Thunder (comics)
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Thunder | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
First appearance | Outsiders vol. 3 #1 (August 2003) |
Created by | Judd Winick (writer) Tom Raney (artist) |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Anissa Pierce |
Team affiliations | Outsiders |
Notable aliases | Adanna Abioye |
Abilities | Density manipulation |
Thunder (real name Anissa Pierce) is a fictional superhero published by DC Comics. She was first described in Green Arrow vol. 2 #26 (Late July 2003) and first appeared the next month in Outsiders vol. 3 #1. Thunder was created by Judd Winick and Tom Raney.
Contents
Fictional character biography
Daughter of Black Lightning
Her father Jefferson Pierce (Black Lightning) and her mother Lynn Stewart did not want her following in his footsteps, and he struck a bargain with her: she would graduate from college before considering a career in crimefighting. She did, and the same night of her graduation she donned a costume and became Thunder.[1][2] She is also the older sister of Lightning.
Outsiders
Shortly after Thunder had started her solo career, she was approached by Arsenal, who offered her a spot on the new team of Outsiders. Reasoning that she could best learn the superhero trade with a team, she agreed to this offer and became an Outsider. Although she got along with most of her teammates, she seemed to come into conflict with Grace, a tough promiscuous bouncer, constantly. They were however quite effective as a team, and the two slowly came to a grudging respect between them; later on they became lovers.[3]
Eventually her father appeared at the Outsiders headquarters, demanding her resignation from the team.[4] Naturally, she refused and when the danger of Sabbac arose again, her father even decided to accompany the Outsiders.[5] During that adventure, the two came to respect each other's abilities, neither having seen the other in action before, and Thunder was allowed to remain an Outsider.
The extent of her invulnerability was tested during a fight with the re-formed Fearsome Five. The matter transmuter Shimmer converted the air in her lungs to water, which caused an inflammation so great that she suffered pulmonary edema and Acute respiratory distress syndrome, which nearly killed her.[6] She recovered and continued to serve with the Outsiders.
"One Year Later"
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OYL, Anissa remains a member of the Outsiders (a team that was currently believed to be dead), and has been involved in the attempted toppling of the regime of Mali. Her role has been instrumental in the mission, having gone undercover amongst the government, a role that has required her to pretend she was having a sexual relationship with the country's ruler Ratun Bennin; in actuality Metamorpho used a hallucinogenic compound to fool the dictator. She compromised the team's mission when she revealed her cover and attacked Mali's army, who were going to slaughter a village.[7]
It was revealed that Thunder has been in a lesbian relationship with her teammate Grace.[3] Thunder was recently kicked off The Outsiders upon Batman's reorganization of the team, being replaced by the Martian Manhunter.[8] She rejoined the team, when Grace invited her on a mission, without Batman's approval.[9]
During the Batman R.I.P. events an assembly of the Outsiders, including Anissa, receives a message from the missing Batman, asking them to feed a secret code in the cybernetic mind of the ReMAC, allowing him to track the Caped Crusader and the Black Glove and help him into his fight. As they reluctantly comply, due to Batgirl, the code reveals itself as a cybernetic boobytrap set by Doctor Hurt, the mastermind behind Batman's downfall, and ReMAC explodes. Several Outsiders are wounded, and Anissa suffers from brain injuries severe enough to knock her in a seemingly irreversible coma.[10] However her in-costume appearance in the "Final Crisis: Submit" story suggest she recovered afterwards, as the Final Crisis storyline occurs after the events in R.I.P.,[11] though Thunder is still shown in a coma during the Batman and the Outsiders Special, where her father ultimately joins up with a new roster of Outsiders to take her place.
Thunder eventually reappears many months later, now living with Grace in a state of semi-retirement. The inconsistencies regarding her coma are briefly touched upon when it is explained that Anissa had been "in and out of hospitals" for a prolonged period after her initial injuries. Following a botched mission, Black Lightning arrives at Anissa and Grace's apartment with several other fugitive members of the new Outsiders, telling Anissa that he simply wishes to see his children again after spending months without any contact with his family. He briefly expresses discomfort over his daughter's sexual orientation, but Anissa tells him off by stating that Grace was there for her when he wasn't. When the Justice Society of America attacks the apartment in order to bring the Outsiders into custody, Anissa chooses to side with her father and fight off the attacking heroes, which ultimately leads to a confrontation with her younger sister, Lightning, whom she claims was always thought of as the "favorite". After the fight is broken up by Doctor Fate, Anissa and Grace choose to rejoin the Outsiders on a mission to Markovia, where they have been tasked by Amanda Waller with capturing Geo-Force.[12]
Powers and abilities
Thunder has the ability to increase her body's mass while preserving volume, which effectively increases her density. In this state she is near-immovable, almost completely invulnerable (a mob enforcer once suffered a compound fracture after trying to punch Thunder in the face), and can create massive shockwaves just by stomping the ground.
In other media
Television
- A teenage version of Thunder appears in the "Thunder and Lightning" shorts of the DC Nation Shorts voiced by Cree Summer.
Kingdom Come
- A young boy inheriting his father powers and being the new owner of the genie Thunderbolt is the version of Thunder appearing in the 1996 graphic novel by Alex Ross and Mark Waid.
References
- ↑ Outsiders vol. 3 #1 (August 2003)
- ↑ Teen Titans/Outsiders Secret Files and Origins #1 (December 2003)
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Outsiders #41 (December 2006)
- ↑ Outsiders #9 (April 2004)
- ↑ Outsiders #10 (May 2004)
- ↑ Outsiders #14 (September 2004)
- ↑ Outsiders #34 (May 2006)
- ↑ Outsiders: Five of a Kind - Thunder and Martian Manhunter #1 (October 2007)
- ↑ Batman and The Outsiders #1 (December 2007)
- ↑ Batman and The Outsiders #12 (December 2008)
- ↑ Final Crisis: Submit (December 2008)
- ↑ Outsiders (vol. 4) #36