Monday, March 25, 2013

For Want of Rogues part II: Nemeses

As we know, the villain in a story is just as—and sometimes even more—important than the hero. Often, when dealing with a hero that faces a variety of foes, there is one that emerges as the villain of them all. The Shadow, the arch-nemesis, the antithesis. Sherlock Holmes has his Prof. Moriarty. Neo has his Agent Smith. And in superhero comics, Batman has his Joker. Reed Richards has his Dr. Doom.

I've talked a lot about the lesser known, less used Wonder Woman rogues. But who stands above them all as the Amazon's greatest enemy?


Probably the most well-known and iconic of Wonder Woman’s rogues is the Cheetah—owing largely to her longevity in being around since the Golden Age, but probably most due to being cast as Diana’s nemesis in Superfriends. And because of this, she is regarded as Wonder Woman's arch-enemy.

And frankly, I find this is a problem.
Don’t get me wrong…I’ve nothing really against Cheetah, per se. I appreciate her place in Wonder Woman’s mythos and recognize her iconic value. But she being the Lex Luthor to Wonder Woman's Superman..? Sorry, she just don’t live up to that.

For one thing, Cheetah isn't that compelling of a character in and of herself. She doesn’t really have a motivation. She kind of has something of a lust for power, but it’s a very broad and general one at that. Frankly, she comes across as more of a nuisance than genuine threat. She just pops up causing trouble with no real agenda or goal—save her vague quest for power.

Often, the arch-nemesis is, in one way or another, the dark reflection of the hero. More than just as physical and/or intellectual, the villain should represent the opposite or dark side of hero in a deep, fundamental overarching way. The Shadow archetype.
Plenty has already been said about how the Joker reflects and opposes Batman and Lex Luthor for Superman…but what does the Cheetah have in reflection of Wonder Woman?

The best I’ve ever seen writers come up with is, where Wonder Woman is blessed by her gods with these great abilities and powers, the Cheetah is cursed by hers and is a savage beast. While it’s a reflection, it’s kind of a shallow one. And depending on which version of Cheetah we’re talking about, some try to push some kind of jealousy/greed thing…but it’s not very well developed. Probably the most interesting thing about her is, even though her powers are supposed to be a curse, she is addicted to them.

Going along with the arch-enemy as Shadow idea, how does Cheetah represent a dark side of Wonder Woman? Cheetah is defined by being a beast, cursed, and petty. So, by pushing her as Diana's opposite, we're therefore defining Wonder Woman as being beautiful and loved.
Is that how Wonder Woman should be defined above all? Yeah, those are aspects of her character, but I wouldn't call them her most defining attributes.

The most interesting developments of Cheetah's character came during/around William Messner-Loebs' run on Wonder Woman where she started to show signs of reforming and grew into something of an unlikely ally with a grudging respect for Diana. These developments led to Cheetah actually freeing herself of her curse temporarily. However, it later became apparent that, even though her powers are a curse, she'd grown addicted to the power and ultimately became a villain again. 

Like I said, I appreciate the Cheetah for what she is. I won't say she doesn't have her place in Wonder Woman's mythos or that she brings nothing to Diana's table. But we need to stop hoisting her up as Wonder Woman’s great, evil match. A hero is measured by their opponents, and when you’re throwing a crazed cat-lady up as the pinnacle of evil Wonder Woman has to face…no one’s going to take her seriously.
Cheetah has her place. But being Wonder Woman’s arch-nemesis ain’t it.


Although he was around during the Golden and Silver Age, nowadays, thanks largely to the George Perez reboot, Ares is often thrown around as one of, if not the, great villain for Wonder Woman.
It seems an obvious choice. As the God of War, he opposes Wonder Woman on an ideological level and, being a god, he certainly poses a physical match for her.

I think Ares does fulfill an interesting role in Wonder Woman's story—though not as the archetypical Shadow. Rather what Joseph Campbell referred to as the “Tyrannical Father.”
The Tyrannical Father is the overbearing dark force that serves as the cause, or catalyst of the hero’s origin and leads to their journey in becoming a hero. In Campbell's Hero's Journey, a confrontation or atonement with this parental figure was a critical moment in the hero's quest. Perhaps the most famous application of the Tyrannical Father trope is Darth Vader in Star Wars.

I suspect it was partially an effort to create this figure for Batman that led to their making the Joker the guy who killed Bruce Wayne’s parents in Tim Burton’s Batman. Frieza in Dragonball Z was this for Goku—being the one who destroyed Goku’s home planet. The Superman animated series kind of gave Brainiac shades of this by having him withhold information leading to Krypton’s destruction.

