Humpty Dumpty (comics)

Humpty Dumpty

Humpty Dumpty, as seen in the cover of Arkham Asylum: Living Hell #3 (September 2003).
Publication information
Publisher DC Comics
First appearance Arkham Asylum: Living Hell
Created by Dan Slott and Ryan Sook
In-story information
Alter ego Humphry Dumpler
Team affiliations Secret Society of Super Villains
Notable aliases The Hobby Robber
The Super Saboteur
Abilities Knack for piecing together broken or disassembled items

Humpty Dumpty is a fictional character from DC Comics, an enemy of Batman who first appears in the 2004 graphic novel Arkham Asylum: Living Hell. Unlike many of Batman's enemies, he is not malevolent.

Fictional character biography

Humphry Dumpler is a hulking man with an egg-shaped head who speaks in rhyme and has a compulsive desire to "repair" that which he considers to be broken. He is shown in flashback to have been the victim of inexplicable, almost supernaturally bad luck almost since birth, illustrated by countless tragedies through his life. Eventually, he became determined to understand the mechanics of the world around him in an attempt to see what made things go wrong for him and attempt to fix them. In his crimes, Humpty disassembles and reassembles mechanical devices that upset him in some way. The devices he "fixes" cause numerous accidents, such as a subway train derailing. Humpty Dumpty's final crime is to adjust the gears in a clock tower, causing one of its hands to fly off, provoking a chain reaction in which dozens of enormous signage objects crashed to the streets and kill dozens of people. When Batgirl tries to apprehend him, she dislocates her arms. Humpty promptly slips her arms back into her sockets and surrenders to her. Revealing that she had tracked him by his overdue library books, her sole question was why he had borrowed a book on human anatomy. Humpty takes her to his home to reveal he had dissected his abusive grandmother and sewn her back together with bootlace in an ill-thought attempt to "fix" her.[1]

He is a model prisoner at Arkham Asylum and is given various small projects to pass the time, such as repairing a broken mirror or fixing Ventriloquist's Scarface dummy. He befriends the financial fraudster Warren White and saves his life from Death Rattle and Two-Face.[2]

In Villains United he joins Alexander Luthor, Jr.'s Society.[3] He is seen partaking in the attack upon the House of Secrets.[4]

He is one of the villains sent to retrieve the Get Out of Hell free card from the Secret Six.[5]

In the Batman: Battle for the Cowl storyline, Humpty Dumpty is recruited by Black Mask as part of a group of villains aiming to take over Gotham.[6]

During the Batman: Leviathan storyline, Humpty Dumpty masquerades as Santa Claus as part of a plan to get stolen toys to the children at the Rainbow House Shelter. He is approached by a man named Abuse who asks if he knows about any missing children. Worried that he'll be found out, Humpty Dumpty knocks Abuse unconscious out and flees to the shelter. Once there, Humpty Dumpty begins placing repaired toys in the children's beds until Batman and Robin show up. As Batman questions Humpty, Robin notices that, even with the lights on and all three talking, none of the children have woken up or made a sound. Looking under the covers, Robin discovers that the children are all dead. Enraged, Robin asks Humpty if he killed the children. Humpty says he is innocent, and explains that he found them “near the river” as they floated up to him. Sad the children had died so close to Christmas, Humpty had tried to give them one last holiday.[7]

In The New 52 (a reboot of the DC Comics universe), Humpty Dumpty is seen as an inmate at Arkham Asylum at the same time that Resurrection Man is incarcerated there.[8]

Powers and abilities

Humpty Dumpty has a knack of disassembling and reassembling different items.

In other media

Television

Video games

See also

References

  1. Arkham Asylum: Living Hell #3 (September 2003)
  2. Arkham Asylum: Living Hell #2 (August 2003)
  3. Villains United #5 (November 2005)
  4. Villains United #6 (December 2005)
  5. Secret Six (vol. 3) #6 (April 2009)
  6. Batman: Battle for the Cowl #1 (May 2009)
  7. Batman: Streets of Gotham #7 (February 2010)
  8. Resurrection Man (vol. 2) #6 (April 2012)
  9. http://www.ign.com/videos/2013/07/29/beware-the-batman-mitch-watson-interview-comic-con-2013

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, April 18, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.