Hal Jordan
Hal Jordan | |
---|---|
Hal Jordan as Green Lantern Art by Alex Ross | |
Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
First appearance |
Showcase #22 (October 1959) |
Created by |
John Broome Gil Kane |
In-story information | |
Full name | Harold "Hal" Jordan |
Species | Human |
Team affiliations |
Green Lantern Corps Justice League Ferris Aircraft |
Partnerships |
Flash (Barry Allen) Green Arrow Green Lantern partners: Guy Gardner John Stewart Kyle Rayner Kilowog |
Notable aliases | Green Lantern, Pol Manning, Parallax, Spectre, Highball |
Abilities | Use of power ring grants numerous powers, including flight, invulnerability, omnilingualism, and the generation of hard-light constructs. |
Hal Jordan, known as Green Lantern, is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. The character was created in 1959 by writer John Broome and artist Gil Kane, and first appeared in Showcase #22 (October 1959). Hal Jordan is a reinvention of a previous character called Green Lantern that had appeared in 1940s comic books as the character Alan Scott.
Hal Jordan is a member and occasionally leader of the intergalactic police force called the Green Lantern Corps. He fights evil across the Universe with a ring that grants him a variety of superpowers.
Hal Jordan ranked 7th on IGN's in the Top 100 Comic Book Heroes in 2011.[1] In 2013, Hal Jordan placed 4th on IGN's Top 25 Heroes of DC Comics.[2]
Publication history
Recreated for the Silver Age
After achieving great success in 1956 in reviving the Golden Age character The Flash, DC editor Julius Schwartz looked toward recreating the Green Lantern from the Golden Age of Comic Books. Like The Flash, Schwartz wanted this new character to have a different secret identity, origin, and personality from his 1940s counterpart. A long time science-fiction fan and literary agent, Schwartz wanted a more sci-fi based Green Lantern, as opposed to the mystical powers of Alan Scott, the original 1940s Green Lantern. He enlisted writer John Broome and artist Gil Kane, who in 1959 would reintroduce Green Lantern to the world in Showcase #22 (October 1959) by creating Hal Jordan.
The character was a success, and it was quickly decided to follow up his three-issue run on Showcase with a self-titled series. Green Lantern #1 began in July–August 1960 and would continue until #84 in April–May 1972.
This creative team was responsible for introducing many of the major characters in Hal Jordan's life. First was Carol Ferris, Jordan's love interest. She was in charge of Ferris Aircraft, and as such, Hal's boss. While she preferred Green Lantern to Hal Jordan, she took an active role in trying to win him over, even going so far as to propose to him in the old Leap Year tradition. Although she gave Jordan some attention, her job and company always came first.
Second was Jordan's best friend, Tom Kalmaku, who was both Hal's mechanic and the chronicler of his super-hero adventures, after succeeding in working out his identity. An Inuit (Eskimo) from Alaska, Tom's nickname was "Pie" or "Pieface". Unlike Chop-Chop (of The Blackhawks), Tom was a competent and intelligent character with a well-rounded personality, not a stereotypical buffoon. Despite the unfortunate nickname, Tom Kalmaku was among the first minority characters to be portrayed in this manner and broke new ground for mainstream comic books.
Jordan's masters, the mysterious Guardians of the Universe, were physically based on David Ben-Gurion, the first Prime Minister of Israel, and were developed from an idea Schwartz and Broome had originally conceived years prior in a story featuring Captain Comet in Strange Adventures #22 (July 1952) entitled "Guardians of the Clockwork Universe".[3]
Schwartz and company also allowed Jordan to have a family, which was another rare thing at this time in superhero comics. While he did not have a wife or children of his own, he had many interactions with his two older brothers, Jack, a district attorney, and Jim, a more comical figure. A reporter, Sue Williams, suspected Jim of being Green Lantern due to his appearance and his reputation of being scatterbrained.
Starting in issue #17, Gardner Fox joined the book to share writing duties with John Broome. The quartet of Schwartz, Broome, Fox, and Kane remained the core creative team until 1970.
"Relevant comics"
Starting with issue #76, Dennis O'Neil took over scripting and Neal Adams, who had drawn the cover of issue #63, became the series' artist. O'Neil and Adams had already begun preparation for the classic run in the form of their re-workings of another DC superhero, the archer Green Arrow.[4]
In an introduction to the 1983 reprinting of this O'Neil/Adams run, O'Neil explains that he wondered if he could represent his own political beliefs in comics and take on social issues of the late sixties and early seventies. O'Neil devised the idea of pitting Hal Jordan, noted for being an intergalactic cop and a crypto-fascist standing for "The Establishment's" law and order, against Oliver Queen, (Green Arrow), who O’Neil had characterized as a lusty outspoken anarchist who would stand in for the counter-culture movement.[5] The first of these socially motivated Green Lantern/Green Arrow stories was written with Gil Kane slated to be the artist, but Kane dropped out and was replaced by Neal Adams.[6]
The superhero duo embark on a quest in a beat-up pickup truck to "find America", along the way witnessing the problems of corruption, racism, pollution, as well as overpopulation confronting the nation.[4] In "Snowbirds Don't Fly" issues #85 and #86, it is revealed that Green Arrow's ward, Speedy, is addicted to heroin. Speedy overcomes his addiction with the help of the Black Canary. This story prompted a massive public reaction, including a congratulatory letter from the mayor of New York, John Lindsay (printed in issue #86).[4]
However, Green Lantern sales had been in a major decline at the time Green Arrow was brought on as co-star, and the O'Neil/Adams stories failed to revive them.[4] Green Lantern was canceled with issue #89 (April/May 1972), and the climactic story arc of the Green Lantern/Green Arrow series was published as a back-up feature in The Flash #217 through #219. In sharp contrast to the socially relevant tales which preceded it, this story centered on emotional themes, with Green Arrow struggling to deal with the guilt of having killed a man.[4] Green Lantern continued to appear in backup stories of Flash from 1972 until the Green Lantern title was resumed in 1976.
1980s exile
In Green Lantern #151 (April 1982) through #172 (January 1984), Jordan is exiled into space for a year by the Guardians in order to prove his loyalty to the Green Lantern Corps, having been accused of paying too much attention to Earth when he had an entire "sector" of the cosmos to patrol. When he returns to Earth, he finds himself embroiled in a dispute with Carol Ferris. Faced with a choice between love and the power ring, Jordan resigns from the Corps. The Guardians call Jordan's backup, John Stewart, to regular duty as his replacement.
