Kobalt (DC Comics)

Last updated
Kobalt
Kobaltmsu0.jpg
Kobalt, by artist Eric Battle.
Publication information
Publisher DC Comics
First appearance Kobalt #1 (June 1994)
Created by John Rozum (writer)
Arvell Jones (artist)
In-story information
AbilitiesAcrobat and martial artist

Kobalt is a fictional character, a comic book superhero published by DC Comics. [1] He first appears in Kobalt #1 (June 1993), and was created by John Rozum and Arvell Jones. [2]

Contents

Publication history

Kobalt was a vigilante superhero with a ruthless and fierce reputation. Some criminals even believed he was a cannibal. Kobalt carries a vendetta against the St. Cloud criminal organization. Kobalt's first appearance was in Kobalt #1 as he harasses some of the employees of St. Cloud. After the battle, Kobalt learns from fellow vigilante Clover that several of Cloud's men are manipulating his organization for profit and other sinister purpose without Cloud being aware of it.

Despite this, Kobalt refuses to team up with Clover; he insists on no new partners ever. It is soon learned he had at least one before, who had managed to set up a very illegal phone line that only a few know about. One of these people is Councilman Tyler Page, the father of a teenaged son named Richard who is an inept superhero groupie. Kobalt owes Councilman Page a debt; he calls it in by asking Kobalt to train Rick to be a superhero.

Kobalt reluctantly begins Rick's training, and is impressed when his best efforts to discourage Rick make the boy train even harder. He goes so far as to have a kevlar costume made for Rick as he continues training. Kobalt's goal was to train Rick a lot longer before allowing him to go out crimefighting, but Rick had other ideas.

Kobalt investigates the as yet unknown party skimming money from St. Cloud to form a rival criminal empire and finds himself battling three supervillains, Volt, who wears an exoskeleton that delivers electric shocks, Slick, whose body is living oil and Red Light, who is only visible in infra-red. Slick and Red Light lead a group of Volt's men to knock over an armored car and steal the small box it was carrying. Kobalt's interrogation of a small timer he captured leads him to the scene of the crime. Rick, who Kobalt left behind at his hideaway, put on his new costume and came to help, against Kobalt's orders. He found the thug Kobalt still had tied up and got the location from him as well. He was able to alert Kobalt to Red Light's invisibility and thereby saved him from being shot by her. Kobalt stole the briefcase and got away. He urged Rick to run and meet up with him later. Instead, Rick sneaked into the trunk of one of the thug's cars so he could find the criminal behind the heist and alert Kobalt.

Kobalt discovers that the box he stole has everything needed to bring down Edwin Alva's criminal empire, but is interrupted from figuring out why someone else wanted it by a phone call. Volt had captured Rick, whom he'd overheard called "Page" and told Kobalt that Page would die unless Kobalt came and brought the files. Kobalt broke into the office of Cape and Cowl magazine, got information on Volt, Slick and Red Light and went to rescue his partner. He "borrowed" an experimental electricity deflecting suit and went to the rescue. He defeated the three of them at the cost of his anonymity. Thanks to video of him and Page fighting Slick, Red Light and Volt's men at the armored car, his mystique was gone.

The first feedback from this "outing" was from Hardware. He came for the box with Alva's evidence, and Kobalt surrendered it without incident. He blamed Page for outing him at first, but reversed himself and agreed to resume training Page.

St. Cloud now realizes that Kobalt is real and uses a small time thug Kobalt recently beat up to set a trap for him. Kobalt found himself facing three costumed thugs named Hook, Line and Sinker with gimmicks to match their names. Kobalt beat up all three of them in less than a minute and found on them evidence to keep up his investigation.

He finds himself facing wave after wave of St. Cloud's hired thugs and dealing with the ones St. Cloud hired to handle his internal security issues. St. Cloud hired a Mr. Glass to kill one of his hirelings who stole and resold a crate of guns he was supposed to transport to their buyers. Mr. Glass blew up the school bus the man drove along with the 17 children aboard. Clover joined Kobalt in the fight, but was shot in the leg and forced to the sidelines after a battle with one more of St. Cloud's enhanced enforcers, an armored thug named Dozer.

