Salvation Run
Salvation Run | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
Schedule | Monthly |
Format | Limited series |
Genre | |
Publication date | November 2007 – June 2008 |
No. of issues | 7 |
Main character(s) | Joker Lex Luthor Rogues Vandal Savage DeSaad |
Creative team | |
Written by | Bill Willingham Lilah Sturges |
Artist(s) | Sean Chen Walden Wong Joe Bennett Belardino Brabo |
Collected editions | |
Salvation Run | ISBN 1-4012-1930-6 |
Salvation Run is a seven-issue 2007-2008 DC Comics limited series which was designed to tie into the company's major event series Final Crisis in 2008.[1]
Premise
[edit]The series, which is based on a pitch from George R. R. Martin, follows a world where various supervillains are captured by the Suicide Squad and imprisoned on a distant planet. The story features the villains splitting into alliances and either attempting to escape the planet, known as "Salvation", or choosing to rule over it. Bill Willingham started as writer, but had to hand the project over to Lilah Sturges after only three issues due to illness.[2] The first issue was released in November 2007.
Major characters in Salvation Run include Lex Luthor, the Joker, the Rogues (Heat Wave, Captain Cold, Weather Wizard, Abra Kadabra and Mirror Master), and other morally ambiguous heroes such as Scandal Savage and Catwoman. Tie-ins to the series were released in Countdown to Final Crisis, Outsiders, Checkmate, Catwoman, and Justice League of America.
A compiled paperback version of Salvation Run was released on September 24, 2008.
Plot
[edit]Lead-up
[edit]Following Black Adam's rampage in World War III, the Amazonian attack on the United States, the murder of the Flash (Bart Allen), and the Injustice League's attack upon the wedding of Green Arrow and Black Canary, a government-sponsored secret program is put in place to combat the growing metahuman threat. Initiated by the President and executed by Amanda Waller and the Suicide Squad, the purpose of the program is to capture the supervillains of the world and exile them to the distant planet Salvation via Boom Tube—including several Suicide Squad members once they are no longer needed (examples being Bane and Deadshot). According to Rick Flag, the prisoners would not be getting any supplies or equipment for their survival, as that would make the government responsible for them, and once they're offworld, they are no longer Earth's responsibility.[3] The planet chosen was Cygnus 4019, a planet that was supposed to be peaceful.[4] However, it turned out to be a "training planet" for the New Gods of Apokolips, overseen by DeSaad.[3][4]
One tie-in issue contradicted this information; the Justice League of America visited Cygnus 4019 to investigate, only to find the planet deserted—the villains had been diverted by Boom Tube to a different planet.[5]
Main plot
[edit]Having arrived on the planet first, the Rogues (Abra Kadabra, Captain Cold, Heat Wave, Mirror Master, and Weather Wizard) are the first to find out that the planet is seemingly designed to kill any visitors. The planet is inhabited by numerous hazardous species which constantly attack. Kadabra deciphers the language of the local pygmies and learns of the "Safe Zone", a "miles long district where all of the dangers have been disarmed by gods from the stars". During their journey, they hear a second Boom Tube arrive and decide to go back. Out of the Boom Tubes come Black Spider, Cheetah III, Clayface I, Effigy, Girder, Hammer and Sickle, a Hyena, Joker, Kid Karnevil, Killer Croc, Killer Frost II, Mammoth, Mr. Freeze, Mister Terrible, Phobia, Psimon, Rock, Shimmer, Shrapnel, Sonar II, Tapeworm, and Tremor of the Superior Five. For a short time, they attempt to assert their leadership over the second group by virtue of their experience.[3]
The Body Doubles, Hellhound, Iron Cross, Manticore, Meanstreak, Metallo, Rag Doll, Skorpio, and Tar Pit battle wild robotic beasts, during which Hellhound is wounded. Despite their plans to leave him to die, the other villains bring Hellhound along, only to feed him to a hunting party of "lion-lizards". Back at camp, Kid Karnevil tells the Joker that he has looked up to him and plans to surpass him by slaying him when he least suspects it. Psimon loudly orates to the entire group that he has figured out a way for them to survive as a society, and even build a civilization that will last many generations, requiring that the women be used as baby factories, and that escape from the planet be given up as an option. This is met with loud disdain from many others, especially the women. Joker then unexpectedly walks up to Psimon and kills him by violently bashing his head in with a rock. At Belle Reve, the Suicide Squad is about to deport Lex Luthor, Blockbuster, and Catwoman. Rick Flag Jr. closes the Boom Tube with Bane, Chemo, and Deadshot inside and tells the two that they are no longer needed on the Suicide Squad. After Flag states that he's too unstable to remain, Deadshot vows to somehow return to Earth and kill Rick Flag Jr. Once on the planet, Luthor immediately commands the attention of the entire supervillain body, saying that he intends to lead them. He makes a speech about Truth, Justice and the American Way, and explains how they have to build their own Boom Tube if they want to get back, at which time they can murder all of those who sent them to the planet. Although at first some villains jeer him, by the end they are all riled up and cheering for his plans.[6]
