Mordru

DC Comics character
Comics character
Mordru
Mordru, the Dark Lord
Character design by Pete Woods
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceAdventure Comics #369 (June 1968)
Created byJim Shooter (writer)
Curt Swan (artist)
In-story information
Alter egoMordru
SpeciesCosmic entity
Place of originGemworld / Zerox (as Wrynn)
Team affiliationsHorde
Sons of Anubis
Demon Knights
Legion of Super-Villains
Lords of Chaos
PartnershipsEclipso
Obsidian
Wrynn
Notable aliasesThe Dark Lord
The Dark Nobleman
Mordru the Merciless
Wrynn
Golden Age Legionnaire
Abilities
  • Classified as an ultimate-level magic wielder, capable of performing virtually any mystical feat through both black and chaos magic. Also possess a profound knowledge of the supernatural
  • Superhuman strength, endurance, ability to possess others, and immortality

Mordru, also known as Mordru the Merciless, is a supervillain featured in American comic books published by DC Comics.[1] Created by writer Jim Shooter and artist Curt Swan, Mordru made his first appearance in Adventure Comics #369 in June 1968.[2]

Regarded as one of the prominent members of the Lords of Chaos, Mordru typically serves as an antagonist to various teams and characters within the DC Universe. These include the Justice Society of America, Amethyst, Doctor Fate, Justice League Dark, and his primary adversaries, the futuristic Legion of Super-Heroes. Possessing the characteristics of a parasitic-like cosmic entity, Mordru is recognized as one of the most potent wielders of magic in the DC Universe. Frequently driven by a desire for conquest, he relentlessly pursues methods to amplify his already overwhelming power in order to exert control over all of existence.

Mordru's character has been adapted in various media, including television series such as Legion of Super-Heroes and Justice League Unlimited.

Fictional character biography

Gemworld

The Lord of Chaos Mordru begins his existence by possessing Wrynn, one of the twin sons of Lord Topaz and Lady Turquoise. Wrynn becomes entranced by the study of black magic. When performing a summoning ritual, Wrynn accidentally resurrects a gemstone golem called Flaw, a servant of the Child and one of the Lords of Chaos; Flaw chooses Wrynn to be the Lords' instrument as they attempt to retake Gemworld. The Lords, giving Wrynn tremendous magical power, rename him "Mordru". As time progresses, Mordru takes over Wrynn's mind and body. Wrynn is reduced to a trapped subconscious with Mordru in full control. Mordru kills Donal during a battle with Amethyst, Princess of Gemworld, and is banished from the Twelve Kingdoms of Gemworld. Amethyst, however, unsatisfied with this punishment, locks Mordru inside Gemworld by merging him with the planet itself. During his years inside Gemworld, Mordru develops taphephobia (the fear of being buried alive), which becomes Mordru's "Achilles' heel".[3]

The Gemworld realm is different from Earth's time. Whenever 20 years time pass on the Gemworld, only 13 years will pass on Earth. At the end of the future Gemworld/Mordru saga, the Gemworld planet is displaced into Earths universe. Mordru (a Lord of Chaos immortal from Cilia) exists many eons before the Gemworld "origin" back story (which is a contradiction). Infinite Crisis erases the Gemworld origin and continues Mordru's Post-Crisis timeline battles with Dr. Fate and other super heroes. As an energy being, Mordu needs to possess mortal host to use his powers. Instead of possessing Wrynn, Mordru controls the form of sorcerer Arion, Lord of Atlantis.[4] Even if 20 year old Wrynn existed post-Infinite Crisis, he would only be 4–5 years old in current DC time. Although Chaos Lord Child mentions Wrynn during the Justice Society conflict, the scheme was to set the Gemworld on a foreseen dark "post-crisis future" and have Mordru subservient through a low powered Wrynn. Donal, Wrynn, and Amber are post-Infinite Crisis characters (alternate time line) erased from existence. The 1987 Amethyst 4-issue mini-series was a possible "future story" +13 years after Crisis on Infinite Earths.

Mordru develops taphophobia from imprisonment in the Rock of Eternity, instead of the defunct Gemworld origin.

