Bruce Wayne Dick Grayson

Bruce Wayne Dick Grayson




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https://screenrant.com/batman-dick-grayson-terry-mcginnis-bruce-successor-reasons
Перевести · 26.07.2021 · Dick Grayson trained under Bruce Wayne as the first Robin from a very young age. Depending on the writer, he was anywhere from …
Дик Грейсон — супергерой из вселенной DC Comics. Он был создан Бобом Кейном, Биллом Фингером …
Семейное положение: Холост (на основной Земле) · Женат на Старфайр (дети Джейк и Мари Грейс…
Дебют: Detective Comics #38 (апрель 1940)
Псевдонимы: Робин · Найтвинг · Агент 37
Род занятий: Борец с преступностью , Офицер Полиции
Текст из Википедии, лицензия CC-BY-SA
https://batman.fandom.com/wiki/Dick_Grayson
Перевести · Richard John "Dick" Grayson was once Batman's first sidekick Robin, before going on to become Nightwing. Once he took up the mantle of Batman when Bruce was thought to be dead, but became Nightwing once again after the events of Flashpoint. After Forever Evil, Dick's identity was revealed to the world and Bruce …
https://archiveofourown.org/tags/Dick Grayson *a* Bruce Wayne/works
Перевести · Dick Grayson (2740) Bruce Wayne (2684) Jason Todd (1313) Alfred Pennyworth (1202) Tim Drake (1061) Damian Wayne (925) Barbara Gordon (431) Clark Kent (426) Cassandra Cain (386) Wally West (336) Include Relationships Dick Grayson & Bruce Wayne (2778) Dick Grayson & Jason Todd (656) Jason Todd & Bruce Wayne (604) Dick Grayson & Damian Wayne …
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=MFttMQ9oBa8
Перевести · 22.10.2020 · Young Dick Grayson's family is killed and Bruce Wayne …
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dick_Grayson
Created by: Bill Finger (writer), Bob …
Notable aliases: Robin, Nightwing, …
Publisher: DC Comics
Full name: Richard John "Dick" Grayson
Robin the Boy Wonder
The character was first introduced in Detective Comics #38 (1940) by Batman creators Bill Finger and Bob Kane. Robin's debut was an effort to get younger readers to enjoy Batman. The name "Robin, The Boy Wonder" and the medieval look of the original costume are inspired by the legendary hero Robin Hood. The costume was designed by J…
Robin the Boy Wonder
The character was first introduced in Detective Comics #38 (1940) by Batman creators Bill Finger and Bob Kane. Robin's debut was an effort to get younger readers to enjoy Batman. The name "Robin, The Boy Wonder" and the medieval look of the original costume are inspired by the legendary hero Robin Hood. The costume was designed by Jerry Robinson who drew it from memory based on Robin Hood illustrations by N. C. Wyeth.

In his first appearance, Dick Grayson is a circus acrobat, and, with his parents, one of the "Flying Graysons". Robin was born on the first day of spring, son of John Grayson and Mary Grayson, a young aerialist couple. While preparing for a performance, Dick overhears two gangsters attempting to extort protection money from the circus owner. The owner refuses, so the gangsters sabotage the trapeze wires with acid. During the next performance, the trapeze from which Dick's parents are swinging snaps, sending them to their deaths. Before he can go to the police, Batman appears to him and warns him that the two gangsters work for Tony Zucco, a very powerful crime boss, and that revealing his knowledge could lead to his death. When Batman recounts the murder of his own parents, Dick asks to become his aide. After extensive training, Dick becomes Robin. They start by disrupting Zucco's gambling and extortion rackets. They then successfully bait the riled Zucco into visiting a construction site, where they capture him.

Robin's origin has a thematic connection to Batman's in that both see their parents killed by criminals, creating an urge to battle the criminal element. Bruce sees a chance to direct the anger and rage that Dick feels in a way that he himself cannot, thus creating a father/son bond and understanding between the two. Throughout the 1940s and 1950s, DC Comics portrayed Batman and Robin as a team, deeming them the "Dynamic Duo", rarely publishing a Batman story without his sidekick; stories entirely devoted to Robin appeared in Star-Spangled Comics from 1947 through 1952.

