Jericho (DC Comics)
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Jericho | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
First appearance | Tales of the Teen Titans #43 (June 1984) |
Created by | Marv Wolfman George Pérez |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Joseph William Wilson |
Species | Metahuman |
Team affiliations | Teen Titans Wildebeest Society Justice League Defiance Core Policy Group |
Abilities |
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Jericho (Joseph William Wilson) is a fictional character appearing in comic books published by DC Comics. The character was originally a superhero, the son of Deathstroke, and a member of the Teen Titans during The New Teen Titans period by Marv Wolfman and George Pérez. Since the early 1990s to the 2000s, Jericho has gone through periods of both sanity and insanity, making him into an enemy of the Titans until he was able to recover from his mental disorder. In DC Rebirth, the character would return to become a hero again while trying to help his father alongside her half-sister, Rose Wilson, in preventing him from falling into the wrong steps.
Joe Wilson going by the name "Kane Wolfman" appeared as a recurring character on the sixth and seventh seasons of The CW Arrowverse show Arrow, played by Liam Hall. He also appeared as a recurring character on the second season of the DC Universe series Titans, portrayed by Chella Man.
Publication history
[edit]Jericho first appeared in Tales of the Teen Titans #43 and was created by Marv Wolfman and George Pérez.[1]
Development
[edit]Jericho was created in the early 1980s, a few years after Marv Wolfman and George Pérez relaunched the Teen Titans series and turned it into a major hit for DC Comics. At the time, Wolfman and Pérez were interested in distancing the team from the Justice League, many of whose members had been mentors to the Titans. This meant introducing new characters such as the mystical Raven and the technological Cyborg, as well as changing some of the existing characters, such as having Dick Grayson trade in his identity as Robin in favor of becoming Nightwing. Jericho was part of this process of establishing the team as its own feature rather than, in Pérez' words, a "Justice Little League". Marv Wolfman had decided on the name, which he got from an unused story from the previous Titans series,[2] and with the idea of Jericho being the son of Deathstroke, but could not think of any other aspects of the character. Pérez worked out the design, powers, and personality of Jericho and also suggested making the character mute. He also insisted that Jericho's emotions be conveyed entirely through visuals, without the use of thought balloons. Pérez claims that Jericho is the first character which he created by himself.[3]
Fictional character biography
[edit]Childhood
[edit]Jericho is the second child of Slade Wilson (Deathstroke) and Adeline Kane. Jackal kidnaps Jericho in retaliation for Deathstroke killing an important colonel. Slade rescues Jericho, but one of his men slits his throat and renders him mute.
Slade and Adeline later divorce, with Adeline obtaining custody of Jericho and his older brother Grant. Jericho discovers that he is a metahuman who can possess others via eye contact and joins Adeline as a member of her espionage organization, Searchers Inc.
Titans
[edit]Sometime later (in a storyline called "The Judas Contract"), Adeline and Joseph discovered that Deathstroke had accepted a contract on the Teen Titans. Adeline and Joseph approached Dick Grayson to help him rescue the Titans, with Joseph adopting the identity of Jericho. The rescue mission was a success, and Jericho subsequently joined the team, but the Titans were initially wary of him because of his relationship to Deathstroke and the betrayal of Terra.
