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Weasel (DC Comics)

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Weasel is the name of two DC Comics supervillains.

An unnamed incarnation of the character appeared in James Gunn's The Suicide Squad (2021), portrayed by Sean Gunn.

Publication history[edit]

Weasel first appeared in The Fury of Firestorm #35 (August 1985), and was created for DC Comics by Gerry Conway and Rafael Kayanan.[1]

Fictional character biographies[edit]

John Monroe[edit]

Weasel
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceThe Fury of Firestorm #35 (August 1985)
Created byGerry Conway (writer)
Rafael Kayanan (artist)
In-story information
Alter egoJohn Monroe
Team affiliationsSuicide Squad
AbilitiesGreat agility
Hand-to-hand combat

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John Monroe was a lonely student at Stanford University in the late 1960s. His contemporaries rarely noticed him. If they did, they referred to him in derogatory terms, using words like "Weasel" to describe him. This made him bitter, driving him to become a murderer decades later.

The grown John Monroe became a teacher at Vandemeer University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. A number of his fellow students from Stanford University held prominent positions. To rationalize killing three of them, he considered them threats to getting tenure at Vandemeer. Taking on the costumed identity of Weasel, displaying great agility, expertise at hand-to-hand combat, and a costume with sharp claws, he stalked the campus grounds and brutally murdered Arnold Lintel, Linda Walters, and a night guard named Chuck Gherkin. When Martin Stein (one half of Firestorm) shows up for a job opening as a physics professor, Monroe made two attempts on Martin Stein's life. In the second attempt, he would have killed Martin had he not provoked the transformation of Stein into Firestorm. After a fight, Firestorm unmasked Weasel and sent him to jail.[2]

Weasel was later recruited into the Suicide Squad for their ill-fated mission to rescue Hawk. During the mission, he tried to kill the Thinker by cutting Thinker's throat with his claws. Rick Flag Jr. took the Thinker's helmet to regain control over the mission. When he saw the Weasel, the Thinker's helmet told Flag to kill him. Weasel's death was not mourned.[3]

During the Blackest Night storyline, Weasel's dead body was seen to be among those entombed in the Hall of Justice. When the Black Power Rings flew in, Weasel's body was among the dead bodies that were reanimated by the Black Power Rings and inducted into the Black Lantern Corps.[4]

In September 2011, The New 52 rebooted DC's continuity. In this new timeline, a slightly revised Jack Monroe Weasel is re-established in the Forever Evil storyline, depicted in a more animalistic state. He was lurking in Central Park when Steve Trevor and Killer Frost were looking for Cheetah (who was in possession of Wonder Woman's lasso). Weasel ambushed Steve Trevor and Killer Frost where he was frozen by a reluctant Killer Frost. Killer Frost told Steve Trevor that Weasel is considered a joke compared to villains Black Bison and Multiplex. Before Steve Trevor and Killer Frost press on, Killer Frost apologizes to Weasel.[5]

Future Weasel[edit]

In Batman #666 (July 2007), a special issue set 15 years in the future, a different Weasel is shown as an enemy of Damian Wayne, who has become Batman following the death of Dick Grayson.[6] This future Weasel has canine-like teeth.

In other media[edit]

An unnamed incarnation of the Weasel appears in the live-action DC Extended Universe film The Suicide Squad (2021), portrayed by Sean Gunn. This version is a member of the titular team.[7][8] He is recruited to the Suicide Squad to destroy the facility of Jötunheim on Corto Maltese, but seemingly drowns while being airdropped of the island's coast. In a post-credits scene, he is revealed to have survived, and flees into the Corto Maltese jungle.

References[edit]

  1. Rovin, Jeff (1987). The Encyclopedia of Supervillains. New York: Facts on File. pp. 369–370. ISBN 0-8160-1356-X. Search this book on
  2. The Fury of Firestorm #35. DC Comics.
  3. Doom Patrol and Suicide Squad Special #1. DC Comics.
  4. Blackest Night #3. DC Comics.
  5. Forever Evil: A.R.G.U.S. #5. DC Comics.
  6. Batman #666
  7. "Nathan Fillion's Role in James Gunn's THE SUICIDE SQUAD May Have Been Revealed". GeekTyrant. Retrieved 2019-10-11.
  8. Vary, Adam B (August 22, 2020). "'The Suicide Squad' First Look, Full Cast Revealed by Director James Gunn at DC FanDome". Variety.

External links[edit]


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