Kobalt's psychotic gun-toting former partner Harvest enters the fray searching for the witness to a mass murder orchestrated by St. Cloud (he had the gang who bought his resold guns wiped out). He, Kobalt, the federal government (including an agent named Kennel, who can shape-shift into any breed of dog), Dakota police and a psychotic killer named Rabid are all after one Chris Doonan for different reasons. Kobalt wants him alive to talk about what he saw, as do the police. Harvest is crazy enough to kill him to keep him from talking and Rabid was hired to kill him for St. Cloud. His pay is the chance to kill the men who humiliated him in the past. One of them is Kobalt.

One pitched battle later, Kobalt rescues Doonan and escapes with him. Harvest was arrested but escapes custody and flees. Rabid fights off Agent Kennel and his FBI handler and gets away as well. He recognized Kobalt's scent and he now can offer St. Cloud Kobalt's real name in return for what he wants.

St Cloud had Mr. Glass in a safe house with a ton of folks looking for him, including Kobalt, Harvest and Rabid. For Kobalt's dismay, Harvest found Glass first and killed him. With a major threat to his empire gone, St. Cloud turned his attention to getting Kobalt next.

St. Cloud bankrolled Utopia Park, a multi-billion dollar theme park built on Paris Island, the poorest section of Dakota (they forced out the residents to make it happen). He uses more of his enforcers, led by Crimson and Maneater, for security. The rest of his security team is also enhanced, either with super powers or with special gadgetry. Dozer, Lead Balloon, Wisp, Bloody Mary, Cutlery, Slipper, Gimlet, Splotch and Angel's Kiss are there ostensibly to keep the park safe, bit their true function is to kill Kobalt when he inevitably arrives seeking to take down St. Cloud.

Kobalt realizes his days are numbered if he continues as is. In a single week he faced more superhumans than he had in his whole career to date. He always avoided them, but now St Cloud knows he's just a man and vulnerable to his forces. Kobalt takes down the warehouse where he trained Page, destroyed or moved a lot of his equipment and makes plans to disappear before St. Cloud sent someone Kobalt can't defeat. Clover is now healed and assists him in his planning.

Councilman Tyler Page was one of the many local celebrities invited to the opening of Utopia Park. He of course brought his wife, his three children and guests of his older two. Rick brought along Michelle Denisi, his longtime crush who recently let him know she had feelings for him too. They were all there at different locations in the park when a riot broke out, led by the Blood Syndicate. Rick got Michelle safely out of the park and with security before he went back in and put on his costume to help out as Page.

Councilman Page called Kobalt to let him know that his son was in the park, and Kobalt assured him that yes, he was most likely in costume trying to help out. He and Clover went into the park prepared to rescue Page and to enact Kobalt's plan: fake his own death and disappear long enough to train against superhumans before re-emerging.

He and Clover searched the park and were interrupted by an attack by Crimson. Kobalt took his measure, but Crimson was tougher than Kobalt thought and beat him up pretty badly. Clover knocked Crimson out with a sneak attack and left with Kobalt to find Page. They helped him help people trapped by the riot until Crimson posed as a victim and savagely attacked Page. He broke both of Page' arms just to get Kobalt to fight him. Clover set up Kobalt's fake death (a bomb in an already damaged roller coaster) and reluctantly stood by and let Kobalt fight alone. He put up less of a fight than he was capable of so that Crimson thought he had him. Page stepped in and without the use of his broken arms, kicked Crimson to get him off of Kobalt. When Crimson turned to kill Page, Clover distracted him by enacting the plan. She pretended to be a woman trapped on the disabled roller coaster. Crimson went to rescue her as art of his security role and Kobalt shot him in the legs. Kobalt then went to the "rescue" and, with Clover clear, detonated the bomb and pretended he died in the explosion.

