The Suicide Squad is an antihero/supervillain team appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. The first version of the Suicide Squad debuted in The Brave and the Bold #25 (September 1959) and the second and modern version, created by John Ostrander, debuted in Legends #3 (January 1987).

Suicide Squad
Cover of Suicide Squad (vol. 5) #33 (March 2018).
Art by Eddy Barrows, Eber Ferreira, Adriano Lucas, and Mason Fox.
Group publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceOriginal:
The Brave and the Bold #25 (September 1959)
Modern:
Legends #3 (January 1987)
Created byOriginal:
Robert Kanigher
Ross Andru
Modern:
John Ostrander
In-story information
Base(s)Belle Reve Penitentiary, IMHS[1]
Member(s)List of Suicide Squad members
Suicide Squad
Cover of Suicide Squad #1 (May 1987).
Art by Howard Chaykin.
Series publication information
PublisherDC Comics
ScheduleMonthly
FormatOngoing series
GenreSpy, superhero
Publication dateVol. 1:
May 1987 – June 1992
Vol. 2:
November 2001 – October 2002
Vol. 3:
November 2007 – June 2008
Vol. 4:
November 2011 – July 2014
New Suicide Squad:
September 2014 – July 2016
Vol. 5
August 2016 – January 2019
Vol. 6
December 2019 – November 2020
Vol. 7
March 2021 – present
Number of issuesVol. 1:
68 (#1–66 plus 1 Annual and 1 Special)
Vol. 2:
12
Vol. 3:
8
Vol. 4:
32 (#1–30 plus issue #0 and one Special)
New Suicide Squad:
22 (20 regular, 1 Annual and 1 Special)
Vol. 5
50 (plus a DC Rebirth one-shot)
Vol. 6
11
Creative team
Writer(s)
Vol. 1:
Vol. 2:
Vol. 3:
  • John Ostrander (#1–8)
Vol. 4:
  • Adam Glass (#1–19, 0)
  • Ales Kot (#20–23)
  • Matt Kindt (#24–29)
  • Jim Zub (Suicide Squad: Amanda Waller #1)
  • Sean Ryan (#30)
New Suicide Squad:
  • Sean Ryan (#1–22, Annual #1)
Vol. 5:
  • Rob Williams (#1– present)
Vol. 6:
Penciller(s)
Vol. 1:
Vol. 2:
  • Paco Medina (#1–12)
Vol. 3:
  • Javier Pina (#1–8)
  • Robin Riggs (#1–8)
  • Jesus Saiz (#7)
Vol. 4:
  • Federico Dallocchio (#1–2, 4–5, 8)
  • Ransom Getty (#1)
  • Andrei Bressan (#2)
  • Cliff Richards (#3, 13, 19)
  • Clayton Henry (#6–7)
  • Ig Guara (#7)
  • Fernando Dagnino (#0, 9–10, 12, 14–15)
  • Carlos Rodriguez (#11)
  • Henrik Jonsson (#16–18)
  • Patrick Zircher (#20–22, 24–26)
  • Rick Leonardi (#23
  • Roger Robinson (#27)
  • Rafa Sandoval (#27)
  • Jason Masters (#28)
  • Jim Fern (#29)
  • André Coelho (#30)
New Suicide Squad:
  • Jeremy Roberts (#1, 3)
  • Tom Derenick (#2–8)
  • André Coelho (Futures End #1)
  • Philippe Briones (#8–, Annual #1)
Vol. 5:
  • Jonathan Glapion, Philip Tan (Rebirth #1)
  • Scott Williams, Jim Lee(#1–#8)
Vol. 6:
  • Bruno Redondo (#1–present)
Inker(s)
Vol. 1:
Vol. 2:
  • Joe Sanchez
Vol. 3:
Vol. 4:
New Suicide Squad:
  • various
Letterer(s)
Vol. 1:
Vol. 2:
  • Bill Oakley
  • Kurt Hathaway
Vol. 3:
  • Rob Leigh
Vol. 4:
  • Jared K. Fletcher
  • Carlos M. Mangual
New Suicide Squad:
  • Taylor Esposito
  • Dave Sharpe
Colorist(s)
Vol. 1:
Vol. 2:
Vol. 3:
  • Jason Wright
Vol. 4:
  • Val Staples
  • Allen Passalaqu
  • Matt Yackey
  • Pete Pantazis
  • Jason Keith
  • Brad Anderson
  • Matt Milla
  • Blond
  • Brett Smith
  • Andrew Dalhouse
New Suicide Squad:
  • Blond
Creator(s)Original:
Robert Kanigher
Ross Andru
Modern:
John Ostrander
Editor(s)
Vol. 1:
Vol. 2:
Vol. 3:
Vol. 4:
  • Pat McCallum
  • Rachel Gluckstern
  • Sean Mackiewicz
  • Rickey Purdin
  • Mike Marts
  • Darren Shan
  • Brian Cunningham
  • Wil Moss
  • Harvey Richards
  • Kate Durréh
New Suicide Squad:
  • Taylor Esposito
  • Dave Sharpe
Collected editions
Trial by FireISBN 1-4012-3005-9
Suicide Squad: From the AshesISBN 1-4012-1866-0
Kicked in the TeethISBN 1-4012-3544-1
Basilisk RisingISBN 1-4012-3844-0
Death Is for SuckersISBN 1-4012-4316-9
Discipline and PunishISBN 1-4012-4701-6
Walled InISBN 1-4012-5012-2
New Suicide Squad: Vol. 1ISBN 1-4012-5238-9

Various incarnations of the Suicide Squad have existed throughout the years as depicted in several self-titled comic book series, from its origins in the Silver Age to its modern-day post-Crisis re-imagining, to the current version that was introduced in 2016. The current iteration of the team appears in the sixth volume of the Suicide Squad comic series, and the recurring members include Enchantress, Katana, Killer Croc, Captain Boomerang, Deadshot and Harley Quinn.

Background and creation edit

The original Suicide Squad appeared in six issues of The Brave and the Bold.[2] Co-creator/writer Robert Kanigher had took the name from another comic series of the same name from the Australian comic publishing company Frew Publications.[citation needed] Although this early incarnation of the team (created by Kanigher and artist Ross Andru) did not have the antics of later iterations, it explained much of squad's field leader Rick Flag's personal history.[3] The team's administrator Amanda Waller was introduced in the Legends miniseries,[4] with the original Silver Age Squad's backstory elaborated in Secret Origins (vol. 2) #14.[5][6]

The Suicide Squad was later re-established in the Legends miniseries with writer John Ostrander at the helm.[7] The renewed concept involved the government employing a group of supervillains to perform extremely dangerous missions as deniable and expendable assets, a concept popular enough for an ongoing self-titled series. The squad was often paired with DC's other government agency, Checkmate, culminating in the Janus Directive[8] crossover.

While the Squad is often depicted as succeeding on their missions, failure was an occurrence. Ostrander remarked on how stories sometimes purposefully brought in characters to be killed off.[9] The team's very name, Suicide Squad, relates to the idea that this group of characters is sent on dangerous and difficult suicide missions.[10][11]

Suicide Squad (vol. 1) lasted 66 issues, along with one Annual and one special (Doom Patrol and Suicide Squad Special #1). After the series' cancellation in 1992, the team members made several appearances in titles such as Superboy,[12] Hawk & Dove,[13] Chase,[14] and The Adventures of Superman.[15][16]

Suicide Squad (vol. 2) was published in 2001, written by Keith Giffen, with art by Paco Medina. Though the series' first issue featured a Squad composed entirely of Giffen's Injustice League[17] members, the roster was promptly slaughtered, save for Major Disaster and Multi-Man. These developments prompt Sgt. Rock, who was written into the role of squad leader, to recruit new members of whom many die during missions.[18]

Suicide Squad (vol. 3) (initially subtitled Raise the Flag in DC's solicitations[19]) was an eight-issue miniseries published in 2007. It featured the return of writer John Ostrander with art by Javier Pina. The story focused on the return of Rick Flag Jr. and the formation of a new squad to attack a corporation responsible for developing a deadly bio-weapon.

