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General Wade Eiling

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General Wade Eiling
General Wade Eiling as depicted in Who's Who Update '88 #4 (January 1995).
Art by Pat Broderick.
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceCaptain Atom #1 (March 1987)
Created byCary Bates
Pat Broderick
In-story information
Alter egoWade Eiling
Team affiliationsSuicide Squad
The Society
Injustice Gang
United States Army
Notable aliasesThe General
Shaggy Man
Abilities

General Wade Eiling, sometimes known as The General, is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.

Publication history

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Wade Eiling first appeared in Captain Atom #1 (March 1987) and was created by Cary Bates and Pat Broderick.[1]

Fictional character biography

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Wade Eiling is a military tactician who blackmails the accused Nathaniel Adam into participating in the atomic experiment that turns Nathaniel into the nuclear being Captain Atom, and causes Adam to disappear for 18 years.[1] This is considered a failure by Eiling and Heinrich Megala, the project's main scientist. They would attempt the experiment again, which ends up with the creation of Major Force.

During the 18 years in which Adam is gone, Eiling marries Adam's wife and acts as father to his two children.[1] Eiling also manipulates Captain Atom into serving the military. His first attempts, a chance for Adam to view his children in exchange for retrieving a lost submarine, falls apart in issue #3 of the 1980s Captain Atom series. This embarrasses Eiling in front of his superiors. The same issue details the cover story for Captain Atom that Eiling helps create, one that is, in his words, "a scenario just far-fetched and hokey enough to sound authentic". His continuing conflicts with the title character were a major focus of the 1980s Captain Atom series. Eiling would also form an intensely adversarial relationship with Megala.

General Wade Eiling makes a cameo appearance in SoftWar, the first story arc of 1993 maxi-series The Hacker Files.

In JLA #24 after being diagnosed with an inoperable brain tumor, Eiling sends a military team to salvage the indestructible body of the first Shaggy Man from the Pacific Ocean. Green Lantern and Aquaman attempt to stop the Corps from retrieving the body, but their efforts are thwarted.[2]

The General returns to his base of operations, Threshold. From there he orchestrates a military assault on the JLA. Answering a call for help in Phoenix, Arizona, the Justice League are attacked by American military forces. Spearheading the offensive is a new superhero team called the Ultramarine Corps.[1][3] Recruited and genetically enhanced by Eiling's lab team, The Ultramarines already exhibit signs of terminal illness.[3] Meanwhile, Batman, the Huntress and Plastic Man track Eling to Threshold, where they discover that Eiling transferred his brain patterns into the indestructible body of the Shaggy Man with its body hair shaved off and called this form the General.

The JLA battle the military and the Corps until JLA #26 (February 1999). General's forces consider mutiny as doubts against attacking the League come to a head. Superman, whose super-senses have diagnosed the Ultramarine's disease, persuades the Ultramarine Corps that General has used and betrayed them. The Corps members, who volunteered for service in good faith, switch sides and speed with the JLA toward Threshold.[4]

Even against the combined might of the JLA and the Ultramarines, the General is unstoppable. Batman notices that General's tactical edge and focus are diminished in his new artificial form. Working together, the team fights the monster onto a bulk-matter teleport platform, during which General is transported to the asteroid 433 Eros.[1]

He stays there for several months until Queen Bee recruits him into Lex Luthor's new Injustice Gang. General battles against the Justice League a second time as part of a coordinated attack, this time utilizing a large-scale machine gun. He declares that the League was wrong to banish him to the asteroid with no trial. The battle moves to one of the White Martian warships that is currently inside the Phantom Zone. There, General states his plan to utilize the weapons of mass destruction on Earth itself. Orion's war dog Sturmer participates in a trick against General. The canine tackles the man through a ship's airlock, into the Phantom Zone. This naturally distresses Superman, but Orion assures him that Sturmer has willingly made this choice.[5]

Having somehow escaped, he has since appeared in the JSA comics fighting Hal Jordan. During the Infinite Crisis storyline, General is one of the hundreds of villains recruited into Alexander Luthor Jr.'s Secret Society of Super-Villains.[1][6] He is a participant in the Battle of Metropolis, the first step of the Society's war on the heroes. This effort fails.[7]

Later, he is recruited into the Suicide Squad, where his regenerative powers are significantly diminished. He betrays the team to their intended target. Rick Flag detonates a bomb implanted in General's head, ending the threat. His head and brain eventually regenerate, but results in some amnesia.[8]

General continues to serve as a Squad member through the "Salvation Run" storyline. This is the name for a program that exiles supervillains to a distant, Earth-like planet without a trial.[9]

In September 2011, DC Comics engaged in a line-wide revision of its superhero comics, including their stories and characters' fictional histories, known as The New 52. In the new stories, the character of Captain Atom has a new origin with General Wade Eiling first appearing in a radiation suit while flanking Captain Atom.[10] General Eiling tells Captain Atom to fall in line as he is a super-weapon that will keep America on the top. When Captain Atom tells them that he will be just another atomic bomb for them, General Eiling attempts to quarantine Captain Atom. While stating that he cannot eat or drink, Captain Atom counters everything that the military throws at him.[11]

Powers and abilities

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General Wade Eiling specializes in military warfare.[12] In a shaved body of Shaggy Man that he dubs the General, Eiling has enough raw strength to engage multiple Justice League members in close combat, including powerhouses such as Steel, Orion, Martian Manhunter, and Superman.