Clover told Page that she promised Kobalt that if anything ever happened to him, she would continue Page's training. Page instead chose to retire - his near death at Crimson's hands soured him on the super hero concept.

While St. Cloud exulted in his victory and informed Rabid that Kobalt was dead, Kobalt turned up in Mexico City. A man named Sanction picked him up at the airport, called him "Miguel", welcomed his "prize pupil" back and told Kobalt he would get him back into shape. [3]

Kobalt is of Cuban descent. He also appeared in Shadow Cabinet #14 and Static Shock!: The Rebirth of the Cool #4.

It is currently unknown if Kobalt will make an appearance in the DC Universe after the two universes were combined by Dharma.

Supporting characters

Kobalt's sidekick Page, by artist Jamal Igle. Pagedcu0.jpg
Kobalt's sidekick Page, by artist Jamal Igle.

Related Research Articles

Vigilantism Civilian who undertakes law enforcement without legal authority

Vigilantism is the act of enforcing the law and investigating and punishing offenses and crimes without legal authority.

Speedy (DC Comics)

Speedy is the name of two DC Comics superheroes, fictional characters that have each served as teenaged sidekicks for the Green Arrow.

Azrael (DC Comics) Fictional superhero

Azrael is an alias used by multiple fictional characters appearing in comic books published by in the DC Comics. The original version, Jean-Paul Valley, was created by Denny O'Neil, Joe Quesada, and Peter Milligan, and debuted in Batman: Sword of Azrael #1. The second character to assume the alias was Michael Washington Lane, in Azrael: Death's Dark Knight #1. Both iterations are Christian vigilantes and assassins created by the Order of St. Dumas and/or it's derivatives, secretive religious organizations seeking to restore justice to Gotham City through religious extremism. They are typically portrayed as antiheroes and reluctant allies of the superhero Batman and the Batman Family, battling forms of manipulations employed by their respective orders, violent tendencies shaped by tragedies in their life, and proving themselves trusted allies to Batman.

Vigilante is the name used by several fictional characters appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. Notable individuals to assume the alias include Greg Saunders and Adrian Chase.

"Alias the Spider" is a comic-book superhero feature from the Golden Age of Comic Books that appeared in Quality Comics' Crack Comics for nearly three years, starting with issue #1 in 1940. He was created by writer-artist Paul Gustavson.

Wild Dog (comics) DC Comics character

Wild Dog is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. Wild Dog is the superhero identity of Jack Wheeler. He first appeared in Wild Dog #1, and was created by Max Allan Collins and Terry Beatty.

Crimson Commando

Crimson Commando is the name used by three fictional characters, which are either a mutant or a cyborg appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.

<i>Mysterious Doctor Satan</i> 1940 film by John English, William Witney

Mysterious Doctor Satan is a 1940 American film serial directed by William Witney and John English. Produced by Republic Pictures, the serial stars Edward Ciannelli, Robert Wilcox, William Newell, C. Montague Shaw, Ella Neal, and Dorothy Herbert. The title of the serial is derived from that of its chief villain.

Silver St. Cloud

Silver St. Cloud is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics, commonly in association with the vigilante Batman. The character debuted in Detective Comics #470 and was created by Steve Englehart and Walt Simonson. Silver St. Cloud is typically depicted as a romantic interest of Bruce Wayne.

Crimson Avenger (Lee Travis) Superhero from DC Comics

The Crimson Avenger is a superhero published by DC Comics. He first appeared in Detective Comics #20. He is the first superhero and costume hero published by Detective Comics. He preceded Batman, and appeared in the same year after Action Comics #1 debuted characters like Superman, which led to the Golden Age of Comic Books. He is sometimes depicted as one of the first masked heroes within the fictional DC Universe. He is also known as a founding member of DC's second depicted superhero team, Seven Soldiers of Victory. After his death, his legacy name lives on other characters.

