Abra Kadabra (character)
Abra Kadabra | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
First appearance | The Flash #128 (May 1962) |
Created by | John Broome Carmine Infantino |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Citizen Abra |
Species | Human (originally) Homo magi (current) |
Place of origin | New Earth |
Team affiliations | The Rogues Secret Society of Super Villains Legion of Zoom |
Notable aliases | Abhararakadhararbarakh Dr. Petrou Professor Zoom |
Abilities |
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Abra Kadabra (Citizen Abra) is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. He first appeared as an opponent of the Flash in 1962.[1]
Abra Kadabra has made several animated appearances and appeared in two episodes of the live-action Arrowverse series, The Flash, portrayed by David Dastmalchian.
Publication history
[edit]Created by John Broome and Carmine Infantino,[2] the character made his first appearance in The Flash #128 (May 1962).[3]
Fictional character biography
[edit]Citizen Abra is from the 64th century, at a time when science has made stage magic obsolete. He desires a career as a performing magician, so he goes back in time to find an audience to entertain, stealing a time machine and inventing a device to paralyze the guards, and soon clashes with the Flash (Barry Allen).[4] He has a hypnotic device that makes people clap regardless of their thoughts, which he uses to force applause from audiences even when they do not applaud his magic tricks. He finds his magic is being overlooked, so decides to involve himself in important events. When the Flash tries to stop a crime he is committing, he makes the Flash clap, enabling him to escape. He is able to send the Flash into space after challenging him to a fight at the theatre, but the Flash is able to change the course of the planetoid he is on so he is sent back to Earth, and finds Kadabra took his left-behind costume, meaning he can follow the impulses, and Kadabra is jailed. But he hypnotizes the Governor using a ray from a device made out of pots and pans, to let him out, and starts staging a puppet show where the Flash is defeated by a puppet called Captain Cream-Puff. When the Flash passes a poster advertising Kadabra, he is turned into a puppet and used in the performance. But the Scarlet Speedster is able to restore himself slightly using the organic matter in his brain, which was not transformed, and then reverse Kadabra's ray so he is restored completely. He again defeats Kadabra.[5]
In one of his many confrontations with the Flash, Abra Kadabra's technology is damaged and his body becomes insubstantial and wraith-like.[6][7] After his body is returned to normal, he is captured by a bounty hunter named Peregrine, and returned to his native century to serve a death sentence, although he is saved by the Flash before he can be executed.[8] Shortly after returning to the 21st century, during the Underworld Unleashed storyline, he forgoes his technological implements and tricks five Rogues into selling their souls to Neron so he can gain genuine magical powers.[2] Abra Kadabra later kidnapped Linda Park, the girlfriend of Wally West (Barry Allen's protégé and successor), during their wedding and erases her from history,[9] though he is ultimately defeated with the help of Walter West, Wally's counterpart from an alternate dimension.[10]
In Infinite Crisis, Abra Kadabra became a member of the Secret Society of Super Villains.[11]
In "One Year Later", he and several other Rogues are approached by Inertia with a plan to kill the Flash (Bart Allen).[12] Though Inertia is defeated, Kadabra and the other Rogues successfully beat Bart to death, though not before Kadabra recognizes that Bart is too young to be the Flash they are used to dealing with.[13]
Salvation Run
[edit]Abra Kadabra is one of the exiled villains featured in Salvation Run, along with his fellow Rogues: Captain Cold, Heat Wave, Weather Wizard, and Mirror Master. Upon coming across the planet's local pygmies, Abra Kadabra deciphers their language and uses it to locate a "safe zone" for himself and the other Rogues before leading the other villains dispatched there to it.[14]
He was a member of the Rogues who joined Libra's Secret Society of Super Villains;[15] however, the rest of the Rogues left the Society.[16]
He was last seen in The Flash: Rebirth off-panel, being attacked by Professor Zoom the Reverse-Flash. In the final issue of the miniseries, Kadabra is seen to have survived Zoom's attack and says Zoom should have made sure he was dead.[17]
DC Rebirth