Pre-Crisis (20th century)

Chronologically (in DC Universe time), his first battle with costumed superheroes occurs during a meeting between Earth-One's Justice League of America and Earth-Two's Justice Society of America. Mordru (who inhabits the Earth-One universe) magically reaches back through time from the 30th century to the 20th, to capture members of the JLA and JSA and bring them to the future so that they can retrieve artifacts that would free the Demons Three and allow him to steal their powers. During the battle, the Justice League and the Justice Society ally with the Legion of Super-Heroes.[5] His plan fails. There is some loss of continuity following Crisis on Infinite Earths, the battle is restored to continuity by the events of Infinite Crisis,[6] where the Justice League and the Justice Society reside on a combined "New Earth".

Post-Crisis (20th and 21st centuries)

After Crisis on Infinite Earths, Mordru is recast as a timeless "Lord of Chaos"; when the Justice Society face him in the present day, Jack Knight (the current Starman) mentions that he knows of Mordru from his visits to the 30th century, and the android Hourman reveals that he attempted to use his time-manipulation to revert Mordru to a less powerful state but found that Mordru's timeline had no beginning or end, suggesting that Mordru was never born nor would he ever die. Mordru attempts to steal the body and power of the newest "Doctor Fate", but is subsequently imprisoned in Fate's amulet. Once he escapes, he overpowers Fate (Hector Hall), steals his collar and amulet and takes on the familiar garb of Doctor Fate.[1] With the aid of Eclipso and Obsidian, Mordru tries to conquer the world, but is defeated by Doctor Fate and the Justice Society.[1] Fate imprisons Mordru within the "Rock of Eternity". There, Mordru is guarded by the wizard Shazam. Spectre is seduced by Jean Loring, hosted by Eclipso, then murders Shazam moments after Mordru escapes.

Mordru's appearance in the Princes of Darkness story arc marks a connection with the backstory of Power Girl and its revision in Infinite Crisis. The defeat of Mordru entails the freeing the soul of Atlantean sorcerer Arion (Mordru was using Arion's body as a host, but freeing Arion's soul required Arion to pass through his body on the way to the afterlife, disrupting Mordru's power long enough for others to stop him), during which Arion states he is not the grandfather of Power Girl.

After his escape from the "Rock of Eternity", Mordru seeks revenge on Fate and the Justice Society.[7] During Mordru's battle with Fate (now manifesting in his helm and cloak on his own without a host), Mordru and Fate encounter different timelines, such as the Kingdom Come timeline. Fate mocks Mordru, suggesting he is a 'cosmic fluke' and a cancer and that no other versions of him exist. Mordru is then defeated by Jakeem Thunder, who places him "somewhere where none of us will see him again".

Mordru returns to again impersonate Fate, but the members of the Justice Society see the ruse. When cast out, Mordru returns to his original form (Volume 2, issue #34).

Mordru battles the JSA and the hostless Nabu in JSA #80, art by Don Kramer.

Pre-Zero Hour (30th Century)

In the 30th century, Mordru becomes one of the most powerful figures in the universe. Although Mordru's story line suffers some loss of continuity, there is an essential plot: Mordru appears on Zerox (the Sorcerer's planet). He joins the sorcerers, rises in power and takes control in a coup. In doing so, he steals the sorcerers' powers, but his apprentice, Mysa Nal (the White Witch) escapes.

Mordru, now known as the "Dark Lord", creates an unstoppable, tyrannical space empire by conquering nearby planets. He combines the technology of the conquered planets with his sorcery. For example, he can jam an enemy's weapons before a space battle. However, Brainiac 5 notices that the Dark Lord is choosing his conquests carefully "as if selecting baubles from a jeweller's tray" thus suggesting his power has wavered.[8] Earth remains free, defended by "The Legion of Superheroes". In a large space battle, the Legion defeats the Dark Lord's armada. Mordru fights back by appearing as a hundred-foot armored giant. After he defeats the Legion, he reverts to his normal stature to rejoice in his victory, failing to notice that Mon-El and Superboy were not present during the fight. He is then quickly sealed in an airless vault at superspeed by Superboy and Mon-El. This triggers his phobia rendering him comatose. The vault is placed beneath Legion Headquarters.

