Web (character)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
The Web
Publication information
PublisherArchie Comics
DC Comics
Dark Circle Comics
First appearanceZip Comics #27 (July 1942)
Created byUnknown (writer)
John Cassone (artist)
In-story information
Alter egoJohn Raymond
Jane Raymond
Notable aliasesJohn Raymond
AbilitiesHi-Tech Suit, Taekwondo

The Web is a superhero created by MLJ Comics in 1942 by artist John Cassone and an unknown writer. The character was published in Zip Comics until 1943, and was later brought back in 1966 to appear in Archie's revived superhero line. DC Comics licensed Archie's superhero characters in 1991, and brought a new revival of the character to life in 2009.

1940s

The Web debuted in issue #27 of Zip Comics in July 1942, having originally been intended for Top-Notch Comics, the change occurring due to a decision to emphasize the humour of Top-Notch. In that first issue, he rescues a woman named Rose Wayne from a Japanese terrorist, the Black Dragon of Death. Rose discovers his secret identity.[1] His origin was recounted in the second story, in issue #28.[2]

The Web's secret identity was John Raymond, a college professor of criminology, and mystery writer.[3] Raymond's interest in studying the motives and behavior of criminals harked back to his youth, and the criminal leanings of his brother Tom.

The Web's enemies include Captain Berlin, and other Nazis.[2]

The character was the lead story in Zip for a while, but lost the cover spot to Steel Sterling. His last appearance in Zip was in issue #38, in July 1943.[2]

1960s

The Web came out of retirement in March 1966 in Fly-Man #36, written by Jerry Siegel and drawn by Paul Reinman to combat the antics of an impostor.[4] By this time, he was retired and married to Rose, who doesn't want him to be a superhero anymore. He convinces her to let him go out once and fight a character who'd stolen his name and costume, but after one fight, he decided to stay in the superhero game, and lie to his wife.[4]

In Mighty Crusaders #4 (April 1966), he joins with the Fox and Captain Flag to form the Ultra-Men. In Mighty Comics #40 (November 1966), he is chastised by his wife, who no longer wanted him to be a superhero.[5]

Despite this criticism, Raymond continues his crimefighting, while becoming increasingly hen-pecked domestically. His wife ultimately trains and dons her own costume: as "Pow-Girl" (appearing in Mighty Comics #43) she fights crime alongside her husband, who is unaware of her real identity. The Web had several more issues' worth of appearances, before disappearing again.[6] It was later revealed that Rose was the younger sister of another Archie superhero, The Jaguar.[7]

Reception

The 60s version of the Web with a nagging wife and mother-in-law was intended to copy the then-popular Marvel Comics style, in which superhero characters are seen coping with conflicts in their personal lives.[4] This was not well-received by fans. The MLJ Companion describes it as "a conceit lifted straight out of the day's inane TV situation comedies" and Dwight R. Decker wrote in Amazing Heroes that "The Web was reduced to playing straight man to mother-in-law jokes".[8] John Wells in American Comic Book Chronicles writes that "the ongoing nagging of Rose Raymond was more shrill than funny", although "that's not to say the feature didn't have its moments".[4]

Later appearances

The Web returned in Archie's Red Circle Comics superhero revival of the 1980s. He made several appearances alongside the company's heroes.

In 2006, he made a cameo appearance in Archie and Friends #101, in the Katy Keene story. In 2007, he appeared again in the Katy Keene story in Archie and Friends #107.

New Crusaders

In New Crusaders, John Raymond/Web and Rose Raymond/Pow-Girl had a son, Wyatt, who has been given a super suit that enhances his physical skills and assumes his father's role of the Web.[citation needed]

DC Comics

Impact Comics

In 1991 the Archie superhero characters were re-imagined in the Impact Comics line. Here the Web is portrayed as a group of secret agents who wore powered armor.

2009 revival

DC Comics' 2009 revival of the Red Circle characters included the Web.[9]

The new incarnation of John Raymond is a spoiled, slacker womanizer, fancying himself a socialite. His brother David, a social worker, has distanced himself from his family, choosing to help the poorer as a social worker. Despite their differences, John always admired David. John was made the heir of the family fortune by his father, who reasoned that John's cold, privileged mindset would make him a better businessman. John, who believed his brother to be the better man and rightful heir, decided to balance business needs with humanitarian goals. To those ends, John maintained his profile as a spoiled socialite while using part of his five-billion dollar fortune to set up a superpowered persona as the Web, a common people superhero who derived his name from the World Wide Web. John developed an advanced supercomputer to select the most urgent or worthy of numerous requests for help submitted his website summontheweb.com.

John later discovers that David has fallen in debt to loansharks, who later murder David. David explains with his last breath that he didn't want to ask John for help because he was too proud. David's death causes John to reevaluate his activities as the Web, and decides that he will no longer aid those who have the resources to help themselves, or who have friends and family they can turn to. Instead, the Web will assist only those who have no one else to turn to.[10] The first beneficiary of his "new deal" is Lieutenant Joseph Higgins, stationed in Afghanistan and looking for his missing father. However, waiting for the Web reply, Higgins is grievously wounded while in a mission, and saved by an experimental warsuit: by the time the Web reviews email, and gives him a positive reply, Higgins has become The Shield, superhero on his own and a potential ally in John's quest.[11]

John eventually discovers that the man responsible for David's murder is a renowned scientist named Dr. Archer, who is using his knowledge of chemistry to create addictive recreational drugs which he then distributes through violent street gangs. Unable to hold off Archer and fight him actively alone the Web resorts, like the previous Impact Comics character, to turn the Web identity into an organization of equally empowered crime fighters, a small army of Web Hosts, receiving functional copies of his suit in exchange for enacting justice in his name.[12][13] After a brief period of unrests and anarchy, Oracle and Batgirl offer an upgrade to the Web Hosts, in exchange for them pledging alliance to the Justice League of America rather than acting independently and thinning their number to expel the more rambunctious and rebellious members. The Web Hosts now receive their powers from a cloud computing server in the Web Lair, making the Web able to shut their suits down remotely. Furthermore, every suit is fitted with an access to Twitterati (the DCU equivalent of Twitter featured into the Final Crisis: Dance miniseries), granting the Host a private social network to use for personal interactions and crimefighting as well, and John Raymond himself, as the current administrator, a permanent link to his Hosts and simple supporters (and a spyware implanted program to gain Oracle absolute control over the aptly named Interweb).