[edit]Abra Kadabra makes his Post-DC Rebirth debut in the Titans series. He first appears as a bumbling and terrible party magician known as Mister Hocus Pocus. When Lilith forms a psionic link with Wally West to try and uncover who or what removed 10 years of history from everyone's memories, she accidentally awakens Abra Kadabra from within Mister Hocus Pocus. Abra Kadabra reveals he is the one who made Wally disappear and he will now destroy him.[18]
Abra Kadabra creates younger puppet duplicates of the Titans and has them fight the Titans. When the puppet Lilith finds Linda Park and tells Abra Kadabra of her importance to Wally, Abra Kadabra realizes that history is broken, knowing that Wally and Linda will not meet years from now. Abra Kadabra realizes that his plans must be sped up, and before he can contemplate this any further, he is attacked by Garth. Abra tries to kill him, but only succeeds in injuring Garth due to Wally's interference.[19] Abra Kadabra reveals to Wally that he removed the latter from time and recollection because he always managed to thwart Abra Kadabra's plans, and disappears with his puppet Titans afterwards. At the theater, Abra Kadabra tries to receive evaluations of the Titans from his puppets. Abra Kadabra reveals his origin (which is similar to his Pre-Flashpoint origin) to his puppets, revealing that he is from the future and traveled back in time to become famous, but his plans were always thwarted by the Flash (Barry Allen) and Kid Flash (Wally West). Abra Kadabra then used almost all of his power to throw Wally into the time stream, but it removed his memories in the process. Intrigued as to why history has been knocked askew, due to the fact Wally knows Linda (even hinting that he knows the true perpetrator), Abra Kadabra begins to craft an even greater trick and he kidnaps Linda from in front of Wally.[20]
He then attempts to force Wally into a position where Wally will run himself into the Speed Force, believing that Wally will be unable to return without Linda as his 'lightning rod',[21] but Wally is able to return by using the Titans as his own lightning rod after talking with a representation of his memories of Linda in the Speed Force, which assures him that he can still win Linda back. With Abra Kadabra defeated and sending him into the time stream, Lilith notes that she cannot understand Abra Kadabra's madness, but picked up a key word in his thoughts as "Manhattan".[22]
Powers, abilities, and equipment
[edit]Abra Kadabra is a powerful wizard and can achieve virtually any feat with his spells. Originally, his powers were derived from 64th century technology that appears magical to residents of the 20th century. Later, Kadabra's abilities are augmented to include true sorcery when he strikes a deal with Neron.[23]
Other versions
[edit]- An unnamed man wielding one of Abra Kadabra's wands called Mr. Magic appears in "Gotham Underground" and Final Crisis: Rogues' Revenge as a member of the New Rogues.
- An alternate timeline variant of Abra Kadabra appears in the Flashpoint tie-in Flashpoint: Secret Seven. This version is a television presenter and a member of the eponymous team.[24]
In other media
[edit]Television
[edit]- Abra Kadabra makes a non-speaking cameo appearance in the Justice League Unlimited episode "Flash and Substance".[citation needed]
- Abra Kadabra appears in Batman: The Brave and the Bold, voiced by Jeff Bennett.[25]
- Abra Kadabra appears in Young Justice, voiced again by Jeff Bennett.[citation needed]
- Abra Kadabra appears in The Flash, portrayed by David Dastmalchian.[26] This version, also known as Phillipe, is a cyborg whose powers are derived from nanotechnology. In his self-titled episode, Kadabra is pursued by Gypsy for crimes he committed on Earth-19 and arrives on Earth-1 to steal components for a time machine so he can return to his own time. However, he is defeated by the Flash, Kid Flash, Vibe, and Gypsy. Before Gypsy takes him back to Earth-19 to be executed, Kadabra taunts the Flash by withholding his knowledge of Savitar's true identity, knowing Savitar kills Iris West by his time and relishing being able to do so by proxy. In the episode "Central City Strong", Kadabra returns to build an anti-matter bomb to destroy Central City in retaliation for his family being erased from existence following the events of "Crisis on Infinite Earths". While the Flash talks him down and sympathizes with him as he also lost a loved one during the Crisis, they are attacked by a monster, later called "Fuerza". After it absorbs the bomb's anti-matter energy, Kadabra tries to save the Flash, but is killed by Fuerza.
