Black Lantern Corps
Black Lantern Corps | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
First appearance | Green Lantern (vol. 4) #43 (January 2008) |
Created by | Geoff Johns (writer) Ethan Van Sciver (artist) |
Roster | |
See: (below) |
The Black Lantern Corps is a fictional organization of corporeal revenants (resembling intelligent zombies or jiangshi) appearing in comic books published by DC Comics, related to the emotional spectrum. The group is composed of deceased fictional characters in zombie form that seek to eliminate all life from the DC Universe.
Publication history
[edit]Prior to the Blackest Night event, Black Hand ("leader" and the first member of the Black Lantern Corps) had already been established as a villain within the pages of Green Lantern. Writer Geoff Johns revisited his origin and expanded upon certain aspects of it during the Green Lantern: Secret Origin story arc (2008).[1] During the arc, Hand's energy-absorbing weapon (previously thought to be an original invention) is revealed to have been constructed by Atrocitus, enemy of the Guardians of the Universe and future founder of the Red Lantern Corps.[2] Atrocitus comes to Earth and approaches Hand, recognizing him as a "doorway to the black" that possesses the power to bring about the Blackest Night. Hand manages to escape and pockets the weapon as he flees.[3][4] The possession of this weapon soon leads him to become an enemy of the Green Lantern Corps, as he now feels a need to extinguish the light of the emotional spectrum.[5]
While being transported to prison, Black Hand experiences a sudden power surge that kills his captors. Xander roams the desert, hearing a voice instructing him to reclaim the souls of characters who were reanimated.[6] Hand murders his family and commits suicide. The Guardian Scar arrives, and creates the first black power ring, which reanimates Black Hand. She reveals that Hand is the physical embodiment of death, and serves as the avatar of the Black Lantern Corps in the same manner that Ion, Parallax, and the Predator are for willpower, fear, and love respectively.[5] Hand later digs up Bruce Wayne's corpse, removes his skull, and recites the Black Lantern oath for the first time. Soon after, black power rings descend upon the universe and begin reviving the deceased as Black Lanterns that attack both the heroes and the villains of the DC Universe. It is claimed the Power Battery is in Space Sector 666.[7] Black Hand is seen holding Wayne's skull in all future appearances, embracing it in a necrophiliac manner in Blackest Night #1 as the black power rings appear from the Black Power Battery, exclaiming that Wayne's death "plays a far greater role in the Blackest Night" than anyone thinks. At the end of the issue, it is shown that Black Hand uses the skull to produce new power rings at will, creating two rings for the newly deceased Carter Hall and Kendra Saunders.
In Blackest Night #3, Indigo-1 describes the premise behind the Black Lantern Corps' fictional relationship with the universe. She explains that the darkness in existence before the creation of the universe is what powers the Black Lanterns. Banished at the dawn of time by the white light of creation, its fighting back causes the white light to be fractured into the emotional spectrum. The events transpiring throughout the titles of Blackest Night are a result of the darkness, once again, fighting back against creation. She goes on to describe how a combination of all seven lights can restore the white light of creation and bring an end to the Black Lanterns. Throughout the Blackest Night event, each time a Black Lantern successfully removes the heart of one of their victims, a black, lantern-shaped speech balloon (used within Green Lantern and Green Lantern Corps to indicate that a power ring is speaking) depicts an ever-rising power level increasing in increments of 0.1 percent.[8] In Blackest Night #4, the power meter is filled and Scar is able to transport the Black Central Power Battery to Coast City, and the true mastermind behind the Black Lanterns is able to step into the main DC Universe: Nekron.
