Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Green Lantern ====== ===== Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary ===== * **Core Identity:** **A foundational hero of the DC Comics universe, Green Lantern is not a single individual but a title bestowed upon members of an intergalactic police force who wield a power ring capable of creating constructs limited only by the user's willpower.** * **Key Takeaways:** (Use an unordered list `*` to provide 3-4 of the most critical, high-level points.) * **Role in the Universe:** Green Lanterns are members of the [[Green_Lantern_Corps_(DC_Comics)]], an organization created by the ancient Guardians of the Universe to maintain order across 3600 sectors of space. They are fundamentally space cops powered by sheer force of will. * **Critical Distinction:** It is crucial to note that Green Lantern and the entire Green Lantern mythology are the property of **DC Comics** and do //not// exist within the mainstream Marvel Universe (Earth-616) or the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU). Any appearances alongside Marvel characters occur in rare, non-canonical crossover events. * **Marvel Analogues:** While Green Lantern is not a Marvel character, Marvel has several characters who fill a similar cosmic protector role or are direct homages, most notably [[Quasar]] (Wendell Vaughn) with his Quantum Bands and Doctor Spectrum of the [[Squadron_Supreme]]. * **Legacy Character:** The title "Green Lantern" has been held by numerous individuals, with the most prominent human members being Hal Jordan, John Stewart, Guy Gardner, and Kyle Rayner, each bringing a unique personality and approach to the role. ===== Part 2: Origin and Evolution ===== ==== Publication History and Creation (DC Comics) ==== The Green Lantern legacy began in the Golden Age of comics. The original Green Lantern, **Alan Scott**, was created by writer Bill Finger and artist Martin Nodell. He debuted in //All-American Comics #16// in July 1940. This version's powers were mystical in nature, derived from a magical green flame contained within a lantern forged from a meteor. His ring's weakness was, famously, wood. Alan Scott was a founding member of the Justice Society of America and was a popular character throughout the 1940s. As the Silver Age dawned, DC Comics editor Julius Schwartz spearheaded a movement to reinvent many of their Golden Age heroes with science-fiction-based origins. For Green Lantern, this task fell to writer John Broome and artist Gil Kane, who introduced a completely new character, **Hal Jordan**, in //Showcase #22// (October 1959). This new Green Lantern was a test pilot who received his ring from a dying alien, Abin Sur. His powers were explicitly science-fiction, tied to the Green Lantern Corps, the Guardians of the Universe, and the Central Power Battery on the planet Oa. This sci-fi reimagining was a monumental success, establishing the core mythology that defines Green Lantern to this day and making Hal Jordan a founding member of the Justice League of America. ==== In-Universe Origin Story ==== === Earth-616 and the MCU: A Case of Mistaken Identity? === To be unequivocally clear for any Marvel Universe historian or fan: there is no Green Lantern, Green Lantern Corps, or planet Oa in the primary Marvel continuity of Earth-616 or its cinematic counterpart, the Marvel Cinematic Universe. The character is an exclusive intellectual property of DC Comics. The frequent confusion stems from several factors: * **Thematic Similarities:** Marvel has its own cosmic police force, the [[Nova_Corps]], and its own heroes granted immense power by cosmic artifacts to protect the universe, such as [[Captain_Marvel_(Carol_Danvers)]] and [[Quasar]]. These thematic overlaps can lead newcomers to conflate the properties. * **Amalgam Comics:** In 1996, Marvel and DC collaborated on a series of one-shot comics that merged their characters. This event created the "Amalgam Universe" and the character of **Iron Lantern** (Hal Stark), a fusion of Marvel's [[Iron_Man_(Tony_Stark)|Iron Man]] and DC's Green Lantern (Hal Jordan). This was a temporary, non-canon event. * **JLA/Avengers Crossover:** The 2003-2004 crossover series //JLA/Avengers// (published as //Avengers/JLA// by Marvel) saw the two super-teams meet and eventually team up. In this series, Green Lantern (Kyle Rayner) interacts directly with Marvel heroes like [[Captain_America_(Steve_Rogers)|Captain America]] and [[Thor]]. During one memorable sequence, Kyle travels to the Marvel Universe and is stunned to find that his ring cannot recharge, as the Emotional Spectrum that powers it does not exist there. Therefore, any "origin" of Green Lantern in the context of Marvel is limited to these specific, out-of-continuity crossover events. The character's true origin lies entirely within the DC Comics multiverse. === The Green Lantern Legacy (DC Comics) === The modern Green Lantern origin story begins billions of years ago on the planet Maltus. A race of ancient, hyper-intelligent beings evolved, with