Savage Dragon Original Art Pinup Signed Erik Larsen Keith Williams!

Comic volume superhero

Barbarous Dragon
TheSavageDragonMini1.jpg

Savage Dragon #ane (July 1992) by Erik Larsen

Publication data
Publisher Image Comics
Beginning appearance As Paul Dragon:
Graphic Fantasy #1 (June 1982)
Cameo every bit the Savage Dragon:
Megaton #iii (February 1986)
First total appearance every bit the Savage Dragon:
Brutal Dragon #1 (July 1992)
Created by Erik Larsen
In-story data
Alter ego Kurr
Team affiliations Liberty League
Chicago Police Section
Special Operations Strikeforce
Notable aliases The Dragon, Mr. Dragon, Officer Dragon, Dragon
Abilities Superhuman strength, stamina, and durability
Accelerated healing gene

The Brutal Dragon is a fictional superhero created by Erik Larsen, published past Image Comics and taking place in the Image Universe. The comic features the adventures of a superheroic police officer named the Dragon. The character first appeared as the Dragon in Graphic Fantasy #1 (June 1982) and first appeared every bit the "Savage Dragon" in Megaton #3 (February 1986).[ane]

The Dragon is a big, finned, green-skinned humanoid whose powers include super-force and an advanced healing factor. He is also an amnesiac: his earliest memory is enkindling in a burning field in Chicago, Illinois. Thus, for most of the serial, the origins of his powers and appearance are a mystery to readers. At the beginning of the series, he becomes a police officer and battles the mutant criminal "superfreaks" that terrorize Chicago.

Savage Dragon is 1 of only two Image Comics titles that debuted during the company's 1992 launch that continues to be published well into the early 2020s,[2] and the only one of the two that for virtually of its run, has been written and drawn about entirely by its creator (with the exception of one issue), for which Larsen has been lauded.[three] Brutal Dragon is the longest running full-color comic book to feature a unmarried artist/writer. The character was besides adjusted into an animated series, which ran for two seasons (26 episodes) on the United states Network beginning in 1995.

The Barbarous Dragon was listed by Wizard every bit the 116th-greatest comic book characters of all time.[4] IGN also listed the Savage Dragon as the 95th-greatest comic volume hero of all time, stating that he has the trappings of a keen comic book hero.[v]

Publication history [edit]

Like many of Erik Larsen'south characters, the Savage Dragon was created by Larsen while he was a kid in simple schoolhouse. In his youth, Larsen drew the Dragon in homemade comic books. The original Dragon, inspired by elements from Helm Marvel, Batman, Speed Racer and later The Incredible Blob, differs greatly from the modern incarnation. After launching Roughshod Dragon in a professionally published comic volume, Larsen returned to the original and reworked his designs into the characters William Jonson, a police officeholder ally of the Dragon, and Flash Mercury, the "Spectacular Dragon".[ citation needed ]

Much later, a greatly redesigned Savage Dragon was featured in two issues of Graphic Fantasy, a self-published championship with a small print run, published by Larsen and two friends. In this incarnation, the Dragon was a widower and a retired member of a regime-sponsored superhero squad. After, the Dragon fabricated another appearance in the third issue of Gary Carlson's Megaton anthology in its Vanguard strip, which Larsen had been cartoon. In these appearances, the character of the Dragon remained basically the same equally it had been in Graphic Fantasy, with a few details modified (such as the inclusion of his wife, who was dead in his previous incarnation). Both the Graphic Fantasy and Megaton problems containing the Dragon have since been reprinted in loftier-quality editions.[ citation needed ]

In 1992, when Larsen left Marvel to co-found Image Comics, he reworked the character for the new publication venture. This time, the Dragon was a massively muscled green amnesiac, who joined the Chicago police department subsequently beingness discovered in a burning field. Initially debuting in a 3-issue miniseries, the Savage Dragon comic book met with enough success to justify a monthly series, launched in 1993. To this day, Larsen continues to write and illustrate the series entirely by himself, and has maintained a reasonably consequent monthly schedule (salve for occasional lapses) in comparison with the other original Image Comics titles. Larsen has occasionally produced ancillary mini-series, and sometimes allowed other creators to produce stories featuring the Dragon or other characters from the series.[ commendation needed ]

According to Larsen, the series is aimed at "older Marvel readers who are about ready to throw in the towel on comics birthday. It'south the missing link betwixt Marvel and Vertigo. More mature than Marvel; less pretentious than Vertigo. The kind of comics [he wants] to read. [The] book is really cocky-indulgent."[6]

Fictional character biography [edit]

For the initial miniseries and the get-go 38 issues of the ongoing series, the Dragon was a full officer of the Chicago Police Section, and partnered with officer Alex Wilde. Dragon and Wilde would afterward accept a coincidental sexual human relationship. He received the proper name of "Dragon" (due to his fin and green skin) from Nurse Ann Stevens, who would later become a supporting character in Mighty Man.[ commendation needed ]

Miniseries [edit]