After being introduced into a primary role within the Blackest Night event, Indigo-1 recruits Hal Jordan to gather a team capable of recreating the white light of creation (chosen for having a personal connection to the most powerful members of the five remaining Corps).[9] The story unfolding in Green Lantern depicts Jordan and Indigo-1 recruiting Carol Ferris, Sinestro, Atrocitus, Larfleeze, Saint Walker, to their purpose.[10] In Blackest Night #5, the team assaults the Black Central Power Battery with the opposite results intended. Nekron is strengthened and able to recruit living characters reanimated from death to his Black Lantern Corps. Although the seven Corps representatives attempt to summon aid by recruiting temporary deputies until the rest of their Corps arrive - Ganthet joins the Green Lantern Corps, Barry Allen joins the Blue Lanterns, Lex Luthor is inducted into the Orange Lanterns, the Scarecrow joins the Sinestro Corps, the Atom joins the Indigo Tribe, Mera joins the Red Lanterns, and Wonder Woman is saved from her Black Lantern identity to join the Star Sapphires - they are nearly thwarted when Nekron digs up the Entity, the first life in the universe, and attempts to kill it. After Sinestro attempts and fails to merge with the entity similar to Hal's bond with Parallax - Sinestro powering the entity with his ego rather than his will to survive - Hal takes control of the Entity himself, noting that the heroes still chose to return to life even if Nekron gave them the opportunity. With this behind him, Hal merges with the entity and frees the reanimated heroes from Nekron's hold, creating the White Lantern Corps in the process, and subsequently reanimates Black Hand and the Anti-Monitor to deprive Nekron of his tether in the living world and his power source respectively. The White Lanterns used the power of the White Light to finally vanquish Nekron and the threat of the Blackest Night passed with the Black Lanterns disintegrating along with their power rings.[11]
The rebirth of the Black Lantern Corps
[edit]Though seemingly destroyed, an aspect of the Black Lanterns returned within Firestorm when his dark undead persona emerged - claiming the name Deathstorm.[12] Torturing the two hosts of the Firestorm Matrix, Deathstorm later traveled to the White Lantern Power Battery where he corrupted it. Whilst initially he intended to destroy it in order to kill all life in the universe, a voice came and commanded him not to do so. Instead, it ordered Deathstorm to bring it an army in order for it to command the power over life itself. With those words said, the White Lantern Power Battery in conjunction with Deathstorm created undead Black Lanterns of the 12 reanimated heroes and villains who had been reborn at the end of the Blackest Night.[13] After Deathstorm steals the White Lantern, he, along with Firestorm, are transported to Qward in the Anti-Matter Universe by the Anti-Monitor, revealed to be behind the returns of the 12 Black Lanterns. However, they are all destroyed when Ronnie and Jason teamed up, thus allowing Ronnie's labor to be accomplished and for him to be returned to life by the White Entity.[14]
The New 52
[edit]Following Black Hand's suicide to escape being inducted into the Indigo Tribe once again, a Black Power Ring emerges from his corpse, reviving him as a Black Lantern. Black Hand returns to Earth and reanimates his family and various dead in the graveyard around his house, but Hal Jordan and Sinestro defeat them by detonating Sinestro's power battery.[15]
Jordan later commits suicide and temporarily becomes a Black Lantern to stop Volthoom.[16][17][18]
During the war between the New Gods and the Lantern Corps, Black Hand reanimates the Source Titans as Black Lanterns. However, after Highfather's misuse of the Life Equation, they are fully resurrected.[19]
In Dark Nights: Death Metal, Batman obtains a Black Lantern Ring and uses it to resurrect various deceased heroes.[20]
Prominent members
[edit]At San Diego Comic-Con in 2009, Geoff Johns was able to discuss his reasoning behind choosing Black Hand as the leader of the new Corps, the character properties of the Black Lanterns, and his own goals in writing their depictions. Commenting on the characters being chosen to reanimate during Blackest Night, Johns said:
The black rings aren't about who's dead; the black rings are about who's alive. So, scenes like Elongated Man and Sue Dibny taking on Hawkman and Hawkgirl is kind of the beginning of that emotional conflict and terror that you'll see throughout Blackest Night. So the black rings are, again, seeking out the dead that matter to our heroes.[21]
