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I'd almost think the villain was Giganta, considering she was engaged to the Atom on that live-action "Super Hero Roast.
I don't think the guy who played her ever voiced a Bat-villain, though his voice would have worked for Killer Croc.
Quote : Originally Posted by Mr_JTR
The only person I can think of whose done live action and voice over work with Superhero types is Miguel Ferrer.
You leave out Mark Hamill, Howard Morris, and Frank Gorshin, just to name three; and I don't recall his name but didn't the guy who played Lex Luthor on Smallville also voice the Flash on Justice League?
Oh, and Norman Alden has to count too, although his live-action Superhero type stuff was never in a comic book AFAIK.
I don't recall Woodrue ever fighting Wonder Woman. He started out as the Plant Master, fought the Atom three or four times, then in the 70s he became Floronic Man and fought Green Lantern. Later, of course, he became one of the most worthless HeroClix ever.
Jason Woodrue appeared in the very first issue of The Atom(Silver Age) back in 1962. He's fought Swamp-Thing, JLA, and was a member of The New Guardians, Secret Society of Super-Villains and I believe one other team. He was the mentor to Pamela Ivy who later became Poison Ivy.
Yes, Rosenberg did voice The Flash on JL/JLU.
Superman: "One of these days, Lois....POW!!! Right to the Marvel Universe!"
[font=Arial]I don't think the guy who played her ever voiced a Bat-villain, though his voice would have worked for Killer Croc.
You leave out Mark Hamill, Howard Morris, and Frank Gorshin, just to name three; and I don't recall his name but didn't the guy who played Lex Luthor on Smallville also voice the Flash on Justice League?
Oh, and Norman Alden has to count too, although his live-action Superhero type stuff was never in a comic book AFAIK.
I'm thinking in this, the 21st Century. And I left out Hamill cause someone else mentioned him in a prior post.
And the guy on Smallville was in the movie "Batman and Robin", he helped create Bane. But he didn't use the name "Floronic Man" in the movie. Just the Woodrue name. Then he died.
I really liked John Glover's Lionel Luthor, and his Devil was really great in "Brimstone." I was unaware of his presence in Batman and Robin and in BTAS.
Here's an easy one: Name the Forever People.
--for bonus points, name their ride. For bonus bonus points, name the Forever People of the Fifth World.
wyld
When our story opens, the Question is investigating an impossible locked-room murder mystery involving a midget and a 6'6"-tall call girl into heavy bondage. Don't worry, I'll explain later. It's all vitally relevant.
--Alan Moore, Twilight
I know where my Floronic Man confusion comes from-- he and Poison Ivy appeared together in a Wonder Woman story in 70's, the first place I saw him.
I can't for the life of me find a reference to it, but I believe Ivy had enslaved him. Probably in Adventure Comics when they were Dollar Comics.
Woodrue freed Poison Ivy in a Batman story in the 90's. She later turned on him. At that time, his body had been recreated with the first plant life his head came in contact with (he'd been decapitated in a previous story). The plant life was Marijuana. Cheech and Chong then appeared and saved the day by smoking him to death.
--for bonus points, name their ride. For bonus bonus points, name the Forever People of the Fifth World.
wyld
Forever people? Rod Stewart, Grateful Dead, Elvis Presley? Admitedly, they're all pretty old and dead, if not in body, then in career.
As for the Fifth world, that'd be the "Super Young Team" who all have some strange names, like "Most Excellent Superbat".Imagine someone coming up behind him, you see he's about to be attack, so you yell out, "Most Excellent Superbat, look out behind you". By the time you get to the comma there, he'd already be hit.
I refuse to believe that no one knows this. Unless participants are holding back in order to let others have a shot, or don't feel like answering / asking the next question.
Let your inner Kirby shine forth!
Also, as an aside, I just wanted to ask about the content of the questions in this thread. One of the earlier DC Trivia threads had a few recommended guidelines in the first post - one of which was "ask something that might have a number of sources of attribution" to avoid unnecessarily specific questions like "What kind of shoes does DEO APES Agent Ishiro Maad wear?" This question can be answered, but only by reading a specific panel of a specific issue of Young Justice. I feel like that's unnecessarily obscure. I don't know if others feel the same way about this point.
Are there any suggested ideas for rules or recommendations that you'd like to see in the thread? Presumably sooner or later this thread will be closed like the ones before it, and we could begin the next one with tips for posters.
--wyld
When our story opens, the Question is investigating an impossible locked-room murder mystery involving a midget and a 6'6"-tall call girl into heavy bondage. Don't worry, I'll explain later. It's all vitally relevant.
--Alan Moore, Twilight
That was my rule, when I set up the former, eventually-huge thread. The idea was that the question not be so specific that it was only in one issue. Unfortunately, people didn't used to adhere to the no-googlign rule,so questions with a general answer got answeered to quickly.
And I do not know the names of the Forever People, just their dog Lockjaw.
That was my rule, when I set up the former, eventually-huge thread. The idea was that the question not be so specific that it was only in one issue. Unfortunately, people didn't used to adhere to the no-googlign rule,so questions with a general answer got answeered to quickly.
And I do not know the names of the Forever People, just their dog Lockjaw.
I refuse to believe that no one knows this. Unless participants are holding back in order to let others have a shot, or don't feel like answering / asking the next question.
--wyld
I know only part of the answer. And besides, why complain when you only just asked the question today?