Power Girl Captured

Power Girl Captured




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Power Girl Captured
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Power Girl, from Justice Society of America #9 (November 2007 ). Art by Alex Ross .


^ Who’s Who in the DC Universe #18 (August 1986)

^ Greenberger, Robert; Pasko, Martin (2010). The Essential Superman Encyclopedia . Del Rey. pp. 315–317. ISBN 978-0-345-50108-0 .

^ McAvennie, Michael (2010). "1970s". In Dolan, Hannah (ed.). DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle . Dorling Kindersley . p. 169. ISBN 978-0-7566-6742-9 . Along with artist Ric Estrada, [Gerry] Conway also introduced the DC Universe to the cousin of Earth-2's Superman, Kara Zor-L a.k.a. Power Girl.

^ "Hello, Culture Lovers: Stan the Map Raps with Marvel Maniacs at James Madison University ", The Comics Journal #42, October 1978, p. 55

^ Issue #207 — released January 1973

^ Johnson, Dan (April 2014). "Showcase Presents... Again". Back Issue! . Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing (71): 51.

^ The Comic Book Database – Power Girl (1988)

^ "Your Guide to Infinite Crisis" . Sequart Organization .

^ The Comic Book Database – "Power Trip"

^ Cowsill, Alan "2000s" in Dolan, p. 338: "Writers Justin Gray and Jimmy Palmiotti, together with artist Amanda Conner, emphasized the fun of Power Girl in her first ongoing series."

^ Power Girl (2009) at the Grand Comics Database

^ Power Girl (2009) at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original )

^ Jump up to: a b Renaud, Jeffrey (March 12, 2010). "Palmiotti, Gray & Conner Off "Power Girl" " . Comic Book Resources . Retrieved April 3, 2010 .

^ Lucas Siegel (2010-03-18). "And The New POWER GIRL Creative Team Is..." Newsarama . Retrieved 2010-06-23 .

^ Justice League of America #147 (October 1977): "Crisis in the 30th Century!". DC Comics.

^ Crisis on Infinite Earths #11. DC Comics.

^ Secret Origins #11. DC Comics.

^ Justice League Europe #9 (December 1989). DC Comics.

^ Justice League Europe Annual #2 (1991). DC Comics.

^ Justice League International #52 (July 1993). DC Comics.

^ Zero Hour: Crisis In Time! #0 (September 1994). DC Comics.

^ Justice League America #105-107 (November 1995 – January 1996). DC Comics.

^ Justice League America #108 (February 1996). DC Comics.

^ Sovereign Seven #25 (May 1997). DC Comics.

^ Birds of Prey #42 (June 2002). DC Comics.

^ JSA #50 (September 2003). DC Comics.

^ JSA: Classified #1–4. DC Comics.

^ Infinite Crisis #1, 2006. DC Comics.

^ Infinite Crisis Secret Files & Origins 2006 . DC Comics.

^ Infinite Crisis #2, JSA #82 (2006). DC Comics.

^ Infinite Crisis #3, 2006. DC Comics.

^ Infinite Crisis #4, (2006). DC Comics.

^ Infinite Crisis #5, (2006). DC Comics.

^ Infinite Crisis #7 (2006). DC Comics.

^ Supergirl (vol. 5) #8 (2006). DC Comics.

^ Supergirl (vol. 5) #19 (September 2007). DC Comics.

^ JSA #85 (May 2006). DC Comics.

^ Justice League of America (vol. 2) #8 (June 2007). DC Comics.

^ Birds of Prey #100, (January 2007); and Birds of Prey #42 (June 2002). DC Comics.

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^ 52: Week Fifty-Two (2007). DC Comics.

^ Justice Society of America (vol. 3) #17. DC Comics.

^ Justice Society 2008 Annual, 2008. DC Comics.

^ Justice Society of America (vol. 3) #19. DC Comics.

^ Jump up to: a b Justice Society of America (vol. 3) #20. DC Comics.