In 1985, the "Crisis on Infinite Earths" storyline that rebooted much of DC Comics' character continuity saw Jordan again take up the mantle of Green Lantern. The new Corps, with seven members residing on Earth, included several aliens, John Stewart, and Guy Gardner. Jordan becomes romantically involved with an alien Lantern named Arisia, for which he comes under fire due to Arisia being only a teenager. The alien Lanterns take a more direct hand in human affairs, a fact not appreciated by human governments. Eventually, the Earth corps break up, several members returning to their home sectors. The Guardians soon return to this dimension, and Jordan works with them to rebuild the fractured Corps.
1990s
During this time, the character's origin story is re-told and expanded in two limited series by Keith Giffen, Gerard Jones, and James Owsley, Emerald Dawn and Emerald Dawn II. The first series expanded the role of the Corps in his origin and also provided more details about his childhood and his relationship with his father and brothers, while the sequel detailed the role of Jordan in the downfall of Sinestro.
In the 1992 prestige format graphic novel Green Lantern: Ganthet's Tale (ISBN 1-56389-026-7) (story by Larry Niven, script & art by John Byrne), Hal Jordan first encounters Ganthet, one of the Guardians of the Universe. He asks Hal to help Ganthet battle a renegade Guardian, Dawlakispokpok (or Dawly, for short) who has attempted to use a time machine to change history.
In the 1993 Reign of the Supermen! storyline, the alien tyrant Mongul and his forces destroy Coast City (Jordan's former home), murdering all of its seven million inhabitants, and replace it with Engine City, with which he plans to turn Earth into a new Warworld. Jordan was off world at the time of the attack. Angered, he flies into Engine City and attacks Mongul, eventually knocking him out with Steel's hammer.[7] This leads into the Emerald Twilight three-part arc: Jordan uses his power ring to recreate Coast City as an instrument in the process of overcoming his grief, talking to ring created versions of his old girlfriend and parents. After his ring's power expires, a projection of a Guardian appears and admonishes him for using the ring for personal gain and summons him to Oa for disciplinary action.[8] Angered at what he sees as the Guardians' ungrateful and callous behavior, Jordan absorbs the energy from the Guardian's projection, goes insane and attacks Oa to seize the full power of the Central Battery, defeating and severely injuring several members of the Green Lantern Corps in the process, taking their power rings as his own and leaving them to die in space. He arrives on Oa and kills Kilowog, Sinestro, and all the Guardians except for Ganthet, who was protected by the other Guardians and survived without Jordan's knowledge.[9] He then renounces his life as Green Lantern, adopting the name Parallax after absorbing the Power Battery's vast powers.
Jordan is replaced by Kyle Rayner by Ganthet as the Green Lantern of Earth when Rayner comes into possession of the last power ring, created from the shattered remains of Jordan's. Guy Gardner has visions of the Green Lantern Corps' destruction and his yellow power ring's energy (being powered by residual Green Lantern's energy) starts to fluctuate. Soon after, Gardner goes to Oa to investigate. He brings Martian Manhunter, Darkstar (Ferrin Colos), The Ray, Wonder Woman, Captain Atom, Alan Scott and Arisia with him. Jordan uses the element of surprise, attacks, and quickly and easily defeats them, leaving Guy in a coma. After the battle Hal sends them all back to Earth warning them to leave him alone in the future. Not long afterwards, Parallax attempts to rewrite history to his own liking with the help of Extant in Zero Hour: Crisis in Time. Parallax destroys the Time Trapper and attempts to remake the universe into a perfect, peaceful place. The process causes time disruptions throughout time. Superman, Kyle Rayner and Metron call upon Earth's heroes to stop this crisis. Parallax reveals himself as the enemy by knocking out Superman with a single blow. Parallax and Exant battle the wide array of heroes. They are eventually defeated, with Green Arrow shooting an arrow into Jordan's chest after he is weakened and almost completely out of energy from using so much power to recreate time and fight Earth's heroes as Kyle Rayner holds him in a full-nelson. Later, in the 1996 Final Night miniseries/crossover storyline, Jordan returns when the Earth's sun is in danger of going out. He starts to reevaluate himself and the decisions he's made and attacks and kills the Cyborg Superman (although he is later revealed to be alive) and visits John Stewart in the hospital who was recently paralyzed in battle. Jordan talks to his old friend for a final time and uses his powers to heal his paralysis. He then uses what appears to be the last of his powers and sacrifices his life to reignite the Sun (which had been extinguished by the Sun-Eater).
During the Emerald Knights storyline, when Kyle Rayner goes on an accidental time-travelling trip, he ends up unintentionally drawing a past version of Hal into the present where Hal is shocked to learn of the crimes his future self had committed as Parallax.[10] Although Hal briefly thought about remaining in the present to escape his actions as Parallax, the Parallax from the time when he was starting the Zero Hour event appears in the present while preparing to recreate the universe. He had been travelling back to his present from the future and became aware of his younger self existing where he should not.[11] This Parallax from out of time tries to pass himself off as the young Hal, but after being discovered he defeats John Stewart, Guy Gardner and Kyle Rayner before being confronted by his younger self. Parallax pulls himself, his younger self and Kyle into the past where Coast City is seconds away from being destroyed and freezes time to show his younger self the atrocities of his hometown's destruction while also trying to explain why he did what he did as Parallax and that his ability to play god was necessary. After a heated battle and debate between the two Hals, Kyle breaks up the fight and tells them both that they have to go back where they came from and erase their memories of recent events in order to ensure that the Sun-Eater is defeated and that time plays itself out naturally.[12]
In the 1999 mini-series Day of Judgement, Jordan becomes the newest incarnation of the Spectre, released from Purgatory after a fallen angel attempted to take that power.[13] Soon after assuming this mantle, Jordan chooses to bend his mission from a spirit of vengeance to one of redemption, also making other appearances through some of DC Comics' other story lines, such as advising Superman during the Emperor Joker storyline (Where the Joker steals the reality-warping power of Mister Mxyzptlk) and erases all public knowledge of Wally West's identity as the Flash after his terrible first battle with Zoom, which led to his wife miscarrying their twins. He also appeared in a 4-part story arc in the series Legends of the DC Universe (issues #33-36). A new series based on this premise, titled The Spectre (volume 4), ran for 27 issues from 2001 to 2003. In it, Hal loses his beloved brother, Jack Jordan, to a supernatural assassin. After the series ended, Jordan was forced to return, temporarily, to the Spectre's mission of vengeance, following a confrontation between the new Justice Society of America and the Spirit King- an old foe of the Spectre and Mister Terrific, who had managed to "resurrect" the ghosts of all those the Spectre had damned to Hell when Jordan's attempt to turn the Spectre's mission to redemption weakened his hold on the damned, until Hal 'accepted' his original mission of vengeance.