The character history of the Earth-Two Robin accordingly adopts all of the earliest stories featuring the character from the 1940s and 1950s, while the adventures of the mainstream Robin (who lived on "Earth-One") begin later in time and with certain elements of his origin retold. Both were depicted as separate, though parallel, individuals living in their respective universes, with the "older" Earth-Two character eventually reaching death in Crisis on Infinite Earths.

Teen Titans
1964's The Brave and the Bold #54 introduces a junior version of the Justice League of America. This team is led by the modern-day Robin, residing on Earth-One, and was joined by two other teenage sidekicks, Aqualad (sidekick of Aquaman) and Kid Flash (sidekick of the Flash), to stop the menace of Mr. Twister.

Later, the three sidekicks join forces with Speedy and Wonder Girl in order to free their mentors in the JLA from mind-controlled thrall. They decide to become a real team: the Teen Titans. By virtue of the tactical skills gleaned from Batman, Robin is swiftly recognized as leader before the Titans disband some years later.

In 1969, still in the Pre-Crisis continuity, writer Dennis O'Neil and artist Neal Adams return Batman to his darker roots. One part of this effort is writing Robin out of the series by sending Dick Grayson to Hudson University and into a separate strip in the back of Detective Comics. The by-now Teen Wonder appears only sporadically in Batman stories of the 1970s as well as in a short-lived revival of The Teen Titans.

In 1980, Grayson once again takes up the role of leader of the Teen Titans, now featured in the monthly series The New Teen Titans, which became one of DC Comics's most beloved series of the era. During his leadership of the Titans, however, he had a falling out with Batman, leading to an estrangement that would last for many years.

Nightwing
In the pre-Crisis on Infinite Earths continuity, the maturing Dick Grayson grows weary of his role as Batman's young sidekick. He renames himself Nightwing, recalling his adventure in the Kryptonian city of Kandor, where he and Batman meet the local hero of the same name. In post-Crisis continuity he is fired by Batman after being shot by the Joker and becomes Nightwing. He maintains this identity during his role in the Teen Titans, and occasionally returns to assist Batman and his successors as Robin in the form of Jason Todd and Tim Drake, Tim in particular becoming a younger brother figure to him.

When Bruce's back is broken by Bane during the Knightfall story arc, Bruce selects Jean-Paul Valley as his replacement as Batman as he does not want to burden Dick with the role and fears that Dick may go after Bane in revenge. However, when Valley proves to be too unstable to be Batman, Bruce undergoes a rigorous recovery and training program with the aid of Doctor Shondra Kinsolving and Lady Shiva to restore him to full health, defeating Valley with Dick and Tim's aid. However, feeling that he needs to re-evaluate Batman and his mission after Valley's defeat, Bruce leaves Gotham once again, after appointing Dick as his successor during the "Prodigal" story arc. While acting as Batman, Dick is left with a clearer idea of the psychological stresses Bruce must endure in the role, as well as facing some of Bruce's newer enemies — such as Killer Croc, the Ventriloquist and the Ratcatcher — while settling his own long-standing issues with Two-Face.

Miniseries and afterward
In Nightwing: Alfred's Return #1 (1995), Dick Grayson travels to England to find Alfred Pennyworth who had resigned from Bruce Wayne's service following the events of the KnightSaga. Before returning to Gotham City together, they prevent an attempted coup d'état against the British government that involves destroying the Channel Tunnel under the English Channel.

Later on, with the Nightwing miniseries (September to December 1995, written by Dennis O'Neil with Greg Land as artist), Dick briefly considers retiring from being Nightwing forever before family papers uncovered by Alfred reveal a possible link between the murder of the Flying Graysons and the Crown Prince of Kravia. Journeying to Kravia, Nightwing helps to topple the murderous Kravian leader and prevent an ethnic cleansing, while learning his parents' true connection to the Prince; they witnessed the original Prince being killed and replaced with an impostor who became as bad as his predecessor (although Zucco killed the Graysons before the conspirators could do anything about it). In the aftermath, Dick returns to his role as Nightwing, recognizing that, for all his problems with Bruce, Bruce never made him become Robin or join his crusade, accepting that he imitated Bruce's example because Bruce was worthy of imitation.

