Creation The Man With No Face was created by John Romita and Dick Ayers in 1954 and first appeared in Captain America Comics # 77. The Man With No Face was created by Zhang Chin when he was part of the Chinese super soldier project. He has the abilties to fly, go intangible, and travel through shadows.
We’re scraping the bottom of the barrel as this countdown highlights the worst of the worst; the all-time most pointless superheroes from DC comics. Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, and The Flash are just a handful of not only DC Comic’s most well-known characters, but some of pop culture’s most iconic figures.
Created by Steve Ditko, the Question first appeared in Charlton Comics ‘ Blue Beetle #1 (June 1967). The character was acquired by DC Comics in the early 1980s and incorporated into the DC Universe . The Question’s secret identity was originally Vic Sage.
No-Face , also known as Kaonashi , is the secondary antagonist turned supporting character of the 2001 Studio Ghibli film, Spirited Away. He appears to be a wandering spirit, with no home, family or friends.
What did Victor Sage do after leaving Hub City?
After leaving Hub City, Victor Sage held a series of journalistic positions in various cities, while reviving his Question persona when necessary. He would participate in major superheroic events such as the invasion of the Dominators and Brainiac’s attack on Metropolis .
Rodor suggested that Sage use a mask made of Pseudoderm to cover his famous features. Disguised by the Pseudoderm mask and armed with information, Sage eventually caught up with Dr. Twain, stopped the transaction, and extracted a confession from him. He then left Twain bound in Pseudoderm in an ironic twist.
The design was based on the notes of Gotham criminal Bart Magan and research into Gingold, the chemical responsible for the Elongated Man’s powers. Pseudoderm was intended to work as an applied skin-like bandage with the help of a bonding gas, but had unforeseen toxicity which was fatal when applied to open wounds.
This character is or was a member of the Justice League of America, or the Justice League in any of its various incarnations, sworn by a duty to act as guardians of America and the world by using their skills and/or superpowers to protect Earth from both interstellar and domestic threats.
This ability came in handy when Sage relocated to Metropolis and teamed up with Superman against Lex Luthor and the Psychopomp. During another multiverse crisis, the Secret Society of Super-Villains coordinated a planet-wide breakout of super-villains from every major prison.
Victor Sage was born Charles Victor Szasz, and grew up an orphan who had a reputation as a troublemaker. Szasz prided himself in defiantly enduring the physical abuse of the Catholic orphanage where he was housed.
It is currently unclear how many, if any, of the Charlton stories are considered canon in the Post-Crisis universe. The events of the Infinite Crisis have made some of the DC Comics Question stories unclear in terms of continuity. Lex Luthor, for example, is no longer portrayed as he was in volume two of The Question.
Who is the mystery persona in The Question?
The Question’s secret identity was originally Vic Sage. However, after the events of the 2006–2007 miniseries 52, Sage’s protégé Renee Montoya took up his mantle and became his successor. Following The New 52 relaunch, Sage was reintroduced as a mystical entity, then government agent, before being restored to his traditional detective persona after the events of DC Rebirth .
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When Atomica (a Secret Society spy and member of the Crime Syndicate) manipulates Superman into murdering Doctor Light by triggering his heat vision power by stabbing his brain with a sliver of kryptonite, Question breaks into the facility where Superman is being held. Using a gas mask-based setup similar to the one used by Nemesis, Question impersonates Steve Trevor and frees Superman, while presenting a lead towards who caused Superman to kill Doctor Light. The lead turns out to be a dead end, but it places Question in with the various Justice League factions when Pandora attempts to seek their help to open the skull-shaped box that various forces are coveting.
He displays no discernible philosophical commitments, aside from a determination to recruit Montoya and to have her decide who she is and who she will become. Montoya is herself agonized over the issue of killing criminals, although her guilt is over a principled refusal to kill one, specifically the murderer of her former partner. The series’ action chiefly alternates between Gotham City, where Montoya struggles to save Kate Kane from Intergang and its Crime Bible cult, and Nanda Parbat, where she trains with Sage’s mentors Rodor and Dragon, and whence she later returns with Sage, too late to find him a cure for his cancer. En route there, Sage dies muttering snatches of conversations from his early comics appearances and a final invocation to Montoya to decide who she will become. After grieving, she determines to take up his mantle as the new Question.
The first version of the New 52 Question was introduced in New 52: FCBD Special Edition. His true identity is unknown but what is known is that he was teleported from an unknown location in time and space, along with Pandora and Judas Iscariot (The Phantom Stranger), to stand trial for unstated crimes against humanity.
The Question is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. Created by Steve Ditko, the Question first appeared in Charlton Comics ‘ Blue Beetle #1 (June 1967). The character was acquired by DC Comics in the early 1980s and incorporated into the DC Universe . The Question’s secret identity was originally Vic Sage.
Aside from appearing in his own titles, The Question has appeared sporadically in DC comics and media and has undergone several reboots.