a faction of them eventually settling on the planet Oa at the center of the universe. These beings, now calling themselves the **Guardians of the Universe**, sought to bring order to the cosmos. Their first attempt, the robotic Manhunters, went rogue and committed a galaxy-wide massacre in Space Sector 666. Learning from this tragic failure, the Guardians decided their new peacekeeping force required beings with free will and morality. They harnessed the green light of willpower, the most stable energy in the Emotional Spectrum, and forged the Central Power Battery on Oa. From this, they created Power Rings and Power Batteries, distributing them to worthy recruits from every sector of space. This was the birth of the **Green Lantern Corps**. The Green Lantern of Space Sector 2814, a Cthulhu-like alien named Abin Sur, was one of the Corps' most respected members. While transporting the super-criminal Atrocitus, his ship was damaged and crash-landed on Earth. Mortally wounded, Abin Sur commanded his ring to find a worthy successor on the planet—a man "utterly honest and born without fear." The ring chose **Hal Jordan**, a cocky but heroic test pilot for Ferris Aircraft. Jordan was transported to the crash site where Abin Sur bequeathed him the ring and battery, inducting him into the Green Lantern Corps. Jordan was taken to Oa for training by Kilowog and his sector's commanding officer, Sinestro. Jordan quickly proved to be one of the most powerful and imaginative ring-wielders in the Corps' history, becoming Earth's protector and a founding member of the [[Justice_League_of_America_(DC_Comics)|Justice League]]. ===== Part 3: In-Depth Analysis ===== ==== The Power Ring & Corps Mythology (DC Comics) ==== The core of the Green Lantern concept is the Power Ring. Its abilities and the rules that govern it are extensive and form the bedrock of the character's stories. === The Oan Power Ring: The Universe's Mightiest Weapon === A Green Lantern Power Ring is often described as the most powerful weapon in the DC Universe, limited only by the user's willpower. * **Willpower Constructs:** The ring's primary function is to create solid light constructs of anything the user can imagine. The complexity, durability, and power of these constructs are directly proportional to the user's concentration and willpower. Hal Jordan often creates fighter jets and giant fists, while the architect John Stewart creates meticulously detailed and structurally sound machines, and the artist Kyle Rayner creates imaginative, anime-inspired constructs. * **Flight:** The ring grants the user the ability to fly at supersonic speeds in an atmosphere and faster-than-light speeds in space. It generates a protective aura that negates the need for a spacesuit and provides life support. * **Energy Projection:** The ring can fire powerful beams of green energy. * **Universal Database:** The ring is connected to the Book of Oa, a universal database containing information on virtually every species, planet, and event in the DC Universe. It also functions as a universal translator. * **Phasing and Invisibility:** Users can make themselves or their constructs intangible, allowing them to pass through solid objects. They can also bend light to become invisible. * **Weaknesses:** * **Recharge Requirement:** A ring holds a finite charge and must be recharged from a personal Power Battery every 24 standard hours by reciting the Green Lantern oath: //"In brightest day, in blackest night, no evil shall escape my sight. Let those who worship evil's might, beware my power... Green Lantern's light!"// * **The Yellow Impurity:** For most of its history, the green energy of will was vulnerable to the yellow light of fear. This was a deliberate "impurity" introduced into the Central Power Battery by the Guardians to keep the Corps in check. An entity of pure fear, known as Parallax, was imprisoned within the battery, causing this weakness. Experienced Lanterns could overcome this with sufficient courage. This weakness was largely removed after the entity was purged from the battery. === The Emotional Spectrum === Later stories expanded the lore to include an entire Emotional Spectrum, where each color corresponds to a different emotion and has its own Lantern Corps: * **Green (Willpower):** Green Lantern Corps * **Yellow (Fear):** Sinestro Corps * **Red (Rage):** Red Lantern Corps * **Blue (Hope):** Blue Lantern Corps * **Indigo (Compassion):** Indigo Tribe * **Violet (Love):** Star Sapphires * **Orange (Avarice):** Agent Orange ==== Marvel Universe Analogues and Counterparts ==== While Green Lantern doesn't exist in the Marvel Universe, several characters serve a similar narrative or functional purpose, providing a fascinating point of comparison. === Quasar (Wendell Vaughn): Marvel's Protector of the Universe === The closest and most direct analogue to Green Lantern in the Marvel Universe is **Quasar**. * **Source of Power:** Quasar wields the **Quantum Bands**, powerful artifacts that tap into a limitless energy source called the Quantum