DC University : The Spectre
    by Mike Agnew Jr.Characters of the DC Universe fall into several categories: aliens, magicians, demons, time-travelers, etc. The Spectre falls into a very specific category only one other character shares (as far as I know). To be honest I just found this out in one of the recent comics I read. The other interesting point here is that comic book characters develop just like the stories. They grow and change and even have revelations from time to time. The Spectre is the perfect example of this because he has a few origins, many of them conflicting. This occurs a lot when writers want to resurrect stories and characters from the past. They sit around and try to think up some way to bring some minor character back into the picture and usually get scrutinized for it. But I digress, time to meet the Spectre.
He is the wrath of God incarnate. See I told you, whole new category. Let's jump into the back story...the original back story. God is good. Devil builds up an army. The Devil revolts against God. Devil loses. God smites him. Yay God. As the story goes the Spectre was one of the angels that revolted with the devil but later repented. God punishes the Spectre by sending him to earth deal out judgment, which he carries out in a very poetic and sometimes completely misguided way. For instance, in the case of the pending execution of a wrongfully convicted man. His death sentence was commuted to life in prison after the Spectre threatened to kill the entire population of the state of New York in retribution, arguing that if the execution was carried out, the "people of the state of New York" would become guilty of murder in his eyes. For those of you who have read the bible or just the cliff notes, the angel of death that killed all the first born sons of Egypt....the Spectre....at least according to the DCU.
To balance this wrathiness, the Spectre has always been paired with a human host. Someone to say, "Hey you know wiping out New York is not such a good idea." You end up with a buddy system that makes situations very intense and confrontational as an internal debate ensues. Jim Corrigan, a murdered cop who decided to reject the afterlife, assumed the role of the Spectre for a very long time. He is the version of the Spectre we see as part of the JSA(Justice Society of America, a 1950's style Justice League). Later on his soul found rest and for a while the Spectre was on his own. At one point he was tricked into thinking that all the magic elements in the world were evil and had to pass judgment on them. I would say a good 50-60% of all magic characters were killed off in the chaos that was the Day of Vengeance. Soon the role was passed to one of my favorite characters, the late (at the time) Hal Jordan. After the Green Lantern went a little nuts and tried to rewrite the universe....yes...that's right. He eventually let his guard down and was killed by the Justice League (see Zero Hour). Hal was a cool host for the Spectre because he argued with the ridiculous totalitarian logic of the Spectre on almost every occasion.
To really get a feel for the Spectre you have to read all the big events, Infinite Crisis, Day of Vengence, Identity Crisis...there are a few more but the names escape me.
At one point he was labeled as too powerful but the writers of DC. How is Superman going to beat the Wrath of God? By punching him? So eventually they gave him the weakness of blind justice and absolute power. When you read a Spectre story there will always be a point where you put down the book and figure out what side you would be on; what you would tell the Spectre. Then you hope it plays out that way.
I like the Spectre. He's mid-level character but definitely one of the good ones.
Read: Books of Magic; Day of Vengeance; Crisis on Infinite Earths; Zero Hour



May 27th, 2010 - 15:40
I gotta tell you, I love these.
Buying some of his stuff Saturday.