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Mister Mind is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics, primarily as an enemy of Captain Marvel. [1] [2] Created by Otto Binder and C. C. Beck for Fawcett Comics, the character made a cameo appearance in Captain Marvel Adventures #22 (March 1943) before making his full first appearance in Captain Marvel Adventures #26 (August 1943). [3]
The Seven Deadly Sins appear in Superman/Shazam!: The Return of Black Adam. The Seven Deadly Sins appear in Lego DC Super Hero Girls: Super-Villain High, voiced by Fred Tatasciore. [10] The Seven Deadly Sins appear in the DC Extended Universe (DCEU) film Shazam!, voiced by Steve Blum, Darin De Paul, and Fred Tatasciore.
Ibac is a supervillain featured in American comic books published by Fawcett Comics and DC Comics.Primarily, versions of the character serve as parallels to Captain Marvel/Shazam and Black Adam, sharing significant histories with these characters and similar powers.
Shazam appears as a playable character in DC Unchained. Shazam appears in Lego DC Super-Villains, voiced by Brandon Routh, while Billy Batson is voiced by Zach Callison. [181] His Earth-3 counterpart Mazahs is also a playable character as well, voiced by Lex Lang.
The “Elementary” and “Why Women Kill” star has joined the DC Comics adaptation “Shazam! Fury of the Gods” as the villain Kalypso, the sister of Helen Mirren’s villainous character ...
Sabbac is the name of three American comic book supervillains appearing in DC Comics.The original Sabbac debuted in Captain Marvel Jr. #4 (February 1943), and was created by Otto Binder and Al Carreno as an enemy of Captain Marvel Jr., while an updated version debuted in Outsiders #8 (March 2004), and was created by Judd Winick and Tom Raney as a nemesis for both Junior and the Outsiders ...
Various alien characters in DC Comics have been seen using it since. Jeff Smith used the original 1940s Monster Society code in his Shazam!: The Monster Society of Evil miniseries, even titling the miniseries' four chapters with ciphered text. DC Comics' official website provides an on-line tool to cipher and un-cipher the messages. [citation ...
Doctor Sivana (left) and Captain Marvel on the cover of Whiz Comics #57 (August 1944).Art by C.C. Beck.. Infamously evil, Doctor Sivana appeared in well over half of all of the Golden Age Captain Marvel comic stories, and in all of the first four stories, after having deduced Captain Marvel's dual identity as boy radio broadcaster Billy Batson early on.