Jericho proved to be a sensitive and pure-hearted individual and was a loyal Titan for many years. Shortly after he joined the Titans, another new member, Kole, joined and Jericho immediately developed a bond with her. Jericho also developed a close and affectionate relationship with Raven, having possessed her once and learned about her demonic heritage. Jericho was the first Titan to understand Raven, bonding over their pasts with their fathers and finding comfort with one another.[4]
Turn to villainy and redemption
[edit]Later, Jericho is possessed by the souls of Azarath and killed by Deathstroke. He possesses Deathstroke before dying and lays dormant before resurfacing.[5][6][7] He is transferred to a new body, but is driven insane by the remnants of the personalities he had absorbed over the years and battles the Teen Titans on several occasions.[8] Vigilante gouges out Jericho's eyes to disable his possession abilities, traumatizing him and reawakening his original personality.[9] It is later revealed that Jericho regenerated his eyes.[10][11]
Jericho later possesses Deathstroke and attempts to kill him, but is stopped by DJ Molecule.[12][13] Arsenal and Jericho decide to form a new team of Titans to restore the legacy that Deathstroke damaged.[14]
The New 52
[edit]In The New 52 (a 2011 reboot of the DC Comics universe), two versions of Jericho were presented. Jericho is initially depicted as an antagonist in Rob Liefeld's Deathstroke vol. 2, but restored to his traditional heroic depiction in Deathstroke (vol. 3).[15]
DC Rebirth
[edit]Jericho later reappears after the DC Rebirth relaunch, once again mute and with his origin restored, though slightly modernized. This version of Jericho is also bisexual.[16]
Unlike his blissful childhood in the original comics, Jericho's family life was strained by the time he was a young teenager, as his father and mother were constantly fighting over his father's long absences due to his supposed government missions.[17]
As a young adult, Jericho works as an executive vice-president for a tech firm that his mother owns in Los Angeles, and is engaged to his interpreter Etienne. Etienne is later revealed to be a member of H.I.V.E. and is killed by Rose Wilson.[18][19][20]
Powers and abilities
[edit]Jericho can possess a person after making eye contact with them; his body turns insubstantial and enters the subject. While he is in possession, Jericho has access to all of that host's powers (physical, mental, and magical), and is also able to tap into their memories. Jericho's victim remains conscious and can express themselves vocally, but they are otherwise unable to control their body's actions while they are possessed by Jericho. If the person is unconscious or asleep upon possession, Jericho can use their voice to speak, albeit with their accent or any other speech impairments, and only using the words they know. Jericho sometimes uses the American manual alphabet letter "J" as his sign name to signal to his allies that he has taken possession of a person. Once the person's mind regains consciousness, they regain their awareness and ability to speak independently.
Despite his pacifistic nature and dislike for physical violence, he is also skilled in hand-to-hand combat and able to hold his own against his father, Deathstroke.
When possessed by the spirits of Azarath, Jericho had a powerful lion soul self and a healing ability.
Powers and abilities in The New 52
[edit]In The New 52, Jericho receives an array of psychic abilities aside from his possession powers, such as being able to telepathically control his brother Grant and his mother Adeline.[21]
Despite conflicting continuity between Deathstroke vol. 2 and 3, Jericho still retains his telepathy to read minds and control others. After being experimented upon, Jericho demonstrated even more powerful abilities to rupture other human beings apart with a psychic blast, much to his horror.[22] Although his telepathy can be blocked by others with mental powers, Jericho can read their aura to see if they hold malicious intents[23] and can also project an energy field to defend against attacks.[24]
Powers and abilities in DC Rebirth
[edit]In DC Rebirth, Jericho demonstrates the ability to separate his incorporeal, spiritual self from his physical body when he uses his powers to possess other people. Unlike his usual way of possessing others, Jericho describes this ability like a near field communication, being able to possess people within a certain distance from him, and the person he is possessing speaks using his voice, not theirs. In addition, his physical body is dormant and immobile, leaving it vulnerable to attacks if no one is there to protect it.[25]
Other versions
[edit]- An alternate universe variant of Jericho appears in Tiny Titans.
- An alternate universe variant of Jericho appears in Teen Titans: Earth One. This version was manipulated and brainwashed by Elinore Stone of S.T.A.R. Labs into spying and fighting against his fellow "Project Titans" members.[26]
In other media
[edit]Television
[edit]- Jericho appears in Teen Titans.[27] This version is an honorary member of the eponymous team unconnected to Slade whose green eye color extends to whomever he is possessing.
- Joe Wilson appears in media set in the Arrowverse, portrayed by Liam Hall as an adult and William Franklyn-Miller as a child.[28]
- Primarily appearing in Arrow, this version has a more violent personality, plays a villainous role akin to his brother Grant Wilson, is the god-son of Billy Wintergreen, and is not mute. In flashbacks depicted in the sixth season, Joe followed in Wintergreen his father Slade Wilson's footsteps and joined the Australian Secret Intelligence Service (ASIS). After Slade returned from a mission on Lian Yu, he and Joe worked with each other for some time until Slade massacred their comrades in a Mirakuru serum-induced frenzy and left to seek revenge on Oliver Queen. Following this, Joe became a criminal and traveled to Kasnia, where he rejected his birth name, took the alias Kane Wolfman, was taken prisoner by the local government, and joined a criminal organization called the Jackals, eventually becoming their leader. In the present, a cured Slade and Queen travel to Kasnia to find Joe, believing he is still imprisoned before discovering what happened afterward. Joe attempts to force Slade to kill Queen, but his father refuses and fights him and the Jackals instead. While escaping, Joe reveals Slade has another son named Grant and that their mother kept him secret from Slade. In the seventh season, Joe assumes Slade's Deathstroke suit, travels to Star City, and fights A.R.G.U.S. agents until he is apprehended by Oliver, the Flash, and Supergirl.[29] After being taken into A.R.G.U.S.'s custody, Joe is later recruited into the "Ghost Initiative".