The Dragon was found in a burning field by Lt. Frank Darling. At the fourth dimension, Chicago was existence terrorized past villainous "superfreaks" (Larsen'south commonage term for superpowered characters), namely the criminal gang called the Vicious Circle, led past the mysterious Overlord. Realizing that the Dragon'due south superhuman powers would exist a terrific boon to the law in battling the Roughshod Circumvolve, Darling asks the Dragon to join the police. At showtime, the Dragon refuses and takes a task in the warehouse of Darling's cousin. Subsequently a number of serious incidents, including the murder of the superhero Mighty Homo and the roughshod mauling of SuperPatriot, Darling takes desperate activity. He pays Vicious Circumvolve members to threaten his cousin in the hope that it will prompt Dragon to reconsider his offer. Although this achieves Darling'south desired result, the two criminals, Skullface and Hardware, kill Darling's cousin and detonate a bomb in his warehouse. The Dragon joins the police force, but Darling is now under the thumb of the Vicious Circle, causing him to steer the Dragon away from Savage Circle activities.[7]

Subsequently, the Dragon gains a girlfriend, Debbie Harris,[8] only to see her shot dead in his apartment by her jealous ex-boyfriend Arnold Dimple. The Dragon falls into a deep depression every bit a consequence.[nine] Dimple returns to plague the Dragon on several occasions as the Fiend, who makes a bargain with the devil to gain supernatural powers.[10]

Chicago PD [edit]

Also every bit being kept away from Vicious Circle activities, the Dragon was loaned out to other law forces across the country to help them in dealing with superpowered criminals. While on loan to the NYPD, he first met the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles,[11] whom he assisted multiple times in after comics. Also during his time in New York, a large prison suspension occurred and a number of powerful and dangerous criminals were killed. This is the first time the Chicago PD lost a star witness against the Overlord; Hardware, who intended to requite evidence against the criminal, was shot expressionless.[10]

Though Captain Darling's Freak Force program failed, the Dragon carried on a lasting human relationship with one of its onetime members: Rapture, a former prostitute with electrical powers, who would later have his child. Meanwhile, the Overlord's second-in-command Cyberface broke abroad from the Barbarous Circumvolve to form a rival organization. Cyberface was later arrested but, like Hardware before him, he was killed before he was able to testify. Ultimately, Cyberface was resurrected and afterwards led the Barbarous Circle under the control of the Horde, some other recurring villain.[ commendation needed ]

Later, the Dragon made his first attempt to arrest the Overlord, who easily defeated him and left him impaled upon a church building spire. The Dragon was believed to be dead, simply regenerated from his wounds later. This is not the simply time the Dragon was missing and presumed dead; it becomes both a recurring theme and running joke in the series. During his recovery, the Dragon was attacked by a person under the mental control of a strange worm. Under the domination of this creature, the Dragon went on a binge during which many innocent bystanders are injured or killed. He was finally stopped by the vigilante Mace, and the worms were traced to the Horde. The rampage resulted in a massive negative backlash against the Chicago Constabulary Department, and the Dragon's biggest naysayer, R. Richard Richards, took this opportunity to assail the Dragon with a robotic weapon dubbed the "Dragon Slayer". Later on, the Dragon encountered the She-Dragon, a young superpowered woman who modeled herself after him.[12]

Following an set on on the police station and the murder of Cyberface (who is later resurrected), the Dragon led a SWAT team to finally accept down the Overlord. The battle was harsh, and every member of the SWAT squad perished except for the Dragon, who was skinned alive. Even in his weakened state, the Dragon finally unmasked the Overlord as Mafia boss Antonio Seghetti, who subsequently falls to his death.[ citation needed ]

Later aiding the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles for a second time, the Dragon narrowly survived another attack by the Fiend, which left him nearly crippled after his bones healed incorrectly.[13] To brand matters worse, Chicago was in the midst of a brutal gang war that arose equally a result of the Overlord's death. The Roughshod Circle, once kept tightly organized by the Overlord, had since separated into several factions that were battling for criminal supremacy. The Dragon was found past a friendly cabbie and Mighty Human being, who used his super-strength to re-prepare the Dragon's bones. Afterward recuperating from this ordeal, the Dragon fought another prison house break, this time in a maximum security facility torn open past a newly-resurrected Cyberface. This battle marked the cease of the gang war, and Cyberface assumed command of the Vicious Circle.[ citation needed ]

This victory was followed by difficult times for the Dragon. Later on a number of crossovers with other Paradigm Comics characters including WildStar[xiv] and The Maxx,[15] the Dragon encountered Spawn and ultimately was sent to Hell past the Fiend.[sixteen] The Fiend can possess living bodies, and his powers are fueled by the capacity for detest of those possessed. His last victim was Debbie Harris' mother, who was unaware that the demon possessing her was the spirit of her daughter's murderer. While in Hell, a fist-fight occurred between God and the devil. As God finally overcomes the devil, he warned his defeated opponent: "Don't fuck with God." Merely as the amnesiac Dragon begins to ask most his origins, God returned him to Earth.[17]

Afterward, things abound steadily worse for the Dragon. He was unable to relieve ill swain officeholder Phil Dirt with a claret transfusion. Meanwhile, Rapture (pregnant with the Dragon's kid) suffered internal damage when the infant kicked—the unborn child having inherited its father's strength—and Rapture entered premature labour. The Dragon was non able to achieve the hospital in time, and the infant appeared to have died. However, in truth, the infant was taken by the Covenant of the Sword, a shadowy organization bent on world takeover.[18]

