Sarge Steel
Sarge Steel | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | Charlton Comics, now DC Comics |
First appearance | Sarge Steel #1 (December 1964) |
Created by | Pat Masulli |
In-story information | |
Team affiliations | CBI L.A.W. Checkmate Department of Metahuman Affairs |
Abilities | Prosthetic metallic left hand. |
Sarge Steel is a detective/spy character published by Charlton Comics during the 1960s. As he was published during the time of Charlton's Action Heroes line of superheroes, and had loose ties to some, he is sometimes included with that group. He was purchased by DC Comics along with the other "Action Heroes".
Sarge (short for "Sargent" as in "Sargent Shriver") Steel has a mechanical left hand. As Dick Giordano stated in the editorial page of L.A.W. #4 he was created by Pat Masulli, and later written and drawn by Joe Gill and artist Dick Giordano. Other artists, including the team of Bill Montes and Ernie Bache, would later take over.
Publication history
[edit]Sarge Steel first appeared in his own title, Sarge Steel #1 (December 1964).[1] His title would last until #8, at which point it was retitled Secret Agent (Gold Key Comics also published a comic with the same title in 1967 based upon the television series, Danger Man), and cancelled with #10 (October, 1967). After that, his series continued in Judomaster #91-98 (the stories in #91-96 fit in the year-long hiatus between issues #9 & #10, as all his stories are listed as 'File #xxx'). Sarge also appeared in short spots on self-defense in Fightin' 5 #34 and 37 and in the Sentinels stories in Peter Cannon, Thunderbolt #57 and 58 as their CIA contact.
Fictional character biography
[edit]Charlton Comics version
[edit]Sarge was originally a hardboiled private eye (in fact, in the book The Fine Art of Murder, Max Allan Collins notes that Steel was the first fictional private eye to be a Vietnam veteran),[2][3] who somehow also got involved in "spy cases" and became, by Sarge Steel #6, a "special agent".
Sarge Steel's enemies included characters like The Lynx, Ivan Crunch, Smiling Skull (a Nazi villain who fought Judomaster during World War II), Werner Von Wess, Mr. Ize, and others.
DC Comics version
[edit]In DC Comics, Sarge was eventually put in charge of the United States' governmental agencies involved with "superhuman" activities for many years. He was apparently the head of a small agency known as the CBI (Central Bureau of Intelligence), which also included King Faraday, and Faraday's two well known agents Richard Dragon and Ben Turner. He was eventually depicted as a Federal Cabinet Secretary of Metahuman Affairs (giving him control of agencies such as the Suicide Squad).[4]
Around this time Sarge is sent in to investigate the country of Bialya. The entire place had re-opened, now a trendy vacation spot, after months of a media blackout. Sarge encounters Captain Atom, Major Force and the second Rocket Red as various attacks rattle the country.[5]
Around this time, the manipulative, caterpillar-shaped alien criminal Mr. Mind is handed over to Steel's custody. Mr. Mind takes control of Steel, hiding inside his artificial hand to escape the detection of superhumans. Controlling Steel, Mind causes the nuclear devastation of the midwest American city of Fairfield. Though superhumans contained the bombs to the literal limits of the town, many thousands died.
Later, Lex Luthor would be elected as President. Luthor appoints Amanda Waller as his successor until Luthor was re-exposed as a criminal in the events of Superman/Batman: Public Enemies.[6]
Steel has since resumed his old Cabinet posting as a member of the Horne Administration. He is currently in charge of Nemesis and Diana Prince as part of the Department of Metahuman Affairs. During his time at that post the villain Circe kidnapped Steel, tied him up, duct taped his mouth shut, locked him in a closet, and had him replaced with her shape-shifting henchman Everyman. Using Steel's pull at the agency, Circe and Everyman helped bring about the events of Amazons Attack!.[7][8]
In the end, Steel is freed, but is left suspicious over Wonder Woman's motives, questioning she may still serve the Amazons' cause, to him perceived as harmful and dangerous. He correctly guesses the love story budding between Nemesis and Wonder Woman, and so decides to keep Diana and Tresser in constant surveillance.