While exploring the headquarters, Shadow Lass finds Mordru's vault and opens the outer door. While trying to open the main door, she is interrupted by Mon-El, who warns Shadow Lass and shuts the vault. He opens an outer glass window which lets them see safely inside, but they see Mordru is revived and coming thru the vault side. Mon-El sounds the alarm and Superboy tries to reach him but is rendered unconscious by Mordru, who has not yet regained his full strength. The Legion flee through a Time Bubble. The Legion have no time to set the bubble and arrive at its last setting, Smallville in Superboy's time. They hide the bubble and aided by Clark Kent (Superboy) they assume secret identities. Through Lana Lang and the Smallville townsfolk, Mordru finds the Legion. They battle and again, Mordru is left imprisoned and comatose. This establishes the classic Mordru story cycle: Mordru is freed, continues his obsession with destroying the Legion then loses in battle, only to be trapped again until the next time.

Earthwar

Mordru manipulated the Resource Raiders, the Khunds, the Dark Circle and events on Weber's World (a diplomatic conference between the United Planets and the Dominion) in order to take over Earth and defeat the Legion, but is defeated. In the aftermath of the crisis, the Khunds and the Dark Circle are driven out of United Planets territory. The U.P. and the Dominion sign an extended peace treaty.

Lord Romdur

Mordru flees to Avalon (a backwater planet). He takes the name Romdur (an anagram of Mordru). Star Boy uses his "mass-inducing" power to collapse Mordru's castle, trapping him again.

Great Darkness Saga

One of Darkseid's Servants of Darkness frees Mordru from imprisonment on Avalon, and Darkseid steals his powers. He is left powerless on Zerox.

Legion of Super-Heroes, volume 4

Mordru is fated to rule the universe for a thousand years. The Time Trapper tries to use the Legion to stop Mordru's rise to power, but in the Great Darkness Saga, the Legion become more powerful than expected. The Time Trapper realizes the Legion is a potential threat. When Mon-El destroys the Time Trapper, it causes a disruption of the space-time continuum and reveals a universe in which Mordru does come to power. Glorith, a minor villain, casts a spell, at the expense of her own life. With this spell, she goes back in time and becomes a time manipulator responsible for creation of the Legion (and modifying the timeline to account for the removal of Superboy and Supergirl from continuity and their replacement with Valor and Andromeda, with Valor being a combination of Mon-El with Superboy's history and influence in the Legion).

In the new timeline, Glorith orchestrates a battle between Mordru and the Legion. Glorith plans to have Mordru and the Legion destroy each other so she can come to power. Ultra Boy discovers her plan. He coerces Mordru to attack Glorith. It is this battle which is said to explain Mordru's wavering planetary conquest.[9] At this point, the Sorcerers of Zerox find an opportunity to remove Mordru's powers and cure his mind. He finds contentment on Zerox and later, after Zerox was destroyed in the "Magic Wars", on Tharn. He marries Mysa Nal.

Following the Magic Wars, there is galactic economic collapse and Tharn faces destruction by the Khund. To protect the planet against the Khund starships, the Sorcerers' Council restores Mordru's powers (even though they know the power will corrupt Mordru). Mordru defeats the Khunds and becomes Emperor. He is not as powerful as before. He can defeat the Green Lantern, Rond Vidar but not the combined powers of The Legion and the United Planets. Mordru joins with Glorith and together they make a number of attempts to secure power. One such attempt disturbs the internal logic of the Zero Hour crossover story.

Relations with other villains (Pre-Zero Hour)

Due to Mordru's power, other would-be conquerors of the 30th century consider Mordru (and hence the Legion) in their plans. For example, Pulsar Stargrave masquerades as Brainiac 5's father and sends Brainy's real father on a series of missions to gather artifacts that could defeat Mordru. Stargrave enlists the aid of the Time Trapper, a "time manipulator". Stargrave orders the Time Trapper to prove his worth by killing the Legion. When the Time Trapper fails, Stargrave tries to enlist the Legion themselves. Later on, an alien sorcerer named Sden tries to trick the Legion into retrieving yet another artifact, again with the goal of defeating Mordru.

