Thinker (DC Comics)
The Thinker is the name of five supervillains appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.
The first incarnation, Clifford DeVoe, is an enemy of Jay Garrick. The second, Clifford Carmichael, is an enemy of Firestorm. The third, Desmond Carter, is an enemy of Batman. The fourth, an A.I. version of the Thinker, is an enemy of the Justice Society of America. An unidentified incarnation of Thinker, introduced in the New 52, is an enemy of the Suicide Squad.
The character has been adapted from the comics into various forms of media, including television series and feature films. The Clifford DeVoe incarnation of the Thinker made his live-action debut in the television series The Flash, portrayed primarily by Neil Sandilands. In the DC Extended Universe, a variation of the unidentified Thinker called Gaius Grieves appears in The Suicide Squad (2021), portrayed by Peter Capaldi.
Publication history
[edit]The Clifford DeVoe incarnation of Thinker first appeared in All-Flash #12 (Fall 1943) and was created by Gardner Fox and Everett E. Hibbard.[1]
In October 1947, the Thinker was one of the six original members of the Injustice Society, who began battling the Justice Society of America in All Star Comics #37 (Oct 1947).[2]
The Cliff Carmichael incarnation of Thinker first appeared in Firestorm #1 (1978) and was created by Gerry Conway and Al Milgrom.[3]
Conway recounted, "My original notion on Firestorm was to do a book that would be DC's complement to Spider-Man, in a sense. We would have a young adolescent male who gets superpowers and doesn't know quite what to do with them. My flip on it was that rather than being the science geek who was being picked upon by the jock, my hero would actually be the jock who was picked on by the geek, and that was going to be Cliff Carmichael's role."[3]
In The Fury of Firestorm the Nuclear Man #50, the strap on Ronnie Raymond's football helmet is cut, and in the following issues the cast members come to suspect Carmichael of the crime. Though Conway later said that he must have intended to ultimately reveal someone else as the culprit (commenting "Cliff was a jackass, but he wasn't a bloodthirsty maniac"), John Ostrander took over as the series' writer and had Carmichael confess to cutting the strap.[3] In Firestorm, the Nuclear Man #99, Carmichael was transformed into the Thinker as part of the genre-wide trend in which civilian cast members were almost eliminated from superhero comics.[3]
Fictional character biography
[edit]Clifford DeVoe
[edit]Thinker | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
First appearance | All-Flash #12 (September 1943) |
Created by | Gardner Fox Everett E. Hibbard |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Clifford DeVoe |
Species | Human Cyborg |
Team affiliations | Injustice Society Suicide Squad |
Abilities | Technologically derived telekinesis and mind control |
Clifford DeVoe is a failed lawyer who bitterly ended his career in 1933. Realizing that many of the criminals he encounter have the skills but not the brains to rule Gotham City's underworld, he starts a new career as the brain behind small-time villains. As the Thinker, DeVoe becomes an enemy of the original Flash, Jay Garrick, and wields the "Thinking Cap", a metal hat that can project mental force.[4] Furthermore, he joins the Injustice Society and spends decades in suspended animation, enabling him to survive into the modern day.[5]
DeVoe later joins Task Force X in exchange for a full pardon.[6] However, he dies from cancer caused by prolonged exposure to his Cap.[7]
In the "DC Rebirth" continuity, DeVoe is a former district attorney.[8]
Cliff Carmichael
[edit]Thinker | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
First appearance | As Cliff Carmichael: Firestorm #1 (March 1978) As the Thinker: Firestorm (vol. 2) #99 (July 1990) |
Created by | Gerry Conway Al Milgrom |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Cliff Carmichael |
Species | Human Cyborg |
Team affiliations | Suicide Squad Secret Society of Super Villains |
Abilities | Technologically derived telekinesis and mind control |
Clifford Carmichael is an intellectual bully and the rival of Ronnie Raymond (one half of Firestorm).[a] After damaging his cousin Hugo Hammer's football helmet, leading him to be injured and paralyzed during a game, Cliff is guilt-ridden.