^ Power Girl (vol. 2) #1–3 (2009). DC Comics.

^ Blackest Night: JSA #1 (January 2010). DC Comics.

^ Blackest Night: JSA #2 (January 2010). DC Comics.

^ Blackest Night: JSA #3 (February 2010). DC Comics.

^ Justice League of America (vol. 2). DC Comics.

^ Justice League of America (vol. 2) #46. DC Comics.

^ Justice Society of America (vol. 3) #41. DC Comics.

^ Justice League: Generation Lost #1. DC Comics.

^ Power Girl #13 (June 2010). DC Comics.

^ Power Girl #14–15 (July–August 2010). DC Comics.

^ Justice League: Generation Lost #10 (September 2010). DC Comics.

^ Power Girl #17–21 (October–November 2010) DC Comics.

^ Power Girl #19–21 (December 2010–February 2011). DC Comics.

^ Justice League: Generation Lost #18–19 (January–February 2011). DC Comics.

^ Worlds' Finest at the Grand Comics Database

^ Mister Terrific #1 (September 2011). DC Comics.

^ Rogers, Vaneta (January 13, 2012). "Paul Levitz Explains More About Worlds' Finest, Earth-2" . Newsarama . Archived from the original on February 2, 2012 . Retrieved January 29, 2012 .

^ Josh Kushins (2012-01-12). "DC COMICS IN 2012 – INTRODUCING THE 'SECOND WAVE OF DC COMICS-THE NEW 52" . Archived from the original on 2012-01-15 . Retrieved 2012-01-14 .

^ "DC Comics Announces Third Weekly New 52 Series With Teaser! It's Earth-2: World's End With Black Superman, Super-Powered Batman & More Spoilers!" . Inside Pulse .

^ Deathstroke (vol. 4) Annual #1 (March 2018). DC Comics.

^ Doomsday Clock #12 (February 2020). DC Comics.

^ Green Lanterns #40 (February 2018). DC Comics.

^ Infinite Crisis #2

^ Birds of Prey #42

^ Supergirl #16 (1997)

^ Justice League Europe #9 (1989)

^ JSA #31 (2002)

^ Wonder Woman #34 (September 2009). DC Comics.

^ All-Star Comics #58 (January–February 1976)

^ Karyn Pinter. "Jimmy Palmiotti: Time Bomb and Power Girl - the Breast of Friends? - Comics Bulletin" . Comics Bulletin . Archived from the original on 2014-07-22 . Retrieved 2014-05-10 .

^ Who’s Who in the DC Universe #18 (August 1986)

^ Power Girl #1, May 2009 Page 12 and 17. DC Comics.

^ Jeph Loeb . Superman/Batman #6 (March 2004) Page 3. DC Comics.

^ Justice League Europe #37 (April 1992). DC Comics.

^ JSA: Classified #2 (October 2005). DC Comics.

^ Jeph Loeb. Superman/Batman #4 (January 2004). DC Comics.

^ Warner Premiere, Superman/Batman: Public Enemies , Warner Home Video (2009). DC Comics.

^ Conway, Gerry (2 January 2020). "The true, dumb reason for the circle?..." Twitter . Retrieved 5 January 2020 .

^ All-Star Comics #64, Cover (February 1977). DC Comics.

^ "All The Stars There Are in (Super-hero) Heaven!" . Twomorrows.com . Retrieved 2011-01-30 .

^ Green Lantern and Power Girl one-shot (October 2000), part of the " Circle of Fire " story arc

^ Justice League: Generation Lost #16 (Late February 2011). DC Comics.

^ James Robinson (w), Nicola Scott (p), Trevor Scott (i). "The Price of Victory" Earth 2 #1 (July 2012), DC Comics

^ Paul Levitz (w), George Perez (p), Scott Koblish (i). "Rebirth" Worlds' Finest 1 (July 2012), DC Comics

^ Mike Johnson (w), Mahmud Asrar (p), Mahmud Asrar (i). Supergirl 19 (April 2013), DC Comics

^ Earth 2: World's End #16 (2015). DC Comics.