Post-Zero Hour (30th and 31st centuries)

After Zero Hour, the future of the DC Universe was completely rebooted. Instead of an established Legion, a new Legion with younger heroes had just been formed, and the history between the 21st and 30th centuries had changed. The story after Zero Hour has Mordru establishing a large empire in the 28th and 29th centuries before being imprisoned by Mysa (now his daughter rather than his apprentice) in an airtight vault on the Yuen asteroid. In the battle, Mysa's allies are killed and she is severely aged.

Mordru is released by a mining project on the Yuen asteroid controlled by a group of disgruntled Legion rejects. The new Legion consisting of Sensor, Umbra and Magno investigates unusual events on the asteroid. Mordru searches for his lost talismans which hold his power such as the Emerald Eye of Ekron.[1] The owner of the Eye defends the relic until a Legion led alliance (including Mysa (who is now de-aged), the Workforce, and the Amazers) defeats Mordru and imprisons him in an airtight sphere. Although the "Elements of Disaster" threatened at one point to revive him, Mordru remains imprisoned.

Legion of 3 Worlds

In this story that is part of the Final Crisis storyline, Mordru is one of Superboy-Prime's Legion of Super-Villains. Mordru rules the Sorcerers' World and holds the White Witch hostage. After killing Glorith, Dragonmage and Prince Evillo, Mordru holds the remaining magic of the universe.[10] He also receives the power of Kinetix (killed by Superboy-Prime) and that of the other sorcerers of "Universe-247". However, the White Witch absorbs Mordru. Due to Mordru's evil in doing, so she becomes the "Black Witch".[11]

The New Golden Age

A younger version of Mordru was revealed to have operated as the Golden Age Legionnaire who was mysterious superhero with his own Legion Ring and Time Sphere. He had helped out Atom, Red Tornado, and the All-Star Squadron before he mysteriously vanished.[12]

By the final issue of "Flashpoint Beyond", Legionnaire was among the thirteen missing Golden Age superheroes in the Time Masters' capsules. When those capsules have failed, they were all pulled back to their own time with history rebuilding around them.[13]

In the pages of "The New Golden Age", Legionnaire's bio was shown to have his information redacted with his appearance silhouetted except for his Legion Ring.[14] Legionnaire was first seen witnessing Alan Scott taking Ruby Sokov with him.[15] Legionnaire then appears before Power Girl, Hawkman, Salem the Witch Girl, and Stargirl when he uses a jolt of his powers to subdue Harlequin's Son and states that he wants to be a member of the JSA. Power Girl informs the other members as Mister Terrific remembers his history. Though Mister Terrific shoots down Alan Scott's suggestion to bring Ma Hunkel into this. Legionnaire states that he came to them as they are the first superhero team and that every other superhero team like the Legion of Super-Heroes had tried to live up to them. Because Huntress is an anomaly and caused the era of second chances, he would like to get one. Upon the Legionnaire asking the JSA not to react and unmasking himself to be a younger Mordru who wants to avoid the path of evil, he states that he wants Huntress' help in that before he destroys this timeline and the 31st Century.[12]

Powers and abilities

Mordru is recognized as an ultimate level magic wielder with a reputation as a master of black magic, able to manipulate virtually any force within the universe according to his will. He possesses exceptional endurance that surpasses superhuman limitations, along with immortality and superhuman strength.[16][17][18] In more recent portrayals, Mordru's powers derive from a form of magic known as "chaos magic". This unique branch of magic requires known systems, such as pentagrams and spells, to be cast and is exclusive to Mordru and his fellow Chaos Lords.[19]