Suicide Squad (vol. 4) debuted as part of DC Comics' line-wide New 52 continuity reboot in 2011. The relaunched book was written by Adam Glass, with art by Federico Dallocchio and Ransom Getty. Amanda Waller directs the group from behind the scenes; Deadshot, Harley Quinn, and King Shark feature prominently in this version of the Squad. The volume concluded in 2014, with issue #30.

New Suicide Squad was launched in July 2014. Written by Sean Ryan with art by Jeremy Roberts, the new series continues to feature Deadshot and Harley Quinn, with Deathstroke, Black Manta, and the Joker's Daughter also featuring.

Publication history edit

Silver Age edit

 
The Squad debuted in The Brave and the Bold #25; art by Ross Andru.

Plot synopsis edit

The Brave and the Bold edit

The original Suicide Squad first appears in The Brave and the Bold #25. Team members appearing in the debut issue include physicist Jess Bright; astronomer Dr. Hugh Evans; Rick Flag Jr., the team leader; and Karin Grace (Davies in #25), flight medic. The characters have follow-up appearances in issues #26, #27 and #37-#39. The team's introductory story depicts them being called in to deal with a super-heated red-hued object, called the "Red Wave", which was heading toward a seaside resort and boiling the ocean along the way. They travel in a plane equipped with a testing and analysis lab. Follow-up appearances show the team dealing with a variety of challenges: a meteor storm (the radiation from which causes them to shrink), a giant serpent in the Paris subway tunnels, a giant monster that captures Karin, and a nuclear bomb. Issues #38 and #39 show the team encountering dinosaurs and meeting the leader of the Cyclops.[20][2][21]

Legends edit

In the midst of Darkseid's attempt to turn humanity against Earth's superheroes via his minion Glorious Godfrey, Amanda Waller assigns Rick Flag Jr. leadership of a reformed Task Force X.[22] Blockbuster, Bronze Tiger, Captain Boomerang, Deadshot, and Enchantress make up Task Force X at Belle Reve. The squad's first mission is to eliminate Darkseid's rampaging fire elemental Brimstone; Blockbuster dies during the conflict and Deadshot takes down the creature with an experimental laser rifle.[23] Waller dismisses the group,[24] though they soon reconvened to rescue Captain Boomerang after Godfrey captures him.[25]

Secret Origins (vol. 2) edit

During World War II, a number of Army riffraff are assembled into a unit that is highly expendable, and therefore nicknamed the Suicide Squadron (shortened to Suicide Squad). Several such teams existed, but their history in comics is only scarcely recorded before Rick Flag, Sr. becomes the leader of the team (and even then, only a few adventures of this Squad are shown). After the war ends, the team (together with the Argent group) is put under the umbrella organization of Task Force X. After his father's death, Rick Flag Jr. goes on to lead the group that is featured in The Brave and the Bold. A deadly encounter with a Yeti during a mission in Cambodia ends with Evans and Bright dead and sends Flag back to the U.S. with a wounded Karin Grace. After a stint with the Forgotten Heroes, Flag is drafted into the Squad that Waller assembles in Legends.[5]

"A Princess' Story" from Secret Origins (vol. 2) #28 sheds light on Nightshade's origin, revealing that her mother hailed from the Land of the Nightshades. An ill-fated trip to this world ends with Nightshade's mother dead and her brother abducted, and Nightshade spends the following years honing her shadowy powers and building a reputation as a crimefighter. She falls in with King Faraday at the C.B.I.; Faraday eventually introduces her to Amanda Waller, who agrees to help her rescue her brother in exchange for Nightshade's participation in the Squad.[26]

Other World War II Suicide Squads edit

The World War II Squad of Secret Origins (vol. 2) #14 was a means of tying the Silver Age Suicide Squad to the war-era Suicide Squad (also called the Suicide Squadron) created by Robert Kanigher for his "The War that Time Forgot" tales in the pages of Star Spangled War Stories.[27] This Suicide Squadron is described as a "top-secret Ranger outfit" whose members were trained to tackle missions from which ordinary volunteers were not expected to return alive. It is unclear whether this team is part of the modern Suicide Squad canon or if the Squad introduced in Secret Origins was intended as a replacement for them in DC continuity.

Another classic version of the Squad (Rick Flag Jr., Karin Grace, Jess Bright, and Dr. Hugh Evans) appears in the non-canon 2004 miniseries DC: The New Frontier by Darwyn Cooke. The group is briefly shown undertaking the sorts of dangerous missions the Squad is known for, and Flag eventually drafts Hal Jordan onto the team to assist in preparing a crewed space flight to Mars. The experimental rocket's test runs quickly goes south and the group (sans Jordan) dies in the explosion.[28]

In the DC Comics Bombshells continuity, the World War II-era Suicide Squad is led by Francine Charles and consists of Killer Croc, Enchantress, Rose Wilson, and Barbara Gordon (who in this setting is a vampire). In the final issue of the comic, it is revealed that after the end of the war, this Suicide Squad became a "Dark Justice League" defending the world against magical threats.

Suicide Squad (vol. 1) edit

Background edit

The first volume of Suicide Squad, written by modern Squad creator John Ostrander, launched in May 1987, shortly after the team was introduced in the "Legends" crossover storyline. It lasted for 66 monthly issues, along with one annual and one special (Doom Patrol and Suicide Squad Special #1), both published in 1988.

This series details the covert operations of the modern post-Crisis Squad, created (in-universe) and directed by Amanda Waller. It is notable for bringing obscure characters such as Captain Boomerang and Deadshot to prominence; the latter received his own tie-in miniseries in 1988, co-written by Ostrander and Kim Yale.[29] The Suicide Squad also presents a modern context for field team leader Rick Flag Jr.'s modern-day activities and his involvement in the Silver-Age Suicide Squad. Former Batgirl Barbara Gordon makes her first appearance as the information-broker Oracle,[30] and serves as the Squad's remote radio support, a vocation she adopted after being shot by the Joker. She uses a wheelchair as a result of being shot.[31]

Suicide Squad (vol. 1) takes pains to humanize its relatively obscure ensemble cast, partly via an in-house chaplain and psychiatric staff at the Squad's Belle Reve headquarters. These staff members are frequently seen interviewing various Squad operatives[32] or providing evaluations of their mental states;[33] several full issues are dedicated to examining prominent characters' personal lives and motivations.[34]

Plot synopsis edit

Throughout 66 issues, this incarnation of the Suicide Squad undertook numerous high-risk missions for the U.S. government.

"Baptism of Fire" edit

The team's first mission in the Suicide Squad title set them up against their recurring enemies, the Onslaught. They infiltrate their headquarters (the fortress known as Jotunheim, situated in Qurac) and proceed to defeat and kill most of the Onslaught members. Elements from this first story arc return over the series, such as the death of Mindboggler, Captain Boomerang's cowardly and treacherous nature, Nightshade's attraction to Rick Flag Jr., a rivalry between Rustam and Flag, and Ravan's defeat at the hands of the Bronze Tiger.[35]

"Mission to Moscow" edit

On orders of Derek Tolliver (the team's liaison with the UNSC), the Suicide Squad is sent to Moscow in order to free the captive Zoya Trigorin, a revolutionary writer. Although the mission is largely successful in its first half, the team finds that Zoya does not want to be freed at all, causing friction among the team as they must plan their escape.

