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Marvel Premiere #41 1978 The Black Musketeers: Dr. Joshua Itobo, Ishanta, and Khanata Black Panther #9 1978 Black Panther: T'Challa Avengers, Defenders, Fantastic Force, Fantastic Four. Illuminati. Fantastic Four #52 1966 July Stan Lee: Jack Kirby [33] Black Talon: Desmond Drew Cult Leader Strange Tales #173 1974 April Len Wein Gene Colan Black ...
The Black Dragon Society is based on a real World War II organization of the same name; this society was not nearly as sinister as its comic book counterparts. Three different comics companies used the Black Dragon Society as villains in the 1940s: National Comics (DC Comics), Fawcett Comics, and Quality Comics. DC Comics came to own the other ...
Wilson "The Kingpin" Fisk - Marvel Comics; Don Fortunato - Marvel Comics; John Genovese - Kick-Ass; Giorno Giovanna - JoJo's Bizarre Adventure; Hammerhead - Marvel Comics; Akira Hojo - Sanctuary; Jiji - Ichi the Killer; The Joker - DC Comics; Kakihara - Ichi the Killer; Lonnie Thompson "Tombstone" Lincoln - Marvel Comics; Lex Luthor - DC Comics ...
1 DC Comics. Toggle DC Comics subsection. 1.1 America's Best Comics. 1.2 Impact. 1.3 Milestone Media. ... Black Marvel Family; Blue Lantern Corps; Challengers of the ...
The DC Comics version debuted in All Star Comics #12 (August 1942) [5] and was created by Gardner Fox and Jack Burnley, in the story "The Black Dragon Menace" in which a Japanese spy ring called the Black Dragon Society of Japan steals eight American inventions and kidnaps their inventors.
The villainous or shadowy group and or organization is a long-standing trope in adventure fiction, from Professor Moriarty's band of villains, to the sinister Mole Men that bedeviled Superman in his 1951 television show.
D. Damage (Marvel Comics) Silvio Dante; The Darkness (character) Jimmy Darmody; Osamu Dazai (Bungo Stray Dogs) Deathwatch (comics) El Diablo (character)
The organization exists in Marvel's main shared universe, known as Earth-616, as well as other Marvel universes. Its structure is somewhat similar to the real-world New York Mafia (which is itself rarely mentioned in Marvel publications), but the Maggia differs in that it frequently hires supervillains and mad scientists to work for them. [ 1 ]