Saturday, November 15, 2025

MINOR SUPER-VILLAIN 877: TWISTO THE RUBBER MAN

(Zip Comics 009, 1940) 


The Tingling Bros Circus is in trouble! Someone has been killing the performers, mid-act, with throwing knives, and it has caused enough financial disruption to the show that owner Jack Tingling is on the verge of bankruptcy!




As you might have surmised from the fact that this entry is about him, the person responsible for the murders is sideshow attraction Twisto the Rubber Man, and we'll get to his motivations in a second because they are one of two notable things about him. First, though, we must take note of the other notable thing: his powers. According to his own patter he was born with them, which I suppose makes him some sort of mutant. Whatever the reason, he is able to stretch and twist his body to a superhuman degree, as if he were completely boneless. He doesn't seem to be able to extend his limbs at will, but his fist does continue travelling under its own momentum to sock new Steel Sterling sidekick Loony in the head in the above panel. He is also able to mould his face into a new shape as if it were made of putty - all in all, he's a much more limited version of stretching characters like the soon-to-debut Plastic Man.


But just why did Twisto do all of those murders? Why to drive down the value of the circus so that he can buy it, make his lion-taming wife Lilli a star and grow rich, of course! It's a foolproof plan, spoiled only by the fact that Lilli considers it "bad" and "wrong" and "illegal" to murder her friends and coworkers for a shot at the big-time.


Having been rejected by the woman that he loves over a few measly murders, Twisto has a bit of a mental break and turns to the only solution he knows: more murders. First on the agenda is Lilli, whose big cat act he sabotages by giving the beasts a taste of his own blood, thus transforming them into uncontrollable man-eaters (this is one of those tropes that crops up a fair amount, that an animal, once it tastes human blood, can't stop craving it. Is it true? No idea). 



At this point, Twisto is so deep in the murder hole (not to mention probably a bit light headed from all that missing blood) that he kind of talks himself into becoming a serial killer by extrapolating from "my beautiful, intelligent wife rejected me because of the crimes I did" to "all beautiful, intelligent women are my enemies and must die." He almost starts his misogynistic murder spree with Steel Sterling love interest Dora Cummings, but is stopped by the timely intervention of Steel himself.


Twisto's progressive mental break continues: his murderous mania transitions into a childlike passivity and he is led away to jail without issue. This isn't the last you'll see of ol' Twisto the Rubber Man, however, as he seemingly snaps out it and escapes immediately after being left alone. We'll see him again in 1941, presumably with a whole new range of criminal motivations.

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MINOR SUPER-VILLAIN 877: TWISTO THE RUBBER MAN

(Zip Comics 009, 1940)  The Tingling Bros Circus is in trouble! Someone has been killing the performers, mid-act, with throwing knives, and ...