In the end, the mission ends with the Squad having to travel across a tundra to reach safety, but come face to face with the People's Heroes, the Russian's own group of metahumans. In the conflict, Trigorin dies, and Nemesis (Tom Tresser) is captured.[36] It turns out Tolliver never even considered the possibility of Trigorin wishing to become a martyr, automatically leaping at the conclusion she would be eager to leave the Soviet Union, and thus risked Waller's wrath upon the mission's end.

Nemesis eventually escapes thanks to a collaboration between the Suicide Squad and the Justice League International, although the two teams fight one another first.[37] This conflict is primarily the result of Batman's investigation into the Suicide Squad, his confrontation with Waller, and his being forced to drop the investigation when she reveals that she can easily figure out his secret identity if need be.[38]

"Rogues" and "Final Round" edit

In this story arc,[39] building on subplots from previous issues,[40] Rick Flag goes after Senator Cray in order to assassinate him. Previously, Senator Cray had been blackmailing Amanda Waller in order for her to ensure Cray's reelection, threatening her with the exposure of the Suicide Squad to the public.

At first, there is also the threat of Waller being usurped by Derek Tolliver, the now-former liaison between the Squad and NSC, who conspires with Cray against Waller. Waller deals with the situation by engaging in counter-blackmail with help of Checkmate, but refrains from informing Flag.[41] The Squad's existence is in danger, and he decides to deal with the problem himself.

Manhunter quits the Squad upon learning of their upcoming mission against Loa in New Orleans, LA.

In order to stop him, the Squad is sent after Flag, and it is eventually Deadshot who confronts Flag shortly before he can shoot Cray, but too late to prevent Tolliver's murder in Suicide Squad #21. As a result of these developments, the Suicide Squad is exposed to the public, contrary to Flag's intentions. Flag flees the scene, while Deadshot is shot by the arriving police officers. Unfortunately for Deadshot, who has a death wish, he does not die from the injuries.

Resulting from the exposure, Amanda Waller is replaced by an actor named Jack Kale so that she can continue to run the Squad. The team then goes on a public relations offensive, becoming, for a time, a prominent heroic team by saving a renowned nun from a repressive regime.[42] Rick Flag travels to Jotunheim, where the Onslaught is still headquartered, and finishes the mission his father could not, blowing up Jotunheim with a prototype nuclear Nazi weapon but gives up his life to do so.[43]

"The Janus Directive" edit

"The Janus Directive" is a crossover storyline involving an interagency war between Checkmate, the Suicide Squad, and Project Atom, who are manipulated by Kobra in order to distract the United States intelligence community from his activities. During the crossover, the headquarters of Checkmate and the Suicide Squad are destroyed as the war between the agencies worsens, and the lives of all members of the Force of July are lost except for Major Victory. In the end, with the defeat of Kobra, the various government agencies are made autonomous, to be overseen by Sarge Steel.

"Apokolips Now" edit

In this issue, the character known as Duchess regains her memory after suffering from amnesia and recalls her true identity as Lashina, of the Female Furies.[44] With help from Shade the Changing Man, Lashina kidnaps several members of the Squad and takes them to Apokolips to win back her place among the Furies. Along with Dr. Light, Squad support members Briscoe (helicopter pilot) and computer specialist/Waller aide Flo Crowley are killed in an attack by para demons. Prevented by Steel from going, Bronze Tiger recruits Deadshot and others and joins with the Forever People to journey to Apokolips. Darkseid arrives to destroy Lashina for bringing humans to his world and allows the rest of the Squad return to Earth with their dead. Shade is returned to his home dimension as the Squad mourns Flo.

"The Coils of the LOA" edit

This issue details the plan of a group called LOA to raise a zombie army with drugs spread across the world. To ensure the Squad doesn't interfere, they reveal how Waller is still in charge and the White House decide to wash their hands of her. With the Suicide Squad on the verge of being disbanded by her superiors, Waller gathers Ravan, Poison Ivy, and Deadshot in an assassination mission of the LOA. The deal for the villains is simple: the three will be set free after helping Waller kill the LOA. While the villains run after the assassination, Waller allows herself to be put into custody.[45][46]

"The Phoenix Gambit" edit

The storyline running through Suicide Squad (vol. 1) #40 - 43 reassembles a scattered Suicide Squad after a year of imprisonment for Amanda Waller. She receives a presidential pardon, courtesy of Sarge Steel, as well as money in the bank and her old privileges concerning the use of imprisoned villains.

This is done so that Waller can reassemble her Squad and prevent a confrontation between American and Soviet forces in the war-torn country of Vlatava. As the Suicide Squad succeeds and finishes their mission, they go in a new direction, free from the government as freelance operatives per the terms negotiated by Waller. Under the leadership of Waller, who now also goes into the field as an operative, they are a mercenary squad open to the highest bidder.

"Serpent of Chaos" edit

This storyline ran through Suicide Squad #45 - 47. Amanda Waller and the Squad covertly sneak into Jerusalem seeking to capture or kill Kobra. However, the squad's arrival is detected by the Hayoth, and their Mossad liaison Colonel Hacohen takes Waller and Vixen into custody in order to show them that the Hayoth has already captured Kobra. Amanda figures out that Kobra allowed the Hayoth to capture him but is unsure of why. Judith follows Vixen to a meeting with the Bronze Tiger and Ravan, critically wounds Vixen, and is nearly killed by the Bronze Tiger. Meanwhile, the Atom discovers Kobra's true plan all along was to corrupt Dybbuk the Hayoth's artificial intelligence team member. Kobra "corrupted" Dybbuk through a series of philosophical conversations about the nature of good and evil; he then attempts to use Dybbuk to start World War III. The day is saved by Ramban, the team's kabbalistic magician, who has a lengthy conversation with Dybbuk about the true nature of good and evil, choice, and morality. Meanwhile, Ravan and Kobra have their final battle which results in Ravan's supposed death via poisoning.

"Mystery of the Atom" edit

Batman is working to solve the murder of Ray Palmer, The Atom. He hears that Waller possibly knew about the explosion that killed him. Superman is told by a CBI agent that the Suicide Squad would be attempting to rescue Qurac's former President Marlo. Adam Cray confronts Deadshot about killing his father, Senator Cray.[47] Golem, of the Hayoth enters the facility holding Marlo on Blood Island. The Hayoth mistakenly believe they would be allowed to take President Marlo into custody. This misunderstanding caused the Hayoth to become embroiled in a four-way conflict with the Justice League (Superman, Batman, and Aquaman), who were there searching for Ray Palmer (the Atom), as well as the Suicide Squad, and the Onslaught. After a series of skirmishes, Superman ends the free-for-all with a shockwave caused by clapping both his hands together. The League confronts Ray Palmer, and he tells them about Micro Force and their murder of Adam Cray, the man who had been impersonating him as a member of the Suicide Squad.[48]

"Rumble in the Jungle" edit

The series concludes in issues #63 - 66, in which the Suicide Squad travels to Diabloverde to depose a seemingly invulnerable and invincible dictator calling himself Guedhe. This despot has his own personal bodyguards, a group of villains calling themselves the Suicide Squad. Insulted by the rival team usurping the Suicide Squad name, Waller accepts the mission to liberate Diabloverde at the price of one peso, paid by an exiled resident, Maria.