In 1996, following the success of the miniseries, DC Comics launched a monthly solo series featuring Nightwing (written by Chuck Dixon, with art by Scott McDaniel), in which he patrols Gotham City's neighboring municipality of Blüdhaven, relocating there to investigate a series of murders and remaining as he recognized that the city needed protection. He remains the city's guardian for some time, facing foes such as Blockbuster and new villains such as Torque, and even becomes a police officer so that he can make an impact on the city's criminal activity in both parts of his life. Later, Grayson divides his duties between Bludhaven and Gotham after a devastating earthquake and the subsequent decision to declare Gotham a No Man's Land, Grayson occasionally assisting his mentor and other members of Bat-Family in maintaining and restoring order in Gotham until it is fully rebuilt. When the Justice League vanished into the past fighting ancient sorceress Gamemnae, Nightwing was selected as the leader of the reserve League created by an emergency program Batman had established in the event of his League being defeated, Batman describing Nightwing as the only person he could have picked to lead the new team.

Eventually, the original League are restored, and Nightwing departs along with some of his League-although others remain as some of the original team take a leave of absence-although Batman notes that his leadership of the League proves that he is ready for more responsibilities. However, the death of Blockbuster prompts Nightwing to leave Bludhaven due to his crisis of conscience; Blockbuster was killed by vigilante Tarantula and Nightwing did not stop it even when he had the chance to do so. While Nightwing returns to Gotham to heal after assisting Batman in dealing with a series of gang wars, Blüdhaven is destroyed by the Secret Society of Super-Villains when they drop Chemo on it.

During the battle of Metropolis, Grayson suffers a near-fatal injury from Alexander Luthor, Jr. when he shields Wayne from Luthor's attack. Originally, the editors at DC intended to have Grayson killed in Infinite Crisis as Newsarama revealed from the DC Panel at WizardWorld Philadelphia:

It was again explained that Nightwing was originally intended to die in Infinite Crisis, and that you can see the arc that was supposed to end with his death in the series. After long discussions, the death edict was finally reversed, but the decision was made that, if they were going to be keeping him, he would have to be changed. The next arc of the ongoing series will further explain the changes, it was said.

After spending some time away with Bruce and Tim to heal and rebuild after their harsh times prior to the Crisis, Dick relocates to New York, but has trouble finding work as both Dick Grayson and Nightwing. During the Batman R.I.P. storyline, Nightwing is ambushed by the International Club of Villains. He is later seen being held in Arkham Asylum, where one of the surgeons, in reality also the civilian identity of ICoV member Le Bossu, arranged for Nightwing to be admitted under the name of Pierrot Lunaire (another ICoV member) and be kept both heavily drugged and regularly beaten by staff to subdue him. Scheduled for an experimental lobotomy by Le Bossu himself, he manages to free himself and come to Batman's aid for the finale of the story arc.

Batman: Reborn
Following the events of Batman's apparent death during the Final Crisis, Nightwing has closed down shop in New York so as to return to Gotham, where after the events of "Battle for the Cowl", he assumes the identity of Batman, with Damian Wayne, Bruce Wayne's biological son, as the new Robin.

The new team of Batman and Robin is the focus of Grant Morrison and Frank Quitely's Batman and Robin series. Their dynamic reverses the classic dynamic of Bruce and Dick, by having a lighter and friendlier Batman paired with a more intense and dark Robin. Over time, Dick's experience as the Dark Knight would harden his personality as his mentor.

During this period, Dick Grayson as Batman also features as a member of the Justice League in a short-lived run by writer James Robinson. After an intense confrontation with the Club of Villains and the mysterious Doctor Simon Hurt (who has established fake evidence that he is actually Bruce's father Thomas Wayne), Hurt is defeated when Bruce returns to the present. However, Bruce leaves Dick to continue to act as Batman in Gotham with Damian as his partner while he sets up the new 'Batman Incorporated' program, Bruce publicly identifying himself as Batman's financial backer to justify a global Batman-themed operation where he funds multiple other vigilantes.