After a crossover with Hellboy,[19] the Dragon was caught up in the Mars Attacks and Mars Attacks/Savage Dragon upshot,[xx] in which he was responsible for destroying the Martians' bases on Mars using a Martian growth ray. This resulted in their retreat and possible extinction. While he was gone, the Vicious Circle had taken control of the metropolis. Returning home to a devastated Chicago, the Dragon was captured and publicly crucified by the Circle. The Dragon survived and defeated most of the villains, but the Dragon's new superior, Helm Mendoza, suspended him for having been missing for and then long. During his pause, the Dragon spent a few months equally a bounty hunter and helped rebuild the city subsequently the Martian invasion.[ citation needed ]

S.O.Southward. years [edit]

Behind the scenes during this period, Rob Liefeld acrimoniously departed from Prototype Comics.[21] [22] The Shattered Image crossover[23] and theMars Attacks Image event[24] were used as a way to phase out characters created past Liefeld from the collective "Image Universe", including Youngblood. In the pages of Savage Dragon, Larsen has the Dragon approached by the United States government to form a superhuman chore-force to replace Youngblood. Later negotiations, the squad is dubbed the Special Operations Strikeforce, or South.O.S.[25] This squad includes much of the super-powered supporting bandage of the book, including Jennifer Irish potato, a super-potent, invulnerable single female parent first introduced in The Fell Dragon: Sex activity & Violence miniseries.[26] Despite being the founding member of the team, the Dragon spends little time every bit a member.[ citation needed ]

Later, on a dying parallel Earth, a murderous despot named Darklord begins to swap parts of his Earth with parts from the Dragon's.[27] The Dragon leads a team of Southward.O.S. members, including Jennifer Spud and his onetime girlfriend Rapture, to this world to finish Darklord. Rapture is killed by Darklord,[28] and the Dragon and Jennifer are separated from the remainder of the team. While the remaining members of Southward.O.South. manage to stop the transfer and escape back to their ain Earth, the Dragon and Jennifer are forced to discover their own way off of the dying planet. While they brand their escape, Dragon attempts to find this Earth's Rapture, just to find that world's Debbie Harris instead.[29]

The threesome is lost in infinite for some months, and the Dragon is once more presumed expressionless, eventually landing on Godworld, where Debbie dies merely is revived as an angel. The Dragon and Jennifer are caught in a battle between Thor and Hercules, and and then sent dorsum to World past All-God; Debbie does not return with them.[30] Post-obit this, the Dragon fights a Dr. Doom-like armored dictator earlier returning to Chicago on leave and striking up a casual sexual human relationship with his former partner Alex Wilde.[31]

In the giant-sized upshot #l, many of the series subplots are resolved, and in a climactic boxing amongst nearly of the series cast, the Dragon is killed past the mystic Abner Cadaver; however, the sorcerer is murdered midway through this past William Jonson, and the Dragon is bonded with him.[32]

William Jonson and the new Overlord [edit]

The serial changed its championship to Fell She-Dragon for four issues,[33] featuring her as the main graphic symbol during an attack by the God Squad to think the diverse super-freaks that were descendants of gods. This led to the S.O.S. returning to Godworld and its accidental destruction by S.O.S. member and old Deadly Duo member Kid Avenger. During this time, William Jonson realizes he and the Dragon are sharing bodies, and shortly thereafter the Dragon finds he has the power to have over Jonson's body, so they get a masked superhero. While he is helping the She-Dragon, Jonson'due south fiancé, Rita Medermade, is kidnapped past Jonson'due south brother Ralph and they both encounter an individual wearing the Overlord armor. While rescuing her, Jonson is shot, Ralph is killed past the Overlord, and the Dragon is given full possession of his trunk.[32]

Abner Cadaver returns — made up of parts of dead God Squad characters, Darklord, and the Dragon's arm — and engages in battle with Fon~Ti, the mystical being who was one time the Horde.[32] After Fon~Ti's victory, he separates the Dragon from Jonson and returns the Dragon to his normal body. Having admitted their love, Jennifer and the Dragon begin to date. After a fight with Impostor, posing equally Rapture, the Dragon proposes to Jennifer, and their wedding ceremony follows in the adjacent result, in which Jennifer is apparently killed by the new Overlord. In truth, she was replaced with Impostor beforehand by the Covenant of the Sword. Though he had only been semi-active earlier, the Dragon officially resigns from the S.O.Southward. and became the legal guardian of Jennifer'due south girl Angel.[34] In the following issue, the Overlord subplot is tied up later on the Dragon defeats his new squad. The Dragon kills the Overlord, and he is revealed as supporting graphic symbol Vic Nixon, who had worn the armor to spy on Rita; the armor and so corrupted him.[35] After this, the Overlord armor is destroyed.[36]

Single parent and Damian Darklord [edit]

Following the resolution of the new Overlord plot, the series spent virtually of its issues wrapping up all the remaining subplots. This was training for the eventual revamp in issue #75, with the Dragon as a single parent looking afterwards Angel and somewhen losing a custody battle for her because of his dangerous lifestyle.[37] The Dragon dated a television producer named Marcy Howard, resumed his casual affair with Alex Wilde, and dated Ann Stevens earlier she was murdered, while a number of super-powered children and adults were kidnapped by the Covenant of the Sword.[ citation needed ]

Afterward losing custody of Angel and Ann's murder, the Dragon and Mighty Man (at present former Freak Strength member Dart) began searching for the missing SuperPatriot. This led them to the Covenant of the Sword, which had in its possession the SuperPatriot, Jennifer, and the Dragon's kid. The Dragon and Mighty Man are captured, just eventually rescued in a large battle similar to the one in consequence #50 in which a number of characters are killed.[ citation needed ]

It was revealed that the Covenant was formed by Damian Darklord, a time traveler who was the enemy of a vigilante named Super-Tough. This human became Darklord and started life as Damian, the son of Liberty, SuperPatriot's daughter who was raped during the Mars Attacks upshot. Damian also built and detonated the "Nega Bomb" fabricated upward of super-powered individuals that de-powered every non-natural "freak" in the world. The Dragon then kills him.