During the Identity Crisis storyline, Hal is visited by Green Arrow asking to exact revenge that he had might knew Sue Dibny's killer is, although Hal admits knowing the culprit's identity he refused as the Spectre to a higher purpose, and implying to Oliver that the killer would eventually be caught, thus explaining the Spectre's inaction.[14]
2000s
Due to a decline in the Green Lantern sales, DC Comics decided to introduce the Green Lantern: Rebirth miniseries which brought Hal Jordan back to life and made him a Green Lantern once again. DC Comics subsequently began a new Green Lantern (vol. 4) series starting with issue #1 (July 2005), making Hal Jordan once again a Green Lantern and his past homicidal actions retconned to be the result of Parallax, now revealed to be caused by Hal having been infected by an ancient fear entity that had possessed him and used him as a puppet. In the Green Lantern (vol.4) it shows how in an effort to try to rebuild his life, Jordan has moved to the nearly deserted Coast City, which is slowly being rebuilt. He has been reinstated as a Captain in the United States Air Force, and works in the Test Pilot Program at Edwards Air Force Base. The series introduces new supporting characters for Hal, a man from his past, Air Force's General Jonathan "Herc" Stone, who learns his secret identity during a battle with the Manhunters and acts as his ally. He also begins to develop a romantic attraction with his fellow pilot, the beautiful Captain Jillian "Cowgirl" Pearlman.[15][16][17] Returning characters also include Carol Ferris, Tom Kalmaku, and Jordan's younger brother James Jordan with his sister-in-law Susan and their children, Howard and Jane.
The Green Lantern Corps also has been successfully rebuilt. Despite the revelation that Hal's past villainous activity was because of the influence of Parallax, many of his fellow Corps officers are unwilling to trust him. Despite being freed from Parallax, his experience also leads him occasionally to have a lack of confidence and self-doubt. Jordan also becomes friends with Kyle Rayner after their first battle with Parallax.
In his new title, he faces revamped versions of his Silver Age foes such as Hector Hammond, The Shark and Black Hand.[18][19][20]
Hal helps briefly with the attack of the OMACs and Brother Eye.[21] He also fights alongside a group of heroes against the Society, defending Metropolis. Guy Gardner leads the Green Lantern Corps attack against Superboy-Prime with Hal appearing in the group.[22]
As part of DC's retconning of the entire universe; as of Green Lantern vol. 4, #10, the book has skipped ahead one year, bringing drastic changes to Hal Jordan's life, as with every other hero in the DC Universe. It is revealed that Jordan spent time as a P.O.W. in an unnamed conflict and has feelings of guilt from his inability to free himself and his fellow Captives.[23]
A new account of Green Lantern's origins was released in the (2008) Green Lantern series. In this new origin Hal Jordan is working as an assistant mechanic under Tom Kalmaku, barred from flying due to his insubordination while in the USAF and his employer's lingering guilt about his father's death in the line of duty. Then Abin Sur, while fighting Atrocitus of the Five Inversion, crashes near Coast City.[24][25]
Hal and the rest of the Green Lantern Corps find themselves at war with Sinestro and his army, the Sinestro Corps during the events of the Sinestro Corps War[26] As a Green Lantern native to Earth, Hal is featured in the Final Crisis mini-series by Grant Morrison.[27]
In the Agent Orange story arc, Jordan is briefly in command of Agent Orange's power battery after he steals it from Agent Orange in a battle. The orange light of avarice converses with Jordan, his costume changes, and he becomes the new Agent Orange. However, Larfleeze quickly takes his power battery back from Jordan.[28]
Jordan is also a character of focus in the new Justice League of America series as a charter member of the revamped JLA. He is also involved in the first plotline of the Brave and the Bold monthly series, teaming up first with Batman and later Supergirl. When teamed with the fledgling Supergirl, Hal is very impressed with her cleverness, although he finds her flirtatious behavior somewhat unnerving.[29]
In the Justice League: Cry for Justice mini-series, Hal leads his own Justice League with Green Arrow, Shazam, Supergirl, Congorilla, Starman, Batwoman, and the Atom in order to avenge the deaths of Martian Manhunter and Batman.[30] Jordan eventually recruits some of the former Titans members for the League's new lineup, including Batman's successor Dick Grayson, Donna Troy, and Starfire.
2010s
During the Blackest Night event, Hal allies himself with six other Lantern Corps during The War of Light. He finds himself facing many of his deceased allies, enemies, and people he failed to save reanimated as undead Black Lanterns under the control of the Green Lantern Corps' ancient enemy Nekron. Hal finds himself not only teaming up with Barry Allen (otherwise known as The Flash), who is also resurrected from his death, but also must work with his enemies Sinestro, Atrocitus, Larfleeze, and his former lover Carol Ferris.