During the creation of Blackest Night, Johns (not being interested in, or frightened by, zombies) wanted to bring back the deceased characters in a way that seemed horrifying and emotionally disturbing to the living characters they encountered. To accomplish that effect, the Black Lanterns have personalities and actively seek out those who will be most affected by their appearance.[22] A prime example of Johns' use of personality distortion with the Black Lanterns is the Elongated Man (typically depicted as being a "light" character that uses his detective skill to "smell" when something is not right) looking upon his victims and remarking to his undead wife: "I smell a mystery."[8][22] Johns identifies the power of the Black Lanterns as not necessarily being evil, but not being good either.[23]
During his initial creation of the new Corps, Johns drew from information he had collected on light while taking physics classes. With the Corps of the emotional spectrum personifying life, he knew that this Corps would need to represent death. Black being an absence of light, he chose Black Hand as the leader of the Corps both for the character's name and also because of how much he enjoyed revamping villains while writing for Flash. Like the other members of the Black Lantern Corps, Johns wanted to take a different approach in his portrayal of Black Hand. Whereas other villains may have a particular motivation, Hand is meant to be depicted as a character who is clearly insane and whose presence makes others uncomfortable.[24]
In Blackest Night #2, multiple black power rings attempt to reanimate the body of the Dove (Don Hall), only to be prevented from disturbing his grave by an invisible barrier. As they collide with the barrier, the rings' typical command ("Rise") is interrupted; the rings instead respond: "Don Hall of Earth at peace." This is the first depiction of the black power rings failing to recruit a member for the Black Lantern Corps.[25] In an interview with IGN, Johns provides an explanation behind the Dove's immunity to the black power rings: "You'll learn more about this as we go forward. But really it speaks to the nature of Don Hall. He can't be desecrated by the likes of these things. He's untouchable in death and at total peace more than any other being in the universe." Reflecting on the limitations of the rings, Johns goes on to state that, even though magic is a "joke" to the black power rings (though the undead Giovanni "John" Zatara is capable of wielding black magic), Don is quite the opposite.[26] Similarly, Blackest Night: Titans #1 shows Black Lantern Hank Hall unable to read Dawn Granger's emotions; her aura depicted as being white rather than a color from the emotional spectrum.
In Blackest Night: Batman #1, the spirit of Deadman is unable to prevent a black power ring from reviving his remains. Deadman attempts to possess his own corpse, but is unable to control it.[27] During the Blackest Night panel at San Diego Comic-Con in 2009, Geoff Johns was asked whether the revived corpses of the Black Lanterns were speaking for themselves or if they were being controlled by an outside force. Johns declined to answer, implying that the question would be answered during the Blackest Night storyline.[28] Similarly, while being overcome by a black power ring, the Spectre declares that he "will not be used."[25] Prior to the Spectre's conversion, Black Hand makes note of the Shadowpact members Zatanna and Blue Devil being surrounded by an aura of life. Upon scanning the Phantom Stranger, Black Hand remarks that the Stranger is "neither living nor dead", and notes him as a person of interest to his Corps.[25]
List of Black Lanterns
[edit]Current members
[edit]- Black Hand – Referred to as "the black incarnate", the avatar of the Black Lanterns.[5]
- Batman – Killed in the invasion of the Dark Knights from the Dark Multiverse, Bruce Wayne was resurrected by a Black Lantern Ring and is secretly holding onto the last of the White Lantern energies which have been compressed into a bullet that potentially can be powerful enough to prevent him from turning into a more destructive and murderous form of Black Lantern.[20]
Former members
[edit]- Leadership
- Nekron[29] – Leader of the Black Lantern Corps
- Scar[30] – Guardian of the Corps and keeper of The Book of the Black
- Blackest Night #1 (September 2009)
- Blackest Night #2 (October 2009)
- Aquaman – Named in issue #1, but not shown in costume
- Deadman – Also featured in Blackest Night: Batman, which shipped the same week
- Hawk (Hank Hall)
- Aquagirl (Tula)
- Dolphin
- Pariah
- Crispus Allen
- Tempest (Garth)
- Firestorm – Named in issue #1, shown in issue #2
- Hawkgirl (Kendra Saunders) – Killed in issue #1, shown in issue #2
- Hawkman (Carter Hall) – Killed in issue #1, shown in issue #2
- Blackest Night: Batman #1 (October 2009)
- Abattoir
- Blockbuster (Roland Desmond)
- Deacon Blackfire
- KGBeast
- King Snake
- Magpie
- Trigger Twins
- Ventriloquist (Arnold Wesker)
- John and Mary Grayson
- Jack Drake
- Janet Drake
- Green Lantern Corps (vol. 2) #39 (October 2009)
- Jack T. Chance – Shown, but not named, in Blackest Night #1
- Tomar-Re
- Jade – Named in Blackest Night #1, but not shown in costume.