This Savage World [edit]

With issue #76, the series changed into a Jack Kirby-inspired mail service-apocalyptic/dystopian story.[38] The Dragon is stuck in a new reality he created by killing the infant Damian Darklord, which prevented him from going back in time, and with most of the mutated and monstrous populace of this world trying to impale him. The Dragon finds his house to be a crater and believes Jennifer and Angel are expressionless. The Dragon has encounters with WildStar[39] and Madman[40] and finds out that during his time possessed, without Mace to cease him, he went on a much longer binge, killing Alex Wilde. The Dragon as well discovers that Cyberface is now President of America and has the SuperPatriot nether his control.[41] The Dragon organizes a group of one-time enemies and allies to defeat Cyberface. After fulfilling a delivery to King Dexter — who helped him overthrow Cyberface — by saving his girl, the Dragon returns a hero and finds his way back to Chicago and is reunited with Jennifer and Affections, who had in fact survived.[42]

The Dragon then finds his old world had survived as well as the Savage Globe. His counterpart from Darkworld, this Dragon, was defeated, just the Dragon'southward onetime Earth was destroyed by a globe-devouring Galactus-like being named Universo, despite the best efforts of the Dragon and his son, Malcolm, who are left floating in space later its devastation. The Dragon is able to relieve Alex Wilde from that world. After this, the Dragon marries Jennifer[43] and lives with her, Affections, and Angel'south new "pet", Mr. Glum, who is secretly plotting to impale the Dragon.[44]

To coincide with the 2004 U.South. presidential election, Larsen created a corrupt politician Ronald Winston Urass,[45] who engineers a successful write-in campaign to elect the Dragon President of the United states of america.[46] However, once his criminal intents and human relationship to the criminal Dread Knight are exposed, the Supreme Court disallows these votes. This leads a vengeful Urass to attack the Dragon using the armor of his father, the Dread Knight, who was an old foe of the SuperPatriot's.[47]

Backside the scenes, Erik Larsen was made publisher of Paradigm Comics,[48] causing a nearly twelvemonth-long publishing gap between issues #121 and #122 of the serial. The title resumed regular publication in January 2006, with the first story involving a vengeful scientist from Iraq sending an almost unstoppable robot to kill the President.[49]

Mr. Glum'south plans for world domination were realized using the power of the God Gun (a weapon able to grant three wishes to its user). Glum fires the gun and asserts his control of the planet while the Dragon is incapacitated in a hospital, having lost his rapid healing abilities. Glum was, at the time, on the run with the Dragon's stepdaughter Angel afterwards he caused her to grow to more than 100 feet tall, and she accidentally destroyed her house and bedridden her female parent. The two go partners and Angel adopts a murderous, merciless personality, while Glum fix the people of Globe to work with the impossible task of making the planet look similar his face (equally his erstwhile earth did).[50]

The Dragon is revived with his healing abilities restored and is able to defy Glum's command considering of a loophole in his wish that means he cannot control extraterrestrials. The Dragon is unable to get close enough to Glum due to the various robots and villains Glum has under his control. Nonetheless, the intervention of a number of characters from the comic series Wanted, who had come to steal the God Gun, allows the Dragon to destroy the weapon, negating Glum'south wish.[51]

During the story, Vanguard's spaceship is destroyed, freeing Universo who was imprisoned on information technology. He begins to suck the energy from Earth once more. Universo and its herald are killed past Solar Man, a Superman-like hero who became murderous and was wished out of being using the God Gun, a wish undone by the Dragon's destruction of the weapon.[52] The She-Dragon also returns from Dimension Ten with the Affections from the Dragon's original world of origin. They are beingness pursued by the Darkworld Dragon and a new villainess, Battleaxe.[53]

Back to Basics [edit]

Later Affections and Malcolm's return to the new world, the Savage Dragon is left to face a new assortment of troubles. With Jennifer having disappeared and presumed dead, two superstrong kids ill-equipped to face the return to normalcy after months spent in isolation (Angel has learning deficits and Malcolm is most illiterate), and no income to intendance for his family, the Savage Dragon returns to the police.[ commendation needed ]

Meanwhile, a new Overlord takes over the Vicious Circle, resuming his attacks over the city, and the Vicious Dragon, hospitalized after a fight, is ambushed and killed past a new freak with the ability to steal the memories and the life force of his enemies.[54] Due to the huge amount of life strength held past the Dragon and his powerful immune arrangement, the freak absorbs all of his memories and physical characteristic, becoming essentially a new iteration of the Dragon. The Impostor Dragon has the remains of his former trunk packed in a preservative solution past Male monarch, and resumes his normal life.[55]

Even this new charter at life appears to be short-lived, as the new Overlord, after trying to deal with the Savage Dragon for his allegiance, literally blows his head and torso away: the Impostor Dragon, brought in the Brutal Circumvolve laboratories for analysis, revives himself as a crazed, unstoppable, deformed powerhouse with conflicting memories, bent on nourishing himself on the superpowered Affections and Malcolm.[ citation needed ]