After the events of Brightest Day: Green Lantern, the storyline continues into War of the Green Lanterns. DC Comics revealed the covers.[31][32][33] that Hal will be joining the Sinestro Corps during "War of the Green Lanterns". Hal and Guy are captured by Krona.[34] However, they escape from Krona's forces and reclaim their Green Lantern rings to fight him and his entity-possessed Guardians.[35] During the final battle, Hal manages to free Carol, Sinestro and the others from the Book of the Black. During the process Sinestro becomes a Green Lantern once again. Jordan manages to defeat and kill Krona, releasing the entities from the Guardians. However, the Guardians believing Hal to be the most dangerous Green Lantern, discharge him from the Corps, strip him of his ring and return him to Earth.[36] It is revealed that the Guardians are afraid of Jordan because they believe what happened to Krona would eventually happen to them if they allow him to continue being a Green Lantern.[37]
During the relaunch of the Green Lantern series in The New 52, Jordan is back to his civilian life on Earth. He has been discharged from the United States Air Force. Jordan is arrested and Carol bails him out. She offers him a job, but not as a pilot. They go on a date but Carol is enraged when Jordan fails to propose marriage. He is then confronted by Sinestro who offers him a Green Lantern ring.[38] A ring he created himself and has complete control over, telling Hal if he wants his real ring back he will help him destroy the Sinestro Corps who have enslaved Korugar during his absence.[39] Before they leave for Korugar Green Lantern wants to say goodbye to Carol but Sinestro does not let him, stating that doing what needs to be done is more important than a failed romance. When the two arrive at Korugar, Green Lantern is tasked by Sinestro in deactivating the central yellow power battery, as he explains that only a Green Lantern can do it. However, when Green Lantern gets to the battery, it begins to disintegrate him. Before he is fully disintegrated, he expresses his belief that Sinestro set him up.[40] The disintegration is revealed to be an opening portal to the Anti-Matter Universe, and when the battery realizes Green Lantern is not Sinestro, the transport is aborted, and an unconscious Green Lantern is deposited outside the battery, amidst a crowd of Yellow Lanterns. He is then imprisoned in a cell meant to foil escape attempts by draining power from his green ring. With his last power left in his ring Green Lantern creates an image of Carol. When Sinestro is caught and imprisoned in a nearby cell, Hal suggests using the last of Sinestro's power to split his ring into hundreds of copies to be used by the captive Korugarans. The plan works, but the Korugarans close in on Sinestro, preparing to take their revenge,[41] before Hal convinces them to use their power against the Sinestro Corps instead. After they drain the Sinestro Corps power battery and defeat most of the Corps, Green Lantern is returned to Earth retaining the ring Sinestro gave him without any means of charging it. The next day he finds Carol and begs her to take him back, explaining that she was the last thing he wanted to see when he was absolutely certain that he was going to die. Carol accepts Hal's apology and the two reunite.[42]
However Sinestro reactivates Green Lantern's ring, telling him that they must work together again.[43] Green Lantern initially refuses to work with him, until Sinestro reveals that the Guardians are planning to replace the Green Lantern Corps. Suddenly, the Indigo Tribe comes to Earth and kidnaps Sinestro, forcing Green Lantern to follow them into Nok, the Indigo homeworld. However, Green Lantern is captured and meets up with Black Hand, who has been turned into an Indigo Lantern.[44] Escaping from Black Hand, Green Lantern tries to find Sinestro, but is shocked to discover that Sinestro has been forcibly inducted into the Indigo Tribe.[45] Green Lantern flees into Nok's forbidden jungles and meets Natromo, the founder of the Indigo Tribe. Natromo tells Hal the origins of the Indigo Tribe, revealing that the Tribe was created to fight the Guardians in case they ever became mad with power. He also says that the Indigo Tribesmen used to be some of the most dangerous criminals in the universe; Iroque, before she became Indigo-1, killed Abin Sur's daughter. When Green Lantern reveals that Abin Sur is dead, Natromo sadly destroys the Indigo Central Battery. Although Sinestro is freed from the Indigo ring, the other Indigo Lanterns are released as well, reverting them back to bloodthirsty sadists.[46] Green Lantern manages to convince Natromo to reconstruct the Indigo Battery, with the help of Iroque, who is still capable of feeling compassion even without her ring. Although the Indigo Tribe is restored to normal, Sinestro is forced back into the Tribe as well. Indigo-1 agrees to release Sinestro from his Indigo ring, but only if Green Lantern swears to help Sinestro become a hero again.[47]
As the Indigo Tribe releases Sinestro, Natromo inverts the link between Green Lantern's and Sinestro's ring. Now, Green Lantern can control Sinestro's ring instead of the other way around. Unfortunately, Black Hand has escaped the Indigo Tribe's control. Indigo-1 teleports the two Lanterns to Korugar, where Sinestro has hidden the Book of the Black. As they read the Book to find out more about the Guardians's plans to replace the Green Lantern Corps, they are teleported right to Black Hand's old home.[48] Green Lantern and Sinestro pass out after running out of power in their rings.[49] Black Hand buries Sinestro and Green Lantern alive. Green Lantern breaks free and fights against Black Hand, and is saved by Sinestro. The two of them fight Black Hand until the Guardians arrive, who command Black Hand to kill them. As their life is draining away, Green Lantern and Sinestro fuse their rings together with an unknown message, before they seemingly die.[50] However, they are later revealed to have survived, but they are trapped in a mysterious realm surrounded by darkness.[51]
Hal and Sinestro begin traveling through the Dead Zone, wherein they encounter a mysterious figure lurking in the zone observing them.[52] This mysterious stranger is revealed to be Tomar-Re, who asks Hal and Sinestro to stop Volthoom (The First Lantern) before he changes reality. Hal and Sinestro are confronted by the fallen Lantern members in the Dead Zone.[53] When new Green Lantern Simon Baz enters the Dead Zone during a fight with Black Hand, he attempts to rescue them, but is only able to split his ring once. Sinestro claims the ring by forcing Hal to experience a moment of fear when he threatens Hal with the loss of Carol. Hal contemplates committing suicide so he could harness Black Hand's ring as it is the only way to leave the Dead Zone.[54]
When Hal makes the ultimate sacrifice and transforms into a Black Lantern, he uses the telepathy of the Indigo Tribe to open the Dead Zone portal. Green Lantern finally manages to escape and attacks Volthoom with the hordes of undead, but Volthoom effortlessly destroys the army and nearly possesses Green Lantern. After a Parallax-empowered Sinestro fails to kill Volthoom as well, Green Lantern proceeds to summon Nekron and finally destroys him. After the battle is over, Green Lantern is released from being a Black Lantern and returns to life as Green Lantern again, finally reuniting with Carol. Before departing, Sinestro reminds Green Lantern of a question he was about to ask him during their near-death back on Ysmault. Green Lantern asks if they had ever been truly friends, to which Sinestro replies that the tragedy is they always will be.[55]
During the events of Green Lantern: Lights Out, Kyle Rayner and the Templar Guardians discover a space anomaly at the edge of the universe. The nearby of Rayner's Power Ring wake up a being inside the anomaly called Relic, a scientist born in a universe prior to the actual, extinguished due to a war between the lanterns of his universe, called "Lightsmiths". Believing in the existence of a reservoir for the Emotional Spectrum and fearing that the Lanterns made the same mistake that the Lightsmiths, Relic destroys the Green Lantern Corps Central Power Battery and the planet Oa, doing the same thing to planet Odym and the entire Blue Lanterns Corps except for Saint Walker. Trying to stop him, Jordan and the Green Lanterns Corps locate Relic in the Source Wall, where Kyle realizes that he is the key to pass to the other side. Rayner and Relic pass to the other side, refilling the reservoir when this one was emptying and increasing the universe's lifespan again. Relic is trapped in the Source Wall, meanwhile Rayner manages to escape from the Source Wall after Jordan left the Source Wall believing Rayner is dead. Convinced by the Templar Guardians, he and Carol Ferris keep Rayner's survival a secret from the other lanterns.