Now look at Wonder Woman. The gods gave her life and power because they knew she would one day have to oppose Ares. Most modern telling of Wonder Woman’s origin usually have the machinations of Ares serve as the catalyst that makes the Amazons hold their Contest. Further, part of what motivated Diana to enter the Contest and eventually become Wonder Woman was her desire for a purpose—Ares gives her that purpose.

So while Ares serves a critical role in Wonder Woman's rogues gallery, I'd be hesitant to call him her arch-nemesis.


Which finally brings us to Circe.
There was a Circe character that appeared in Pre-Crisis Wonder Woman, but the character as she’s currently known first came about early in the George Perez reboot. Circe’s first Post-Crisis appearance was notable in that she completely owned Wonder Woman the entire issue. In fact, Diana doesn’t even defeat her and only survives due to the interference of Hermes. Diana herself even acknowledges she had no chance against her and worries what might happen the next time they meet.

Since then, Circe’s emerged as a somewhat consistent opponent for Wonder Woman and maintained a mystique as an upper-echelon threat for her. For a while, mainly starting with Phil Jimenez’s run on the title, there seemed to be a genuine effort to push Circe as Wonder Woman’s true arch-nemesis.

Unfortunately, there was such an effort that Circe became pretty overexposed and, consequently, such overexposure saw her being thrust as a lead villain where she wasn’t needed or wanted. Specifically, the Who is Wonder Woman story arc—which saw Circe acting rather out of character—and the abysmal Amazons Attack storyline that immediately followed—which saw Circe enacting a nonsensical plan with no clearly defined goal and, most embarrassingly, getting taken out by Batman uttering a magic word he knew...just in case.

Since then, Circe’s been kept under the radar—her only notable appearance acting as the evil counter to Wonder Woman in DC Universe Online.

Overexposure and poor showings aside, for my money Circe makes a superior and fitting arch-nemesis for Wonder Woman. For starters, being a sorceress of god-like power, she can match Diana physically.
But more importantly, she opposes Diana on a deep, critical, and fundamental level. Like I alluded to earlier, the best villains represent the opposite of the hero in some capacity and Circe reflects Diana in a very fundamental way.

As I’ve frequently gone on about, the crucial thing about Wonder Woman and what drives her is her belief in peace and tolerance and that mankind is fundamentally good and decent.
Circe is the opposite. According to her backstory, she was once a corrupt princess that was driven away from her people after murdering her husband. She later sold her soul to the goddess Hecate in exchange for greater power in sorcery and, after exacting a terrible revenge on her people, has devoted her life to sowing discord and hatred. She uses her power to lavish herself with comfort and has lived for thousands of years in a bitter, selfish, and hateful existence.

So where Wonder Woman is defined and driven by her compassion, generosity, selflessness, and idealistic belief in the good of people…Circe is a misanthrope defined by her selfishness, hatred, and belief people are, deep down, nothing more than savage beasts.
 Or animals.
Get it..?

3 comments:

  1. I think that the Priscilla Rich Cheetah was a dark mirror to Wonder Woman in that Diana builds strong friendships with other women and helps them to uplift themselves (as seen with Etta and the Holliday College girls and even Paula). Cheetah, by contrast is the kind of woman who tears other women down to protect her position and power within the patriarchal system--even as she herslef is oppressed by that system.

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  2. Themysciran fan JackMarch 6, 2019 at 10:47 AM

    I’m always curious people don’t suggest Dr. Cizko more.

    That’s cool what you did there, and I like it.


    You turned my head on her with this. If DC was letting me do an ongoing comics serial, you just convinced me Circe would have to appear in it. She’s a much more attractive character/foe with this perspective attached. It’s good; Wonder Woman wants our best selves and Circe wants our basest selves, our most deified being and our most animalistic being.

    It’s quite interesting.

    Wish DC would bring you in to do a Circe story :)


    Who the Great Hera cares what I, I, I, me, me, me thinks, but I don’t think that Circe is Diana’s ultimate foe.

    She is part of her Villain’s Stable, and should stay on, you’ve persuaded a fan.


    Circe is such an incredibly powerful concept; her arrival feels like Doomsday or R’As Al-Ghul or Bane. Personally, in this reader’s mind, you can only bring them in a few times; I feel Bane and Doomsday and Circe are REALLY awesome if they make one- or two-time appearances, while the Joker and Lex Luthor and the Riddler and the Cheetah might tangle with B/S/WW over and over and over on many multiple occasions.