Convergence: Nightwing/Oracle
In Gotham City, Nightwing and Oracle have begun to adapt to their new way of life, under the dome. His impulsive nature is in conflict with her calculations and forethought, but that impulsive nature means he lives in the moment - which is what they both needed when they were forced to adapt. From her place in the Clock Tower, she guides him on a new mission to stop Mister Freeze at the museum. Unfortunately, not everyone adapted as well as Nightwing did. Even before Dick can gain the upper hand, Freeze abandons his robbery, simply giving up. The despair of knowing that there is no way to get out of the city - that he will never see any of the people who had lived outside it again - has taken its toll, and he has lost the motivation to continue.

Kind of depressed by the whole ordeal, Dick asks for some time alone, going radio silent for a time. After getting off-air, he meets up with Starfire, whom he confides in. He has something he's been meaning to do, but with the way things have gone, he isn't sure he has a right to do it. He isn't sure he has the right to be happy. Sighing, Kory reminds that he can't afford to fear happiness. He has this chance, and he should take it, because everyone needs to know that in this new state of affairs, something still matters.

After returning to Barbara, Dick is still a bit preoccupied. He is shaken by something she understands all too well. The reason Freeze surrendered was because he saw the pointlessness. He saw the track of the endless treadmill that they are now on. She can't bear to tell him, but she's beginning to feel the same way. Failing to sense it in her, he asks her to get dressed up, and insists on taking her out to dinner.

Barbara can't help but be down about the fact that the restaurant menus have been shrinking and becoming more bland, of late. With the lack of places to import from, it was Poison Ivy who saved everyone by growing food in Robinson Park. Part of her feels ashamed for having treated Ivy like a villain for so long.

Over dinner, Dick interrupts Babs' order to tell her how he feels about her. He explains that whatever happens in this world, he knows they can bear it if they have each other. Pulling a ring out of his pocket, he asks her to marry him. After a pause, though, she admits that she can't. Confused, he asks why, but she has no time to answer him, because the dome around the city suddenly vanishes. Internally, Barbara can't help but wonder if this is a sign that she should accept his proposal. Feeling free, for the first time in a while, the pair of them eat dinner outside, and enjoy themselves for an hour - but by the end of that hour, the invaders came.

Hawkman approaches Barbara and explains that he knows - thanks to all-seeing drone bots called Absorbascons - that she secretly runs Gotham, as they secretly ran their Gotham. While he knows also that there were other versions of he and Hawkwoman on Barbara's earth, he assures her that he is not that Hawkman. Hawkwoman explains their intent to kill everyone in the city for the sake of their own, and Barbara is sure she means it. Before Hawkwoman can finish her speech, Babs has Nightwing make a surprise attack. Unfortunately, he is not strong enough to take on this version of Hawkman alone.

Even so, Hawkwoman turns to Barbara and admits that she does not like rules. Thanagarians fight to win in a manner that allows no future resistance. For that reason, she offers a plan: she and Hawkman intend to abandon their weaker city, and let it be destroyed. If Barbara agrees, they will then be allowed to take refuge in this Gotham. Hawkwoman explains that she and Hawkman are all that remain of their Thanagar. If they die, regardless of which city they champion, it is the end of their Thanagar. The catch to the plan, though, is that this city will be ruled by them and remade in Thanagar's image.

Naturally, Dick outright refuses the offer, challenging her to battle, as was the original plan. She responds that if he goes along that line, he and his people will die. She gives him one hour to change his mind. He turns to Barbara, eager to prepare for battle, but she has to tell him no a second time this night. She hasn't got the will to fight beings like them. Incredulous, Dick leaves her to pick up weapons from the Batcave, intent on fighting with or without her.

As Dick leaves, Barbara gets out her laptop. She had been forced to feign fatalism because of the enemy's Absorbascons. The truth is that she does run the city, and while they gave her an hour to prepare for battle, she had already started fighting them ten minutes ago.

Despite the relief of the dome coming down, Barbara Gordon must now worry about the possibility that her city could be invaded by killers from another city. Even now, the Hawkman and Hawkwoman of another world have sent armed spy drones called Absorbascons to monitor the city. All the while, drones belonging to whatever entity trapped both factions in the domes in the first place are ensuring that the battle occurs, at the command of some unseen mastermind.

The Hawks await their challengers with disdain, as Nightwing speeds to face them in their own territory. Barbara feels bad, because she'd had to lie to him on the very night he proposed to her in order to ensure that Gotham City would be safe. S
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