In Green Lantern: Godhead, Highfather and the New Gods launch a simultaneous attack to steal a Power Ring from each color in order to get the "Life Equation", a definitive weapon to defeat Darkseid, after a brief conversation between Highfather and Relic, still trapped in the Source Wall, where Highfather learns about Power Rings and the risk to the reservoir at the other side of Source Wall. Jordan, now the leader of the Corps, with the planet Mogo now serving as the new base for the Corps, warns all Lanterns of the danger of the New Gods. Launching an attack against them, Jordan allies with Sinestro to defeat Highfather, but in the attack are betrayed by Indigo-1, believing that Lanterns are a serious danger to the entire universe. Unable to defeat the New Gods due to their superior powers, Jordan visits Earth to talk with Black Hand, explaining the menace of the New Gods. Hand accepts his proposal to help Jordan to defeat the New Gods (enticed by the promise of being able to convert dead gods into undead for his Black Lantern army), both traveling to the Source Wall, where Hand discovers that the Source Wall is actually a mass grave. After liberating the dead from the wall, Jordan and Hand travel to New Genesis with a Boom Tube created by Sinestro with a Mother Box. In the final attack Rayner resurrects the dead from the Wall, and Jordan receives the rendition of Highfather when he understands that he is becoming what he hates - Darkseid - in his obsession with their private war. Finally, Highfather and Jordan affirm the peace between Lanterns and New Gods, and Relic warns that the Source is changed and that something is wrong.
Hal Jordan is featured as a part of Justice League series relaunch as well. The initial issues of the title take place five years prior as Jordan assists Batman against a mysterious threat.[56] It is shown he is already friends with Barry Allen and each know the other's secret identity.[57] Hal also believes with the ring he can overcome anything by himself by sheer force of will. This leads to reckless behavior that almost gets him killed. It is only when Batman reminds him of his mortality by revealing his own identity as Bruce Wayne does Hal reconsider his approach.[58] Five years after the team forms, Green Lantern resigns from the Justice League in an effort to keep the group functioning after his behavior put the team in peril during their fight with David Graves.[59] Subsequently, he returns to the Justice League to help Jessica Cruz learn how to control her powers.
In the aftermath, Hal gets a new look as he goes rogue from the Green Lantern Corps to shelter them from blame for everything that has taken place in recent issues, such as the Third Army's assault or Relic's attack. Along the way, Jordan steals a Green Lantern prototype gauntlet and power pack from the armoury, allowing him to continue to operate as a hero without the need for a power ring, although he is sometimes required to fight other Lanterns to maintain the illusion of independence.
Subsequently, in DC Rebirth, Hal returns as Green Lantern again after abandoning the prototype gauntlet due to its energies starting to transform him into a living construct, although he uses it one final time to forge a new power ring for himself before discarding it.[60]
Powers and abilities
As a Green Lantern, Jordan is semi-invulnerable, capable of projecting hard-light constructions, flight, and utilizing various other abilities through his power ring which are only limited by his imagination and willpower. Jordan, as a Green Lantern, has exceptional willpower.
As Parallax, Hal was one of the most powerful beings in all of the DC Universe. In addition to his normal Green Lantern powers, he was able to manipulate and reconfigure time-space to his will, manipulate reality at a large scale, had vast superhuman strength which he demonstrated by being able to knock out Superman with one punch, a higher sense of awareness and enhanced durability. As Parallax he still was able to be harmed nearly just as easily as a normal Green Lantern but seemed to be able to endure more physical punishment. While Hal Jordan was Parallax he was never defeated by physical force, all of his very few defeats were of a changed mental state during or after the battle, which was usually the result of dealing with his own conscience and he would just give up, leave the battle and hide himself.
While at some point acting as a renegade so that the Corps can use him as a scapegoat for recent events, Jordan uses Krona's prototype gauntlet instead of a power ring, giving him greater power as the gauntlet wields the energy of twelve power rings rather than just one.
Other versions
As with other characters published by DC Comics, many alternative universe versions and analogues of the character have appeared within both the Green Lantern series and other titles. In Action Comics #856, a Bizarro version of Hal, called Yellow Lantern, is featured. Yellow Lantern possessed a Sinestro Corps ring and used to inflict fear among Htrae's inhabitants.[61]
The Green Lantern of Earth-5 is shown to be the Hal Jordan of Captain Marvel's world (Earth-5) in the new 52 multiverse. He is killed in Countdown: Arena #2 by Monarch.[62] A Green Lantern named Hal Jordan III, grandson of the original Hal Jordan, from the world of Batman Beyond. He is labelled as Green Lantern of Earth-12. He loses his left arm in battle with Monarch.[62]
The character has also appeared in and been the focus of many Elseworlds titles such including JLA: Age of Wonder,[63] DC: The New Frontier,[64] Superman: Red Son,[65] JLA: The Nail[66] (Where he was the leader and most powerful member of the JLA in a world where Superman was never found by the Kents), Green Lantern: Evil's Might[67] and the John Byrne penned Superman & Batman: Generations 2 (This Jordan pursuing a career in politics before he was forced to use the ring against Sinestro)[68] and a part of the Frank Miller Dark Knight universe, appearing in All Star Batman and Robin[69] and Batman: The Dark Knight Strikes Again.
In The Dark Knight Returns, it is stated that Jordan left Earth years ago when politics forced the heroes to 'retire', while in The Dark Knight Strikes Again, he returned when Batman requested his help to destroy Lex Luthor's weapons satellites).[70] In The Dark Knight III: The Master Race, Hal returns to Earth once again when a group of Kryptonians led by the ruthless Quar are released from Kandor, but the Kryptonians dismiss him as nothing but a man with a ring and burn his hand off before leaving him to fall to his death.[71]
In the DC/Marvel Company crossover series Amalgam Comics, there appeared to be two amalgams of Hal. The Iron Lantern was the amalgam of Hal Jordan and Tony Stark. His identity was known as Hal Stark. Another unknown amalgam of Hal Jordan appeared in Speed Demon #1, in which the Speed Demon killed "Madman" Jordan, as apparently this Jordan had committed a horrible crime.
Hal Jordan is a character in JLA/Avengers, which featured a crossover between DC and Marvel Comics. Despite the fact that both teams travel to both of their respective universes, this is one of the few comics featuring multiple universes that remains in (DC) continuity. During this story, Hal gets a vision of his future as Parallax in the 'real' universe after a reality is created where the two universes have regularly interacted for years, but nevertheless resolves to restore reality as the heroes cannot choose their lives over the lives of those being affected by the current chronal disruption.
An alternate version of Hal Jordan also appeared in the Pocket Universe Earth created by the Time Trapper. He, along with various other heroes who had no superpowers in this reality, teamed up with a good version of Lex Luthor to stop three evil Kryptonians who had escaped from the Phantom Zone. Hal Jordan piloted an advanced jet craft that was easily destroyed by the Kryptonians.
Though Jordan was never one of the main characters in the award-winning mini-series Kingdom Come, a version of him from the Earth-22 (A post Infinite Crisis alternate universe) made a cameo on the end of the storyline" Thy Kingdom Come" story arc on the issue of Justice Society of America (vol. 3) #22, during Batman's funeral.
A new version of Power Ring, the villainous Green Lantern analogue of the Crime Syndicate of America, appeared and is stated as being the "original" (though previously unseen) iteration of the character. He has been presumed dead years earlier. It is implied that he was reborn in his reality as a direct result of Jordan's resurrection in Green Lantern: Rebirth.[72]
In the alternate timeline of the Flashpoint event, Hal Jordan was reckless as a flying ace. He along with Carol Ferris was on a F-22 Raptor entering Western Europe territory before the Shark attacks. Hal forces the Shark to crash his jet into Carol's jet, and both of them barely got out of the ejection system. Upon their return to America, Hal was about to fly the jet. However, he witnesses the spaceship crash on Earth and was approached by the ship's survivor, Abin Sur, asking for help.[73] However, Abin Sur is subsequently taken into custody by Cyborg and the government to be questioned about his reasons for being on Earth.[74] Later, when Amazonian invisible planes invade over Coast City, Hal and Carol manage to shoot down the invisible planes and the Hydra that they dropped. Later, Hal is volunteered by the President of the United States for a mission to use a Green Arrow Industries nuclear weapon to bomb Western Europe.[75] Later, Hal is ready to fly on the F-35 with the Green Arrow nuclear weapon attempting to destroy Western Europe at the end of the Atlantean/Amazon war.[76] During the battles on New Themyscira, Hal possesses the remaining nuclear weapon, but his firing mechanism jams. Hal's only option is to fly through New Themyscira in a suicide attack, causing a process which destroys not only New Themyscira's invisible shield, but Hal with it. Afterwards, Thomas Kalmaku gives Carol a note saying that Hal was afraid to say that he had always loved her. Carol sees the engagement ring that he was going to propose to her.[77]
In the distant future, the Book of Oa shows that Hal will eventually marry Carol and their son would be named Martin Jordan after Hal's father.[55]
The comic book prequel tie-in to the game Injustice: Gods Among Us sees that universe's Hal Jordan willingly joining Superman's group of heroes in obtaining peace on Earth through more forceful matters. While Jordan plays a relatively small role in Year One, he is a more featured character in the Year Two series, where his loyalty to Superman causes conflicts with his loyalty to the Green Lantern Corps. Eventually putting Superman's Regime above them, Hal is eventually stripped of his Green Lantern power ring by Ganthet, having been officially declared a renegade. Sinestro, having joined Superman's Regime and mended his relationship with Hal, offers him a Yellow Ring instead, which he accepts in order to save Carol Ferris' life. The annual—taking place before the war—details that Hal, despite his loyalty to Superman, unconsciously harbors small doubts that the Man of Steel's motivations are as pure as he makes them out to be, acknowledging that he has seen many worlds where one person deemed themselves the only one capable of saving everyone. He grew closer to Sinestro after the latter destroyed an all-powerful device they were sent to retrieve, getting past his disdain and resentment of his former mentor. In Year Three he deals with magical forces alongside the Regime, going up against Renee Montoya before their battle is interrupted by the demon Trigon and the interdimensional imp Mr. Mxyzptlk, whose fight nearly engulfs them in Hell. In Year Four he is the first to recognize Superman's growing condescending attitude and openly shows resentment at being treated as such. In Year Five he further voices discontent when Superman begins recruiting villains to the Regime and becomes more open to brutal violence. After Victor Zsasz escapes prison and kills Alfred Pennyworth, he, Superman, Wonder Woman, and Damian Wayne nearly capture Batman after he tracks the killer, but Flash helps him get away. Hal remains suspicious about how Zsasz was able to escape and suspects either Sinestro or Superman released him, deciding to find out when Sinestro refuses to confirm or deny it. However, he later discusses with the Flash how he is reluctant to discover the truth, for if it turns out Superman did orchestrate Zsasz's escape, then the Regime are sided with a killer. Zsasz is later killed in custody, and with no surveillance having been on to reveal the killer, Hal is unable to determine who is at fault. Near the end of the series he, Wonder Woman, and Superman track down Batman at his lead-lined base and are close to apprehending him. Batman distracts them by recounting all the tragic actions taken by the Regime, during which Superman does not deny he did in fact play a role in Alfred's death, shocking Hal and Diana. He is then transported like everyone else to the other side of the world once Batman's final plan pans out.