Zone. Like the Power Ring, they are tools of immense power given to a chosen protector. * **Abilities:** The Quantum Bands grant a suite of powers remarkably similar to a Power Ring. They allow for the creation of solid energy constructs, flight, energy blasts, and the generation of protective force fields. The key difference is that Quasar's constructs are typically more geometric and less "sculpted" than a Lantern's, and their power is limited by the user's mental focus and scientific understanding of what they are trying to create, rather than raw emotional will. * **Role:** The title of "Protector of the Universe" was bestowed upon the wielder of the Quantum Bands by the cosmic entity Eon. This makes Quasar's role—a single, cosmically aware guardian—very similar to that of a Green Lantern, though he is generally a solo operator rather than a member of a large corps. * **Personality:** Wendell Vaughn's personality is almost the opposite of Hal Jordan's. Where Jordan is a daring, often reckless hotshot, Vaughn was chosen to be Quasar precisely because he was a cautious, level-headed S.H.I.E.L.D. agent who lacked the "killer instinct" of other candidates, making him less likely to abuse the Bands' power. === Doctor Spectrum and the Squadron Supreme === The **Squadron Supreme** is Marvel's most famous pastiche of DC's Justice League. Each member is a direct analogue of a JLA member, and Doctor Spectrum is the team's Green Lantern. * **The Power Prism:** Doctor Spectrum's power comes from an alien gem called the Power Prism. Like the ring, it allows the user to create and control light-based energy constructs of any shape and size. * **Origin:** The original Doctor Spectrum (Kenji Obatu) was given his Power Prism by the Grandmaster to fight the Avengers. Later versions, particularly from the Earth-712 and Earth-31916 realities, have been portrayed as more heroic members of their respective Squadrons. * **Direct Homage:** Unlike Quasar, who evolved into his own unique character, Doctor Spectrum is and always has been an explicit homage to Green Lantern, often used to explore "what if the Justice League existed in the Marvel Universe?" scenarios. ===== Part 4: Key Relationships & Network (DC Comics) ===== ==== Core Allies ==== * **The Flash (Barry Allen):** Hal Jordan's closest friend and confidant. Their relationship is one of the most iconic "buddy" dynamics in comics. They are foils for one another: Hal is the serious, by-the-book space cop, while Barry is the more jovial, grounded forensic scientist. Their friendship defines the heart of the Silver Age Justice League. * **Green Arrow (Oliver Queen):** Hal's ideological rival and traveling partner. In the groundbreaking 1970s //Green Lantern/Green Arrow// series by Denny O'Neil and Neal Adams, the two heroes journeyed across America. Hal represented the conservative establishment and cosmic law, while Oliver was a liberal firebrand fighting for the "little guy." Their debates on justice, law, and morality became legendary. * **Carol Ferris:** Hal Jordan's long-time love interest and employer at Ferris Aircraft. Their relationship is complicated by Carol's recurring role as the host for the Star Sapphire, the queen of a cosmic corps powered by the violet light of love, which often puts her in direct opposition to the Green Lanterns. ==== Arch-Enemies ==== * **Sinestro:** Once the greatest Green Lantern and Hal Jordan's mentor, Thaal Sinestro of Korugar became obsessed with order, believing fear was a more effective tool than willpower. He was exiled by the Guardians for ruling his home sector as a tyrant. He later forged a yellow power ring, powered by fear, and created his own Sinestro Corps to wage war on the Green Lanterns. He is Hal Jordan's ultimate nemesis, a dark mirror of what he could become. * **Atrocitus:** The leader of the Red Lantern Corps. Atrocitus is one of the five survivors of the Manhunter massacre in Sector 666. Consumed by rage towards the Guardians for their failure, he harnessed the red light of rage to form his own corps, whose members replace their hearts with their power batteries and vomit corrosive, burning blood. He seeks vengeance against both the Guardians and Sinestro. ==== Affiliations ==== * **Green Lantern Corps:** This is the primary affiliation for most Green Lanterns. It is a structured military and police organization run by the Guardians of the Universe on Oa. Notable members include the drill sergeant Kilowog, the honor guard member Tomar-Re, and thousands of others from across the universe. * **Justice League of America:** As one of its founding members, Hal Jordan (and later, John Stewart and Kyle Rayner) has served as the League's cosmic expert and powerhouse. His ring provides the team with unparalleled versatility for defense, containment, and travel. * **JLA/Avengers:** During the 2003 crossover, Kyle Rayner was the serving Green Lantern on the JLA's roster. He fought alongside the Avengers against Krona and the Grandmaster, forming a temporary but powerful alliance with Marvel's