| Bloodsport | |
|---|---|
| Bloodsport (Robert DuBois)'s design following Infinite Frontier. Art by Jonboy Meyers. | |
| Publication information | |
| Publisher | DC Comics |
| First appearance | Superman (vol. 2) #4 (April 1987) |
| Created by | John Byrne |
| In-story information | |
| Full name | Robert DuBois |
| Species | Human |
| Team affiliations | Suicide Squad Secret Society of Super-Villains |
| Partnerships | Lex Luthor Amanda Waller |
| Abilities | Skilled hand-to-hand combatant and world-class marksman. Has access to advance weaponry that allows for teleportation of weaponry. |
Bloodsport is the name several supervillain s appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. The first incarnation of the character was created by writer and artist John Byrne, first appearing in Superman #4 (April 1987). While making sporadic appearances within Superman -related titles, influence by the character's reinvention in the DC Extended Universe also had made the connected to the Suicide Squad.
The most well-known incarnation of the character is Robert DuBois, an African-American whose backstory varies; originally, Robert was a draft dodger who became mentally ill from guilt when his brother served in his place, resulting in the loss of his limbs. Exploited by Lex Luthor unknowingly, he is set as a vigilante against Superman, cumulating to a famous assassination attempt. [1] Following his reinvention in the DC Extended Universe, his backstory is revised, making him a avid patriot who hesitated in joining the army. When his brother enlisted and was killed in action, he is inspired by his bravery and becomes a mercenary, eventually coming into conflict with Superman and is recruited into Task Force X. [2] Another source also defines him as a world-class marksman capable of making anything into a weapon trained by his mercenary father similarly to his DCEU counterpart. [3]
The Robert DuBois incarnation of Bloodsport made his live-action debut in the television series Supergirl , played by David St. Louis. [4] Idris Elba portrayed the character in the DC Extended Universe film The Suicide Squad (2021). [5]
The character of Robert DuBois, created by writer and artist John Byrne, first appeared in Superman #4 (April 1987) as Bloodsport. [6] [7] The second incarnation, Alexander Trent, made his first appearance in The Adventures of Superman #507 (December 1993) and was created by writer Karl Kesel and artist Barry Kitson. [8] The third incarnation, known as Bloodsport III, made his first appearance in Superman #652 (July 2006) and was created by writers Kurt Busiek and Geoff Johns, and artist Pete Woods. [9] [10] Demolitia, a female version of Bloodsport, is introduced by writer David Michelinie, and artists Kieron Dwyer and Denis Rodier in Action Comics #718 (February 1996), in which she procured Bloodsport's technology. [11] [12]
Robert DuBois is a Vietnam draft evader, who had a mental breakdown and became obsessed with the Vietnam War after learning that his brother had gone in his stead. [13] DuBois was drafted to serve in the United States Armed Forces. Upon receiving his induction notice, DuBois fled to Canada, not because he was morally opposed to the war, but because he was afraid of death. [14] [15] DuBois' younger brother, Michael, reported for induction in his place, passing himself off as Robert. [16] Michael DuBois was sent into combat in Vietnam, where he lost both his arms and legs. [17] After learning this, DuBois went insane from guilt. [18] [19]
Later, DuBois was contacted by employees of Lex Luthor, who sought a pawn to assassinate Luthor's archenemy Superman. [20] Operatives of Luthor, under the direction of a man named Kimberley, played upon DuBois' fixations on Vietnam to condition him psychologically to want to kill Superman. [21] They also equipped DuBois with an arsenal of powerful, advanced weapons, including a Kryptonite gun. [22] DuBois then went into action in Metropolis, calling himself Bloodsport. [23] He now claimed that both his brother and he had served in combat in Vietnam and had been injured there. [23] Professing rage at the citizens of Metropolis for wasting the freedom he claimed both his brother and himself fought to defend, Bloodsport indiscriminately slaughtered dozens of innocent people. [23] In his first clash with Superman, Bloodsport severely weakened him with a Kryptonite bullet. [24] After receiving medical aid, Superman confronted Bloodsport once more. Even Luthor, outraged by Bloodsport's murders of so many people due to the attention this would attract to his assault, attempted to stop the mad killer. [25] Superman succeeded in causing the teleportation device Bloodsport used to bring weapons to himself to malfunction. [26] Bloodsport then threatened to detonate his teleporter's power pack, blowing up ten square miles of the city. [27] Superman's friend Jimmy Olsen had learned of Bloodsport's true identity and located his brother. [28] Confronted by Michael, Bloodsport collapsed in grief and was taken into custody. [29]
DuBois has a brief encounter with Deadshot, which was eventually broken up by Superman and Batman. [30] He also appeared in JLA/Avengers as a villain who ambushes Vision and Aquaman with a group of other villains. [31] He later fights Steel, but is restrained by Hal Jordan. [32] DuBois remained in prison for several years, and eventually earned the enmity of Alexander Trent, another prisoner on Stryker's Island who had since taken up the name Bloodsport. [33] As racial tension began to overwhelm Stryker's Island, the prison warden decided to host a boxing match between DuBois and Trent. [34] He believed that this was the ideal way to allow the inmates to vent their frustrations without inciting further acts of violence. [33] To safeguard the situation, the warden asked Superman to referee the match. [34] The riot broke out, [35] resulting in DuBois getting his hands on one of Trent's weapons and using it to blast a hole in the prison wall. [36] DuBois ran for freedom, but was apparently shot dead by armed prison guards in the watchtower. [37]
Following the events of Dark Nights: Death Metal , DuBois was reintroduced to the DC Universe during Infinite Frontier . After his brother's death, his mental state deteriorated, leading him to become the mercenary Bloodsport. After failing to kill Superman, he was sent to Belle Reve until he was forced into the Suicide Squad with the task of exploring the Multiverse for Amanda Waller's own personal ambitions. [38]
DuBois pretends that he is a bitter Vietnam veteran who feels greatly betrayed and rejected by his country, thus he enjoys powerful and righteous anger toward his fellow Americans for wasting the freedoms invading Vietnam supposedly helped preserve. [39] However, he has no first-hand experience about this war, ergo, his speeches and character are largely drawn from movies about the war and folk representations of Vietnam War veterans. Though at first he seemed aware that his vet persona was fictional, he grew increasingly delusional and dissociated. [40] [1] Described as a very violent and powerful man, DuBois was plunged into a permanent fantasy about being a soldier, and was even feared by the other dangerous prisoners at Stryker's Island Prison in Metropolis. [41]
Originally, Bloodsport possess no superhuman abilities but was considered a average hand-to-hand combatant and proficiency with firearms whom possess advance technology can teleport various high-tech weaponry originating from LexCorp to himself at will, in which said arsenal is described as Superman to be "extradimensional" in quality and quantity. [42] [43] His technology includes a device that enables him to teleport high-tech weaponry to him from a distant location instantaneously, with many being one-of-a-kind prototypes from advanced LexCorp research projects. [44] [42] He also has a wide variety of firearms, from handguns to shoulder-fired weapons. [45]
The more recent iteration improved this concept, making him a superbly trained in all forms of combat, a world-class marksman whom has a penchant in making anything in his hands a deadly weapon, and similarly possess a arsenal of high-tech weaponry. [3] [2] This arsenal includes a suit that enables multiverse travel and protects the user from experience insanity from it and has various scanner functionalities. His weaponry also includes rifles powered by sound and kryptonite, [2]
Since the original incarnation's creation, several other characters have also used the codename: