Doom Patrol

Elasti-Girl is a fictional character, a superhero of the DC Comicsuniverse and a member of the Doom Patrol. For the Incredibles character, see Elastigirl. The page you requested was not found. However, this book may not under any circumstances be resold or redistributed for compensation of any kind without prior written permission from the author and his publisher. This book may be briefly cited, and copied or downloaded for further free distribution for individual use, provided that full attribution to the author, Steven Shaviro, is maintained. But for greater convenience I am keeping it available here, on the World Wide Web. You may click here to purchase Doom Patrols from amazon.com. This book is a theoretical fiction about postmodernism and popular culture.
The similarities between that group and DC's Doom Patrol are uncanny, but the two debuted so close together that it's very unlikely either was influenced by the other. If this site is enjoyable or useful to you, Please contribute to its necessary financial support. Once Upon a Geek Pretty, Fizzy Paradise random picture day Reilly2040's Blog Supergirl Comic Box Commentary Toyriffic when is evil cool. The Blogroll of sites involved: For More Challenges, visit these fine blogs. Frank got the ball rolling over there for a DC Challenge-related blog crossovery thing. Original pencil art by Matthew Clark. Former Patrol member Crazy Jane finds the island first, bearing terrifying news of what's to come& Plus, more Metal Men. Oolong Island is picking up the pieces after the Black Lanterns' devastating attack.
Tomorrow brings the return of Crazy Jane. Crazy Jane as rendered by Matthew Clark. They've also changed the cover up a bit, using an image that Matthew Clark had previously shared with me. I've read some feedback posted here by Nathan on the comments page and it sounds like Greg might not be the only one with concerns. He seems concerned for the future of the title, which I can understand in today's fickle marketplace, especially when you throw a crossover in early.
Aside from killing off some members of the John Byrne iteration of the team and some brief appearances of Bumblebee, though, that promise has gone mostly unfulfilled. When Keith Giffen's revamp of "Doom Patrol" was first announced, I remember a lot of promises that it would somehow encompass all versions of the team over the years. While a lot of folks went punk in the '80s, Storm's transformation into mohawked, leather-wearing badass was less about the music and lifestyle and more about going down into the sewer and having knife-fights with super-powered gang-leaders. He eventually removed the symbiote and returned to his classic costume, except for a brief period when Aunt May was hospitalized and he decided to dress in a non-symbiotic black costume to express the darkness of his soul. One of the most famous costume changes in comics history, Spider-Man's black suit was actually an alien symbiote that bonded to his body during an intergalactic conflict called the Secret Wars, but we're pretty sure it was really put there because everyone was tired of drawing all those webs on his classic costume. Mercifully, none of this lasted, and he returned to his old identity and costume for reasons that ultimately, don't really matter.