The villains are already fighting heavily amongst themselves, with few mediators. Lex Luthor announces to the group that he, Doctor Sivana, Professor Ivo and General Immortus have devised a way to get them off the rock. As he is orating, the Joker voices his distrust for Luthor as a leader, annoyed that he expects everybody else to listen when he has not told them his plan. Joker questions why they should accept any authority there, when they did not accept it back on Earth. While they are arguing, a kraken-like monster attacks the camp, and Joker and Gorilla Grodd use Chemo to destroy it. Joker proclaims himself to be a humble hero of the people and further denounces Luthor, likening him to aristocracy. A bigger fight starts to break out in the camp between those who are working and those who are not, which escalates until Iron Cross threatens the Joker. Joker shoots him in the head, killing him, and announces that he and Grodd are having a mutiny. Soon, those loyal to Luthor and those who prefer Joker have a massive battle, razing most of the camp in the process. Deciding it is getting out of hand, Gorilla Grodd uses his telepathic powers to calm everybody down, and he and the Joker leave the camp to make it on their own elsewhere with all those loyal to them. They take a sizable portion of the camp with them. As they are leaving, Sivana angrily complains to Lex Luthor about their situation. Luthor explains that knowing there would be a mutiny, he had asked Iron Cross to threaten Joker. His plan, which he believes was successful, was to simultaneously get rid of all of the worthless members of the camp who would sit around and squander resources, and create a common enemy as a motivational tool that those remaining loyal to him would have to fight against. After the chaos, Blockbuster leaves the camp for an empty clearing in the middle of the woods and reverts into Martian Manhunter. He reveals he has been sent to observe the villains and is reporting to an unknown party on a communicator.[7]
Catwoman spies on Martian Manhunter in the woods, learning his secrets. Martian Manhunter is revealed to be reporting back to Batman with his communicator, although he does not know if Batman can pick up the signal from that far away. Lex Luthor is still having to soothe tensions in his camp, this time between the Body Doubles, Bane, and Deadshot. His camp distrusts them because of the role they played in the Salvation deportation, but to show he trusts them, Lex Luthor hires Deadshot and Bane as security, offering them one million dollars when they return to Earth. Tensions are even higher in Joker's camp as Joker is proving to be an irresponsible and ineffective, if fearsome, leader. He is attacked by Bolt, angry at the lack of food their camp has, but the minor insurrection is stopped by Kid Karnevil. Brain and Monsieur Mallah arrive at Joker's camp, and Mallah asks Grodd to speak with him away from the others. Mallah proposes to Grodd that as fellow gorillas, the natural kings of the jungle, they should team up, since surely through their combined might they would be able to rule the entire place by themselves. Grodd laughs at Mallah for considering himself, an "absurd science experiment", comparable to "a proud child of Gorilla City". Mallah strikes Grodd and calls him a beast, causing Grodd to fly into a rage and kill him and Brain. Afterwards, on a separate part of the planet, Vandal Savage and four other ladies are walking through the wilderness alone. Vandal explains why he believes the respective camps of Luthor and Joker will both fail and collapse in on themselves, and then shows the ladies he has brought them to the rumored "Safe Zone", a beautiful-looking paradise, as they reach the top of a hill.[8]
Joker leads his group on a night-time raid on "Camp Luthor" in search of supplies. During the raid, Catwoman is discovered sneaking around in trees, bringing suspicion upon herself as a "good guy" spy. To prove her innocence and shift the heat, she outs "Blockbuster" as Martian Manhunter, having seen him change earlier. This results in the rest of the villains quickly turning their attention to him and bringing him down. Upon the discovery of the villains on this planet, Desaad gives an order to transport Parademons to the planet believing that combat with the villains inhabiting the planet will produce "...the finest crop of Parademons to emerge in decades! Well...the few that survive, that is."[4]