After becoming the General by transferring his mind into the body of the first Shaggy Man, he can rapidly regrow lost limbs.[13] He is also immune to extreme temperatures, high pressures, and the vacuum of space, is functionally immortal, and does not require food, water, or sleep to survive.[14]

Other versions

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The General appears in JLA/Avengers #4 as a brainwashed minion of Krona.[15]

In other media

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Television

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Video games

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General Wade Eiling as the General appears in the Nintendo DS version of Justice League Heroes.

Miscellaneous

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  • General Wade Eiling, as the General, appears in issue #5 of the Justice League Unlimited spin-off comic book.
  • General Wade Eiling appears in the Young Justice tie-in comic.

Reception and analysis

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The Slings & Arrows Comic Guide found that in the character of General Wade Eiling the comic had created "an appalling specimen of military pigheadedness who can justify every iniquitous piece of behaviour under the blanket of national security".[20] The Supervillain Book summed up Eiling's character as an "immoral soldier".[21]

According to George A. Gonzalez, the Justice League Unlimited incarnation of Eiling represents the negative side of "aggressive military policies of the 2000s" by the US government, like "wanton violence" and "fixation on 'power' (i.e. military force)". Through his deliberate transformation into "a huge, hideous, grayish monster with superpowers", Eiling "quite literally [...] embodies the ugliness of militarism".[18] Eiling also serves as an example of the development of comics over the decades: While in the 1940s and 50s comic heroes were "unabashed patriots", in the figure of General Eiling from the 2000s they fight against a representative of a misunderstood patriotism that values the reputation of the nation-state higher than the lives of any number of civilians.[18]

Markus Engelns gives a different characterization of Eiling based on the World War III comic arcs, in a later stage in the character's development: Eiling no longer has his function as a general, and has lost any discernable motive beyond fighting, which emphasizes his dangerousness even more.[22]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f Jimenez, Phil (2008), "General, The", in Dougall, Alastair (ed.), The DC Comics Encyclopedia, New York: Dorling Kindersley, p. 135, ISBN 978-0-7566-4119-1, OCLC 213309017
  2. ^ JLA #24. DC Comics.
  3. ^ a b Lloyd, John (May 2020). Exploring the Dynamics of Relationships and Emotional Processes of Comic Book Characters for Potential Implications in Family Therapy: A Content Analysis Approach (PhD). p. 81. Retrieved December 31, 2020.
  4. ^ JLA #26. DC Comics.
  5. ^ JLA Vol. 6: World War III (collects JLA #34-41, 2000, ISBN 1-56389-618-4). DC Comics.
  6. ^ Infinite Crisis #3. DC Comics.
  7. ^ Infinite Crisis #7. DC Comics.
  8. ^ Suicide Squad Vol. 3 #8. DC Comics.
  9. ^ Salvation Run #1. DC Comics.
  10. ^ Captain Atom (vol. 2) #3. DC Comics.
  11. ^ Captain Atom (vol. 2) #4. DC Comics.
  12. ^ JLA Vol 1 #24 (December 1998). DC Comics.
  13. ^ JLA Vol 1 #39 (March 2000). DC Comics.
  14. ^ JLA Vol #26 (February 1999). DC Comics.
  15. ^ JLA/Avengers #4. DC Comics/Marvel Comics.
  16. ^ a b "Wade Eiling Voices (DC Universe)". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved May 19, 2024. A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its credits or other reliable sources of information.
  17. ^ a b Ng, Philiana (August 8, 2014). "Clancy Brown has joined The CW's "Arrow" spin-off as a powerful comic-book character". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved August 8, 2014.
  18. ^ a b c Gonzalez, George A (2016). "Justice League Unlimited and the Politics of Globalization" (PDF). Foundation: The International Review of Science Fiction. 45 (123): 5–13.
  19. ^ Egan, James (2016). "The Flash 2014". 1000 Facts About TV Shows Vol. 1. Lulu Publishing Services. ISBN 9781326660536.
  20. ^ Plowright, Frank, ed. (2003). The Slings & Arrows Comic Guide. Slings & Arrows. p. 108. ISBN 978-0954458904.
  21. ^ Misiroglu, Gina Renée; Eury, Michael, eds. (2006). The Supervillain Book: The Evil Side of Comics and Hollywood. Visible Ink Press. ISBN 978-1578591787.
  22. ^ Engelns, Markus (2009-09-07). "Der Dritte Weltkrieg als Reifeprüfung" (PDF). Medien Observationen. Retrieved 2020-12-14.