During that mission, they confront and defeat the other Suicide Squad. Each member of the Squad journeys through the mystical jungle towards Guedhe's fortress, confronting their own inner demons along the way, except for Deadshot. Amanda Waller deceives the despot, who is actually Maria's husband, into a form of self-destruction. The despot believes himself to be immortal, but in reality, he is a powerful psychic whose consciousness continues to animate his remains. Waller convinces him that her touch brings death, leading to his demise. Afterward, Waller disbands the Suicide Squad, and the series comes to an end.

Membership: Amanda Waller's Squad edit

Notable team members from Suicide Squad (vol. 1) include:

Interim stories (between Vol. 1–2) edit

Background edit

Though John Ostrander's Suicide Squad (vol. 1) series was canceled in 1992 with issue #66, the concept lived on in various DC storylines throughout the years. What follows is a breakdown of the Squad's various odd appearances over the years.

Plot synopsis edit

Superboy (vol. 3): "Watery Grave" edit

The Squad resurfaces in a three-issue Superboy (vol. 3) arc, with a lineup consisting of Captain Boomerang, Deadshot, King Shark, Knockout, Sam Makoa, and Sidearm (who meets his death in the following issue). Superboy himself joins the Squad to assist in taking out a Pacific Rim crime cartel called the Silicon Dragons.[12] Writer Karl Kesel claims to have come very close to killing Captain Boomerang during this arc.[49]

Hawk & Dove (vol. 4) edit

In the Hawk & Dove (vol. 4) miniseries, superheroes Hawk and Dove (Sasha Martens and Wiley Wolverman) are targeted by the government who assemble a new Suicide Squad to subdue the pair. Squad members at the time include Bronze Tiger, Count Vertigo, Deadshot, Flex, Quartzite, Shrapnel, and Thermal.[13]

Chase (vol. 1): "Letdowns" edit

Amanda Waller reforms the Squad once again in Chase #2. D.E.O. agent Cameron Chase joins Bolt, Copperhead, Killer Frost, and Sledge on a mission to take out a South American military base, only to be betrayed by the villains.[14]

Superman: Our Worlds at War Secret Files & Origins: "Resources" edit

The brief story "Resources" (one of several in the issue) depicts Amanda Waller assembling the Squad that is seen in the Adventures of Superman arc.[50]

Adventures of Superman (vol. 1): "The Doomsday Protocol" edit

Lex Luthor organizes another Suicide Squad during his term as President of the United States so that they can recruit Doomsday to battle the alien Imperiex. This version of the Squad consists of Chemo, Mongul, Plasmus, and Shrapnel; it is led by Manchester Black, under the supervision of Steel. Doomsday seemingly kills most of the Squad upon his release, but all of the characters turn up alive in later comics.[15]

Suicide Squad (vol. 2) edit

Background edit

Keith Giffen's short-lived Suicide Squad run (which began in November 2001 and lasted 12 issues) is something of a darkly humorous analog to the writer's former work on Justice League International, and follows a new version of the Squad, designated Task Force Omega, and run by Sgt. Frank Rock. Together with his right-hand man Bulldozer, Rock taps new characters Havana and Modern to round out the team's mobile HQ. President Lex Luthor and Secretary of Metahuman Affairs Amanda Waller are shown to be supplying the Squad's assignments.[51]

Rock is thought by several other characters to have been deceased since the end of World War II, and they are surprised to see him alive and well.[52][53] Two flashback stories[54][55] provide some context for Rock's current-day activities, but the series' final issue strongly implies that Rock is an (as-yet-unidentified) impostor.[56]

Plot synopsis edit

The First issue details the former Injustice League's terminally botched attempt to extract a kidnapped scientist from an Icelandic facility. With all but one team member (Major Disaster) presumed dead by issue's end, Sgt. Rock forms a new Suicide Squad for the missions ahead.[52] Major Disaster, Deadshot, and Killer Frost are mainstays of the field team. For his part, Rock is every bit as ruthless as Amanda Waller was (though far more affable), remorselessly sending his agents to die for the good of their country.

The Squad's missions involve eliminating an out-of-control colony of bio-engineered army ants,[53][57] and investigating the mysterious island of Kooey Kooey Kooey to discourage its telepathic inhabitants from declaring war on Earth.[51][58][59] Havana is revealed to be Amanda Waller's daughter,[60] and the final story arc revolves around an all-out attack on the Squad by the members of Onslaught, led by the son of longtime Squad enemy Rustam. Onslaught kills Modem and captures Rock, Havana, and Waller.[61]

Upon learning that the Squad has been compromised, Waller's office drafts the Justice Society of America to counterattack Onslaught alongside the Squad, but they arrive too late to save Havana from Rustam's wrath. Deadshot discovers a discarded Sgt. Rock mask inside an empty holding cell, which prompts Bulldozer (who is monitoring the situation remotely via Deadshot's video camera) to stand from his wheelchair and announce "Oh, boy!" before leaving. Back in her office, Amanda Waller reviews Bulldozer's file, and states that he and Sgt. Rock died in 1945.[56]

Membership: Task Force Omega edit

Notable team members from Suicide Squad (vol. 2) include:

Interim stories (between Vol. 2–3) edit

Background edit

Amanda Waller and the Suicide Squad were heavily involved in the events and fallout of 52. During much of this time, Waller ran the Squad covertly because of her station as the White Queen of Checkmate. This inter-faction tension is a recurring theme throughout many Squad stories of this era.

Plot synopsis edit

Superman (vol. 2): "Dead Men" edit

A Squad composed of Deadshot, Killer Frost, and Solomon Grundy goes after Lois Lane in order to silence her investigation into Lex Luthor's presidency.[62]

Superman Secret Files & Origins 2004: "Suicide Watch" edit

A mystery agent sends Captain Boomerang, Double Down, Killer Frost, and Killer Shark to (unsuccessfully) assassinate an imprisoned Amanda Waller as she awaits trial. Nemesis also appears.[63]

52 edit

Amanda Waller assembles a short-lived Suicide Squad, led by Atom Smasher,[64][65] to take on an out-of-control Black Adam. Atom Smasher's team ambushes the Black Marvel Family, getting Waller the evidence that she needs to expose their threat to the world.[66] As Waller reviews future potential Squad members, Atom Smasher quits the team, threatening to inform Checkmate of Waller's unauthorized field ops unless she grants him a full pardon.[67] Later, as World War III rages, Waller informs Bronze Tiger that Rick Flag Jr. is alive.[68]

Checkmate (vol. 2): "Rogue Squad" edit

As part of DC's One Year Later event, Greg Rucka penned the two-part "Rogue Squad" arc for Checkmate (vol. 2). After Bronze Tiger finds Rick Flag Jr. alive, Amanda Waller (now the White Queen of Checkmate) taps the pair to track down a rogue Squad that is out to expose her off-the-books activities. The Squad is led by Mirror Master, and includes Icicle, Javelin, Plastique, Tattooed Man, Punch, and Jewelee.[69]

Salvation Run edit

Beginning in the pages of Countdown, the Squad makes various one-off appearances where they are seen rounding up the world's villains for an unknown purpose. This culminates in the seven-issue Salvation Run miniseries (written by Bill Willingham), where the Squad sends the apprehended villains to a remote prison world via boom tube. Squad members seen rounding up villains include Rick Flag Jr., Bronze Tiger, Captain Boomerang, Count Vertigo, the General, King Faraday, Multiplex, Nightshade, Plastique, Bane, Chemo, and Deadshot (the latter three are betrayed by the Squad and sent to the prison planet with the other villains).[70][71][72][73][74][75][76][77][78]

Suicide Squad (vol. 3) edit

Background edit

John Ostrander returned to the Suicide Squad for an eight-issue miniseries that began in November 2007. The series takes place between the squad's appearance in Checkmate (vol. 2) #6–7 and the events of Salvation Run. It is functionally a sequel to the Checkmate arc, detailing how Rick Flag Jr. survived his apparent death[43] before returning to Waller's Suicide Squad.

