Will Magnus
This article's lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points. (February 2022) |
Will Magnus | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
First appearance | Showcase #37 (April 1962) |
Created by | Robert Kanigher (writer) Ross Andru (artist) |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Dr. William Maxwell "Will" Magnus |
Species | Human |
Team affiliations | Metal Men Doom Patrol Science Squad |
Notable aliases | Veridium |
Abilities |
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Doctor Will Magnus is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.[1] A brilliant scientist who occasionally suffers from debilitating mental illness, he is responsible for creating the Metal Men and serves as a general robotics expert among the superhero community.
He first appeared in Showcase #37 alongside his creations, the Metal Men and was created by Robert Kanigher and Ross Andru.[2]
Fictional character biography
[edit]One of the most impressive geniuses of the DC Universe with doctorates in theoretical mathematics, mechanical engineering, and particle physics, William Maxwell "Will" Magnus often offers scientific advice to other characters. His greatest achievement is the one for which he first received renown: the creation of the Metal Men. The method through which Doc Magnus created the Metal Men has varied over years with various writers. At first they were just blank slate robots with responsometers, devices which generated their intelligence and personalities which are evocative of the metals from which they were formed.[2]
In an attempt to boost sales of the comic book, the characters underwent vast changes. The Metal Men assumed human alter egos, while Doc Magnus became a fugitive scientist dedicated to global conquest. His personality change was credited to having been kidnapped, reawakened, and brainwashed by a mad dictator. Sales plunged instead and the comic was not printed for a few years. Eventually, Metal Men was picked up again with Doc's sanity restored and he returned to assist his Metal Men.
At one point he saved Doom Patrol's Robotman, whose original body had been destroyed by Madame Rouge. Doc Magnus recovered Robotman's brain and built him a new cybernetic body.
In 1993, a four-part Metal Men miniseries retconned much of their backstory. It was revealed that the responsometers were not responsible for the Metal Men's sentience and that the Metal Men were imprinted with the intellects and personalities of real people during a lab accident: Magnus' brother Mike, fiancé Sharon, two lab workers Redmond Wilde and Randy Pressman, janitor Thomas Tinkham, and pizza delivery man Jack. At the climax of the miniseries, Gold is killed and Doc Magnus mortally wounded. He transfers his personality into a blank, green robot named Veridium, becoming the new leader of the Metal Men.
52
[edit]With the advent of Identity Crisis, Gold is back and Doc Magnus is once again human and played an active role in the series 52.
As revealed during Infinite Crisis, when Superboy-Prime pounded on the walls of reality, he caused the fabric of reality to shift, changing and merging histories. The "blank robots with responsometers" origin is said to be the definitive origin while the "human personalities" origin and the 1993 miniseries are described as the byproduct of a mental breakdown suffered by Magnus. When Booster Gold visited, asking for help with his robot Skeets, Magnus commented that the Metal Men "don't quite work anymore".
The responsometers are now described as containing an "artificial soul" invented by Doc Magnus, as inspired by T. O. Morrow, who is revealed to have taught him at college and to have been the only one not to laugh at Magnus' theories. After the unexplained dismantling of the Metal Men, Doc Magnus is unable to recreate these souls and restore their personalities. He now takes Prozac for the bipolar disorder which caused his nervous breakdown and the depression which led to the creation of the Plutonium Man, a tremendous, nearly indestructible superweapon based upon the Metal Men, but with Magnus' then-own deranged, twisted worldview as its operating system. It is implied that although the medication is keeping Magnus from doing anything irrational, it is also deadening his imagination and creativity and that this is the reason that he cannot recreate the Metal Men.
Magnus is approached by government agents hoping to use the Metal Men as soulless smart weapons, an offer that Magnus rejects. Through all of this, Magnus visits Morrow in his cell in Haven. Morrow warns Magnus that there have been numerous abductions of "mad" scientists, including Doctor Sivana, whose lair Magnus investigates.
Eventually Morrow himself disappears, leaving a note for his former student with a string in machine code. Using the code, Magnus is able to revive Mercury, but his robotic friend and creation is apparently destroyed again while trying to save him from the conspiracy trying to kidnap every mad scientist in the DCU.
During Week 22, mindless replicas of the Metal Men force Magnus to escape from his burned house before he is captured by what is revealed to be a separate group "Chang Tzu's Science Squad".[3] This would be the second time Magnus has confronted Chang Tzu. A previous incarnation of the villain once managed to brainwash the Metal Men, but their loyalty to Magnus restored their rightful minds.[2]
This group is based on Oolong Island (said to be part of the territory of China) and has been responsible for the disappearing scientists (including Professor Morrow). The group is being financed by Intergang with the collusion, it is implied, of the Chinese government. The assembled scientists have been given unlimited budgets to invent various super weapons including, in particular, various types of robots.