One week later, Heat Wave is shown holding Martian Manhunter in a fiery cage. Captain Cold, Hyena, and Killer Croc talk about what to do with Martian Manhunter. When Killer Croc suggests eating him, Captain Cold and Heat Wave object to this. Lex Luthor tells them not to lay a finger on the Manhunter. Later, Thunder and Lightning arrive to give food to Martian Manhunter. When they offer to help Martian Manhunter, Bane attacks. Despite being shocked by Lightning, Bane defeats both of them as Lex Luthor arrives. As tensions heat up, the Joker begins to argue with and satirize Lex Luthor's leadership, leading them into a heated conflict. After Luthor severely berates and provokes the Joker who backhand slaps him across the face. In Vandal Savage's camp, tensions grow between Savage and the four ladies he has brought with him, each of whom he has promised a position of royalty in his proposed new utopian kingdom as his queen. The ladies, while growing disgruntled, appear to be unaware of the promises he's made to the others. Back in the main camp, Luthor and the Joker prepare to finally have a fistfight between them, an all-out brawl to determine which one will retain supremacy. The fight is long and bloody, and although Luthor arguably gets in more hits, the Joker finally wins due to his bizarre complete tolerance for pain. As the fight ends, it is revealed that while all of the border guards had been watching the melee, not only have an alarming number of the planet's robot protectors resurfaced, but there is also a gigantic invasion of incoming Parademons. Upon their attack, a Parademon kills Hyena.[9]
As the Parademon attack continues, one of them stabs Brutale. The villains defeat the Parademons, but Lex Luthor correctly surmises this to be just the first wave. Catwoman informs Lex Luthor about Vandal Savage's camp and leads them to it. Luthor convinces Vandal to help complete the teleportation device and return them all home. Gorilla Grodd rejoins the group and attempts to murder Joker for his attempt to kill him. They are interrupted by another Parademon patrol who are quickly defeated after some of them do away with General Immortus and Solomon Grundy. With the machine finished, the villains return to Earth. Luthor leaves last, revealing that he used Heatmonger (of the Aryan Brigade), Thunder and Lightning, Plasmus, Neutron, and Warp to power it. Upon his departure, the teleporter explodes, killing the Parademons. The story closes with Captain Cold narrating the mentality of the villains, and of how they are willing to do what it takes to survive.[10]
Inmates
[edit]Villains placed on the planet include:
Casualties
[edit]- Hellhound - Fed to "lion-lizard" creatures by the Body Doubles.[6]
- Psimon - Bludgeoned to death by a rock used by the Joker.[6]
- Iron Cross (of the Aryan Brigade) - Shot by the Joker.[7]
- Brain and Monsieur Mallah - Beaten to death by Grodd.[8]
- Metallo - Burned through by Martian Manhunter's eye blasts.[4] Suffers the blue screen of death.[12]
- Hyena - Shot in the head by a Parademon.[9]
- Brutale - Stabbed by a Parademon.[10]
- General Immortus - Killed in the Parademons' second attack.[10]
- Neutron - Presumably killed when Luthor's teleporter self-destructed.[10]
- Plasmus - Presumably killed when Luthor's teleporter self-destructed.[10]
- Heatmonger (of the Aryan Brigade) - Presumably killed when Luthor's teleporter self-destructed.[10]
- Thunder and Lightning - Presumably killed when Luthor's teleporter self-destructed.[10]
- Warp - Presumably killed when Luthor's teleporter self-destructed.[10]
Solomon Grundy is also killed in Salvation Run #7, but eventually resurrects.[10]
Aftermath
[edit]In Justice League of America #21, it is revealed that Martian Manhunter was still imprisoned in his flame cage when the villains left the planet. Libra later frees him at the behest of the Human Flame.
Metallo, Brutale, and General Immortus, who were killed during Salvation Run, later resurface.
Collected editions
[edit]The series has been collected into a trade paperback:
- Salvation Run (192 pages, September 2008, ISBN 1-4012-1930-6,[13] Titan Books, November 2008, ISBN 1-84576-981-3)
References
[edit]- ^ Cowsill, Alan; Irvine, Alex; Manning, Matthew K.; McAvennie, Michael; Wallace, Daniel (2019). DC Comics Year By Year: A Visual Chronicle. DK Publishing. p. 316. ISBN 978-1-4654-8578-6.
- ^ EXCLUSIVE: Willingham Explains "Salvation Run" Departure, Comic Book Resources, January 28, 2008
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad Salvation Run #1 (January 2008). DC Comics.
- ^ a b c d e Sturges, Matthew. Salvation Run, no. 5. New York: DC Comics, 2008
- ^ Justice League of America #19 (May 2008). DC Comics.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Salvation Run #2 (February 2008). DC COmics.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Salvation Run #3 (March 2008). DC Comics.
- ^ a b c d Salvation Run #4 (April 2008). DC Comics.
- ^ a b c Salvation Run #6 (June 2008). DC Comics.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Salvation Run #7 (July 2008). DC Comics.
- ^ a b Checkmate (vol. 2) #19 (December 2007)
- ^ "Blog of writer Matthew Sturges". Matthewsturges.com. Archived from the original on 2012-03-02. Retrieved 2011-02-04.
- ^ Salvation Run at DC
External links
[edit]- Review of Salvation Run #1, 1, 3, 5 and 6, Comics Bulletin
- Review of Salvation Run #5, Comic Book Resources
- Salvation Run at the Grand Comics Database
- Salvation Run at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)