- Blackest Night: Superman #1 (October 2009)
- Blackest Night: Titans #1 (October 2009)
- Green Lantern (vol. 4) #45 (October 2009)
- Hal Jordan
- Solomon Grundy #7 (November 2009)
- Green Lantern Corps (vol. 2) #40 (November 2009)
- Bzzd – Shown, but not named, in Blackest Night #1
- Blackest Night #3 (November 2009)
- Blackest Night: Superman #2 (November 2009)
- Psycho-Pirate (Roger Hayden) – Shown, but not named, in Blackest Night #3
- Green Lantern (vol. 4) #46 (November 2009)
- Khufu
- Chay-Ara
- Abin Sur – Named in Blackest Night #2, but not shown in costume
- Arin Sur
- Blackest Night: Titans #2 (November 2009)
- Terry Long
- Robert Long
- Hawk (Holly Granger)
- Pantha[32]
- Blackest Night: Batman #3 (December 2009)
- Tony Zucco
- Captain Boomerang (Digger Harkness) – Named in Blackest Night #1, but not shown in costume
- Green Lantern Corps (vol. 2) #41 (December 2009)
- Blackest Night #4 (December 2009)
- Azrael (Jean-Paul Valley)
- Atom (Al Pratt) – Named in issue #1, shown in issue #4
- Jean Loring
- Blackest Night: Titans #3 (December 2009)
- Baby Wildebeest – Shown, but not named, in issue #2[33]
- Green Lantern (vol. 4) #47 (December 2009)
- Laira – Named in issue #45, shown in issue #47
- Qull – Named in issue #45, shown in issue #47
- Roxeaume
- Doom Patrol (vol. 5) #4 (January 2010)
- Celsius
- Tempest (Joshua Clay)
- Negative Woman
- Cliff Steele's original body
- Booster Gold (vol. 2) #26 (January 2010)
- R.E.B.E.L.S. (vol. 2) #10 (January 2010)
- Stealth
- Harbinger
- Outsiders (vol. 4) #24 (January 2010)
- Katana's dead husband and children:
- Maseo Yamashiro
- Yuki Yamashiro
- Reiko Yamashiro
- Blackest Night #5 (January 2010)
- Damage
- a clone of Bruce Wayne
- Animal Man
- Ice
- Wonder Woman
- Superman
- Superboy (Kon-El)
- Kid Flash (Bart Allen)
- Green Arrow
- Donna Troy
- Justice League of America (vol. 2) #39 (January 2010)
- Teen Titans (vol. 3) #77 (January 2010)
- Blackest Night: The Flash #1 (February 2010)
- Justice League of America (vol. 2) #40 (February 2010)
- Steel (Hank Heywood III) – Shown, but not named, in issue #39
- Blackest Night: JSA #1 (February 2010)
- Sandman (Wesley Dodds)
- Doctor Mid-Nite (Charles McNider)
- Mister Terrific (Terry Sloane)
- Johnny Quick
- Green Lantern (vol. 4) #49 (February 2010)
- Suicide Squad #67 (March 2010)
- Weird Western Tales #71 (March 2010)
- Catwoman (vol. 3) #83 (March 2010)
- The Power of Shazam! #48 (March 2010)
- Osiris (Amon Tomaz)
- Sobek
- Secret Six (vol. 3) #17 (March 2010)
- Yasemine Soze
- Blackest Night: The Flash #2 (March 2010)
- Starman (vol. 2) #81 (March 2010)
- Green Lantern (vol. 4) #50 (March 2010)
- The Question #37 (March 2010)
- Blackest Night: The Flash #3 (April 2010)
- Blackest Night #7 (April 2010)
- Green Lantern Corps (vol. 2) #46 (May 2010)
- Brightest Day #23 (April 2011)
- Green Lantern (vol. 5) #20 (May 2013)
- Dark Nights: Death Metal #5 (November 2020)
- Air Wave (Larry Jordan)
- Animal Man
- Anthro
- Atom (Al Pratt)
- Bat Lash
- Black Condor (Ryan Kendall)
- Blue Beetle (Dan Garrett)
- Claw the Unconquered
- Dan the Dyna-Mite
- Dove (Don Hall)
- Enemy Ace
- Fate (Jared Stevens)
- Hawk (Holly Granger)
- Hourman (Rex Tyler)
- Human Bomb (Roy Lincoln)
- Johnny Quick (Johnny Chambers)