Video games
[edit]- Abra Kadabra appears in DC Universe Online's "The Lightning Strikes" DLC, voiced by Christopher Loveless.[citation needed]
- Abra Kadabra appears as a character summon in Scribblenauts Unmasked: A DC Comics Adventure.[27]
Miscellaneous
[edit]Abra Kadabra appears in the novel The Flash: The Tornado Twins.[citation needed]
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. 99. ISBN 978-1-4654-8578-6.
- ^ a b Jimenez, Phil (2008), "Abra Kadabra", in Dougall, Alastair (ed.), The DC Comics Encyclopedia, London: Dorling Kindersley, p. 8
- ^ 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. 340. ISBN 978-1-4654-5357-0.
- ^ Rovin, Jeff (1987). The Encyclopedia of Supervillains. New York: Facts on File. p. 1. ISBN 0-8160-1356-X.
- ^ The Flash #133 (December 1962)
- ^ The Flash (vol. 2) #23 (February 1989)
- ^ The Flash (vol. 2) #67 (September 1992)
- ^ The Flash (vol. 2) #68 (September 1992)
- ^ The Flash (vol. 2) #142 (October 1998)
- ^ The Flash (vol. 2) #158 (March 2000)
- ^ Infinite Crisis #2 (January 2006)
- ^ The Flash: The Fastest Man Alive #11 (June 2007)
- ^ The Flash: The Fastest Man Alive #13 (August 2007)
- ^ Salvation Run #1 (January 2008)
- ^ Justice League of America (vol. 2) #21 (July 2008)
- ^ Rogues' Revenge #1 (September 2008)
- ^ The Flash: Rebirth #6 (April 2010)
- ^ Titans (vol. 3) #1 (2016)
- ^ Titans (vol. 3) #2 (2016)
- ^ Titans (vol. 3) #3 (2016)
- ^ Titans (vol. 3) #5 (2016)
- ^ Titans (vol. 3) #6 (2016)
- ^ Underworld Unleashed #1 (November 1995)
- ^ Flashpoint: Secret Seven #2 (July 2011)
- ^ "Abra Kadabra Voices (Flash)". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved May 9, 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.
- ^ Beedle, Tim (March 6, 2017). "EXCLUSIVE: Abra Kadabra is Coming to The Flash". DC Comics. Archived from the original on 2017-03-07. Retrieved March 8, 2017.
- ^ Eisen, Andrew (October 4, 2013). "DC Characters and Objects - Scribblenauts Unmasked Guide". IGN. Retrieved May 9, 2024.
External links
[edit]- Alan Kistler's Profile On: THE FLASH - A detailed analysis of the history of the Flash by comic book historian Alan Kistler. Covers information all the way from Jay Garrick to Barry Allen to today, as well as discussions on the various villains and Rogues who fought the Flash. Various art scans.
- Abra Kadabra at DC Database
- Abra Kadabra at Comic Vine
- Abra Kadabra at Writeups.org
- DC Comics supervillains
- Characters created by Carmine Infantino
- Characters created by John Broome
- Comics characters introduced in 1962
- DC Comics characters who can teleport
- DC Comics characters who use magic
- DC Comics immortals
- DC Comics cyborgs
- Fictional characters who can manipulate time
- Fictional characters who have made pacts with devils
- Fictional stage magicians
- DC Comics wizards
- Flash (comics) characters
- Magical supervillains
- Time travelers