^ "Carol Strickland's Power Girl Index" . Carolastrickland.com . Retrieved 2011-01-30 .

^ Justice League: Generation Lost #6. DC Comics.

^ Justice League: Generation Lost #14. DC Comics.

^ Ame-Comi: Power Girl #1. DC Comics.

^ Abrams, Natalie (April 9, 2016). "Spoiler Room: Scoop on Blindspot, Outlander, The Originals and more" . Entertainment Weekly . Retrieved April 9, 2016 .

^ "The World's Finest" . Worldsfinestonline.com . Retrieved 2011-01-30 .

^ Lamar, Cyriaque (February 4, 2012). "In this semi-drunk movie about Superman's death, Elijah Wood is Cyborg Superman" . io9 . Gizmodo Media Group . Retrieved February 4, 2019 .

^ Trumbore, Dave (February 3, 2012). " Chronicle Writer Max Landis Vents About The Death and Return of Superman" . Collider . Retrieved February 4, 2019 .

^ Batman: The Brave and the Bold #1. DC Comics.

^ LEGO Batman [@LEGOBatmanGame] (3 December 2014). "Unfortunately for you, you're not dealing with #Superman... You're dealing with #PowerGirl! #DLC" (Tweet) – via Twitter .

^ Sara Cravens [@ThatsSoCravens] (May 16, 2017). "Over the moon to finally get to announce I'm #PowerGirl in @InjusticeGame Avail today! #injustice2 #warnerbros @Xbox @PlayStation #superhero" (Tweet) . Retrieved May 17, 2017 – via Twitter .

^ Brian Childs (2011-05-11). "The Best of Power Girl Cosplay" . uproxx . Retrieved 2016-05-28 . The Power Girl costume is perhaps the most popular cosplay costume of super hero comic books. By that I don’t mean that it is the most frequently worn costume. It is the most popular comic book costume for people to re-post, share and click on for reasons that remain a mystery to no one.

^ G4TV: Power Girl Shares Her Thoughts on Kevin Bacon ; accessed Oct. 14, 2010

^ Frankenhoff, Brent (2011). Comics Buyer's Guide Presents: 100 Sexiest Women in Comics . Krause Publications . p. 16. ISBN 978-1-4402-2988-6 .


Power Girl , also known as Kara Zor-L and Karen Starr , is a DC Comics superheroine , making her first appearance in All Star Comics #58 (January/February 1976). [1] Power Girl is the cousin of DC's flagship hero Superman , but from an alternate universe in the fictional multiverse in which DC Comics stories are set. Originally hailing from the world of Earth-Two , first envisioned as the home of DC's wartime heroes as published in 1940s comic books, Power Girl becomes stranded in the main universe where DC stories are set, and becomes acquainted with that world's Superman and her own counterpart, Supergirl .

In common with Supergirl's origin story, she is the daughter of Superman's aunt and uncle and a native of the planet Krypton . [2] The infant Power Girl's parents enabled her to escape the destruction of her home planet by placing her in a rocket ship. Although she left the planet at the same time that Superman did, her ship took much longer to reach Earth-Two. On Earth, as with other Kryptonians, Power Girl discovered she possessed abilities like super strength, flight, and heat vision, using which she became a protector of innocents and a hero for humanity. Though the specifics of how vary over subsequent retellings, Power Girl is later stranded on another Earth when a cosmic crisis affects her home of Earth-Two, and later carves out a separate identity for herself from her dimensional counterpart Supergirl once they are forced to coexist.