- Johnny Quick (Earth-Three)
- Liberty Belle
- Red Bee (Richard Raleigh)
- Red Tornado (Ma Hunkel)
- Red Tornado (android)
- Sandman (Wesley Dodds)
- TNT
- Ultraman
- Dark Nights: Death Metal #6 (December 2020)
- Blue Beetle (Ted Kord)
- The Batman Who Laughs' original body
Though an exact list of the former Green Lanterns reanimated by black power rings does not exist, Kyle Rayner's ring states that all of the deceased Green Lanterns within the Oan crypt in Green Lantern Corps (vol. 2) #39 were transformed into Black Lanterns.[34]
Oath
[edit]As with the other Lantern Corps, Black Hand devised an oath for the Black Lanterns:
The Blackest Night falls from the skies,
The darkness grows as all light dies,
We crave your hearts and your demise,
By my black hand, the dead shall rise!— Black Lantern Corps oath
Entity
[edit]While the Black Lantern Corps are powered by the black emptiness of space which represents death and therefore does not belong to the Emotional Spectrum, Black Hand is revealed to be the physical embodiment for these corps, in the same manner that Ion is the embodiment of willpower for the Green Lantern Corps. During the climax of Blackest Night #8, Boston Brand tells the Corps' leaders that Black Hand is the "tether keeping Nekron within our world", and that as the avatar of Death he is also the only key to defeating the Black Lanterns permanently. Using the White Lantern power of Life, Hal Jordan commands "William Hand of Earth - Live", resurrecting Black Hand and removing him as the Black Lantern Corps' primary power source - which deals a crippling and eventually fatal blow to the Black Lanterns.[11]
The Book of the Black
[edit]Hidden within the vaults of Oa is a massive black tome known as The Ultimate Facilitator of the Blackest Night. Written in corrupted blood by the traitorous Guardian of the Universe, Scar, the book contains prophecies. The prophecies indicate which Earth heroes have the abilities to weather the Blackest Night and ensure the survival or destruction of the universe.
Also within its pages is all the forbidden history of the Guardians of the Universe, and in an effort to protect its secrets, the rogue Guardian was forced to imprison the Sinestro Corps talekeeper Lyssa Drak inside the book. After Scar's true death and the end of the Blackest Night, The Book of the Black is found by Ganthet, who notes it retains much forbidden knowledge within its pages. He decides to keep it a secret from the other Guardians and entrusts Guy Gardner with the secret.[35]
The book is later taken by Krona who, after releasing Lyssa Drak from inside the book,[36] takes it to the Dead Planet of Ryut. There, after detecting the "New Guardians", it opens its pages to unveil the history of Krona.[37] They are soon afterwards attacked by the book's keeper, the former Sinestro Corps member Lyssa Drak. She is capable of trapping Sinestro himself, Carol Ferris, Indigo-1, Atrocitus, Saint Walker and Larfleeze inside the book. However, Sinestro is able to prevent her from capturing Hal Jordan as well, by causing a detonation using the combined energy of their rings. The energy explosion also affects The Book of the Black, which disappears in a rainbow light, leaving only behind the rings of the six trapped Lanterns.