DC Comics' official solicitations consistently referred to the miniseries as Suicide Squad: Raise the Flag,[19] though this nomenclature is never used within any individual issue or collected edition of the miniseries.

Plot synopsis edit

After he is believed dead, Rick Flag Jr. resurfaces on the dinosaur-infested island of Skartaris alongside his enemy Rustam.[79] The pair works together to survive.[80] Unfortunately, Flag is forced to kill Rustam once they discover a way home. Afterward, he becomes a prisoner of war in Qurac for four years. Flag rejoins the Suicide Squad after he is rescued by Bronze Tiger.

After reviewing several new recruits,[81][82] Amanda Waller briefs the Squad on the latest target: a Dubai-based global conglomerate called Haake-Bruton, whose new viral weapon is to be destroyed, and its board of directors eliminated.[83] The Squad airdrops onto Haake-Bruton's island stronghold, where Flag encounters Rustam's revenge-seeking father. Eiling compromises the mission, conspiring with Thinker to betray the Squad to Haake-Bruton's board in exchange for asylum.[84] The Squad suffers heavy casualties in the sudden internal conflict.[85] Despite numerous setbacks, Deadshot carries out the assassination, while Waller confronts the General personally. Eiling demonstrates control over Flag via psychological conditioning; Flag subdues him after revealing the cooperation as a ruse, and the Squad returns to Belle Reve. Flag is unfazed by Waller's revelation that his own identity and memories are implanted, asserting to Nightshade that he is still Rick Flag Jr.[86]

Membership: Raise the Flag edit

Notable team members from Suicide Squad (vol. 3) include:

Interim stories (between Vol. 3–4) edit

Background edit

The Squad made prominent appearances in a four-issue Manhunter (vol. 4) arc[87] and during the Blackest Night crossover event.[88] In his multiverse-spanning adventures, Booster Gold briefly cooperated with a version of the Silver Age Squad.[89] These issues mark the Squad's final appearances prior to DC Comics' New 52 continuity reboot in 2011.

Plot synopsis edit

Manhunter (vol. 4): "Forgotten" edit

The Suicide Squad has a run-in with Manhunter after she unknowingly compromises their months-long undercover investigation into the Crime Doctor's metahuman genetic experiments in collaboration with Vestech Industries. Manhunter backs off of the trail at the insistence of the Squad and the Birds of Prey, but goes rogue in an effort to bring down the Crime Doctor, who futilely attempts to restrain the Squad after becoming aware of their deep-cover duplicity. The operation is dismantled, and Manhunter goes public with the takedown.[87]

Booster Gold (vol. 2): "1952 Pick-up" edit

On one of his adventures throughout the DC multiverse, Booster Gold winds up in an alternate 1952, where Karin Grace drafts him into a Squad led by Frank Rock. The team infiltrates a U.S. military compound to root out a Soviet double-agent, who ultimately turns out to be the creator of the Rocket Reds' combat armor.[89]

Blackest Night: "Danse Macabre" edit

In the three-issue Blackest Night tie-in arc "Danse Macabre" (written by Gail Simone and John Ostrander), several deceased Suicide Squad members are reanimated as Black Lanterns (unofficially known as the "Homicide Squad"), led by Fiddler. They attack the Squad and the Secret Six, who are engaged in simultaneous conflicts at their respective headquarters, owing to Amanda Waller's plans to shut down the Six. The two teams join forces to wipe out the Homicide Squad; with the immediate threat resolved, the Six assert their independence, and Deadshot places a bullet mere centimeters from Waller's heart to punctuate the point. As she recovers at Belle Reve, she reveals that she is secretly Mockingbird, the Secret Six's mysterious benefactor.[88]

Suicide Squad (vol. 4) edit

Background edit

A new Suicide Squad title, written by Adam Glass with art by Federico Dallocchio and Ransom Getty, launched in September 2011 as part of The New 52 (a reboot of the DC Comics universe). Amanda Waller once again directs a crew of black ops agents on covert government missions, with Deadshot serving as the field team's leader. The ongoing series is notable as serving as something of a showpiece for Batman villain Harley Quinn, and it has crossed over with other New 52 titles, including Resurrection Man,[90] Grifter,[91] and Justice League of America's Vibe.[92]

Plot synopsis edit

After a botched government mission forces her to execute an injured teammate, Amanda Waller sets out to assemble an expendable field team, prompting the formation of a new Suicide Squad.[93] Waller forces dozens of Belle Reve's death row inmates into a series of rigorous tests and torture scenarios to evaluate their loyalty and value as potential Squad members.[94] The finalists—notably including Deadshot, King Shark, and Harley Quinn—are outfitted with micro-bomb implants, and inducted into the Squad.[95]

The Suicide Squad's missions typically involve the elimination or retrieval of high-value targets. At one point, the team must track down an AWOL Harley Quinn;[96] in another mission, the Squad goes after Resurrection Man.[90][97] The Basilisk terrorist group serves as a recurring villain[98][99] (echoing the Onslaught organization from John Ostrander's original Suicide Squad series), and several issues delve into the twisted relationship between Harley Quinn and the Joker.[96][100]

Eventually, Waller recruits serial killer James Gordon Jr. to act as Belle Reve's in-house psychiatric adviser—but unbeknownst to her, Gordon quickly develops a twisted infatuation with her.[101] One ongoing and unresolved plot point involves the Samsara serum—a medical treatment that Belle Reve's doctors use to resurrect dead Squad members (including Deadshot and Voltaic[102]). It is eventually discovered that the serum will permanently kill anyone to whom it is administered; Waller is implied to be one such subject.[103]

Forever Evil edit

During the Forever Evil crossover event, the Crime Syndicate of America emerges as the new threat which the Suicide Squad must avert.[104] After the destruction of Belle Reve and the release of its inmates, Waller recruits Deadshot to a new Suicide Squad team. He, in turn, recruits Harley Quinn. Amanda Waller later reveals to James Gordon Jr. that the current Suicide Squad is but one version of the Task Force; she calls out Task Force Y to assist in battling the Crime Syndicate.[105]

Membership: Suicide Squad (vol. 4) edit

Notable team members from Suicide Squad (vol. 4) include:

New Suicide Squad edit

Background edit

This 2014 relaunch, from writer Sean Ryan and artist Jeremy Roberts, sees Deadshot and Harley Quinn teaming up with new Squad members Black Manta, Joker's Daughter, the Reverse Flash and Deathstroke.[106][107]

Membership: New Suicide Squad edit

Notable team members from New Suicide Squad include:

Suicide Squad (vol. 5) edit

Background edit

Using the end of the New 52 initiative as a launching point, DC Comics began a second relaunch of its entire line of titles called DC Rebirth in 2016, written by Rob Williams and shifting between Jim Lee, John Romita, Jr., and Tony S. Daniel for art. Suicide Squad (vol. 5) #1 (August 2016) was the debut bimonthly relaunch of the team's comic book title which consisted of Amanda Waller, Deadshot, Rick Flag, Captain Boomerang, Harley Quinn, Killer Croc, Katana and Enchantress.[108] The Suicide Squad was given a new look, reflecting the team's appearance in the DC Extended Universe. The title would crossover with Justice League in Justice League vs. Suicide Squad, written by Joshua Williamson and drawn by Jason Fabok, Tony S. Daniel, and Howard Porter.