During Week 23, a giant robot, piloted by animals from Intergang, delivers Doc Magnus to Oolong Island.[4]
Magnus is assigned to design and construct a new Plutonium Man robot, but deliberately makes little progress, saying to Morrow that the original Plutonium Man was an expression of his pain and rage brought on by his mental illness and that the reason that he takes his medication is to prevent himself from doing something like that again. Morrow reveals this to the Island's leaders and Magnus's medication is confiscated.
Magnus then proceeds to work on the Plutonium Man, saying that this time he will "do it right". Though he is unstable due to his lack of medication, Magnus is not fully co-operating with Chang Tzu. Magnus goes about scavenging materials from various items (gold from a gold watch, lead from lead shielding, mercury from thermometers, and tin from cans of baked beans which he adopts as his sole diet – presumably to ensure that the other scientists will not want to spend too much time with him as well). This allows him to reconstruct his Metal Men, albeit only a few inches high. These new Metal Men are shown to help Magnus remain sane despite being off his pills, such as when they persuade him to deactivate the now-completed Plutonium Man after he turns it on during a period of depression.
Ooolong Island is attacked by the JSA seeking to rescue Black Adam, and Chang Tzu orders the Plutonium Man to be activated. Chang notes that he has been spying on Magnus and knows that several metals have entered the lab and not come back out. The Metal Men attack Chang Tzu, allowing Magnus to escape and switch off the island's defenses. While he does this, Morrow confronts Magnus and destroys Mercury yet again. Magnus explains to Morrow why it is pointless to stop him from deactivating the shields as the JSA will get in eventually, and instead offers him the chance to teleport out, saying that Morrow was "the best teacher I ever knew" and that he tries "to over look the psychopathic super-villain thing". Morrow accepts the offer.
Magnus is then confronted by Chang Tzu whom he apparently kills with the aid of Lead and what he describes as a particle wave ray gun. Magnus also indicates that this shooting was a result of his irrationality, brought on by the lack of his medications. Magnus then surrenders to the JSA.
With all charges against him dropped due to being coerced into collaboration, Will Magnus returns to his home and laboratory. There, when Booster Gold visits him again, exactly one year after their last meeting, with a salvaged responsometer containing Skeets' "memself", asking him to somehow restore the robot that was destroyed by Mister Mind, Magnus agrees. He reveals to have in his possession a copy of Skeets' memories, and so he is able to rebuild him as a security droid 2.0, slightly more advanced, but oblivious of the events of the past years.
Now sane again, he returns to working on his Metal Men.
Superman/Batman
[edit]In the Superman/Batman series, Doc Magnus is shown working again with his Metal Men. He has even built a new one, the spunky and wisecracking gynoid Copper. Despite contrary advice from his fiancée he asks Bruce Wayne for a tryout of his Metal Men as security guards. The trial is successful, but the Metal Men fail on the field, due to mistrust by the human personnel and Brainiac's influence, leaving Doc Magnus the responsibility of saving the day.[5]
JLA
[edit]Magnus has recently assisted the Justice League of America with the rebuilding of Red Tornado. After Red Tornado's first intended body is stolen by Amazo, he is called on again to provide Red Tornado with yet another new body, more powerful and advanced than the previous one. Despite his good intentions, the attempts comes to another downfall, and almost spells his death, when Amazo returns to claim the newer and stronger body for himself.
Metal Men (2009)
[edit]The Metal Men are later restored as a second feature in the revamped Doom Patrol (5th series), written by Keith Giffen. Now living in simple suburbia in Kanigher Street, the Metal Men seem to be affected by his currently partly deranged state of mind. Iron seems unaffected, Gold is now humorously self-obsessed and magniloquent, Platina is lovesick, Lead is dimwitted and prone to errors, Tin is always scared and affected by chronic self-esteem issues, and Mercury, once brilliant and humorous, has now developed the same bipolar disturbance affecting Will Magnus himself, and refuses to take medications. Copper, the newest and seventh member, is disturbingly ignored by her teammates, who often refuse to acknowledge her presence despite being side by side with her.