Cliff is admitted into a mental institution and used as a test subject for the original Thinker's Thinking Cap. After implanting microchip versions of the helmet into his brain, Cliff becomes a cyborg metahuman and joins the Suicide Squad.[9][10] He battles the second Firestorm, Jason Rusch, who renders him comatose.[11]
In Infinite Crisis, Cliff joins Alexander Luthor Jr.'s Secret Society of Super Villains. He is killed by King Faraday in Suicide Squad (vol. 3), but resurrected in The New 52 continuity reboot.[12]
Des Connor
[edit]Thinker | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
First appearance | Batman: Shadow of the Bat #67 (October 1997) |
Created by | Alan Grant Norm Breyfogle |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Desmond Connor |
Species | Human Cyborg |
Abilities |
|
The fourth Thinker is Des Connor, an enemy of Batman who can amplify the fears of others. He hypnotizes civilians into committing heists before being defeated by Batman, who is immune to his powers.[13]
Artificial intelligence
[edit]Thinker | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
First appearance | JSA #9 (April 2000) |
Created by | David S. Goyer Geoff Johns Stephen Sadowski |
In-story information | |
Species | Artificial intelligence |
Team affiliations | Injustice Society Secret Society of Super Villains Checkmate Legion of Zoom |
Notable aliases | White King's Bishop |
Abilities | Binary intelligence capable of integrating into and controlling computerized and electronics systems |
The fourth Thinker is a rogue artificial intelligence based on Clifford DeVoe's consciousness and created by Mister Terrific. As the new Thinker, it joins Johnny Sorrow's modern Injustice Society, provides the villains with information about the JSA members, and turns the heroes' own HQ against them. He is defeated by the second Star-Spangled Kid and disappears into cyberspace.[14]
The Thinker A.I. later joins Alexander Luthor Jr.'s Secret Society of Super Villains and the Legion of Zoom and becomes the White King of Checkmate.[15]
Unnamed Thinker
[edit]Thinker | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
First appearance | Suicide Squad (vol. 4) #24 (December 2013) |
Created by | Matt Kindt Patrick Zircher |
In-story information | |
Species | Human Cyborg |
Team affiliations | Secret Society of Super Villains |
Abilities | Superintelligence |
An unidentified Thinker is introduced in Forever Evil. Due to his powers gradually degrading his body, he takes over the body of OMAC before escaping Belle Reve.[16]
Other versions
[edit]- The body of an unidentified alternate universe variant of the Thinker appears in JLA: The Nail #2. He was killed by a brainwashed Metamorpho on the orders of a mutated Jimmy Olsen, who sought to isolate Earth from the galaxy while he recreates Krypton.[17]
- An unidentified alternate timeline variant of the Thinker appears in Flashpoint: Legion of Doom #3 as an inmate of Doom prison.[18]
In other media
[edit]Television
[edit]- The Clifford DeVoe incarnation of the Thinker makes non-speaking cameo appearances in Justice League Unlimited as a member of Gorilla Grodd's Secret Society and the Flash's Rogues.
- The Clifford DeVoe incarnation of the Thinker makes a non-speaking cameo appearance in the Batman: The Brave and the Bold episode "Sword of the Atom!".
- The Clifford DeVoe incarnation of the Thinker appears in the fourth season of The Flash, portrayed primarily by Neil Sandilands,[19][20] with Kendrick Sampson (Dominic Lanse / Brainstorm),[21] Sugar Lyn Beard (Becky Sharpe / Hazard),[22] Miranda MacDougall (Izzy Bowin / Fiddler), Arturo Del Puerto (Edwin Gauss / Folded Man), and Hartley Sawyer (Ralph Dibny / Elongated Man) also portraying the character in different host bodies. This version is a South African university professor who, with help from his engineer wife Marlize DeVoe, developed the "Thinking Cap" to increase his intelligence, only to become a metahuman with gifted intelligence and an advanced form of ALS. In an attempt to cure himself and remove technology from the world, Clifford became a wheelchair-bound cyborg and tricked the Flash into helping him create 12 metahumans so he can steal their powers, give himself a new body, and counter the Flash and his allies. While the speedster eventually succeeds in foiling Clifford's plans, the latter's "Enlightenment" satellite would go on to create more new metahumans and meta-technology that empowered individuals such as Cicada.
- The Clifford DeVoe incarnation of the Thinker, based on his Golden Age counterpart, makes a non-speaking cameo appearance in a photograph depicted in the Stargirl episode "Summer School: Chapter One".
- An unidentified incarnation of the Thinker, based on Gaius Grieves(see below), appears in Suicide Squad Isekai, voiced by Hōchū Ōtsuka in Japanese and Jay Hickman in English.[23] This version is a rogue member of the Suicide Squad who, like the Clifford DeVoe incarnation, possesses the Thinking Cap. After escaping to another world, he joins forces with fellow rogue squad-mates the Enchantress, the Ratcatcher, and Killer Croc as well as the Joker disguised as Katana to serve the Undead King and brainwash a population of elves, only to be defeated by Harley Quinn and decapitated by the Joker, who steals his head and Thinking Cap to spread chaos.
Film
[edit]The Thinker, based on the unidentified incarnation, appears in The Suicide Squad, portrayed by Peter Capaldi. This version is Dr. Gaius Grieves, a sociopathic, Scottish metahuman geneticist who was employed by Corto Maltese's dictatorship and the U.S. government for the secretive "Project Starfish". Over the course of 30 years, he studied and experimented on the alien Starro using enemies of the Corto Maltesean government within the local Nazi-era research facility Jötunheim.[24][25] After an anti-American dictatorship takes over the Corto Maltesean government and kill his scientific staff with the intention of weaponizing Starro in the present, Grieves sides with them to save himself, claiming that only he can control the creature. However, he is captured by the Suicide Squad, whom Amanda Waller sent to destroy Project Starfish and bury its U.S. ties, and forced to help them infiltrate Jötunheim until they accidentally release Starro, who kills Grieves in retaliation for experimenting on it.