However knowing zilch about the actions of the Impostor Dragon, Angel and Malcolm seek a way to revive the torso of the Savage Dragon, despite being faced past Male monarch with the prospect of creating nothing more a soulless being or a mind-addled monstrosity, due to the brain matter lost during the attack. They fix off to ask Nurse Stevens for the last blood sample of the Dragon, hoping to use its regenerative abilities to speed up the recovery and the resurrection of the Savage Dragon corpse. The Savage Circle, however, overpowers them, stealing the blood sample to create an regular army of Dragon clones.[ citation needed ]

Every bit a last resort, after being faced past the Impostor Dragon who attacks Rex and is frozen in the preservative solution, Male monarch and Malcolm agree to transfuse office of Malcolm's blood into the Dragon's corpse. The Dragon revives, but has no memories of his former life.[ citation needed ]

Dragon Wars [edit]

Concerned about the new, harder mental attitude of the Dragon, the new Overlord sends the Night Dragon after the Vicious Dragon. Showing a draconian disregard for human life, the Savage Dragon ultimately reveals to accept regained every shred of his past retentiveness as Kurr the Emperor (meet below), and subsequently beating up the Dark Dragon, he eats his brains, killing him for his defiance.[ citation needed ]

He then gain to alienate from himself Malcolm, planning vengeance over the Savage Circle, now using the Dragon'south blood to empower his members. The new Overlord decides to strike a truce with the police department as seen in #159.[56] He lends the help of all the superfreaks in his command to stop Kurr. As the concluding attempt fails,[57] Kurr sheds his facade, proclaiming his identity and retelling his origins (come across below), for the starting time time in-universe speaking, to Malcolm and Angel. Battling his way through several enemies, including Vanguard, an unnamed Shapeshifter taking the She-Dragon'southward appearance, Glum, the original Angel, and other friends and foes from his past, Kurr cleanses Earth of man life using a special venom.[ citation needed ]

After he battles and kills Malcolm, the Impostor Dragon wakes upwardly, this time with the Cruel Dragon's personality fully in charge, and avenges his offspring and world by killing the Kurr-Dragon. Damian Overlord proceeds to restore his original await and body, giving the Savage Dragon the opportunity to greet his species and exit the cleansed Earth in their care.[ citation needed ]

Distraught by the consequences of Kurr'south actions, he pleads with Damian Overlord for the power to travel dorsum in time and kill Kurr before he unleashes the potion, thus creating some other divergent timeline where his family is still alive. Damian grants his wish, mercilessly killing him shortly thereafter as "Savage Dragon is a dangerous wildcard for the globe". Despite a red herring implying Damian transplanted Savage's personality into WildStar'south trunk, in the "restored" timeline Kurr's alien son, along with a "mysterious gentleman", takes abroad Virus' corpse (equally he is now calling the Impostor Dragon), taking it on to his spaceship, where Virus and Kurr are used to render the Vicious Dragon to life. The Savage Dragon decides to proceed his resurrection hidden to Earthlings, and to make amends with his species, offers to assistance them to find a suitable planet.[ citation needed ]

After the Dragon Wars, Malcolm Dragon has taken the Savage Dragon'due south role, along with his sister Angel, interim equally protectors of the metropolis. A schism in the superfreaks has brought the Overlord working with the police department, with a part of the freaks still engaging in villainy, and Malcolm to proceed them in check.[58] [59] [lx]

Origin revealed [edit]

The Savage Dragon's origin was revealed in the Image Comics 10th Anniversary hardcover book, which was released on November 30, 2005. The collection featured stories by the four remaining Image founders (Erik Larsen, Todd McFarlane, Marc Silvestri, and Jim Valentino) returning to the characters they offset created for the company. Larsen's story revealed that the Dragon used to be an evil tyrant named Emperor Kurr, who led a nomadic race of space aliens who spent thousands of years traveling through infinite, searching for a suitable new homeworld. After Kurr had called World, which was perfect for their needs, he decided to go against his people's peaceful ways and slaughter all humans. Ii scientists named Rech and Weiko conspired against him.[61]

Kurr had previously refused to father an heir, (correctly) assertive that it would put his own power in jeopardy and thus killed all the females he had lain with. Weiko's girl Geeta sacrificed herself past mating with him, assuasive her male parent to recover a fertilized egg from her remains. With their people's time to come bodacious, the two scientists gave him encephalon damage that erased his retention, and implanted within his memories five days' worth of satellite television broadcasts from Earth, giving him an unconscious sense of the culture. Kurr was then sent to live on Earth, while his race moved on to search for a new planet elsewhere.[61]

Supporting characters [edit]

  • Alex Wilde – A female ex-police force officer who was in a relationship with the Dragon.
  • Malcolm Dragon – The son of the Dragon and Rapture who is currently the main grapheme of the comics.
  • Angel Potato – The girl of Smasher and stride-daughter of the Dragon.
  • Maxine Dragon – Malcolm's wife.
  • Jill Baronial a.k.a."Sprint" – She was a superhero prior to her death. Later on, her niece Allison Summers took up the role and the third Dart is her sister Jane Baronial.
  • Jennifer Murphy a.k.a. "Smasher" – The mother of Angel Irish potato and 1 of the Dragon's beloved interests
  • Rapture- The mother of Malcolm and one of Dragon's lovers.
  • Mighty Man – a woman who can turn into a man with superpowers.
  • Liberty & Justice – Blood brother and sis team who are the children of the SuperPatriot.
  • The SuperPatriot – the male parent of Liberty & Justice.
  • The Freak Force – a grouping of super-humans that often allies with the Dragon
  • Vanguard – an conflicting superhero who oftentimes teams upwards with the Dragon.
  • Horridus – a member of the Freak Force.
  • The She-Dragon – a immature woman who was mutated into a female counterpart to the Dragon.