- Joe makes a cameo appearance in the crossover "Elseworlds" as a Central City Police Department police officer in an altered reality created by John Deegan.[30]
- Jericho appears in Titans, portrayed by Chella Man.[31][32] This version is the oldest child of Deathstroke who was rendered mute after enemies of Deathstroke's threatened Jericho to reach him, after which Jericho's overprotective mother Adeline took him and left Deathstroke. Five years prior, despite living away from his father and being unaware of his mercenary work, Jericho admired him. Seeking to exploit this, Deathstroke's enemy Dick Grayson befriends Jericho, invited him to join the Titans, and revealed the truth about his father. Uncertain about this, Jericho locates his father in the hopes of learning his side of the story, only to get caught in a fight between Deathstroke and Grayson, during which Jericho sacrificed himself to save the latter. While his body died, Jericho's spirit became trapped in Deathstroke's body for the next four years until his sister Rose Wilson grievously injures Deathstroke, causing Jericho's spirit to jump to her body.[33]
Film
[edit]- Jericho makes a non-speaking appearance in Teen Titans: The Judas Contract as a test subject of Brother Blood, who developed a machine capable of granting people superpowers. Once the experiment is finished, Mother Mayhem seemingly kills Jericho, though he turns up alive in the post-credits scene.[34]
- Jericho appears in Deathstroke: Knights & Dragons: The Movie, voiced by Griffin Puatu as a teenager and Asher Bishop as a child.[35] Seeking revenge on his absentee father Slade Wilson, a conflicted Jericho joins his sister Rose Wilson and H.I.V.E. to take over the world before reconciling with his parents.
Video games
[edit]- Jericho appears in DC Universe Online as part of the "Teen Titans: The Judas Contract" DLC. This version is an associate of the Teen Titans.[36]
- Jericho appears as a character summon in Scribblenauts Unmasked: A DC Comics Adventure.[37]
- Jericho appears as a playable character in DC Legends.[38]
Miscellaneous
[edit]- Jericho appears in Teen Titans Go!.[39]
- The Arrow incarnation of Joe Wilson appears in the non-canonical tie-in novel Arrow: Vengeance. In this version of events, following Slade Wilson's return from Lian Yu, he abused ASIS resources to find Oliver Queen. When his superior Wade DeFarge discovered this, Slade attempted to kill him, but Joe and his mother Addie were killed in the crossfire.
- Joseph Wilson / Jericho appears in Deathstroke: Knights & Dragons, voiced by Griffin Puatu as a teenager and Asher Bishop as a child.[27] This version is the only son of Slade and Adeline who shares a close relationship with the former. Additionally, he was rendered mute after H.I.V.E. took him hostage to coerce Slade to join them and Joseph's throat was slit. Following this, Slade left him and Adeline, who sent Joseph to a private boarding school in Switzerland. The isolation and trauma left the now teenage Joseph angry and resentful as he was forced to address his burgeoning and unstable psionic powers alone, which cause him to enter a trance-like state and become more violent due to his lack of control over them.
Sexuality
[edit]When Marv Wolfman and George Pérez were creating the character, they toyed around with the idea of making Joseph gay. Pérez had this to say: "While Marv and I did discuss the possibility of Joseph Wilson being gay, Marv decided that it was too much of a stereotype to have the sensitive, artistic, and wide-eyed character with arguably effeminate features be also homosexual".[40] However, it is eventually revealed that he is not interested in women, saying in sign language to Kole, who was in love with him, that he is gay in Convergence: New Teen Titans #2, which was confirmed by artist Nicola Scott.[41] The DC Rebirth version of Joseph is canonically confirmed to be bisexual,[16] as is his Titans TV series version.[33]
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. 156. ISBN 978-1-4654-5357-0.
- ^ "The Controversy of Teen Titans #20 | Titanstower.com". www.titanstower.com. Retrieved 2018-10-09.
- ^ Pérez, George (June 1991). "Foreword". The New Teen Titans: The Judas Contract. DC Comics. ISBN 978-0-930289-34-8.
