Minister Blizzard

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Minister Blizzard
Minister Blizzard by Riley Rossmo 2017.jpg
Minister Blizzard as depicted in Batman Annual (vol. 3) #1 (January 2017). Art by Riley Rossmo and Ivan Plascencia.
Publication information
Publisher DC Comics
First appearance Wonder Woman #29 (May–June 1948)
Created by Joye Hummel Murchison (uncredited), William Moulton Marston, H.G. Peter
In-story information
Team affiliations Cold Warriors/Ice Pack
Notable aliasesPrime Minister Blizzard
AbilitiesUses cryogenic weapons to generate extreme cold, ice and snow, as well as advanced technology to dominate minds.

Minister Blizzard is a fictional character appearing in DC Comics publications and related media, commonly as a recurring adversary of the superhero Wonder Woman. [1] A would-be world conqueror from a hidden Arctic civilization, he debuted in 1948 in Wonder Woman #29, written by an uncredited Joye Hummel Murchison and illustrated by Harry G. Peter. [2] One of two members of Wonder Woman's rogues gallery introduced in the 1940s to have an ice/snow motif, Minister Blizzard (after the Blue Snowman, who first appeared three years prior), was an early progenitor of the comics trope of the ice-gun wielding supercriminal, [3] preceding more recognizable DC Comics antagonists such as Mr. Freeze and Captain Cold, as well as Marvel Comics' Blizzard.

Contents

Minister Blizzard's Golden, Silver and Bronze Age comics appearances all portray him as a Machiavellian politician with chalk-white skin bent on plunging the world into a second ice age, [4] inevitably bringing him into conflict with Wonder Woman and her allies. His Modern Age appearances have portrayed him variously as an eco-terrorist, [5] as well as a fanatical cult leader. [6]

Fictional character biography

Pre-Crisis

Golden Age version

The Bronze Age Minister Blizzard manipulates Captain Cold in Justice League of America #139 (February 1977); art by Dick Dillin and Frank McLaughlin. Minister Blizzard by Dillin.jpg
The Bronze Age Minister Blizzard manipulates Captain Cold in Justice League of America #139 (February 1977); art by Dick Dillin and Frank McLaughlin.

Professor Chemico of Holliday College creates a climate changing machine which can make hot and cold climates. He plans to use the machine to make the North Pole into a warm fertile area. Princess Snowina of Iceberg-Land learns about the invention and fears the machine will melt her people and their civilization. Her advisor Prime Minister Blizzard convinces Snowina to let him steal the invention. Minister Blizzard steals the climate changing machine from Chemico and the Holliday Girls, trapping them in a block of ice. While Wonder Woman rescues the girls, the Minister uses the machine to create a giant glacier to threaten New York. When Princess Snowina discovers his plan, Blizzard captures her and sends the glacier against New York, using the Holliday Girls as hostages to prevent a counterattack. Wonder Woman manages to stop him and then makes peace with Snowina while the Minister is taken into custody. Ultimately, Chemico's invention is not used to change any area of the Earth's climate and is largely forgotten about. [7]

Silver & Bronze Age version

Minister Blizzard appears next in Wonder Woman #162. While walking in Manhattan with Steve Trevor, Wonder Woman suddenly finds that the city has been iced over by a weapon created by Minister Blizzard. The Minister captures Wonder Woman with her own lasso and begins to carry out his plan to steal Manhattan Island. Wonder Woman is able to create a diversion and cause the Minister to drop her lasso. Wonder Woman then escapes, rescues Steve, and destroys Minister Blizzard's forces. [8]

Minister Blizzard later joins forces with fellow ice-powered villains Icicle I and Captain Cold to create a miniature ice age in Ecuador. Distracting Wonder Woman and the Justice League to stage a crime spree in Gotham City, the trio are ultimately captured, but not before Minister Blizzard reveals that he and the villainous Shadow Thief are the true masterminds of what was to be a larger plot to freeze the entire world. [9]

Post-Crisis

The Post-Crisis Minister Blizzard in Wonder Woman Annual (vol. 3) #1 (November 2007). Art by Terry Dodson, Rachel Dodson and Alex Sinclair. Minister Blizzard.jpg
The Post-Crisis Minister Blizzard in Wonder Woman Annual (vol. 3) #1 (November 2007). Art by Terry Dodson, Rachel Dodson and Alex Sinclair.