The book is later seen on Oa while it forces the captured Lanterns to relive their lives prior to acquiring their current rings. After the defeat of Krona and the release of the New Guardians, the Book is taken by Lyssa Drak. She is later confronted by the now Green Lantern Sinestro who tracked her with the aid of an energy-manipulating alien hero he fought while in the Sinestro Corps. Contact with the Book of the Black reveals the Guardians' plan to replace the Corps with the 'Third Army'.[38]
Subsequently, the book returns to Black Hand's possession as it is sought by the Guardians of the Universe. The book reveals to Black Hand that Hal Jordan is not his enemy. When questioned about that, it reveals that Jordan will be the greatest Black Lantern.[15] After Black Hand is imprisoned in the Chamber of Shadows,[39] the Book of Black is retrieved by Green Lantern B'dg.[40] However, the book sucks B'dg and Simon Baz into it and returns to Black Hand.[41]
The book's prophecy is revealed to be true when Hal Jordan transforms into a Black Lantern as a means to escape the Dead Zone. Hal then summons Nekron in order to defeat the First Lantern, Volthoom. After his defeat, Hal is released from being a Black Lantern and returns to life as Green Lantern once again.[18]
Powers and abilities
[edit]The Black Lanterns are corpses reanimated by black power rings, which are fueled by the power of death. Corpses reanimated by black power rings are reconstructed if damaged, keeping the body in working order at all times.[42] Black power rings are capable of regenerating typically fatal injuries inflicted upon their users (including the complete dissolution).[27][43] The rings generate black tendrils to "root" themselves into the corpses, making it impossible to remove them by physical force.[9]
The first black power rings possess no charge, but each time a Black Lantern kills someone and removes their heart, .01 percent power is restored to every ring in the Corps.[8][44] In Blackest Night #3, Indigo-1 solidifies this theme by explaining that those who rise feed off emotion. Even at low power levels, black rings enable their user to fly and create black energy constructs. They are also unaffected by magic.[26] In "classic" zombie fashion, the bite of a Black Lantern induces a slow-acting necrosis that eventually turns the victim into a fellow Black Lantern. It is unknown if this power can work on any living being, or only those characters who have been reanimated from death before (such as Superman, the Green Arrow, and Donna Troy).[45]
Nekron uses the Anti-Monitor as a physical power source within the Black Power Battery. It is alluded to in several comics and "Origins and Omens" backstories that it is the Anti-Monitor's desire for the end of humanity that made him the primary candidate to become the Battery's power supply following his betrayal and subsequent murder at the hands of Superboy-Prime during the Sinestro Corps War. In a climactic battle with the Lantern Corps, the Anti-Monitor is nearly freed from the Power Battery and revealed to have only succumbed partially to Nekron's influence, demanding that he be freed so that he could exact revenge on Nekron for his imprisonment.[47][48] As part of the final 'coup de grace' against the Black Lantern Corps, the Entity also commands "Anti-Monitor of Qward - Live", which frees him from the Black Power Battery - destroying it in the process. It was the Anti-Monitor's physical corpse, coupled with Black Hand's presence as the entity of Death, that served as the full source of the Black Lantern Corps' power.
Black Lanterns are able to read the emotions as colored auras that correlate to the Emotional Spectrum.[8] Multiple emotions read as a multi-colored aura, while unreadable emotions come out as white.[49] Furthermore, demonic and underworld dwellers (such as Etrigan the Demon) are read with a black aura, apparently unreadable due to their undead nature. A state of profound suspended animation is enough to fool a Black Lantern by making the target of suspended animation invisible to the senses of the Black Lantern.[50] Emotionless hearts such as the Scarecrow's render their bearers equally invisible to the Black Lanterns.[29] When facing beings with warped mental states, or otherwise addled minds (such as Bizarro), the correlation between the emotion detected and the actual color that the Black Lanterns see is inverted.[51] In addition to the abilities granted to them by the rings, Black Lanterns retain any skills and superpowers they may have had in life.[8]
Vulnerabilities
[edit]Black Lanterns are vulnerable to white light and a combination of green light with another Corps' light.