Villains [edit]

  • The Vicious Circle – the primary opponents for the Dragon.
  • The Overlord – the original leader of the Vicious Circle and the original main villain of the series, too as the Dragon's curvation-enemy.
  • Cyberface – one of the leaders of the Fell Circumvolve and the second main villain of the series.
  • Abner Cavadar – one of the members of the barbarous circle.
  • The Horde – a member of the Vicious Circle.
  • Brainape – a member of the Vicious Circle.
  • Damien Darklord – the grandson of SuperPatriot and the tertiary chief villain of the series.
  • Alice Summers – the niece of Dart and the 2nd person to accept up the drape and later the leader of the Vicious Circle.
  • Mr. Glum – an evil alien from Dimension X.
  • The Scourge – a new villain that Malcolm fought.
  • Solar Man – an evil parody of Superman.
  • Universo – A behemothic alien who consumes planets.
  • 'The Fiend '- An evil demon spirit who possesses people.
  • Thor – the God of Thunder as a villain.

Collected editions [edit]

  • The Savage Dragon (collects #1–three of the original Savage Dragon miniseries, plus the Savage Dragon story from Image Comics #0 and other new material, with pages rearranged to appear in chronological social club)
  • Fell Dragon Volume i: Baptism of Fire (reprints #1–5 of the Dragon miniseries, a expanded version of the original Savage Dragon miniseries with everything from the original collection plus new cloth)
  • Savage Dragon Volume 2: A Force to Be Reckoned With (collects #1–half-dozen)
  • Savage Dragon Volume 3: The Fallen (collects #7–11)
  • Cruel Dragon Book 4: Possessed (collects #12–sixteen and WildC.A.T.s #14)
  • Savage Dragon Book 5: Revenge (collects #17–21)
  • Barbarous Dragon Book 6: Gang War (collects #22–26)
  • Savage Dragon Volume seven: A Talk with God (collects #27–33)
  • Savage Dragon/Hellboy (collects #34–35)
  • Savage Dragon Book viii: Terminated (collects #34–40, #i/2)
  • Vicious Dragon Volume 9: Worlds at War (collects #41–46)
  • Fell Dragon Volume 10: Endgame (collects #47–52)
  • Savage Dragon Book 11: Resurrection (collects #53–58)
  • Fell Dragon Volume 12: Last Rites – cancelled (would have collected #59–63)
  • Savage Dragon Volume thirteen: Desperate Times – cancelled (would accept collected #64–69)
  • Brutal Dragon Volume 14: Terminate of the Globe – cancelled (would accept collected #lxx–75)
  • Barbarous Dragon Volume xv: This Fell World (collects #76–81)
  • Roughshod Dragon: United We Stand (collects #139–144) (August 2010) (ISBN 1607062968)
  • Savage Dragon: Back in Blue (collects #145–150) (January 2010) (ISBN 1607061848)
  • Brutal Dragon: Identity Crisis (collects #151–156) (March 2010) (ISBN 1607062585)
  • Fell Dragon: Dragon State of war (collects #157–162) (November 2010) (ISBN 1607063239)
  • Savage Dragon: Emperor Dragon (collects #163–168) (April five, 2011)
  • Savage Dragon: The Kids Are Alright (collects #169–174) (November 2011)[62]
  • Savage Dragon: Invasion (collects #175–180) (September 2012)[63]
  • Savage Dragon: On Trial (collects #181–186) (July 2013)[64]
  • Savage Dragon: The End (collects #187–192) (February 2014) (ISBN 1607068508)[65]
  • Savage Dragon: A New Get-go! (collects #193–198) (December 2014)[66]
  • Cruel Dragon: Changes (collects #199–204) (July 2015)[67]
  • Roughshod Dragon: Growing Pains (collects #205–210) (March 2016)[68]
  • Vicious Dragon: Legacy (collects #211–216) (December 2016)[69]
  • Savage Dragon: Warfare (collects #217–222) (June xiv, 2017)[70]
  • Savage Dragon: Merging of Multiple Earths (collects #223–227) (Apr 2018) [71]
  • Savage Dragon: As Seen on TV (collects #228–234) (May 2019) [72]
  • Brutal Dragon: A Urban center Nether Siege (collects #235–240) (Baronial 2019) [73]
  • Savage Dragon: The Scourge Strikes (collects #241-246) (July 15, 2020) [74]
  • Fell Dragon: Family unit Matters (collects #247-252) (Scheduled for December 16, 2020) [75]
  • Savage Dragon: Team-Ups (collects Vanguard #iii–iv, Velocity #two written past Kurt Busiek, Freak Forcefulness #10, Vicious Dragon #13A past Jim Lee and Brandon Choi, #25's redundancy story past Keith Giffen, Jeff Matsuda and Terry Austin, and #xxx)
  • Twisted Fell Dragon Funnies (collects the back-ups from #160–171, plus some new stories) (July 2011)
  • The Dragon: Blood & Guts (collects the three effect Blood & Guts miniseries)
  • Savage Dragon Archives Book 1 (collects #1–5 of the Dragon miniseries, #one–21 of the ongoing series, and WildC.A.T.s #14 in black-and-white)
  • Fell Dragon Archives Volume 2 (collects #22–50 & #1/ii in black-and-white)
  • Cruel Dragon Athenaeum Volume 3 (collects #51–75 in blackness-and-white)
  • Savage Dragon Archives Book 4 (collects #76–100 in blackness-and-white)
  • Roughshod Dragon Archives Volume 5 (collects #101–125 in black-and-white)
  • Savage Dragon Archives Volume 6 (collects #126–150 in blackness-and-white)
  • Cruel Dragon Archives Book seven (collects #151–175 in blackness-and-white)[76]
  • Fell Dragon Athenaeum Book eight (collects #176–200 in black-and-white)[77]
  • Cruel Dragon Archives Volume 9 (collects #201–225 in black-and-white) [78]
  • Savage Dragon Archives Volume 10 (collects #226-250 in black-and-white) (Scheduled for December sixteen, 2020)[79]

