Post by Z451 on Jan 17, 2014 0:51:03 GMT
Carrie Kelley
Caroline Keene "Carrie" Kelley becomes the new Robin in The Dark Knight Returns when she saved him.
Later in The Dark Knight Strikes Again, she adopts the identity Catgirl.
She was the first full-time female Robin in the history of the Batman franchise, though Julie Madison had passed off as Robin for a brief time in a Bob Kane story published in Detective Comics #49 in March 1941.
Kelley is a 13-year-old schoolgirl and scout whom Batman saves from a sadistic group of Mutant gang members on the night of his return from retirement.
Idolizing the Dark Knight, she then spends her lunch money on a Robin outfit, sets out to attack petty con-men and to find Batman in the hope of becoming his partner.
Kelley uses a slingshot and firecrackers as weapons.
She also wears green-tinted sunglasses in lieu of a black harlequin mask.
Unlike the previous Robins, Kelley is not an orphan, but she appears to have rather neglectful parents who are never actually seen — one of them mutters "Didn't we have a kid?" while their daughter is witnessing the fierce battle between Batman and the street gangs known as the Mutants.
It is hinted through their dialogue that they were once activists and possibly hippies during the 1960s, but have since become apathetic stoners.
In the series, the government's banning of superhero activities and Jason Todd's death had led to the Dark Knight's retirement, but Batman accepts her as Robin when she saves his life just as he is on the verge of being killed by the Mutant Leader by jumping on him from behind and tearing at his eyes.
She half drags him back to the Batmobile and makes a sling for his arm out of part of her cape and a piece of pipe.
He often threatens to fire her but she shows considerable ability and improvisation which impresses him enough to give her a stay of dismissal even when she disobeys his orders.
The police, now led by newly appointed Commissioner Ellen Yindel, takes a very poor attitude to Batman and his methods and issues a warrant for his arrest.
When she sees Batman with Kelley leaping in mid-air and barely catching a passing hang-glider, Yindel adds child endangerment to the growing list of charges against Batman.
As Robin, Carrie plays a crucial part in tracking down and confronting the Joker who, at a fairground, has poisoned several children and planted a bomb on a roller coaster.
While Batman goes after his age-old nemesis, Carrie manages to dispose of the bomb but gets into a tangle with Fat Abner, the Joker's accomplice.
As they grapple together, Abner is decapitated by an over-hanging section of the track, driving Carrie momentarily into shock and tears, but recovering enough to rescue a seriously injured Batman from capture by the police and help heal his wounds with his faithful butler Alfred Pennyworth.
Unnerved by Batman's activities, the United States government sends Superman to bring him down.
As the big battle is about to start, Carrie delays Superman's arrival using the tank-like Batmobile and a slingshot, to which the Man of Steel simply replies "Isn't tonight a school night?"
Using a variety of powerful weapons, including self-made Kryptonite, Batman manages to defeat Superman but "dies" in the process.
It later emerges that he had faked his own death and Carrie unearthed him from his grave soon after he revived.
They then go underground to the Batcave where, with Green Arrow, they set about training various teenage street gangs into an army that is to deal with "worse than thieves and murderers."
Three years later, Kelley has begun calling herself Catgirl.
She still remains Batman's able second-in-command.
She wears a skin-tight cat costume with a leopard pattern, and is now trained extensively in combat.
Her equipment includes motorised rollerskates and an arm cannon that fired batarangs.
Catgirl's main duty is to oversee an army of "batboys" to help save the world from a police-state dictatorship, led by Lex Luthor and Brainiac.
She leads them into battle, liberating imprisoned heroes such as the Atom and Flash.
But she also causes serious injury to a Batboy who exceeded her orders by maiming and killing a couple of police officers.
She beats him up and tells the others to treat him but not bother with anesthetic.
Once alone, however, she breaks down in tears but is offered a comforting hand by Batman — Dick Grayson refers to her as "The daughter (Batman) never had" but also as "jailbait."
Carrie eventually comes into conflict with a supernatural man resembling the Joker and attempts to kill him with arrows, thermite, acid and C4.
However, the man still returns to make an attempt on her life in the Batcave, turning out to be a now-homicidal Dick Grayson, who resented her because he had been shoddily treated and dumped by Batman.
Her lips are badly lacerated and several of her bones are broken in the fight.
Thinking that she is about to die, she tells Batman that she loves him, with Batman later reflecting that he feels the same (Frank Miller clarified in an interview in the book Batman through the Ages that Batman saw Carrie as a daughter, meaning Carrie most likely saw Batman as a father figure).
Batman, however, arrives and stalls Grayson long enough for Ralph Dibny to get Carrie to safety.
It was noted that Carrie was developing feelings for The Atom (Ray Palmer).