Though they are biologically the same person, Power Girl behaves as an older, more mature, and more level-headed version of Supergirl, with a more aggressive fighting style. She also adopts a different secret identity from her counterpart. These changes are reflected in their differing costumes and superhero names as well; Power Girl sports a bob of blond hair; wears a distinctive white, red, and blue costume with a cleavage -displaying cutout. The name Power Girl reflects that she chooses not to be seen as a derivative of Superman, but rather her own hero and this choice is reflected in the strong independent attitude of the character. Over various decades, Power Girl has been depicted as a member of superhero teams such as the Justice Society of America , Infinity, Inc. , Justice League Europe , and the Birds of Prey .

Power Girl's origin has gone through revisions, but over time has reverted to her original conception as the Supergirl of Earth-Two. The 1985 limited series Crisis on Infinite Earths eliminated Earth-Two from history, causing her to be retconned as the granddaughter of an Atlantean sorcerer known as Arion . This was an unpopular change and writers depicted the revised Power Girl inconsistently. The 2005–2006 Infinite Crisis limited series then restored her status as a refugee from the Krypton of the destroyed Pre-Crisis Earth-Two universe. Following DC's 2011 " Flashpoint " storyline and New 52 reboot, Power Girl's origin was retold as the Supergirl of "Earth 2", cousin and adopted daughter of Superman, who during evil Fourth World New God Darkseid 's invasion of Earth 2 becomes stranded in the main continuity of Earth 0, subsequently adopting the name Power Girl to hide her true identity. She returned to her source Earth in the story Earth 2: World's End (2014–2015).

Power Girl was introduced in All Star Comics #58 in 1976, [3] and was a member of the superhero team the Justice Society of America through the remainder of the 1970s and 1980s period known as the Bronze Age of Comics . Marvel Comics ' then-publisher Stan Lee said in 1978 that when DC Comics created Power Girl after Marvel had introduced Power Man , "I'm pretty annoyed about that. ...I've got to ask the Marvel lawyer – she's supposed to be starting a lawsuit about that and I haven't heard anything. I don't like the idea. ... You know, years ago we brought out Wonder Man , and [DC Comics] sued us because they had Wonder Woman , and ... I said okay, I'll discontinue Wonder Man. And all of a sudden they've got Power Girl. Oh, boy. How unfair." [4] Ironically, Marvel had previously published Thor #207, written by Power Girl co-creator Gerry Conway , in which Len Wein 's character says, "Whoever heard of Powergirl, anyhow?" [5]

After All Star Comics was canceled as a part of the DC Implosion , the character would continue to appear along with the rest of the JSA in Adventure Comics for a six-issue run. Due in part to her being one of the more popular characters in All Star Comics at the time, [6] she was given a solo tryout in Showcase issues 97–99, which expanded on her pre-Crisis origin. During this time, she was a regularly featured character in the annual Justice Society crossovers in the original Justice League of America series. She was a founding member of Infinity Inc. , appearing in each of the first 12 issues and making later guest appearances.

After DC's continuity-altering Crisis on Infinite Earths storyline, her origin was retconned in Secret Origins (vol. 2) #11 and she became a magic-based character with ties to ancient Atlantis, leading to appearances in The Warlord . The character did not receive her own self-titled series until the Power Girl miniseries of 1988. [7] The character became a featured member of Justice League Europe (a spin off from Justice League International ) for the run of the series. After the cancellation of JLI, the character joined Chris Claremont 's creator-owned series Sovereign Seven and appeared in several issues of Birds of Prey . She eventually rejoined the Justice Society in JSA #31 and became a regular part of that series and its follow-up, Justice Society of America vol. 3.

