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Answer: Alan Grant Mark Buckingham: Batman Villains Secret Files and Origins #1 (October 1998) Mike Patten is an engineer in Gotham City that believed a civilization 15,000 years ago was wiped out due to a massive earthquake. During the events of Cataclysm, his wife and daughter perished, leading Mike to believe the end of humanity was nigh. He ...
Bane, along with several other Batman villains, is tricked by Jack Napier (who in this reality was a Joker who had been force-fed an overdose of pills by Batman, which temporarily cured him of his insanity) into drinking drinks that had been laced with particles from Clayface's body.
Sharp began writing about the daily New York Times crossword puzzle as practice for a possible website for a comics course. [6] [10] He writes under a pseudonym—Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld—that was originally a nickname invented during a family trip to Hawaii; his real-life identity was outed in 2007.
Bane appears in The Lego Batman Movie, voiced by Doug Benson. [3] This version's design is a combination of his comics counterpart and Tom Hardy's portrayal. A Feudal Japan-inspired incarnation of Bane appears in Batman Ninja, voiced by Kenta Miyake. Bane appears in Batman vs. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, voiced again by Carlos Alazraqui. [3]
Bane; Baron Bedlam; Battalion (member of Team Titans) Beast Boy; Black Canary (Dinah Laurel Lance) Black Condor (Richard Grey, Jr.) Black Condor (Ryan Kendall) Black Condor (John Trujillo) Black Lightning; Manchester Black; Blight (Batman Beyond) Blimp (member of Inferior Five) Blindside (member of Relative Heroes) Brahma (member of the ...
King Snake (Sir Edmund Dorrance) is a character appearing in media published by DC Comics, usually as an adversary of Robin and Batman. Created by writer Chuck Dixon and artist Tom Lyle, King Snake first appeared in Robin #2 (1991). [1] He is a master martial artist and the father of the villain Bane.
“Batman's obvious obsession is crime,” King says. “He wages a war on crime because of how his parents died, [but] the fact that Penguin as a criminal thrives in Gotham City makes zero sense ...
The Ventriloquist is one of many villains in the Batman's rogues gallery to be confined to Arkham Asylum when Batman apprehends him. In Knightfall, Arkham is destroyed by Bane and the Ventriloquist is among the inmates who escape. [5] Unable to find Scarface, the Ventriloquist uses a sock puppet in his place for a short time (aptly named Socko).