Lynn Michaels Comic book character mainly appearing in Marvels punisher

Lynn Michaels is a fictional vigilante, and ally of the Marvel Comics antihero the Punisher. She was created by Chuck Dixon and John Romita Jr., and first appeared in The Punisher War Zone #7.

<i>Super</i> (2010 American film) 2010 American black comedy superhero film directed by James Gunn

Super is a 2010 American black comedy superhero film written and directed by James Gunn and starring Rainn Wilson, Elliot Page, Liv Tyler, Kevin Bacon and Nathan Fillion. It tells the story of Frank Darbo, a short-order cook who becomes a superhero without having any superhuman ability, calling himself the "Crimson Bolt". He sets out to rescue his wife Sarah from the hands of a drug dealer.

<i>Vigilante</i> (film) 1983 American film directed by William Lustig

Vigilante, later released on video as Street Gang, is a 1982 American vigilante film directed by William Lustig and starring Robert Forster and Fred Williamson. Lustig came upon the idea for the film through a news article about "a group of blue collar workers in southern New Jersey who had organized to fight crime in their neighborhood".

<i>In the Flesh</i> (TV series)

In the Flesh is a BBC Three supernatural drama series starring Luke Newberry. Written and created by Dominic Mitchell, the show began airing on BBC Three on 17 March 2013 with the first series consisting of three one-hour-long episodes. Set after "The Rising", which is the show's take on a zombie apocalypse, the drama focuses throughout on reanimated teenager Kieren Walker and his return to his local community.

"By Fire" is the sixth episode of the second season and 28th episode overall from the FOX series Gotham. The episode was written by Rebecca Perry Cutter and directed by TJ Scott. It was first broadcast in October 26, 2015 in FOX. Continuing from the previous episode, Bridgit Pike decides to kill her brothers after being abused, going into a vigilante crusade, forcing Gordon to stop her with the help from Selina Kyle. Kringle's and Nygma's relatioship turns into a tragedy, while Penguin decides to free his mother from Galavan's clutches.

"Legacy" is the 93rd episode overall and fifth-season premiere of The CW series Arrow. The episode was written by showrunners Marc Guggenheim and Wendy Mericle from a story by Greg Berlanti and directed by James Bamford. It was first broadcast on October 5, 2016 on The CW.

<i>Kick-Ass</i> (comics) Comic book series by Mark Millar and John Romita Jr.

Kick-Ass is a creator-owned comic book series written by Mark Millar and illustrated by John Romita Jr. It was initially published by Marvel Comics under the company's Icon imprint and republished under Image Comics. It is the story of Dave Lizewski, a teenager who sets out to become a real life superhero. His actions are publicized on the Internet and inspire other people. He gets caught up with ruthless vigilantes Big Daddy and Mindy "Hit-Girl" McCready, who are on a mission to take down the Genovese crime family.

Manhunter (Paul Kirk)

Manhunter is a fictional character, a superhero and later anti-hero appearing in comic books published by DC Comics. He was the first published hero referred to as Manhunter within the DC Universe. Originally a plain clothes amateur detective character, Kirk was called "manhunter" only in the title of his stories, a slang term for someone who tracks down fugitives and criminals. He then dons a red and blue costume and officially adopts "Manhunter" as an alias in 1942. The character's stories ended in 1944. Paul Kirk was then revived in 1973 in a globe-trotting conspiracy thriller storyline told through a series of back-up published in Detective Comics vol. 1 #437-443. Reintroducing Kirk as more ruthless and now lethal hero working against a villainous group called the Council, the story gave him a new costume, new weapons, and a superhuman healing ability. Though the 1973 story became a critical success with readers, Kirk dies at the end of it and was not resurrected by DC Comics. Instead, the Manhunter name has passed on to other heroes.

References

  1. "DC Comics: 10 Most Powerful Members Of Shadow Cabinet". CBR. March 5, 2020.
  2. Your Brain on Latino Comics: From Gus Arriola to los Bros Hernandez. University of Texas Press. 19 October 2012. ISBN   9780292749917.
  3. Kobalt #1-16, 1994-95