Abra Kadabra (comics)

Abra Kadabra

Abra Kadabra. Art by Oscar Jimenez and Anibal Rodriguez
Publication information
Publisher DC Comics
First appearance Flash #128 (May 1962)
Created by John Broome
Carmine Infantino
In-story information
Alter ego Abhararakadhararbarakh (Citizen Abra)
Team affiliations Secret Society of Super Villains
The Rogues
Injustice Gang
Abilities Master sorcerer
Previously:
Wielded magic-like futuristic technology

Abra Kadabra is a fictional character, a supervillain appearing in DC Comics, and an enemy of the Flash.

Publication history

Abra Kadabra first appeared in Flash #128 (May 1962) and was created by John Broome and Carmine Infantino.[1]

Fictional character biography

The Flash #133 (December, 1962), cover art by Carmine Infantino

Abra Kadabra is from the 64th century, at a time when science has made stage magic obsolete. However, he desires a career as a performing magician, so he goes back in time to find an audience to entertain after stealing a time machine and inventing a device to paralyze the guards, and soon clashes with the Flash (Barry Allen). He has a hypnotic device that makes people clap regardless of their thoughts, which he uses to force applause from audiences even when they don't applaud his magic tricks. He finds his magic is being overlooked, so decides to involve himself in important events. When the Flash tries to stop a crime he is committing, he makes the Flash clap, enabling him to escape. He is able to send the Flash into space after challenging him to a fight at the theatre, but the Flash is able to change the course of the planetoid he is on so he is sent back to Earth, and finds Kadabra took his left-behind costume, meaning he can follow the impulses, and Kadabra is jailed. But he hypnotizes the Governor using a ray from a device made out of pots and pans, to let him out, and starts staging a puppet show where the Flash is defeated by a puppet called Captain Cream-Puff. When the Flash passes a poster advertising Kadabra, he is turned into a puppet and used in the performance. But the Scarlet Speedster is able to restore himself slightly using the organic matter in his brain, which was not transformed, and then reverse Kadabra's ray so he is restored completely. He again defeats Kadabra.[2]

In one of his many confrontations with the Flash, Abra Kadabra's technology is damaged and his body becomes insubstantial and wraith-like.[3][4] After his body is returned to normal, he is captured by a bounty hunter named Peregrine, and returned to his native century to serve a death sentence, although he is saved by the Flash before he can be executed.[5] Shortly after returning to the 21st century, during the Underworld Unleashed storyline, he forgoes his technological implements and tricks five rogues into selling their souls to Neron so he can gain genuine magical powers.[1] Abra Kadabra later kidnapped Linda Park, the girlfriend of Wally West (Barry Allen's protégé and successor), during their wedding and erases her from history,[6] though he is ultimately defeated with the help of Walter West, Wally's counterpart from an alternate dimension.[7]

Abra Kadabra is mentioned in Neil Gaiman's Books of Magic mini-series. In the fourth issue Timothy Hunter, escorted by Mister E, visits the 64th century, described by E as a time when the differences between magic and technology have become blurred. The inhabitants tell them they have selected their "date-line" to send the "Madchild Abhararakadhararbarakh". Timothy Hunter responds "Abracadabra?" and Mister E tells him not to talk to the inhabitants of this time, and so they then continue their path into the future.[8]

In Infinite Crisis, Abra Kadabra became a member of the Secret Society of Super Villains.[9]

In "One Year Later", he and several other Rogues are approached by Inertia with a plan to kill the Flash (then Bart Allen).[10] Though Inertia is defeated, Kadabra and the other Rogues successfully beat Bart to death, though not before Kadabra recognizes that Bart is too young to be the Flash they are used to dealing with.[11]

Salvation Run

Abra Kadabra is one of the exiled villains featured in Salvation Run along with his fellow Rogues: Captain Cold, Heat Wave, Weather Wizard, and Mirror Master. Upon coming across the planet's local pygmies, Abra Kadabra deciphers its language and uses it to locate a "safe zone" for himself and the other Rogues before leading the other villains dispatched there to it.[12]

He was a member of the Rogues who joined Libra's Secret Society of Super Villains,[13] however the rest of the Rogues left the Society.[14]