Plot synopsis edit

The Black Vault edit

The Suicide Squad are sent to a Russian prison to retrieve a secret item, which turns out to be a portal to the Phantom Zone.[109] During the unfolding events, a Russian group of metahumans, known as the Annihilation Brigade, shows up and the situation worsens.[110] General Zod gets free of the Vault, and Captain Boomerang is killed.[111][112] The battle is brought to an abrupt halt as a new character, Hack,[113] breaches the Russian database and learns how to pull General Zod back into the portal.[114][115]

Going Sane edit

Back in Belle Reve, scientists working for Waller are examining the portal.[114] Waller shares her intent to weaponize Zod and add him to her Suicide Squad. Flag disagrees, and conflict escalates between the two, leading to Flag firing his gun at Waller.[113][116]

In the next issue, Amanda's scientists continue trying to extract Zod. Meanwhile, the portal is sending out electromagnetic waves, and the characters appear to act in increasingly erratic ways. The portal waves are shown as having the opposite effect on Harley, causing her to realise she must intervene in the escalating blood lust.[117][118]

Justice League vs. Suicide Squad edit

This episode follows the Squad to the fictional island of Badhinisia, where the team has been dispatched to prevent the Brimstone Brotherhood from causing an earthquake. During the events, the Squad is confronted by the Justice League, having learned of the team's existence from Batman.[119] Waller shares her intention to blow the bombs in their necks if they are captured by, or surrender to, the League.[120][121] The Suicide Squad are defeated by the Justice League until Killer Frost absorbs a portion of a weakened Superman's life force and freezes everyone.[120]

Back at Belle Reve Penitentiary, the Justice League has been captured by Amanda. Batman escapes his confinement and confronts Waller about her plans for the League.[122] When the plot reveals the approaching threat of Max Lord and his super villain team, the two teams must pool their efforts in order to prevent the theft of a powerful weapon from inside Belle Reve.[122][123]

As the story progresses, Lord succeeds in stealing the Heart of Darkness (a.k.a. the Eclipso Diamond) and uses it to control the League, and through them, gains control of the world. Batman rallies Lobo and the remaining Squad members to make a final stand against Lord, escalating to conflict with the compromised Justice League. Meanwhile, Amanda observes that Lord himself is falling under the influence of the Eclipso Diamond, and warns him of this when Lord has her brought to the White House. Lord realises too late that Waller's warning held truth. In the following chaos, Batman deems them the new Justice League.[124][125][126][127] Although Lord is able to bring most of the Squad/League under his control, he is defeated when Killer Frost, acting on Batman's instructions, is able to create a prism of ice that reflects Superman's heat vision in a frequency that will disrupt Eclipso's control of the heroes, Eclipso himself being vanquished by Killer Frost as she draws on the life energy of the rest of the heroes and Squad members present, thus limiting the drain on any one of them. In the aftermath of the crisis, Killer Frost is officially released while Lord is kept in Waller's custody, Waller musing that she will use him for 'Task Force XI'.

Burning Down the House edit
Earthlings on Fire edit
Kill Your Darlings edit
Drain the Swamp edit

Waller recruits Juan Soria, a prospective hero who was turned down by the Justice League and then arrested for robbery, into the Squad in order to combat an alien force that feeds off optimism and hope. In preparation for the mission, Waller had systematically broken Soria down to rid him of any and all hope. This allowed him to defeat the creature. After learning that he was used, Waller relocates Soria to Killer Croc's cell. Croc had previously been tempted to eat Soria and it is assumed this is what happened.[128]

The Squad confronts Damage, who Waller wants to recruit for her Task Force XL. Meanwhile, King Faraday, who is still being held at Belle Reve, reveals he's been accessing Waller's hidden files and asks about someone named Coretta. Waller is visually shaken by the mention. She leaves the prison and goes to her daughter Coretta in the hospital as she's just given birth to Waller's grandchild. Her son Jessie tells her that Coretta does not want to see her. Hack returns and reveals she is in Belle Reve's computers. She begins opening the cells, erasing files, and murdering guards.[129]

Suicide Squad Black edit

Background edit

DC Comics created a magical version of the Suicide Squad known as Suicide Squad Black in 2019 during the DC Rebirth run. It was created by Jai Nitz and Scot Eaton. The team have a six-issue comic series titled Suicide Squad: Black Files.

The roster consists of the Gentleman Ghost, Azucar, the Enchantress, Juniper, Klarion the Witch Boy, Tiamat, and Wither, and El Diablo for a magical roster of the Squad called Suicide Squad Black.

Plot synopsis edit

The Revenge of Kobra edit

Rota Fortuna edit

War in Two Worlds edit

My Own Worst Enemy! edit

Fugitive from Myself edit

Reverse Image edit

Suicide Squad (vol. 6) edit

The monthly Suicide Squad comic was again relaunched at the start of 2020, written by Tom Taylor with art by Bruno Redondo.

The initial storyline features a Task Force X run by a mysterious bureaucrat called Lok directing a team composed of Deadshot, Harley Quinn, Magpie, Cavalier, the Shark, and Zebra-Man to press gang a group of anarchist superhumans called the Revolutionaries.[130] Over the course of the first six issues several Revolutionaries are killed in action; it transpires that the Revolutionaries were deliberately setting themselves up in infiltrate Task Force X and Lok is a frontman for Black Mask, who is impersonating Ted Kord.[131]

Suicide Squad (vol. 7) edit

The Infinite Frontier monthly Suicide Squad comic launched in March 2021, written by Robbie Thompson with art by Eduardo Pansica.

Membership: Suicide Squad (vol. 7) edit

Notable team members from Suicide Squad (vol. 7) include:

Collected editions edit

Silver Age edit

# Title Material collected Pages Year ISBN
1 Suicide Squad: The Silver Age Omnibus Volume 1 160 August 2, 2016 978-1401263430

Post-Crisis edit

Volume 1 edit

# Title Material collected Pages Year ISBN
1 Trial by Fire 232 September 8, 2015 978-1401258313
2 The Nightshade Odyssey 264 December 15, 2015 978-1401258337
3 Rogues
  • Suicide Squad #17–25, Annual #1
280 April 12, 2016 978-1401260910
4 The Janus Directive
  • Suicide Squad #26–30
  • Checkmate! #15–18
  • Manhunter #14
  • Firestorm #86
  • Captain Atom #30
272 July 19, 2016 978-1401262617
5 Apokolips Now
  • Suicide Squad #31–39
220 December 27, 2016 978-1401265427
6 The Phoenix Gambit
  • Suicide Squad #40–49
235 May 23, 2017 978-1401269043
7 The Dragon's Hoard
  • Suicide Squad #50–58
232 December 12, 2017 978-1401274573
8 The Final Mission
  • Suicide Squad #59–66
192 May 21, 2019 978-1401289539

Volume 1 Spin-Offs edit

Title Material collected Pages Year ISBN
Deadshot: Beginnings
  • Deadshot #1–4
  • Detective Comics #474, 518
160 November 5, 2013 978-1401242985
Deadshot: Bulletproof
  • Deadshot #1–5
  • Legends of the Dark Knight #214
144 April 21, 2015 978-1401255190

Volume 2 edit

# Title Material collected Pages Year ISBN
1 Suicide Squad: Casualties of War
  • Suicide Squad #1–12
296 June 29, 2021 978-1779510693

Volume 3 edit

# Title Material collected Pages Year ISBN
1 Suicide Squad: From the Ashes
  • Suicide Squad: Raise the Flag #1–8
192 September 2, 2008 978-1401218669

