At least once the Rook, target of the move on more than one occasion, managed to get his back.
Thursday, February 8, 2024
THE LYNX'S FAVOURITE MOVE
Wednesday, February 7, 2024
MINOR SUPER-VILLAIN 446: THE ROOK
(Mystery Men Comics 018, 1941)
This here is the Rook, the only recurring antagonist of Golden Age duo the Lynx and Blackie the Mystery Boy. In terms of crime, he's your basic thief and murderer with a sideline in opportunistic kidnapping and extortion. He does have several notable attributes, however:
Tactics: The Rook has a hypnoray and he is going to use it, dammit. He's not one of those fickle super-villains who blame their tools every time a plan doesn't come together. The hypnoray is SOLID, it's a VALUED MEMBER OF THE TEAM and it's STAYING.
The Rare Hate Triangle: In his first appearance, the Rook kills his henchman Killer Burke rather than split the take of their latest job with him. Killer's brother Baldy Burke swears revenge and attempts to get it for the next four issues. It's a very fun dynamic because Baldy also hates the Lynx, so his allegiance is fluid. Sometimes he teams up with the Lynx to get the Rook, sometimes the opposite. At least once, Baldy just pops up out of the Rook's back seat and attempts to shoot him.
More books should feature a wildcard antagonist! I can't think of too many examples off the top of my head but those I can are terrific additions to the plot. Also, more super-villains should have non super-hero enemies given how they behave - if nothing else a guy like the Joker should be taking fire from opportunists any time he shows his face in public.
Eyes: Not only does the Rook have really great staring eyes (and they just keep getting more intense - by the end of his appearances he's got Muppet-style half ping pong balls going on) but the subjects of his hypnoray also have them. It's a nice touch and I appreciate it.
Physical Resilience (or Possibly a Series of Carefully-Planned Escape Routes): The Rook ends his first six appearances in the same way: missing, presumed dead. Specifically, he meets his theoretical end, in order, by fire, a fall, quicksand, drowning, explosion, and being thrown out a window onto sharp rocks and pounding surf far below. The Rook, in other words, operates on slasher movie villain rules - if he surely must have been killed but you don't have a body then he isn't dead. And the Lynx must have figured that out because in their final encounter he just breaks both of the Rooks legs rather than trying to kill him like he usually does.
In conclusion: while the Rook himself isn't the greatest villain in the world, virtually everything about him is worth incorporating into a villainous MO. Except for the part where he teamed up with literal Nazis. None of that.
DEMONIC ROUND-UP 003
Two shorts and two longs. Bajah : Minor Golden Age Marvel magician Dakor has to travel all the way to the fictional Indian kingdom of Nordu ...

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(Speed Comics 007, 1940) Despite their KKK-adjacent looks and tactics, the Hooded Riders are nothing more than a gang of rural protection ra...
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(More Fun Comics 067, 1941) Negal is some sort of demon lord who has been allowing ghosts to leave his realm and harass a guy on Earth. He g...
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Look out! Its demons! Lucifer : Dastardly voodoo man the Voodoo Man has this version of Lucifer possess a young woman for some dang reason....
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(Target Comics v1 007-008) The of these two selections is from the end of the Bull's-Eye Bill story in Target Comics v1 007 and the sec...
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(Adventure Comics 051-052, 1940) Snegg's your classic villain who can't handle the thought of revising a plan. In his first appearan...
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(Flash Comics v1 005, 1940) Johnny Thunder is made an FBI Agent. (fired in issue 7)
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(Weird Comics 002, 1940) Space adventurers Blast Bennett and his pal Red are tooling around the Solar System one day when they are hailed b...
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(Marvel Mystery Comics v1 020, 1941) We open on a fear-gripped Star City (not the one you're thinking of), in which ten people have been...