Weaknesses and limitations

Mordru, despite his formidable powers, possesses several weaknesses. One notable weakness is his claustrophobia, which makes him vulnerable when confined in small spaces. Additionally, Mordru is susceptible to environments lacking air, further rendering him susceptible to defeat through methods such as burial or entrapment. Furthermore, Mordru's overconfidence in his abilities often proves to be a hindrance. This arrogance can lead him to underestimate his opponents or overlook potential threats, creating opportunities for his adversaries to exploit. Mordru's power is somewhat limited by the boundaries of his own imagination. While he possesses incredible magical abilities, the extent of his power is constrained by his own creative capacity. This limitation implies that Mordru's abilities may fall short when confronted with situations or challenges that require a level of imagination beyond his current capabilities.[17][16][20] Additionally, as an energy being and Lord of Chaos, Mordru relies on the utilization of a physical vessel and host to utilize his magical powers.[21]

In other media

Television

  • Mordru appears in Legends of the Superheroes, portrayed by Gabriel Dell. This version is the leader of the Legion of Doom.
  • Mordru makes a non-speaking appearance in the Justice League Unlimited episode "The Greatest Story Never Told".
  • Mordru appears in the Legion of Super Heroes episode "Trials", voiced by Jim Ward. This version was previously banished from Zerox and stripped of his magic, but found an amulet that enabled him to regain it. He then attempts to overtake Zerox, but is defeated by the Legion.

Video games

Miscellaneous

References

  1. ^ a b c d Wallace, Dan (2008), "Dark Lord", in Dougall, Alastair (ed.), The DC Comics Encyclopedia, New York: Dorling Kindersley, p. 94, ISBN 978-0-7566-4119-1, OCLC 213309017
  2. ^ Cowsill, Alan; Irvine, Alex; Korte, Steve; Manning, Matt; Wiacek, Win; Wilson, Sven (2016). The DC Comics Encyclopedia: The Definitive Guide to the Characters of the DC Universe. DK Publishing. p. 211. ISBN 978-1-4654-5357-0.
  3. ^ Amethyst (vol. 3) #1–4 (November 1987 – February 1988). DC COmics.
  4. ^ Justice Society #42-50 (1999). DC Comics.
  5. ^ Justice League of America #147–148 (1977). DC Comics.
  6. ^ Action Comics #864 (June 2008). DC Comics.
  7. ^ JSA #78 (December 2005). DC Comics.
  8. ^ Adventure Comics #369. DC Comics.
  9. ^ Adventure Comics #369. DC Comics.
  10. ^ Final Crisis: Legion of 3 Worlds #1. DC Comics.
  11. ^ Final Crisis: Legion of 3 Worlds #4–5. DC Comics.
  12. ^ a b Justice Society of America Vol. 4 #9. DC Comics.
  13. ^ Flashpoint Beyond #6. DC Comics.
  14. ^ The New Golden Age #1. DC Comics.
  15. ^ Justice Society of America Vol. 4 #8. DC Comics.
  16. ^ a b Who's Who: The Definitive Directory of the DC Universe #16. DC Comics. 1986.
  17. ^ a b Who's Who: Update '88 #2. DC Comics. 1988.
  18. ^ The DC comics encyclopedia: The definitive guide to the characters of the DC universe. Matthew K. Manning, Stephen Wiacek, Melanie Scott, Nick Jones, Landry Q. Walker, Alan Cowsill (New ed.). New York, New York: DK Publishing. 2021. ISBN 978-0-7440-2056-4. OCLC 1253363543.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  19. ^ Tynion, James IV (2019). Justice League Dark. Vol. 2, Lords of order. Ram V, Alvaro Martinez, Guillem March, Daniel Sampere, Mark Buckingham, Miguel Mendonça. Burbank, CA. ISBN 978-1-4012-9460-1. OCLC 1110150328.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  20. ^ Who's Who in the Legion of Super-Heroes #5. DC Comics. 1988.
  21. ^ Willingham, Bill (2010). Justice Society of America: axis of evil. Travis Moore, Jesús. Merino, Dan Green, Jesse Delperdang. New York: DC Comics. ISBN 978-1-4012-2901-6. OCLC 567099447.
  22. ^ "Legion of Super-Heroes in the 31st Century #18 - Failure to Communicate (Issue)". Comic Vine. Retrieved September 18, 2023.

External links

  • Mordru at DC Comics Database
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