Once a black power ring is destroyed, the corpse it animates becomes inert.[9]
Kimiyo Hoshi and Halo can completely destroy Black Lanterns by using their light-based powers.[52][53] Conner Kent used the Medusa Mask to destroy two Black Lanterns by forcing them to experience the full force of the Emotional Spectrum, irritating their black power rings enough that they remove themselves from their bearers and flee.[54] The Black Lanterns are also vulnerable to Wonder Woman's Lasso of Truth.[55] The "touch" of a Black Lantern, typically used to remove their victims' hearts and drain them of emotional energy, can also sever the connection between other Black Lanterns and their black power ring.[56] Barry Allen was able to deactivate the black rings that were 'targeting' him and Hal Jordan by using time travel, jumping two seconds into the future so that the rings would shut down when they could not sense their 'assigned' wearers.[57]
One common way of stopping a Black Lantern is to injure them faster than their ring is able to regenerate their body (such as a Red Lantern's plasma, a mutated pitcher plant with strong digestive liquids, or the intense heat of Mogo's core).[58][59]
Others that have proven resistant to the Black Lantern rings are either those who have wielded a power ring before or generally otherworldly beings such as Etrigan, who lacks a human heart and emotions, Atrocitus, whose heart was replaced by his ring, the Shade, who is truly immortal and thus cannot die, and Osiris, whose magical nature allowed him some semblance of control over the ring. Don Hall (the original Dove) was immune to recruitment into the Black Lantern Corps as he was "at peace", which destroyed the Black Lantern Rings that attempted to recruit him.
Another vulnerability of their rings' power is that the odd physics behind magical power can dumbfound their abilities, as was the case when Arthur's daughter Serenity cast protection spells which disrupted the blackout effect of his power ring.[60]
Other versions
[edit]In the Flashpoint universe, the successful murder of William Hand at the hands of Atrocitus freed Nekron from imprisonment long before several of the different colored Lantern Corps and the long-prophesied "War of Light" erupted. Shortly after being released, Nekron used his dark powers to create the Black Lantern Corps using the corpses of the Green Lanterns and countless other lifeforms that have fallen before him.
The New 52: Futures End
[edit]In the possible future of Futures End set five years later:
- Krona is reanimated as a Black Lantern and leads his Black Lanterns against Hal Jordan and Relic.[61]
- Sinestro smashes Lyssa Drak's skull on the ground, which summons a Black Lantern Power Ring, and Sinestro uses it to reanimate his Corps as Black Lanterns.[62]
In other media
[edit]- Blackest Night-inspired Black Lantern skins for Batman, Hawkgirl, Superman, The Flash, and Doomsday appear in Injustice: Gods Among Us.
- A Black Lantern skin for Green Lantern appears in Injustice 2.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Green Lantern (vol. 4) issues #29-35 (May - November 2008). DC Comics.
- ^ Green Lantern (vol. 4) #32 (August 2008). DC Comics.
- ^ Green Lantern (vol. 4) #33 (September 2008)
- ^ Green Lantern (vol. 4) #34 (October 2008). DC Comics.
- ^ a b c Green Lantern (vol. 4) #43 (September 2009). DC Comics.
- ^ DC Universe #0 (June 2008). DC Comics.
- ^ Blackest Night #0 (June 2009). DC Comics.
- ^ a b c d e Blackest Night #1 (September 2009). DC Comics.
- ^ a b c Blackest Night #3 (November 2009). DC Comics.
- ^ Green Lantern (vol. 4) #46-48 (November 2009-January 2010). DC Comics.
- ^ a b Blackest Night #8 (March 2010). DC Comics.
- ^ Brightest Day #10 (September 2010). DC Comics.
- ^ Brightest Day #11 (October 2010). DC Comics.
- ^ Brightest Day #22 (March 2011). DC Comics.
- ^ a b Green Lantern (vol. 5) #12 (August 2012). DC Comics.
- ^ Green Lantern (vol. 5) #18 (March 2013). DC Comics.
- ^ Green Lantern (vol. 5) #19 (April 2013). DC Comics.
- ^ a b Green Lantern (vol. 5) #20 (May 2013). DC Comics.
- ^ Green Lantern (vol. 5) Annual #3 (December 2014). DC Comics.
- ^ a b Dark Nights: Death Metal #5. DC Comics.
- ^ Johns, Geoff. DC Comics: Green Lantern: Blackest Night (11:06) Archived October 2, 2009, at the Wayback Machine. San Diego Comic Con 2009. San Diego Convention Center, San Diego CA. 25 July 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2009.