In the possible future of Futures End, Hal Jordan had left his role as Corps Leader behind, promising to never again leave Earth unprotected after a gruesome war killed thousands of people, including Hal's mother. Living what looks like a bachelor's life in Coast City, Hal learns from his deceased father that Krona has become the new leader of the Black Lantern Corps, which forces Hal to renege on his vow and to take them head on with only the help of a new ally, Relic. The ensuing battle occurs near the Source Wall, which is a miniature Blackest Night version, with Relic giving Hal access to the rest of the emotional spectrum needed to handle his foes. As Hal is quickly overrun, he sacrifices himself to end the Black Lantern threat once and for all. Critically wounded and barely alive, Hal is placed inside the Source Wall, just like Relic was.[78]
In the crossover series Star Trek/Green Lantern: The Spectrum War, the return of Nekron in a not-too-distant future results in the complete destruction of the DC Universe,[79] with Hal Jordan and the other members of the original 'new Guardians' the only survivors after Ganthet initiates the 'Last Light' protocol, banishing all surviving ring-wielders to the alternate Star Trek universe, where his corpse is collected by the USS Enterprise.[80] After Hal makes contact with the Enterprise and learns of Nekron's return in this universe, he assists the crew in thwarting the new ring-bearers, as well as dealing with the threats of Atrocitus, Sinestro and Larfleeze. With Nekron defeated, Hal joins the Enterprise in their mission of exploration.[81]
In the in-continuity company-wide story Convergence, the Zero Hour-era Hal Jordan and the people of Metropolis are stolen from that timeline immediately before the reboot event at the end of Zero Hour by Brainiac and stored on the planet Telos along with cities of heroes and villains from other eras and Earths of the DC Comics Multiverse.[82] The villain Deimos, also on the planet, steals the power of the Time Masters and attempts to remake the Multiverse in his image, only to be killed by Hal Jordan, using the power of Parallax and still vengeful over the lost of Coast City. This attack causes the Multiverse to begin to unravel, prompting a crisis event which it will not survive.[83] When Brainiac explains that he can send the heroes home, he is prevented by damage from the original Crisis on Infinite Earths event from restoring the universe to normal. Seeking redemption for his recent actions, Parallax volunteers to go with the pre-Flashpoint era Superman to the time of the original Crisis. Their contribution to that great battle is enough to change the outcome and avert the collapse of the original Multiverse; and thus Parallax saves the Multiverse, and undoes the events of Zero Hour in the process.[84]
In the DC Bombshells series, Hal Jordan is an American pilot attending a Christmas party in London who becomes smitten with Harley Quinn after witnessing her beat up most of the men at the scene. Harley tricks him to take her to the airfield, where she knocks him out and steals his plane.[85]
In other media
Animated television
The Superman/Aquaman Hour of Adventure
Hal Jordan made his first cartoon appearance in 1967 in an eponymously titled segment of The Superman/Aquaman Hour of Adventure cartoon by Filmation. In it, he fought evil with the aid of a blue-skinned, pointed-eared sidekick Kairo, Hal's Venusian Helper. It is revealed that Hal is a member of the JLA. In these cartoons, Hal Jordan was voiced by Gerald Mohr.
Super Friends
- Green Lantern was featured as a 'guest hero' in The All-New Super Friends Hour. His powers were consistently misrepresented, such creating vehicles for transportation with his ring such as a "Lantern Jet", ignoring the fact that the power ring traditionally allows him to simply will himself to fly. Also, whenever Green Lantern would use his ring to create something, such as a life raft or a double-bladed transport helicopter, the final product would often be shown with its appropriate colors, instead of the same green shade as the power beam.
- Hal Jordan and his nemesis Sinestro were also regulars in Challenge of the SuperFriends which aired 1978–1979. One notable episode featured a re-telling of Hal's origin in which the dying Abin Sur passes on his ring. The character would continue to be brought back in sporadic appearances for the subsequent Super Friends, Super Friends: The Legendary Super Powers Show and The Super Powers Team: Galactic Guardians shows. Michael Rye voiced the character for all three shows.
Duck Dodgers
Hal Jordan also appeared in a 2003 episode of the Duck Dodgers animated series entitled "The Green Loontern", in which Duck Dodgers is mistakenly given a Green Lantern uniform by his dry cleaners. Donning it, he meets the Corps and fights Sinestro before meeting Hal (voiced by Kevin Smith), who is wearing Dodgers' too-small uniform.
DC animated universe
In the DC Animated Universe, it is unknown if Hal Jordan is or ever was a Green Lantern.
- The Superman: The Animated Series episode "In Brightest Day", uses Jordan's origin as a Green Lantern for Kyle Rayner, as Rayner was the Green Lantern at the time of the episode's production. During a fight with Sinestro, Rayner crashes into Jordan's plane.
- Hal Jordan as a Green Lantern makes a physical appearance in the Justice League Unlimited episode "The Once and Future Thing Part II: Time Warped" voiced by Adam Baldwin. When time becomes fluid, John Stewart is unexpectedly replaced by Hal. He quickly introduces himself to his bewildered teammates and continues on as if nothing happened, explaining that the ring has brought him "up to speed". Later, as the assembled heroes close in on the time-warping villain responsible, Hal reverts to John, causing Static to say "Make up your mind!".
The Batman
In the fourth season finale of The Batman, "The Joining", the Justice League was introduced. Hal Jordan was included among its members, in a non-speaking cameo. He and the other members of the League play a role in the show's fifth season. He appears in the episode "Ring Toss" where he helps Batman take on Sinestro and a ring-powered Penguin, and in the finale "Lost Heroes", both times voiced by Dermot Mulroney.
Batman: The Brave and the Bold
Hal Jordan appears in the Batman: The Brave and the Bold episode "The Eyes of Despero!", voiced by Loren Lester. He is first seen leading many other Green Lanterns into battle against Despero, only to have them be turned against him by Despero's mind control. Releasing a discharge of power from his ring, he seemingly perished in the blast alongside his fellow Lanterns, with his ring going across the universe in search of another wielder. It makes its way to Batman, sending him to space. Hal, the missing in action Lanterns, and the Guardians of the Universe were revealed to be alive and in the ring near the end. Hal later makes a cameo appearance as a member of the Justice League of America in a flashback sequence shown at the beginning of "Sidekicks Assemble!" He is also mentioned in "Darkseid Descending!", where Guy Gardner and Booster Gold get into a fight over who gets to have Hal's former room on the Justice League Satellite. Additionally, Hal appears in a non-speaking cameo in the two parts of the episode "The Siege of Starro!", first, among the heroes possessed by Starro, and later, as one of the heroes that have already broken free of Starro's mind control, and battle against him.
Young Justice
Hal Jordan appears as a member of the Justice League in the Young Justice animated series,[86] voiced by an uncredited Dee Bradley Baker. Hal makes a non-speaking appearance at the end of the pilot episode, "Independence Day", where he and John Stewart use their rings to contain Blockbuster after he is defeated by Robin, Kid Flash, Aqualad and Superboy. He then appears helping to bring Mount Justice back online. In the second episode "Welcome to Happy Harbor", Kid Flash mentions that Superman and Green Lantern hollowed out Mount Justice, but it is unclear to which Green Lantern Kid Flash was referring. In the episode "Failsafe", during a mind-training exercise conducted by Martian Manhunter, an illusory Hal and John are apparently vaporized by invading aliens. In "Agendas", Hal and John were convenes recruitment for the new Justice League members; he and John immediately dismiss the idea of adding Guy Gardner to the League.