The New 52 edit

Volume 4 edit

# Title Material collected Pages Year ISBN
1 Kicked in the Teeth
  • Suicide Squad #1–7
160 July 12, 2012 978-1401235444
2 Basilisk Rising
  • Suicide Squad #0, 8–13
  • Resurrection Man #9
192 February 19, 2013 978-1401238445
3 Death is for Suckers
  • Suicide Squad #14–19
144 October 29, 2013 978-1401243166
4 Discipline and Punish
  • Suicide Squad #20–23
  • Detective Comics #23.2
  • Justice League of America 7.1
144 May 6, 2014 978-1401247010
5 Walled In
  • Suicide Squad #24–30
  • Suicide Squad: Amanda Waller #1
208 October 28, 2014 978-1401250126

New Suicide Squad edit

# Title Material collected Pages Year ISBN
1 Pure Insanity
  • New Suicide Squad #1–8
192 July 21, 2015 978-1401252380
2 Monsters
  • New Suicide Squad #9–12, Annual #1
144 February 9, 2016 978-1401261528
3 Freedom
  • New Suicide Squad #13–16
144 August 2, 2016 978-1401262648
4 Kill Anything
  • New Suicide Squad #17–22
168 November 22, 2016 978-1401270001

Suicide Squad: Most Wanted edit

The Most Wanted miniseries highlight individual members of the Suicide Squad.

Title Material collected Pages Year ISBN
Suicide Squad Most Wanted: Deadshot
  • The Deadshot portions from Suicide Squad Most Wanted: Deadshot and Katana #1–6
136 August 9, 2016 978-1401263805
Suicide Squad Most Wanted: Katana
  • The Katana portions from Suicide Squad Most Wanted: Deadshot and Katana #1–6
128 September 20, 2016 978-1401264642
Suicide Squad Most Wanted: El Diablo
  • The El Diablo portions from Suicide Squad Most Wanted: El Diablo and Boomerang #1–6
138 April 25, 2017 978-1401268657
Suicide Squad: Secret Files
  • Suicide Squad Most Wanted #1–6
144 April 18, 2017 978-1401277086

DC Rebirth edit

Volume 5 edit

# Title Material collected Pages Publication date ISBN
1 The Black Vault
  • Suicide Squad: Rebirth #1
  • Suicide Squad #1–4
160 March 7, 2017 978-1401269814
2 Going Sane
  • Suicide Squad #5–8
  • Harley Quinn and the Suicide Squad April Fool's Special #1
144 June 13, 2017 978-1401270971
Justice League vs. Suicide Squad
  • Justice League vs. Suicide Squad #1-6
  • Justice League #12–13
  • Suicide Squad #8-10
312 December 26, 2017 978-1401274788
3 Burning Down the House
  • Suicide Squad #11–15
  • Suicide Squad: War Crimes Special #1
176 September 12, 2017 978-1401274221
4 Earthlings on Fire
  • Suicide Squad #16–20
144 December 19, 2017 978-1401275396
5 Kill Your Darlings
  • Suicide Squad #21–25
128 April 17, 2018 978-1401278809
6 The Secret History of Task Force X
  • Suicide Squad #27–32
144 July 24, 2018 978-1401280987
7 Drain the Swamp
  • Suicide Squad #33–40
192 October 23, 2018 978-1401284749
8 Constriction
  • Suicide Squad #41-44, #47-50 and Annual 1
256 August 20, 2019 978-1401288877
Aquaman/Suicide Squad: Sink Atlantis
  • Suicide Squad #45-46
  • Aquaman #39-40
104 February 12, 2019 978-1401290726
1 Deluxe Edition Book 1
  • Suicide Squad #1–8
  • Harley Quinn and the Suicide Squad April Fool's Special #1
  • Suicide Squad: Rebirth #1
296 October 24, 2017 978-1401274214
2 Deluxe Edition Book 2
  • Suicide Squad #9–20
  • Suicide Squad: War Crimes Special #1
328 May 8, 2018 978-1401278915
3 Deluxe Edition Book 3
  • Suicide Squad #21–32
296 November 27, 2018 978-1401285166
Suicide Squad by Jim Lee Unwrapped
  • Suicide Squad April Fool's Special #1
  • Suicide Squad: Rebirth #1
  • Suicide Squad #1–8 (penciled artwork only)
160 October 23, 2018 978-1401284534

New Justice edit

Volume 6 edit

# Title Material collected Pages Publication date ISBN
1 Suicide Squad: Bad Blood
  • Suicide Squad #1–11
288 April 27, 2021 978-1779503954
1 Suicide Squad: Black Files
  • Suicide Squad: Black Files #1–6
??? 978-1779503954
1 Suicide Squad: Katana: The Revenge of Kobra
  • Suicide Squad: Katana: The Revenge of Kobra #1–6
134 July 9, 2019 978-1779503954


Volume 7 edit

# Title Material collected Pages Publication date ISBN
1 Suicide Squad: Give Peace a Chance 208 November 23, 2021 978-1779512758

In other media edit

Television edit

Animation edit

 
Task Force X as they appear in Justice League Unlimited. From left to right: Plastique, Deadshot, Clock King, and Captain Boomerang.

Live-action edit

  • The Suicide Squad appear in the tenth season of Smallville, consisting of Rick Flag, Deadshot, Plastique, and Warp. This version of the group initially work for Amanda Waller of Checkmate before Chloe Sullivan blackmails them into working for her.
  • The Suicide Squad appear in Arrow. Introduced in the second season, this version of the team works for A.R.G.U.S. Director Amanda Waller and initially consists of Floyd Lawton / Deadshot, Mark Scheffer / Shrapnel and Ben Turner / Bronze Tiger. Additionally, John Diggle and Lyla Michaels also work as part of the team, but are not implanted with explosives, and Harley Quinn makes a cameo appearance, but is not called for duty. Scheffer is killed by Waller as a result of him abandoning the mission while Diggle releases the remaining members from A.R.G.U.S.'s custody to help him stop Waller from bombing Starling City in an attempt to defeat Slade Wilson's army. In the third season, Oliver Queen takes pity on Carrie Cutter / Cupid and hands her over to Waller for use in the squad. Additionally, former member Digger Harkness attempts to seek revenge on Michaels for attempting to terminate him for failing to complete a mission, only to be foiled by Queen and the Flash. In the episode "Suicidal Tendencies", Diggle, Michaels, Lawton, and Cutter rescue Senator Joseph Cray from a hostage situation, during which Lawton sacrifices himself to save the others after discovering Cray had set up the attack to stage his own rescue and eventually mount a presidential campaign.[136] After Shadowspire kills Waller, Michaels becomes A.R.G.U.S.'s new director and disbands the squad as part of her efforts to reform the organization. In the seventh season episode "My Name is Emiko Queen", Michaels reforms the squad as the "Ghost Initiative" and recruits Cutter, Chien Na Wei, Kane Wolfman, and Ricardo Diaz to locate and capture a terrorist financier named Dante without A.R.G.U.S.'s oversight.[137] However, the operation fails after Diaz disables his explosive implant and warns Dante, who subsequently escapes. When the Joint Chiefs of Staff learn that the squad had been reactivated, Diggle resigns from A.R.G.U.S. to protect Michaels.
    • At San Diego Comic-Con 2014, following the squad's debut episode, Diggle's actor David Ramsey revealed that there had been talk of a spin-off series focused on them.[138] However, Arrow co-producer and comic book writer Keto Shimizu commented in January 2015 that it did not seem like a possibility due to David Ayer's Suicide Squad film being in development at the time.[139] Series producer Greg Berlanti later confirmed that the team's inclusion within Arrow was used in order to test the audience's reception and interest prior to Ayer's film being put into production.[140]

Film edit

 
The Suicide Squad as depicted in their first DCEU film. From left to right: Slipknot, Captain Boomerang, Enchantress, Katana, Rick Flag, Harley Quinn, Deadshot, Killer Croc, and El Diablo.
 