Recently, he has been seen composing an essay accusing prominent female historical figures of being Amazonian spies. It is then revealed that since his kidnapping by Circe that Doctor Psycho has been tampering with his mind, enhancing his suspicious nature. Doctor Psycho eventually manages to switch bodies with Sarge Steel. He is then brainwashed into being a jester in a cage fight that Wonder Woman and Black Canary infiltrates. Diana uses her Lasso of Truth on him to remove the influence of mind control. Now remembering everything and understandably furious, he helps Wonder Woman and Black Canary capture a panicking Doctor Psycho, who is behind the illegal cage battles, to switch their bodies back and bring him to justice.
The New 52
[edit]In 2011, "The New 52" rebooted the DC universe. Sarge Steel is re-introduced in the OMAC comic.[9] Sarge Steel is an agent of Checkmate, and is put in charge of investigating the OMAC attacks at Project Cadmus when the sentient satellite Brother Eye goes rogue.[10] Maxwell Lord sends him as the leader of a team of elite agents including Maribel and Little Knipper to hunt down OMAC, but their attempt to capture him fails.[11] For this failure, Lord takes him off the assignment and sends Mokkari to take down OMAC instead. Sarge voices his displeasure when they call in S.H.A.D.E.'s top agent Frankenstein to do the job. In Checkmate's last battle against Brother Eye, Steel is called in again to lead his team against OMAC. They fight through Checkmate Headquarters in Mount Rushmore and Steel loses his hand in the fight.[12]
During the "Titans: Beast World" storyline, Sarge Steel partakes in Amanda Waller's efforts to kill the transformed Beast Boy and his spores by having Chunk self-destruct inside him.[13] After an Amazon warrior murders a group of men, Steel leads the US army in forcing all Amazons residing in America to be deported back to Themyscyra, and rallies the troops against Wonder Woman when she refuses to leave.
Alternate versions
[edit]An alternate universe version of Sarge Steel appears in The Multiversity chapter "Pax Americana".[14]
In other media
[edit]- A character based on Sarge Steel named Commander Henry Steel appears in Naomi, portrayed by Brian Brightman. This version is a member of the Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Task Force.
- Sarge Steel appears in Batman and Harley Quinn, voiced by John DiMaggio. This version is an A.R.G.U.S. commander.[15]
References
[edit]- ^ Markstein, Don. "Sarge Steel". Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Retrieved 2 April 2020.
- ^ Collins, Max Allan, in Edward Gorman (Editor), Martin Harry Greenberg (Editor), Larry Segriff (Editor),The Fine Art of Murder: The Mystery Reader’s Indispensable Companion (Carroll & Graf Pub., 1993).
- ^ Cronin, Brian. "Comic Book Legends Revealed #323." Comic Book Resources (July 15, 2011).
- ^ Jimenez, Phil; Wells, John (2010). The Essential Wonder Woman Encyclopedia. Del Rey. p. 362. ISBN 978-0345501073.
- ^ Captain Atom Annual #2 (1998). DC Comics.
- ^ Superman/Batman #6 (DC Comics, Mar. 2004). DC Comics.
- ^ Amazons Attack #1 (DC Comics, June 2007). DC Comics.
- ^ Amazons Attack #2 (DC Comics, July 2007). DC Comics.
- ^ OMAC #1. DC Comics.
- ^ OMAC #2. DC Comics.
- ^ OMAC #3. DC Comics.
- ^ OMAC #8. DC Comics.
- ^ Titans: Beast World #4. DC Comics.
- ^ The Multiversity: Pax Americana #1
- ^ Gary Miereanu [@SuperPRGuy] (27 April 2017). "@DCAUResource Trailer arrives in weeks, not days. Here's a #BatmanHarley image to tide you over: #Batman/…" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
External links
[edit]- Sarge Steel at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on February 15, 2017.
- Sarge Steel Entry at International Superheroes
- Sarge Steel @ Mister8.com
- Charlton Comics characters
- Charlton Comics titles
- Charlton Comics superheroes
- Cyborg superheroes
- DC Comics cyborgs
- DC Comics male superheroes
- DC Comics military personnel
- DC Comics titles
- Fictional amputees
- Fictional spies
- Superhero detectives
- 1964 comics debuts
- Comics characters introduced in 1964
- Fictional United States Army Special Forces personnel
- Fictional soldiers
- Fictional Vietnam War veterans
- Hardboiled