Multimedia [edit]

  • The Erik Larsen CD-Rom Comic Volume Anthology (1995, Think Multimedia Entertainment) collected the Vicious Dragon miniseries (#1–3) Fell Dragon #1–10, Freak Force #1–iv, Vanguard #1–half-dozen, SuperPatriot #one–iv, and The Roughshod Dragon Vs. Roughshod Megaton Man Special, plus Graphic Fantasy #one–2 and Megaton #3 (early independent comics featuring the Dragon)

In other media [edit]

In 1995, the Savage Dragon appeared in The Savage Dragon, an animated television series as part of the Cartoon Express on the USA Network. Produced by Universal Cartoon Studios, it ran for 26 episodes from 1995 to 1996 and featured numerous supporting characters from the comic book series, including the She-Dragon, the Horde, Barbaric, Mako and the Overlord. The Dragon was voiced by Jim Cummings. Additional voices were provided by Mark Hamill, Michael Dorn, Jennifer Hale, René Auberjonois, Frank Welker, Dawnn Lewis, Paul Eiding, Peter Cullen, Rob Paulsen, Robert Ito and Tony Jay.

Reception [edit]

The Savage Dragon was listed by Sorcerer every bit the 116th-greatest comic book grapheme of all fourth dimension.[four] IGN also listed the Savage Dragon as the 95th-greatest comic volume hero of all fourth dimension.[5]

Further reading [edit]

  • McCulloch, Joe. "REVIEWS: SAVAGE DRAGON #233," The Comics Journal (May 7, 2018).

References [edit]