Power Girl played a significant role in the continuity-changing events of Infinite Crisis (2005), which tied into her starring role in the first JSA Classified story arc "Power Trip" in 2005 (issues #1–4 of the series). [8] [9] These stories heavily featured the revelation that Power Girl was in fact the Earth-Two Power Girl and a Kryptonian, who survived Crisis , and that her Atlantean backstory had been a lie. Starting in July 2009, Power Girl received her first ongoing series , simply titled Power Girl (vol. 2), with the first twelve issues written by Jimmy Palmiotti and Justin Gray , drawn by Amanda Conner , [10] and colored by Paul Mounts . [11] [12] According to Comic Book Resources , the series has been "wildly praised for its fresh and fun approach." [13]

When Palmiotti, Grey and Conner left the series after issue #12, Palmiotti said, "Amanda always said she could just commit to the book for a year, and as we got into the series we realized that we just couldn't do the same type of book with another artist at this point and decided it was a good idea to leave with her and give another team a shot." [13] Judd Winick took over as writer with artist Sami Basri beginning with issue #13. Winick stated that the tone of the book will continue, and the premise of the character in New York. [14]

The trade paperback " Power Girl" ( ISBN 978-1401209681 ) collects Showcase issues #97–99, Secret Origins (vol. 2) issue #11, JSA issues 32 and 39, and JSA Classified issues #1–4. " Power Girl: A New Beginning" ( ISBN 978-1401226183 ) collects the first six issues of the 2009 series. " Power Girl: Aliens & Apes" ( ISBN 978-1401229108 ) collects issues 7 through 12, and " Power Girl: Bomb Squad" ( ISBN 978-1401231620 ) covers 13 to 18, and " Power Girl: Old Friends" collecting issues 19-27.

The entirety of the Palmiotti/Grey/Conner run is contained in " Power Girl: Power Trip" ( ISBN 9781401243074 ) which collects JSA Classified #1–4 and Power Girl #1–12.

Kara's father discovers that Krypton is about to explode, and places her in a spacecraft directed towards the Earth. Although this occurs at the same time that Kal-L's ship is launched, Kara's ship travels more slowly, and she arrives on Earth decades after her cousin has landed. Kara's Symbioship is designed to keep her in stasis during the journey and provide her with life experiences and education in the form of virtual reality . The Symbioship allows her to interact with virtual copies of her parents and fellow Kryptonians. Originally, by the time she arrives on Earth, Kara is shown to be in her early twenties. However, as mentioned in JSA Classified #1, her age at arrival has now been retconned to about eighteen in post- Crisis continuity.

In Showcase #97, Kara is reclaimed by the sentient Symbioship and reimmersed into Kandorian society for a time. Several years of virtual time elapse, in which Kara is married and has a child. She is freed with the assistance of newspaper reporter Andrew Vinson, at which point she disables the ship.

Power Girl's existence is not revealed to the general public until much later; her cousin Clark and his wife Lois Lane provide her a family environment to assist her transition towards real life relationships. In her first recorded adventure, Kara assists Justice Society members Flash and Wildcat with containing an artificially induced volcanic eruption in China. She then joins Robin and Star-Spangled Kid to form a Super Squad to assist the Justice Society in defeating Brainwave and Per Degaton , who were causing disasters around the world. She pushes their base towards the Sun , the heat causing the villains to fall unconscious. Later, she becomes a full member of the Society when Superman retires from active membership.

Having been raised by the Symbioship with artificial Kryptonian life experiences, Power Girl finds it difficult to adapt to life on Earth. However, with the help of reporter Andrew Vinson, she adopts the secret identity of computer programmer Karen Starr (she obtains her knowledge in this field from exposure to Wonder Woman 's Purple Ray on Paradise Island ). On the pre- Crisis Earth-Two, Power Girl's closest friend is the Huntress , the daughter of the Earth-Two Batman and Catwoman .

The first contact between Power Girl and Earth-One 's universe was on the crossover Justice League of America #147, written by Paul Levitz & Martin Pasko , where the character shows her attraction to that reality saying, "It has a much nicer brand of Superman, y'know?". [15]

The 1985 Crisis on Infinite Earths limited series erased the existence of the Earth-Two Superman, and Power Girl's continuity was thus substantially disrupted. [16] Initially she believed herself to be Superman's cousin, as she had been before the reboot . However, her background was retconned
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