- ^ New Teen Titans vol 2 #1
- ^ Teen Titans vol. 3, #1–6: "A Kid's Game" (September 2003–February 2004)
- ^ Teen Titans vol. 3, #4: "A Kid's Game" (December 2003)
- ^ Teen Titans vol. 3, #12: "Family Lost" (August 2004)
- ^
- Teen Titans (vol. 3) #41 (January 2007)
- Teen Titans (vol. 3) #46 (June 2007)
- Titans (vol. 2) #6 - 9 (December 2008 - March 2009)
- ^ Vigilante vol. 2, #6 (July 2009)
- ^ Teen Titans vol. 3, #77 (November 2009)
- ^ Teen Titans vol. 3, #78 (December 2009)
- ^ Titans Annual 2011 (July 2011)
- ^ Titans vol. 2, #37 (July 2011)
- ^ Titans vol. 2, #38 (August 2011)
- ^ Deathstroke vol. 3, 1-20 (2014)
- ^ a b Deathstroke (vol. 4) #6-7
- ^ Deathstroke (vol. 4) #1-4
- ^ Deathstroke (vol. 4) #6 - 10
- ^ Deathstroke (vol. 4) #12 - 29
- ^ Deathstroke (vol. 4) #34 - 50
- ^ Deathstroke vol. 2
- ^ Deathstroke vol. 3, #2 (2014)
- ^ Deathstroke vol. 3, #5 (2014)
- ^ Deathstroke vol. 3, #20 (2014)
- ^ Deathstroke vol. 4, #9 (2016)
- ^ Teen Titans: Earth One
- ^ a b "Jericho Voices (Teen Titans)". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved July 17, 2024. A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its credits or other reliable sources of information.
- ^ Abrams, Natalie (September 7, 2017). "Arrow casts Slade Wilson's son". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on September 8, 2017. Retrieved September 8, 2017.
- ^ Burlingame, Russ (January 11, 2019). "Arrow Brings Back Cupid, Deathstroke II, and China White in "Past Sins"". comicbook.com. Retrieved July 17, 2024.
- ^ Anderson, Jenna (December 6, 2018). "John Barrowman Returns to the Arrowverse in "Elseworlds" Crossover Photo". DC. Retrieved July 17, 2024.
- ^ Staley, Brandon (October 4, 2018). "A New Deathstroke Is Coming to Titans, Along with Jericho". Comic Book Resource. Retrieved October 4, 2018.
- ^ Boucher, Geoff (March 19, 2019). "Titans: Chella Man Cast As Jericho For DC Universe Series". Deadline. Retrieved March 19, 2019.
- ^ a b Titans (TV Series) Episode: Jericho
- ^ Gerding, Stephen (February 8, 2017). "TEEN TITANS: THE JUDAS CONTRACT DROPS FIRST TRAILER, ANNOUNCES RATING". CBR.
- ^ Burlingame, Russ (October 4, 2019). "First Look at CW Seed's Michael Chiklis-Led Deathstroke: Knights & Dragons". comicbook.com.
- ^ "Teen Titans: Judas Contract". 18 July 2018.
- ^ Eisen, Andrew (October 2, 2013). "DC Characters and Objects - Scribblenauts Unmasked Guide". IGN. Retrieved July 17, 2024.
- ^ "Blackfire and Jericho are on their way to #DCLegends in June! Read more about them, plus the reworks on Reddit and KTplay!". Facebook. May 28, 2021. Retrieved July 17, 2024.
- ^ "Teen Titans Go! #50 - Graduation Day (Issue)". Comic Vine. Retrieved July 17, 2024.
- ^ Gay League – Jericho Archived 2006-09-03 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Nicola Scott on Twitter: "Yes, he is." (Archived)
External links
[edit]- Titans Tower: Jericho Archived 2022-08-19 at the Wayback Machine
- DC Comics superheroes
- Characters created by George Pérez
- Characters created by Marv Wolfman
- Comics characters introduced in 1984
- DC Comics psychics
- DC Comics characters with accelerated healing
- DC Comics LGBTQ superheroes
- DC Comics LGBTQ supervillains
- DC Comics male superheroes
- DC Comics male supervillains
- DC Comics metahumans
- DC Comics telepaths
- DC Comics titles
- Fictional bisexual men
- Fictional characters with energy-manipulation abilities
- Fictional characters with body or mind control abilities
- Fictional gay men
- Fictional LGBTQ characters in television
- Fictional murderers
- Fictional mute characters
- Suicide Squad members