After DC Comics rebooted its continuity in the 1985 event Crisis on Infinite Earths , Wonder Woman, her supporting cast and her enemies were re-imagined. Though originally absent from this revised mythos, Minister Blizzard would be reintroduced to the Wonder Woman canon in 2007 by writer Allan Heinberg as "a radical environmentalist bent on invoking another Ice Age". In a plot coordinated by Circe, he teams with a far-reaching coalition of Wonder Woman's adversaries, including the Cheetah, Hercules, the Duke of Deception, Doctor Psycho, Silver Swan, Giganta, Queen Clea, Angle Man, Doctor Poison, Gundra the Valkyrie and the Mask. [10]

The New 52

In The New 52 reboot of DC Comcs' continuity, Minister Blizzard is presented as a cult leader who controls an unnamed group of religious fanatics. Though the events are unchronicled, he was, at one point, a recurring enemy of the expatriate Amazon assassin Myrina Black. [11]

DC Rebirth

In the post-Rebirth continuity, Minister Blizzard attempted to kill billionaire Barry O'Neill during a wintertime seasonal celebration in Gotham City. Seeking to recover "a hidden kingdom encased in snow", the Minister regarded O'Neill's creation of an ice-themed fairy tale children's attraction as a mockery to his holy efforts. He was defeated by Batman, though O'Neill's murder was soon successfully carried out by the mysterious serial-killer collective known as the Stag. [12]

Powers, abilities, and equipment

Minister Blizzard carries a gun that fires a beam capable of instantly freezing anything it hits, as well as spontaneously generating enormous amounts of ice, snow and cold. In his earliest appearances, his gun produced a "mind-paralysis ray" which could effectively "freeze" cognition and motor responses, as well as scramble thoughts. [13] The Minister is capable of propelling himself through the air by using his gun to materialize ice slides which rapidly form beneath and behind his feet, similar to the Marvel Comics mutant superhero Iceman. Additionally, the gun appears to be able to formulate moving constructs made of ice and vapor, not unlike the hydrokinetic abilities of the DC Comics superhero Mera.

Though imposing, his advanced technology is not his only formidable weapon. The Minister has consistently demonstrated a cunning capacity for deceitful manipulation. Whether abusing his position as majordomo by misleading the regent of the icy kingdom from which he hails, wholly duping his criminal accomplices Captain Cold and Icicle I, or deluding followers as a cult leader, Minister Blizzard's affinity for calculating control has proven as dangerous as his ice gun.

In other media

Television

Minister Blizzard makes a non-speaking appearance in the Harley Quinn episode "Getting Ice Dick, Don't Wait Up" as a member of the "cold boys", alongside Captain Cold, Icicle, and Blue Snowman.[ citation needed ]

Miscellaneous

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References

  1. Jimenez, Phil. The Essential Wonder Woman Encyclopedia, Del Rey Books, 2010, p. 64-65.
  2. Wonder Woman #29, DC Comics, May–June 1948.
  3. Blair, Matthew: "Golden-Age Showcase: Minister Blizzard", Cambrian Comics, 11 Dec. 2017, cambriancomics.com/2017/12/11/golden-age-showcase-minister-blizzard. Accessed 13 March 2022.
  4. Jimenez, Phil. The Essential Wonder Woman Encyclopedia, Del Rey Books, 2010, p. 64-65.
  5. Jimenez, Phil. The Essential Wonder Woman Encyclopedia, Del Rey Books, 2010, p. 65.
  6. Batman Annual (vol. 3) #1, DC Comics (January 2017).
  7. Wonder Woman #29 (1944). DC Comics.
  8. Wonder Woman #162. DC Comics.
  9. Justice League of America #139. DC Comics.
  10. Wonder Woman (vol. 3) Annual #1. DC Comics.
  11. Justice League (vol. 2) #42 (July 2015). DC Comics.
  12. Batman (vol. 3) Annual #1 (January 2017). DC Comics.
  13. Jimenez, Phil. The Essential Wonder Woman Encyclopedia, Del Rey Books, 2010, p. 64.
  14. Justice League Adventures #12 (December 2002). DC Comics.
  15. DC Super Friends #16 (August 2009). DC Comics.