heroes. ===== Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines ===== ==== The Sinestro Corps War (2007) ==== This epic storyline saw Sinestro unleash his newly formed Sinestro Corps on the universe. Wielding yellow rings powered by fear, his army included infamous beings like the Anti-Monitor, Superboy-Prime, and the Parallax-possessed Kyle Rayner. The war ravaged the cosmos, forcing the Green Lantern Corps to rescind its ban on lethal force. It was a brutal, large-scale conflict that elevated the Green Lantern mythology, firmly established the Emotional Spectrum, and cemented Sinestro as an A-list villain. For the Green Lantern Corps, it was their own //[[annihilation|Annihilation]]//-level cosmic event. ==== Blackest Night (2009) ==== Arguably the most popular Green Lantern story of the modern era, //Blackest Night// was a line-wide DC event centered on the Green Lantern lore. A new, seventh corps emerged: the Black Lantern Corps, powered by death itself. Led by the cosmic entity Nekron, black power rings spread across the universe, reanimating the corpses of deceased heroes and villains to extinguish all life and emotion. The event forced all seven emotional corps—Green, Yellow, Red, Blue, Indigo, Violet, and Orange—to form an uneasy alliance to combat the darkness, culminating in the birth of the White Lantern of life. ==== JLA/Avengers (2003) ==== This was the definitive crossover between Marvel and DC. When the Marvel cosmic entity Grandmaster and the DC cosmic entity Krona engage in a cosmic game, the Avengers and the Justice League are forced to battle one another. Green Lantern Kyle Rayner plays a significant role. His constructs are shown to be immensely powerful against Marvel heroes, but he also discovers his ring is useless in the Marvel Universe without a connection to the Emotional Spectrum. This forces him to rely on a temporary power source provided by the Grandmaster. The event is a masterclass in comparing the power sets and philosophies of the two universes, with Green Lantern's unique abilities being a key focus. ===== Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions ===== ==== The Human Lanterns of Sector 2814 ==== Unlike many singular superheroes, Earth's Green Lantern is a legacy title passed between several major characters, all of whom have co-existed at various points. * **Hal Jordan:** The archetypal Silver Age hero. A brave, stubborn, and unimaginably powerful test pilot. Considered by many to be the greatest Green Lantern. * **John Stewart:** Introduced in 1971 as a backup for Hal. A former U.S. Marine and architect, John is serious, disciplined, and military-minded. His constructs are known for their precision and structural integrity. He gained mainstream fame as the Green Lantern in the //Justice League// animated series. * **Guy Gardner:** The "hot-head." Guy is arrogant, loud, and aggressive, often acting as an anti-hero. His willpower is immense but often channeled through rage and bravado. * **Kyle Rayner:** The "torchbearer." After Hal Jordan destroyed the Corps, Kyle, a graphic artist, was given the last remaining power ring. For years, he was the sole Green Lantern. His constructs are the most creative and elaborate, reflecting his artistic soul. ==== Alan Scott: The Golden Age Green Lantern (Earth-Two) ==== The original Green Lantern, Alan Scott, is not part of the Green Lantern Corps. His powers are magical, derived from a cosmic entity called the Starheart. Post-Crisis, he was established as the Green Lantern of the parallel world Earth-Two. He is an elder statesman of the superhero community and a founding member of the Justice Society of America. His weakness is wood, a stark contrast to the yellow impurity of the Corps. ===== See Also ===== * [[quasar]] * [[nova_corps]] * [[squadron_supreme]] * [[avengers]] * [[justice_league_of_america_(dc_comics)]] ===== Notes and Trivia ===== ((Green Lantern is a property of DC Comics. This entry is provided for comparative analysis within the context of a Marvel encyclopedia, addressing a common point of fan confusion.)) ((The Amalgam Comics character Iron Lantern (Harold "Hal" Stark) was a combination of Marvel's Iron Man and DC's Green Lantern. His armor was powered by a power battery, and he fought villains like Mandarin-estro (a fusion of the Mandarin and Sinestro).)) ((During the //JLA/Avengers// crossover, Captain America briefly wielded Thor's hammer, Mjolnir, and Kyle Rayner's Power Ring simultaneously in the final battle against Krona, a testament to his immense willpower and worthiness.)) ((The 2011 //Green Lantern// film starring Ryan Reynolds is often a source of jokes within the Marvel fandom, particularly from Reynolds himself in his role as [[deadpool|Deadpool]]. The first //Deadpool// film included a scene where Wade Wilson explicitly says "Please don't make the super suit green... or animated!")) ((The concept of a spectrum of emotions powering different corps has been compared by fans to Marvel's Infinity Stones, with each artifact representing a fundamental aspect of existence.))