The New 52
[edit]In The New 52 timeline, Will Magnus is first mentioned in the Forever Evil storyline. A rebuilt Cyborg heads out to find Will Magnus so that he can learn about his "Metal Men" project.[6] Meeting with Will Magnus, Cyborg learns that he can not help him. Magnus tells him the history of the Metal Men project, how they were built to execute search and rescue missions that humans could not tackle. After he was able to get them online, the government went back on their word and chose to have the Metal Men become assassins. The Metal Men hid at Magnus' apartment where they help protect Magnus and the population from an experiment gone wrong, destroying themselves in the process. Seeing their responsometers that control them in Magnus' lab, Cyborg senses that their minds and hearts are still active encouraging Magus to activate them once more to help him.[7]
When the Conner Kent version of Superboy shows up asking for help, Superman gathers all the geniuses he knows including, but not limited to, Mister Terrific, Batman, Ted Kord and Will Magnus. Examination of Conner leads the group to ponder evidence that the universe has been rebooted at least three times.[8]
Powers and abilities
[edit]Normally, Will Magnus had no special abilities aside from his great intellect. His vast intelligence was responsible for the creation of the Metal Men, along with various other robots.
As Veridium, Magnus could manipulate heat and energy.[9]
Other versions
[edit]- In the Amalgam Comics universe, Will Magnus, jealous of his brother Erik for constantly outshining his scientific accomplishments with his Metamutant abilities, created the Sentinels to hunt down Metamutants.[10]
In other media
[edit]Television
[edit]- Dr. Milton Magnus appears in Batman: The Brave and the Bold, voiced by Corey Burton.[11] This version previously worked with several other scientists before they were presumed dead in a lab accident and became the Gas Gang. Initially not knowing of his colleagues' evil motives, Magnus built the Metal Men to continue their legacy.
- Will Magnus appears in the "Metal Men" segment of DC Nation Shorts, voiced again by Corey Burton.
Film
[edit]- Will Magnus appears in Justice League: The New Frontier, voiced by Townsend Coleman.[11]
- An alternate reality incarnation of Will Magnus appears in Justice League: Gods and Monsters, voiced by C. Thomas Howell.[11][12][13] This version is a friend of Kirk Langstrom who attempted to help him create a serum to cure the latter's cancer, only to inadvertently turn Langstrom into a pseudo-vampire. A year after this, Magnus accidentally beat his wife Tina to death after realizing she preferred Langstrom over him. This caused Magnus to lose faith in humanity and attempt to end all human conflict. In the present, he creates three Metal Men to frame the Justice League for the deaths of various scientists and connect the minds of every human on Earth using nanites. However, Lex Luthor discovers and reveals Magnus' plan to the League and the U.S. military, allowing them to stop him. With his plan foiled, a regretful Magnus commits suicide by disintegrating himself with a nanite sphere.
- Will Magnus appears in DC Super Hero Girls: Intergalactic Games, voiced by Phil LaMarr.[11]
Video games
[edit]- Will Magnus appears in DC Universe Online as a vendor in the Watchtower's Tech Wing.
- Will Magnus appears as a character summon in Scribblenauts Unmasked: A DC Comics Adventure.[14]
Miscellaneous
[edit]- Will Magnus appears in DC Super Hero Girls, voiced by Phil LaMarr.[11]
- Will Magnus appears in Smallville Season 11.
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. 90. ISBN 978-1-4654-5357-0.
- ^ a b c Jimenez, Phil (2008), "Doc Magnus", in Dougall, Alastair (ed.), The DC Comics Encyclopedia, New York: Dorling Kindersley, p. 102, ISBN 978-0-7566-4119-1, OCLC 213309017
- ^ 52 Week 22
- ^ 52 Week 23
- ^ Superman/Batman #34-36 (2007)
- ^ Justice League (vol. 2) #27
- ^ Justice League (vol. 2) #28 (2014)
- ^ Action Comics #1022 (2019)
- ^ "Cosmic Teams!". Archived from the original on 2009-12-31. Retrieved 2010-05-08.
- ^ Magneto & the Magnetic Men #1
- ^ a b c d e "Will Magnus Voices (DC Universe)". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved June 1, 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.
- ^ Mozzocco, J. Caleb (August 6, 2015). "Unraveling the world of 'Justice League: Gods and Monsters'". CBR. Retrieved June 1, 2024.
- ^ Damore, Meagan (July 28, 2015). "SDCC: "Justice League: Gods and Monsters" Cast & Crew Spill Alternate Reality Secrets". CBR. Retrieved June 1, 2024.
- ^ Eisen, Andrew (October 4, 2013). "DC Characters and Objects - Scribblenauts Unmasked Guide". IGN. Retrieved June 1, 2024.