Links
DC Wiki
Batman Wiki
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DC Comics
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Later in The Dark Knight Strikes Again, she adopts the identity Catgirl.
She was the first full-time female Robin in the history of the Batman franchise, though Julie Madison had passed off as Robin for a brief time in a Bob Kane story published in Detective Comics #49 in March 1941.
Kelley is a 13-year-old schoolgirl and scout whom Batman saves from a sadistic group of Mutant gang members on the night of his return from retirement.
Idolizing the Dark Knight, she then spends her lunch money on a Robin outfit, sets out to attack petty con-men and to find Batman in the hope of becoming his partner.
Kelley uses a slingshot and firecrackers as weapons.
She also wears green-tinted sunglasses in lieu of a black harlequin mask.
Unlike the previous Robins, Kelley is not an orphan, but she appears to have rather neglectful parents who are never actually seen — one of them mutters "Didn't we have a kid?" while their daughter is witnessing the fierce battle between Batman and the street gangs known as the Mutants.
It is hinted through their dialogue that they were once activists and possibly hippies during the 1960s, but have since become apathetic stoners.
In the series, the government's banning of superhero activities and Jason Todd's death had led to the Dark Knight's retirement, but Batman accepts her as Robin when she saves his life just as he is on the verge of being killed by the Mutant Leader by jumping on him from behind and tearing at his eyes.
She half drags him back to the Batmobile and makes a sling for his arm out of part of her cape and a piece of pipe.
He often threatens to fire her but she shows considerable ability and improvisation which impresses him enough to give her a stay of dismissal even when she disobeys his orders.
The police, now led by newly appointed Commissioner Ellen Yindel, takes a very poor attitude to Batman and his methods and issues a warrant for his arrest.
When she sees Batman with Kelley leaping in mid-air and barely catching a passing hang-glider, Yindel adds child endangerment to the growing list of charges against Batman.
As Robin, Carrie plays a crucial part in tracking down and confronting the Joker who, at a fairground, has poisoned several children and planted a bomb on a roller coaster.
While Batman goes after his age-old nemesis, Carrie manages to dispose of the bomb but gets into a tangle with Fat Abner, the Joker's accomplice.
As they grapple together, Abner is decapitated by an over-hanging section of the track, driving Carrie momentarily into shock and tears, but recovering enough to rescue a seriously injured Batman from capture by the police and help heal his wounds with his faithful butler Alfred Pennyworth.
Unnerved by Batman's activities, the United States government sends Superman to bring him down.
As the big battle is about to start, Carrie delays Superman's arrival using the tank-like Batmobile and a slingshot, to which the Man of Steel simply replies "Isn't tonight a school night?"
Using a variety of powerful weapons, including self-made Kryptonite, Batman manages to defeat Superman but "dies" in the process.
It later emerges that he had faked his own death and Carrie unearthed him from his grave soon after he revived.
They then go underground to the Batcave where, with Green Arrow, they set about training various teenage street gangs into an army that is to deal with "worse than thieves and murderers."
Three years later, Kelley has begun calling herself Catgirl.
She still remains Batman's able second-in-command.
She wears a skin-tight cat costume with a leopard pattern, and is now trained extensively in combat.
Her equipment includes motorised rollerskates and an arm cannon that fired batarangs.
Catgirl's main duty is to oversee an army of "batboys" to help save the world from a police-state dictatorship, led by Lex Luthor and Brainiac.
She leads them into battle, liberating imprisoned heroes such as the Atom and Flash.
But she also causes serious injury to a Batboy who exceeded her orders by maiming and killing a couple of police officers.
She beats him up and tells the others to treat him but not bother with anesthetic.
Once alone, however, she breaks down in tears but is offered a comforting hand by Batman — Dick Grayson refers to her as "The daughter (Batman) never had" but also as "jailbait."
Carrie eventually comes into conflict with a supernatural man resembling the Joker and attempts to kill him with arrows, thermite, acid and C4.
However, the man still returns to make an attempt on her life in the Batcave, turning out to be a now-homicidal Dick Grayson, who resented her because he had been shoddily treated and dumped by Batman.
Her lips are badly lacerated and several of her bones are broken in the fight.
Thinking that she is about to die, she tells Batman that she loves him, with Batman later reflecting that he feels the same (Frank Miller clarified in an interview in the book Batman through the Ages that Batman saw Carrie as a daughter, meaning Carrie most likely saw Batman as a father figure).
Batman, however, arrives and stalls Grayson long enough for Ralph Dibny to get Carrie to safety.
It was noted that Carrie was developing feelings for The Atom (Ray Palmer).
Links
DC Wiki
Batman Wiki
Copyright Owner
DC Comics
Record:
W:
L: