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Manhattan Guardian

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The Manhattan Guardian
The Manhattan Guardian by Cameron Stewart.
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceSeven Soldiers: Guardian #1 (May 2005)
Created byGrant Morrison
Cameron Stewart
In-story information
Alter egoJake Jordan
Team affiliationsSeven Soldiers of Victory
Newsboy Army
Justice League
AbilitiesSkilled hand to hand combatant
Excellent physical condition
Carries a golden helmet and shield

The Manhattan Guardian is a DC Comics costumed hero. Created by Grant Morrison and Cameron Stewart and based on the character The Guardian, he first appeared in Seven Soldiers: Guardian #1 (2005), part of the Seven Soldiers of Victory "megaseries".[1]

Publication history

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The character originally appeared in the Manhattan Guardian mini-series.[2] The inspiration came from the British newspaper The Guardian which gave Morrison the idea for a tabloid-sponsored superhero, translated to America.[3]

The Manhattan Guardian series is set in "Cinderella City" (to separate it from the ugly sisters Metropolis and Gotham) which is New York City but with unrealised architectural projects including an idea for the Hotel Attraction proposed by Paul Laffoley, Hans Hollein's "Rolls-Royce Building" concept for 28 Liberty Street, Robert Moses' Mid-Manhattan Expressway and Frank Lloyd Wright's "Ellis Island Key". The original idea came from Paul Laffoley's suggestion to reference Gaudi's architecture for inspiration in rebuilding Ground Zero. Morrison said: "I want it to be a more exalted New York, where things that were dreamed of were finally brought into reality".[3]

The character later made cameos in Infinite Crisis and 52.

Fictional character biography

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Seven Soldiers

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Jake Jordan was an unemployed and disgraced former police officer, who left the force after killing a young boy he misidentified as the murderer of his partner. On the suggestion of his fiancee's father Larry, Jake applied for a mysterious job at the Manhattan Guardian tabloid newspaper. After facing several trials disguised as a terrorist attack, including fighting a Golem, Jordan was confronted by the paper's owner, Ed Stargard. Impressed with his conduct, Ed offered Jake the job: to be the newspaper's very own Superhero/Reporter. During his meeting with Jake, Ed notes that he had bought the rights to the Guardian name from Project Cadmus, who had sponsored the original.

Shortly afterwards, Jake's fiancee Carla was kidnapped by subway pirates, and her rescue becomes his first mission. He is assisted by the newspaper's delivery boys, who have developed an information network. The pirates are rampaging through New York's underground in an effort to find a tattoo-based map. During the battle, Carla's father is killed. Shortly after the battle, Carla breaks up with Jake. Later, the Guardian faces down killer robots modeled after the world's ethnic groups. Fed up with how his new job has changed his life, Jake storms Ed's office, intent on quitting, only to find Ed is an elderly man who never physically developed beyond babyhood. Ed explains that he used to be a member of a group called the Newsboy Army known as Baby Brain. The group had a deadly and maddening encounter with the evil faerie-folk, the Sheeda, who are now storming the Guardian building, intent on finishing the former Newsboy off. Not content to leave Ed to die, the Guardian, Baby Brain, and his secretary set off to find Carla and fight the Sheeda.

With the assistance of other heroes, such as Mr. Miracle and the new Bullet-Woman, the Sheeda are defeated, and Jake and Carla are tearfully reunited, making up in the process, shown in a headline proclaiming "HERO GETS GIRL!".

Infinite Crisis

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Following Seven Soldiers of Victory, Jake Jordan has been seen valiantly fighting Doomsday in the Villains United Infinite Crisis Special. He is seen in the related seven-part limited series, Infinite Crisis. Jake, along with many other superpeople, attend a mass for fallen and missing superheroes. He is one of the hundreds of defenders in the "Battle for Metropolis", protecting the city from a climactic attack from dozens of members of the "Secret Society of Supervillains".[4]

52 and beyond

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Jake's association with the heroes does not end there. Jake is seen attending the memorial service for Superboy, despite having only become the Manhattan Guardian a short time prior to his death. In week 50 of the 52 maxi-series, Jake is one of the dozens of heroes called to the border of China to battle Black Adam.[5]

Superman writer James Robinson expressed a desire to have Jake team up with the original Guardian at some point in the near future.[6]

After Eclipso destroys the moon during a battle with the Justice League, Jake is seen helping evacuate citizens from Manhattan as the city descends into chaos. The moon is repaired with effort by many of Earth's magic-based heroes.[7]

Jake teams up with Supergirl to combat a virus-based attack on the citizens of Metropolis.[8]

Powers and abilities

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The Manhattan Guardian has no superpowers but is a skilled hand-to-hand combatant in excellent physical condition, having been trained in the police force. Like the original Guardian, he wears a golden helmet and carries a golden shield as a weapon.

Other versions

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Earth-23

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Manhattan Guardian appeared as a member of the Justice League of Earth-23.[9] He is later seen again as the League examines a robotic alien threat.[10]

Notes

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  1. ^ Greenberger, Robert (2008), "Guardian", in Dougall, Alastair (ed.), The DC Comics Encyclopedia, New York: Dorling Kindersley, p. 150, ISBN 978-0-7566-4119-1, OCLC 213309017
  2. ^ Cowsill, Alan; Irvine, Alex; Manning, Matthew K.; McAvennie, Michael; Wallace, Daniel (2019). DC Comics Year By Year: A Visual Chronicle. DK Publishing. p. 303. ISBN 978-1-4654-8578-6.
  3. ^ a b It's a Bird! It's a Plane! It's Architecture!. The New York Times, July 31, 2005
  4. ^ Infinite Crisis #7
  5. ^ World War III #4
  6. ^ "Newsarama | GamesRadar+".
  7. ^ Justice League of America (vol. 2) #57 (July 2011)
  8. ^ Batman: Devastator (October 2017)
  9. ^ Action Comics #9 (May 2012)
  10. ^ The Multiversity #1 (2014)

References

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