- ^ a b Johns, Geoff. DC Comics: Green Lantern: Blackest Night (29:30) Archived October 2, 2009, at the Wayback Machine. San Diego Comic Con 2009. San Diego Convention Center, San Diego CA. 25 July 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2009.
- ^ Johns, Geoff. DC Comics: Green Lantern: Blackest Night (31:34) Archived October 2, 2009, at the Wayback Machine. San Diego Comic Con 2009. San Diego Convention Center, San Diego CA. 25 July 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2009.
- ^ Johns, Geoff. DC Comics: Green Lantern: Blackest Night (42:31) Archived October 2, 2009, at the Wayback Machine. San Diego Comic Con 2009. San Diego Convention Center, San Diego CA. 25 July 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2009.
- ^ a b c Blackest Night #2 (October 2009). DC Comics.
- ^ a b Geoff Johns: Inside Blackest Night - Part Two, IGN, August 14, 2009
- ^ a b Blackest Night: Batman #1 (October 2009). DC Comics.
- ^ Johns, Geoff. DC Comics: Green Lantern: Blackest Night (38:55) Archived October 2, 2009, at the Wayback Machine. San Diego Comic Con 2009. San Diego Convention Center, San Diego CA. 25 July 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2009.
- ^ a b Blackest Night #4 (November 2009). DC Comics.
- ^ Adventure Comics (vol. 2) #0 (February 2009). DC Comics.
- ^ "Amon Sur". DC Comics. Archived from the original on 2013-01-02. Retrieved 2009-09-16.
- ^ "Pantha". DC Comics. Archived from the original on 2015-01-02. Retrieved 2009-12-23.
- ^ "Wildebeest". DC Comics. Archived from the original on 2013-01-02. Retrieved 2010-02-14.
- ^ Green Lantern Corps (vol. 2) #39 (October 2009). DC Comics.
- ^ Green Lantern - Emerald Warriors #1. DC Comics.
- ^ Untold Tales of Blackest Night (October 2010). DC Comics.
- ^ Green Lantern (vol. 4) #63. DC Comics.
- ^ Green Lantern (vol. 5) #6 (February 2012). DC Comics.
- ^ Green Lantern Annual #1 (August 2012). DC Comics.
- ^ Green Lantern (vol. 5) #16 (January 2013). DC Comics.
- ^ Green Lantern Corps (vol. 3) Annual #1 (January 2013). DC Comics.
- ^ Montgomery, Lauren (Director). Johns, Geoff (Commentator) (2009). Green Lantern: First Flight (Behind the Scenes of Blackest Night). [animated film/DVD]. Warner Home Video. Warner Bros Animation. DC Comics.
- ^ Green Lantern Corps (vol. 2) #41 (December 2009). DC Comics.
- ^ SDCC 09: Blackest Night Consumes Comic-Con, IGN, July 25, 2009
- ^ Blackest Night: Titans #3 (December 2009). DC Comics.
- ^ Blackest Night: Superman #1 (October 2009)
- ^ Blackest Night #7 (February 2010). DC Comics.
- ^ Green Lantern Corps (vol. 4) #46. DC Comics.
- ^ Blackest Night: Titans #2 (November 2009). DC Comics.
- ^ Blackest Night: Batman #3 (October 2009). DC Comics.
- ^ Superman/Batman #66 (November 2009). DC Comics.
- ^ Justice League of America (vol. 2) #40 (December 2009). DC Comics.
- ^ Outsiders (vol. 4) #25 (December 2009). DC Comics.
- ^ Blackest Night: Superman #3 (December 2009). DC Comics.
- ^ Blackest Night: Wonder Woman #1 (January 2010). DC Comics.
- ^ Teen Titans (vol. 3) #78 (February 2010). DC Comics.
- ^ Blackest Night #6 (February 2010). DC Comics.
- ^ Catwoman (vol. 3) #83 (January 2010). DC Comics.
- ^ The Phantom Stranger #42 (January 2010). DC Comics.
- ^ Justice League (vol. 3) #26. DC Comics.
- ^ Green Lantern: Futures End #1. DC Comics.
- ^ Sinestro: Futures End #1. DC Comics.
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