Notes
[edit]- ^ As revealed in Firestorm the Nuclear Man #53 (November 1986). DC Comics.
References
[edit]- ^ Cowsill, Alan; Irvine, Alex; Korte, Steve; Manning, Matt; Wiacek, Win; Wilson, Sven (2016). The DC Comics Encyclopedia: The Definitive Guide to the Characters of the DC Universe. DK Publishing. p. 308. ISBN 978-1-4654-5357-0.
- ^ Cowsill, Alan; Irvine, Alex; Manning, Matthew K.; McAvennie, Michael; Wallace, Daniel (2019). DC Comics Year By Year: A Visual Chronicle. DK Publishing. p. 52. ISBN 978-1-4654-8578-6.
- ^ a b c d Wells, John (September 2016). "Bullies and Blowhards of the DC Bronze Age". Back Issue! (#91). Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing: 26–27.
- ^ Rovin, Jeff (1987). The Encyclopedia of Supervillains. New York: Facts on File. p. 343. ISBN 0-8160-1356-X.
- ^ Waid, Mark. "Chapter 7 Stolen Thunder". The Life Story Of The Flash by Iris Allen. DC Comics.
- ^ Doom Patrol and the Suicide Squad Special #1. DC Comics.
- ^ The Flash (vol. 2) #134 (February 1998). DC Comics.
- ^ The Flash #750. DC Comics.
- ^ Suicide Squad #48. DC Comics.
- ^ Suicide Squad #61. DC Comics.
- ^ Firestorm (vol. 3) #11 (May 2005). DC Comics.
- ^
- Suicide Squad (vol. 3) #1. DC Comics.
- Suicide Squad (vol. 3) #7. DC Comics.
- The Fury of Firestorm: The Nuclear Men #1 (November 2011). DC Comics.
- ^ Batman: Shadow of the Bat #66. DC Comics.
- ^ JSA #17. DC Comics.
- ^
- The Flash (vol. 2) #187. DC Comics.
- JSA Classified #5. DC Comics.
- Checkmate (vol. 2) #9. DC Comics.
- Checkmate (vol. 2) #13. DC Comics.
- The Flash #760. DC Comics.
- ^ Suicide Squad (vol. 4) #24 - #29. DC Comics.
- ^ Justice League: the Nail #2. DC Comics.
- ^ Flashpoint: Legion of Doom #3 (August 2011). DC Comics.
- ^ "'The Flash': Tom Felton Not Returning as Series Regular". EW. 25 July 2017. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
- ^ "'The Flash' premiere recap: Team Flash is back, baby!". EW.com.
- ^ Venable, Nick (19 January 2018). "How The Flash Could Use The Cerebral Inhibitor To Defeat The Thinker". Cinemablend.com. Retrieved 2018-08-29.
- ^ Anderson, Jenna (2018-01-30). "'The Flash' Plans an Unlikely Escape in "True Colors" Preview". Comicbook.com. Retrieved 2018-08-29.
- ^ Pineda, Rafael Antonio (June 21, 2024). "Suicide Squad Isekai Anime Unveils More Cast, Opening Sequence". Anime News Network. Retrieved June 21, 2024.
- ^ Vary, Adam B (August 22, 2020). "'The Suicide Squad' First Look, Full Cast Revealed by Director James Gunn at DC FanDome". Variety.
- ^ Gunn, James [@JamesGunn] (July 4, 2021). "[In response to "Is it true the Thinker's real name is Gaius Grieves?"] Yes" (Tweet). Archived from the original on July 5, 2021. Retrieved July 4, 2021 – via Twitter.
External links
[edit]- The Flash TV Show season 4 Archived 2017-12-01 at the Wayback Machine
- Characters created by Alan Grant (writer)
- Characters created by Al Milgrom
- Characters created by David S. Goyer
- Characters created by Gardner Fox
- Characters created by Geoff Johns
- Characters created by Gerry Conway
- Comics characters introduced in 1943
- Comics characters introduced in 1978
- Comics characters introduced in 1997
- Comics characters introduced in 2000
- Comics characters introduced in 2013
- DC Comics cyborgs
- DC Comics male supervillains
- DC Comics psychics
- DC Comics supervillains
- DC Comics telekinetics
- DC Comics telepaths
- Earth-Two
- Fictional artificial intelligences
- Fictional district attorneys
- Fictional lawyers
- Fictional school bullies
- Flash (comics) characters
- Golden Age supervillains