    I’m amazed that this character (and Priscilla Rich, and Angle Man) never appeared on the series.

    As indicated, this Amazon reader is partial to a Frank Miller or Richard Donner or Alan Moore or Christopher Nolan kind of Herve Villachaize (3’11) or Danny DeVito (4’10) or Richard Dreyfuss (5’4) or Dudley Moore (5’2) or Cheech Marin (5’6) or Peter Falk (5’5) or Henry Winkler (5’6) or Robin Williams (5’7) or Bob Hoskins (5’6) or Ian Holm (5’5) or Red Buttons (5’5) or Joel Grey (5’5) or Billy Barty (3’9) as a small man with psychic/occult powers and a resentful grudge against women versus a Herculean 6’ Amazon of Love. In today’s world, many of these still-living guys or Peter Dinklage or Elijah Wood or Tom Cruise would all be awesome in a Marvel movie of Wm. Marston’s Wonder Woman.

    That’s just me.

    Short resentful Psychic Misogynist vs titanic supremely physically Wonder Woman for All.

    I would agree it could easily get very heavy-handed, many writers would make it too overtly political (“He should be an MRA! He’s toxic masculinity!” etc — these aren’t characters). (I find it’s weak when the Joker and Lex Luthor get too real-life political even on issues (environment, say) I care about (THE DARK KNIGHT was an exception in loosely skirting a political ideology but never making it explicit; that kind of apolitical-political treatment would work great for Dr. Psycho)).

    (*PS I feel the Firstborn was like this, too overly “toxic masculinity” political overload with no real character; “big” “musclehead” “ultra aggro angry” “violent” “thuggish”; ‘buried beneath a mountain’ isn’t that interesting, and the most toxic males are Adolf Hitlers and Eichmanns and Pol Pots and Jeffrey Dahmers. I don’t like big huge jerky musclejocks either but to fight Wonder Woman I found him boring, nothing at all remotely interesting like Incredible Hulk who is gentle even meek and intellectual but…….)

    You may ask: how’s a guy with Professor X’s powers plus Green Lantern powers over ectoplasm plus dream inception powers less powerful or impacting than Circe or Doomsday or Bane?

    Never occurred until just now, personally. I dunno.

    I can just see him having five big movies or five big graphic novels over several years, very much like Green Goblin or Dr. Octopus or Catwoman or Two-Face. If Wonder Woman was a show, I could see him appearing each season.

    I think he has more personal motivation (very different from the Joker’s and Lex Luthor’s, but of the same *personal* kind) to keep coming back against Diana Troy (she’s the Ultimate Woman, he’s the Ultimate Psychic Trapped In A Tiny Man’s Little Body; she represents woman’s power and to him this is not a huge asset but a major threat; she the hero activates his enraged inferiority by her mere presence, etc).

    He’s nothing like the Joker or Lex Luthor — except that he’s the type who would keep coming back, again and again and again.

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  3. Themysciran fan JackMarch 6, 2019 at 10:53 AM

    I think it’s interesting how people talk about Priscilla Rich as a woman-hater who doesn’t realize she is oppressed; I agree with that idea. I think William Marston’s work on Dr. Psycho is just as rich. Whether ectoplasmic and seeking further powers through occult means or whether a natural mutant psychic, I think he’s such an interesting enemy and combatant.

    When people represent him as a little person, I think it becomes very complicated and uncomfortable and relatable, very PHANTOM OF THE OPERA.

    The fact that in Marston’s he hates women because he was tricked into believing his true love had betrayed him before her death — wow, yikes. I find it very uncomfortable and unsettling and disturbing yet also tragic: he is deceived by an actual oppressor male into believing that women are untrustworthy, committing to a life of suspicion of and rage at the ladies - and, having killed her, he can never ever know the truth (truth being an important motif in WW comics). You shouldn’t kill, I’m not sympathizing — but complicated killing is what VILLAINS do. In a Wonder Woman opera, it’s easy to imagine him discovering in the end that she was innocent all along, and he sings a tragic number about regret and pride and suffering (not what I’d wanna see in a comic, but just saying).

    I think it’s awesome that Cizko is pronounced Psycho.


    I only recently discovered this site and devoured your WW material; I rarely comment on the internet but this was a memorable entry on Circe; cool thinking, Guy McNicht.

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