The Suicide Squad as depicted in Suicide Squad: Hell to Pay. From left to right: Bronze Tiger, Copperhead, Deadshot, Harley Quinn, Captain Boomerang, and Killer Frost.

Video games edit

Batman: Arkham edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ (Institute for Metahuman Studies)
  2. ^ a b "Brave and the Bold (1955 1st Series DC) comic books". www.mycomicshop.com. Retrieved 2017-02-03.
  3. ^ Squirek, Mark. "a book review by Mark Squirek: Suicide Squad: The Silver Age Omnibus Vol. 1". www.nyjournalofbooks.com. Retrieved 2017-02-03.
  4. ^ Legends #1–6
  5. ^ a b Secret Origins (vol. 2) #14
  6. ^ Irvine, Alex (2010). "1950s". In Dolan, Hannah (ed.). DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle. Dorling Kindersley. p. 95. ISBN 978-0-7566-6742-9. In "The Three Waves of Doom", a story that filled The Brave and the Bold #25, writer Robert Kanigher and artist Ross Andru introduced the Suicide Squad, a band of World War II-era military misfits.
  7. ^ Manning, Matthew K. "1980s" in Dolan, p. 228: "Writer John Ostrander gave the new Suicide Squad its own series, having brought the team to life in 1986's Legends miniseries...With the team's own title, Ostrander was helped by artist Luke McDonnell."
  8. ^ The 11-part Janus Directive crossover consisted of Suicide Squad #27–30, Checkmate #15–18, Manhunter (vol. 2) #14, Firestorm (vol. 2) #86, and Captain Atom #30
  9. ^ Ostrander, John (2016-10-09). "John Ostrander's Picking Favorites". ComicMix. Retrieved 2017-02-03.
  10. ^ Ficarra, Jenn (August 2016). "Why Is It Called 'Suicide Squad'? The Team's Name Is Fitting For Their Mission". Retrieved 2017-02-03.
  11. ^ Polo, Susana (2015-07-16). "The Suicide Squad, explained". Polygon. Retrieved 2017-02-03. Nobody really believes that a hero will get killed in their own book, so it can be hard to bring tension to the fight between good and evil. But when every team member is as unimportant to the publisher as they are to the fictional setting in which they exist, death can be around the corner. As the Suicide Squad book killed somebody in just about every story arc, readers got hooked on the idea that nobody was safe.
  12. ^ a b Superboy (vol. 3) #13–15
  13. ^ a b Hawk & Dove (vol. 4) #3–5
  14. ^ a b Chase #2–3
  15. ^ a b The Adventures of Superman #593–594
  16. ^ ""Suicide Squad", Declassified: A Look Back at DC's Task Force X". CBR.com. Retrieved 2017-02-03.
  17. ^ Justice League Annual #1
  18. ^ Buxton, Mark (August 2016). "The Many Deaths of The Suicide Squad". Den of Geek. Retrieved 2017-02-03.
  19. ^ a b "Suicide Squad #1: Raise the Flag". DC Comics. 2007-09-12. Retrieved 2015-03-03.
  20. ^ Keith, Booker, M. (2014). Comics through time: a history of icons, idols, and ideas. ABC-CLIO. p. 45. ISBN 9780313397516. OCLC 896826610.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  21. ^ David, C. "The insane history of the Suicide Squad". Looper.com. Retrieved 2017-02-03.
  22. ^ Legends #1
  23. ^ Legends #3
  24. ^ Legends #4
  25. ^ Legends #5
  26. ^ Secret Origins (vol. 2) #28
  27. ^ Star Spangled War Stories #110–111, 116–121, 125, and 127–128
  28. ^ DC: The New Frontier #1–4
  29. ^ Deadshot #1–4. DC Comics.
  30. ^ Suicide Squad #23. DC Comics.
  31. ^ Batman: The Killing Joke. DC Comics.
  32. ^ Suicide Squad #5. DC Comics.
  33. ^ Suicide Squad #1. DC Comics.
  34. ^ Suicide Squad #8, 19, and 31. DC Comics.
  35. ^ Suicide Squad #1–2. DC Comics.
  36. ^ Suicide Squad #7. DC Comics.
  37. ^ Justice League International #13 and Suicide Squad #13
  38. ^ Suicide Squad #10. DC Comics.
  39. ^ Suicide Squad #21–22. DC Comics.
  40. ^ Suicide Squad #8, 11, 14, 17, 19. DC Comics.
  41. ^ Flag discovers this in Suicide Squad #19. DC Comics.
  42. ^ Suicide Squad (vol. 1) #23–25
  43. ^ a b Suicide Squad #26. DC Comics.
  44. ^ "Suicide Squad: Essential List". ComicsVerse. 2016-08-03. Retrieved 2017-02-01.
  45. ^ Suicide Squad #37–39
  46. ^ "Suicide Squad Will Draw From These Classic Storylines, Get The Details – CINEMABLEND". CINEMABLEND. 2015-02-09. Retrieved 2017-02-01.
  47. ^ Suicide Squad #59, November, 1991
  48. ^ Suicide Squad #59–62
  49. ^ Flashback: The Suicide Squad (Back Issue #26, February 2008)
  50. ^ Superman: Our Worlds at War Secret Files & Origins #1
  51. ^ a b Suicide Squad (vol. 2) #6
  52. ^ a b Suicide Squad (vol. 2) #1
  53. ^ a b Suicide Squad (vol. 2) #2
  54. ^ Suicide Squad (vol. 2) #4
  55. ^ Suicide Squad (vol. 2) #10
  56. ^ a b c Suicide Squad (vol. 2) #12
  57. ^ Suicide Squad (vol. 2) #3
  58. ^ Suicide Squad (vol. 2) #7
  59. ^ Suicide Squad (vol. 2) #8
  60. ^ Suicide Squad (vol. 2) #9
  61. ^ Suicide Squad (vol. 2) #11
  62. ^ Superman (vol. 2) #182
  63. ^ Superman Secret Files & Origins 2004
  64. ^ 52 #24
  65. ^ 52 #33
  66. ^ 52 #34
  67. ^ 52 #45
  68. ^ World War III, Book Three: Hell Is for Heroes
  69. ^ Checkmate (vol. 2) #6–7
  70. ^ Countdown #43-42, 39, 28, 25, 22
  71. ^ All-Flash #1
  72. ^ Checkmate (vol. 2) #18–20
  73. ^ Green Arrow and Black Canary Wedding Special #1
  74. ^ Outsiders (vol. 2) #50
  75. ^ Gotham Underground #1, 3, 6
  76. ^ Justice League of America (vol. 2) #15, 17–18
  77. ^ Salvation Run #1–2
  78. ^ Catwoman (vol. 3) #74–75, 78
  79. ^ Suicide Squad (vol. 3) #1
  80. ^ Suicide Squad (vol. 3) #2
  81. ^ Suicide Squad (vol. 3) #3
  82. ^ Suicide Squad (vol. 3) #4
  83. ^ Suicide Squad (vol. 3) #5
  84. ^ Suicide Squad (vol. 3) #6
  85. ^ Suicide Squad (vol. 3) #7
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