With the help of his new hosts and his supporters the Web finally tracks down Dr. Archer, finally handing him down to the police with enough proof to get him put on trial. However Alice, girlfriend of the late David, warns John of another hidden instigator behind Archer's actions, the mysterious Deuces Wilde.[14]

When a technological-savvy villain, Doctor Zadar, manages to mainline the remote link, effectively capturing and controlling the entire Web Hosts population, Raymond meets Kim Brand, the current incarnation of the Flygirl, in this continuity no longer a magic user but a former Web Host wearing an enhanced, illegally modified and souped-up Web Host suit with greater proficiency. Raymond enlists her for the rescue mission, offering her the enhanced suit in exchange, this time as her personal property.

Raymond handles the crisis selflessly, deliberately risking his life to keep Fly Girl out of harm, but highlighting his lack of teamplay abilities: however, he manages to impress the U.S. Army to warrant for Kim and himself an induction into the newly formed Mighty Crusaders, along with The Comet, Inferno, The Shield and War Eagle.[15]

Powers

The DC Comics incarnation of the Web has no superpowers, having in his John Raymond persona the strength of a man in his prime engaging in moderate physical exercise. Instead, he relies on an overtly technological suit, granting him several abilities, including but not limited to flight, bullet-proof armor, HUD interface connected to a GPS tracker and enhanced strength. However, his most prized asset is his Lair, similar to the Batcave in containing his weaponry and a supercomputer, always connected to the website summontheweb.com and feeding him the data of people desperate enough to get help from outside sources.[12]

John Raymond has fully functional copies of his suit, with every power of his original one, used by willing followers of summontheweb.com,[13] along with an instruction manual and 120 days of tech support, creating a super-hero franchise named the "Web Hosts" (obvious pun over the webhost concept, consistent with the image of the Web as an accessibile, Internet-savvy hero). When Oracle and Batgirl confront him about his lack of control over the Hosts, John Raymond agrees to enforce a stricter charter on his users in exchange for upgrades provided by Oracle herself.

The Web Hosts are now permanently connected to the Interwebs, a Twitter-derived social network, fully accessible from the suits, that constantly feeds in John Raymond's administrator account and suit all information the Hosts are willing to share about crime fighting, or simple socialization. As a programmed side-effect, however, everything the Web does is out on the display on the Interwebs, for everyone to view or comment upon. As a security measure, the Web Lair is upgraded with a cloud computing system linked to the Hosts, making Raymond (and Oracle) able to remotely disable the Hosts Suits.[14]

Jane Raymond

In July 2015, Archie Comics announced that its imprint Dark Circle Comics would introduce a new version of the Web the following year: Jane Raymond, a 14-year old Korean-American high school student who becomes a costumed hero after gaining powers from an accident.[16] The announced series never materialized.[17]

References

  1. ^ Mitchell, Kurt; Thomas, Roy (2019). American Comic Book Chronicles: 1940-1944. TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 156. ISBN 978-1605490892.
  2. ^ a b c Mougin, Lou (2020). Secondary Superheroes of Golden Age Comics. McFarland & Co. pp. 135–137. ISBN 9781476638607.
  3. ^ Nevins, Jess (2013). Encyclopedia of Golden Age Superheroes. High Rock Press. p. 289. ISBN 978-1-61318-023-5.
  4. ^ a b c d Wells, John (2014). American Comic Book Chronicles: 1965-1969. TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 78. ISBN 978-1605490557.
  5. ^ Web at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on April 14, 2012.
  6. ^ "The Mighty Crusaders Handbook". mightycrusaders.net.
  7. ^ Timmons, Stan (w), Manna, Lou (p), Linsdley, Rex, Stone, Chic (i). "The Killing Hour" Blue Ribbon Comics, no. 14 (December 1984).
  8. ^ Offenberger, Rik; Castiglia, Paul (2016). The MLJ Companion: The Complete History of the Archie Super-Heroes. TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 143. ISBN 978-1605490670.
  9. ^ "Completing the Red Circle: Talking to JMS". Newsarama.com. Retrieved 2010-12-27.
  10. ^ The Red Circle: The Web (October 2009)
  11. ^ The Red Circle: The Shield (October 2009)
  12. ^ a b The Web (vol. 3) #1 (November 2009)
  13. ^ a b The Web (vol. 3) #2 (December 2009)
  14. ^ a b The Web (vol. 3) #3 (January 2010)
  15. ^ The Web (vol. 3) #10 (August 2010)
  16. ^ Phegley, Kiel (July 2, 2015). "Archie's Dark Circle Introduced Teen Hero in The Web". Comic Book Resources. Archived from the original on August 14, 2015. Retrieved August 31, 2015.
  17. ^ "Szymon Kudranski's Twitter". May 24, 2020. Retrieved November 21, 2020.

External links