  1. ^ Markstein, Don. "Fell Dragon". Don Markstein's Toonopedia . Retrieved ii April 2020.
  2. ^ Hennum, Shea (March 12, 2015). "What Spawn Means to the Future of Image". Paste.
  3. ^ David, Peter (August 23, 2010). "Giving Credit Where Credit is Due, Office 1" peterdavid.net. Reprinted from Comics Buyer'southward Guide #1033 (September iii, 1993). Krause Publications.
  4. ^ a b "Wizard'southward pinnacle 200 characters. External link consists of a forum site summing up the peak 200 characters of Sorcerer Magazine since the real site that contains the list is broken". Wizard. Retrieved 2011-05-07 .
  5. ^ a b "Fell Dragon – #95 Elevation Comic Volume Heroes". IGN. Retrieved 2011-05-07 .
  6. ^ Larsen, Erik. "Ofttimes Asked Questions". SavageDragon.com. Retrieved April 25, 2017.
  7. ^ Vicious Dragon limited series #one (July 1992).
  8. ^ Cruel Dragon limited series #2 (Oct. 1992).
  9. ^ Savage Dragon express series #3 (December. 1992).
  10. ^ a b Fell Dragon #three (August 1993).
  11. ^ Savage Dragon #ii (July 1993).
  12. ^ Savage Dragon #12 (Baronial 1994).
  13. ^ Barbarous Dragon #22 (September 1995).
  14. ^ Wildstar: Heaven Zero #3 (September 1993).
  15. ^ The Maxx #6 (October 1993).
  16. ^ Fell Dragon #xxx (Baronial 1996).
  17. ^ Fell Dragon #31 (September 1996).
  18. ^ Savage Dragon #33 (Nov 1996).
  19. ^ Brutal Dragon #34 (Dec 1996).
  20. ^ Mars Attacks The Savage Dragon #i–4 (Topps Comics, Dec. 1996–Mar. 1997).
  21. ^ "Chapter Three: Paradigm Litigation, Cont.", The Comics Journal #192 (December 1996), pp. 17–19.
  22. ^ Dean, Michael. (July 2000). "The Epitome Story: Part Three: What Went Wrong". The Comics Journal #225. pp. 7–11.
  23. ^ Shattered Image #ane–four (Aug.–Dec. 1996).
  24. ^ Mars Attacks Paradigm #1–4 (Dec. 1996–Apr. 1997).
  25. ^ Fell Dragon #40 (July 1997).
  26. ^ Roughshod Dragon: Sex activity and Violence #1–2 (Aug.–Sept. 1997).
  27. ^ Savage Dragon #42 (Oct. 1997).
  28. ^ Savage Dragon #43 (Nov. 1997).
  29. ^ Cruel Dragon #44 (Dec. 1997).
  30. ^ Savage Dragon #45–46 (Jan.–Feb. 1998).
  31. ^ Savage Dragon #48 (Apr 1998).
  32. ^ a b c Savage Dragon #50 (June 1998).
  33. ^ Savage [She-]Dragon problems #51–54 (July–October. 1998).
  34. ^ Roughshod Dragon #54 (Oct 1998).
  35. ^ Savage Dragon #55 (Nov. 1998).
  36. ^ Savage Dragon #57 (January. 1999).
  37. ^ Savage Dragon #75 (May 2000).
  38. ^ Savage Dragon #76 (June 2000).
  39. ^ Savage Dragon #77 (July 2000).
  40. ^ Savage Dragon issue #81–85 (Nov. 2000–Mar. 2001).
  41. ^ Savage Dragon #95 (January 2002).
  42. ^ Savage Dragon #100 (June 2002).
  43. ^ Savage Dragon #104 (October 2002).
  44. ^ Savage Dragon #106 (Dec 2002).
  45. ^ Savage Dragon #116 (August 2004).
  46. ^ Savage Dragon #120–121 (November 2004–Jan. 2005).
  47. ^ Savage Dragon #121 (Jan. 2005).
  48. ^ Brady, Matt (July 8, 2008). "Eric Stephenson: Talking to the New Paradigm Publisher". Newsarama.
  49. ^ Savage Dragon #122 (Jan. 2006).
  50. ^ Savage Dragon #126–127 (May–June 2006).
  51. ^ Savage Dragon #129 (October 2006).
  52. ^ Savage Dragon #130 (Nov. 2006).
  53. ^ Savage Dragon #131 (Dec. 2006).
  54. ^ Barbarous Dragon #131 (December. 2006)
  55. ^ Savage Dragon #133 (Nov. 2007)
  56. ^ Larsen, Erik (w, a). The Savage Dragon #159 (June 2010). Image Comics.
  57. ^ Larsen, Erik (w, a). The Vicious Dragon #162 (September 2010). Image Comics.
  58. ^ Arrant, Chris (Baronial 16, 2013). "Decease and the SAVAGE DRAGON – Taking the Championship Character Out of the Title?". Newsarama.
  59. ^ Burlingame, Russ. "Roughshod Dragon Version 2.0: Erik Larsen on The Starting time Twenty-four hours of Malcolm'due south New Life". ComicBook.com. Retrieved 2014-09-xiii .
  60. ^ "Larsen Shakes Upward 'Roughshod Dragon,' Updates 'Emmet' Condition". CBR.com. Retrieved 2014-09-thirteen .
  61. ^ a b Larsen, Erik (west, a). "The Fashion It Was," Image Comics Hardcover #1 (Nov. 2005).
  62. ^ "Roughshod Dragon: Kids Are All Right TPB (Preview)". CBR.com. Nov 22, 2011.
  63. ^ "Savage Dragon: Invasion (Savage Dragon #175–180)". Goodreads. Retrieved April 25, 2017.
  64. ^ "Savage Dragon: The End" Archived 2017-04-26 at the Wayback Machine. Comic Volume Roundup. Retrieved April 25, 2017.
  65. ^ "Savage Dragon: The End Archived 2017-04-26 at the Wayback Motorcar. Comic Volume Roundup. Retrieved April 25, 2017.
  66. ^ "Barbarous Dragon: A New Outset!" Archived 2017-04-26 at the Wayback Machine. Comic Book Roundup. Retrieved April 25, 2017.
  67. ^ "Savage Dragon: Changes" Archived 2017-04-27 at the Wayback Machine. Comic Book Roundup. Retrieved Apr 25, 2017.
  68. ^ "Vicious Dragon: Growing Pains" Archived 2017-04-26 at the Wayback Machine. Comic Volume Roundup. Retrieved Apr 25, 2017.
  69. ^ "Savage Dragon: Legacy TP". Image Comics. Retrieved April 25, 2017.
  70. ^ "Paradigm COMICS June 2017 Solicitations". Newsarama. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
  71. ^ "Barbarous DRAGON: MERGING OF MULTIPLE EARTHS TP". Image Comics. Prototype Comics. Retrieved 5 March 2019.
  72. ^ "SAVAGE DRAGON: As SEEN ON Television TP". Epitome Comics. Prototype Comics. Retrieved 28 December 2019.
  73. ^ "Cruel DRAGON: A CITY UNDER SIEGE TP". Image Comics. Image Comics. Retrieved 28 December 2019.
  74. ^ "SAVAGE DRAGON: THE SCOURGE STRIKES TP". Paradigm Comics. Paradigm Comics. Retrieved iii July 2020.
  75. ^ "Image Comics' Full December 2020 Solicitations". Haemorrhage Absurd. Bleeding Cool.
  76. ^ "Brutal Dragon Athenaeum, Vol. 7 TP". Image Comics. Retrieved Apr 25, 2017.
  77. ^ "Savage Dragon Archives, Vol. 8 TP". Image Comics. Retrieved April 25, 2017.
  78. ^ "SAVAGE DRAGON Archives, VOL. 9 TP". Prototype Comics. Image Comics. Retrieved 5 March 2019.
  79. ^ "Image Comics' Full December 2020 Solicitations". Bleeding Cool. Haemorrhage Absurd.

External links [edit]

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata
  • Barbarous Dragon at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on February 23, 2017.

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Savage_Dragon

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