He was last seen in The Flash: Rebirth with off-panel, being attacked by Professor Zoom. In the final issue of the mini-series, Abra is seen to have survived Zoom's attack and says Zoom should have made sure he was dead.[15]

DC Rebirth

Abra Kadabra makes his post-DC Rebirth debut in Titans series. He first appears as a bumbling and terrible party magician known as Mister Hocus Pocus. When Lilith forms a psionic link with Wally West to try and uncover who or what removed 10 years of history from everyone's memories, she accidentally awakens Abra Kadabra from within Mister Hocus Pocus. Abra Kadabra reveals he is the one who made Wally disappear and he will now destroy him.[16]

Abra Kadabra creates younger puppet duplicates of the Titans and has them fight the Titans. When the puppet Lilith finds Linda Park and tells Abra Kadabra of her importance to Wally, Abra Kadabra realizes that history is broken, knowing that Wally and Linda will not meet years from now. Abra Kadabra realizes that his plans must be speed up, and before he can contemplate even further, he is attack by Garth. He tries to kill him but only succeeds in injuring Garth due to Wally's interference.[17] Abra Kadabra reveals to Wally that he removed the latter from time and recollection because he always managed to thwarts Abra Kadabra's plans, and disappears with his puppet Titans afterwards. At the theater, Abra Kadabra tries to receive evaluations of the Titans from his puppets. Abra Kadabra reveals his origin (which is similar to his pre-Flashpoint origin) to his puppets, revealing that he is from the future and traveled back in time in order to become famous, but his plans were always thwarted by the Flash (Barry Allen) and Kid Flash (Wally West). Abra Kadabra then used almost all of his power to throw Wally into the time stream in order to remove him from time, but it removed his memories in the process. Intrigued as to why history has been knocked askew, due to the fact Wally knows Linda (even hinting that he knows the true perpetrator), Abra Kadabra begins to craft an even greater trick and he kidnaps Linda from in front of Wally.[18]

Powers and abilities

Abra Kadabra is a powerful sorcerer and can achieve virtually any feat with his spells. Originally his powers were all due to 64th century scientific technology that appeared magical to residents of the 20th century. Later, Kadabra's powers are augmented to include true sorcery when he strikes a deal with Neron.[19]

Other versions

Flashpoint

In the alternate timeline of the Flashpoint event, Abra Kadabra is a television presenter and member of the Secret Seven. He sends a message about Shade, the Changing Man believing that Shade was a dangerous lunatic and then reveals the identities of the Secret Seven members.[20]

In other media

Television

Video games

References

  1. 1 2 Jimenez, Phil (2008), "Abra Kadabra", in Dougall, Alastair, The DC Comics Encyclopedia, London: Dorling Kindersley, p. 8
  2. The Flash vol. 1 #133 (December 1962)
  3. The Flash Vol. 2 #23 (Feb. 1989)
  4. The Flash Vol. 2 #67 (Sept. 1992)
  5. The Flash Vol. 2 #68 (Sept. 1992)
  6. The Flash Vol. 2 #142 (Oct. 1998)
  7. The Flash Vol. 2 #158 (March 2000)
  8. Gaiman, Neil (1991). The Books of Magic. Book IV: The Road to Nowhere: DC Comics. ISBN 978-1-56389-082-6.
  9. Infinite Crisis #2 (Jan. 2006)
  10. The Flash: The Fastest Man Alive #11 (June 2007)
  11. The Flash: The Fastest Man Alive #13 (Aug. 2007)
  12. Salvation Run #1 (Jan. 2008)
  13. Justice League of America #21 (July 2008)
  14. Rogues Revenge #1 (Sept. 2008)
  15. The Flash: Rebirth #6 (April 2010)
  16. Titans vol. 3, #1 (2016)
  17. Titans vol. 3, #2 (2016)
  18. Titans vol. 3, #3 (2016)
  19. Underworld Unleashed #1 (November 1995)
  20. Flashpoint: Secret Seven #2 (July 2011)
  21. "Search Ask Greg". S8.org. Retrieved 2016-09-23.

External links

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