Green Lantern: The Animated Series
Hal Jordan appears as the main protagonist in Green Lantern: The Animated Series, voiced by Josh Keaton.[87]
Mad
Hal Jordan appears in Mad where he tries to appeal to Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman about being called "Super Friends".
Justice League Action
Hal Jordan will appear in Justice League Action, with Josh Keaton reprising his role.[88]
Live-action television
- In 1979, a two-part mini-series of live-action films featuring the Justice League and their villains the Legion of Doom was produced under the title Legends of the Superheroes. It featured Howard Murphy as Hal Jordan.
- In the first-season episode of the television series The Flash, titled "Rogue Air," it is referenced that a pilot from Ferris Air strangely disappeared, resulting the company's defunct, and thus implying Hal Jordan and the Green Lantern Corps' existence.
- During a flashback scene in the fourth-season premiere of Arrow, a man wearing an aviator jacket with the name "Jordan" on it, appears at a bar in Coast City.
Films
- Hal Jordan is one of the main characters featured in Justice League: The New Frontier. He is voiced by David Boreanaz. This version is a war veteran. Jordan volunteers for a trip to Mars due to the Martian Manhunter's arrival. When the rocket begins to fail the co-pilot Rick Flagg detonates explosives. Jordan is saved by Superman but Flagg is killed. Shortly after a dying Abin Sur gives Hal a Green Lantern ring. Hal helps in the battle against the Centre and becomes Green Lantern. Hal throws the exploding Centre into the atmosphere. Hal is presumed dead though he survives and he is shown as a member of the Justice League during John F. Kennedy's famous speech.
- Christopher Meloni voices Hal Jordan in the Warner Premiere animated feature Green Lantern: First Flight.
- Nolan North voices Hal Jordan in the Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths animated feature film.
- Nathan Fillion voices Hal Jordan in the anthology feature Green Lantern: Emerald Knights.
- Ryan Reynolds portrayed Hal Jordan in the live-action Green Lantern film directed by Martin Campbell.[89]
- Nathan Fillion also voices Hal Jordan in Justice League: Doom and Justice League: The Flashpoint Paradox.
- Hal Jordan appears in Lego Batman: The Movie – DC Super Heroes Unite, based on the video game of the same name, with Cam Clarke reprising his role.
- Hal Jordan appears in the animated film Justice League: War, voiced by Justin Kirk.
- Hal Jordan appears in The Lego Movie, voiced by Jonah Hill. He is depicted as a Master Builder who Superman is often annoyed at.
- Hal Jordan appears in the animated film Justice League: Throne of Atlantis, with Nathan Fillion reprising his role.
- Hal Jordan appears in the animated film Lego DC Comics Super Heroes: Justice League: Attack of the Legion of Doom, with Josh Keaton reprising his role.
- Hal Jordan appears in the animated film Lego DC Comics Super Heroes: Justice League: Cosmic Clash, voiced again by Josh Keaton.[90]
- Hal Jordan will be featured as one of the main characters in the live-action reboot Green Lantern Corps and another appearance in the currently untitled Justice League sequel as part of the DC Extended Universe.[91][92]
Video games
- Hal Jordan is an unlockable character in Justice League Heroes.
- Hal Jordan is a playable character in the video game, Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe voiced by Josh Phillips. His counterpart is Liu Kang. Following his fight with Lex Luthor on Oa, Hal is informed by Ganthet and two other members of the Guardians of the Universe about the World Merge crisis. His game ending has him and the other Green Lanterns becoming aware of a giant pyramid (from Mortal Kombat: Armageddon) emerging. Realizing Sinestro could try and take the pyramid's secret, he and the Green Lantern Corps try to stop him.
- Hal Jordan can be summoned to clear the screen of all enemies in the Wii version of Batman: The Brave and the Bold – The Videogame. He is also playable in the DS version.
- Hal Jordan appears as a hero in a cinematic trailer for the video game DC Universe Online MMORPG voiced by Gray Haddock. In the cinematic, "Who Do You Trust", the trailer depicts a dark future where he and the rest of the Justice League are engaged in a final battle against Lex Luthor and other villains. He is primarily engaged in battle with Giganta but afterwards is attacked by Black Adam. Black Adam uses his strength to crack Hal's ring. When Barry Allen arrives to help, Black Adam calls down his magic lightning bolt. The bolt strikes Hal's damaged ring resulting in a massive explosion that kills Barry and Hal. After the cutscene however, Luthor travels back in time to warn the Justice League of an even greater threat, Braniac, who will take control after the battle. Hal then assists the League by training new Green Lanterns. To become one, the player must download the "Fight For The Light" DLC pack which gives them the option to pick Light as their superpower.
- Hal Jordan is the main protagonist in Green Lantern: Rise of the Manhunters (which is set in the same continuity as the live-action film) voiced by Ryan Reynolds.
- Hal Jordan appears as a playable character in Lego Batman 2: DC Super Heroes, voiced by Cam Clarke.
- Hal Jordan appears as a playable character in Injustice: Gods Among Us, with Adam Baldwin reprising his role from Justice League: Unlimited. During the game's story mode, Green Lantern, Aquaman, Green Arrow, and Wonder Woman are pulled into an alternate reality where Superman's Regime rules Earth. After saving the alternate Deathstroke from Cyborg and Raven and saving his teammates from Sinestro, he is confronted by a Sinestro Corps version of himself called Yellow Lantern. At the game's conclusion, Yellow Lantern is forced to stand down and surrender by the 'prime' Superman, willingly removing his ring. He and Sinestro are shown to be taken to Oa by the 'prime' Hal to stand trial for their crimes. In Hal Jordan's ending, Hal witnesses the crash of an alien spaceship. The pilot claimed to be Abin Sur, although he did not wear a power ring. He also referred to Hal as the "Almighty One". Hal tries to convince him of their past of how he replaced Abin Sur as defender of sector 2814, but the alien died shortly afterwards. Hoping to solve the mystery, Hal heads for Oa to ask the Guardians of the Universe what they know about this.
- Hal Jordan appears as a playable character in The Lego Movie Videogame.
- Hal Jordan appears as a playable character in Lego Batman 3: Beyond Gotham, with Josh Keaton reprising his role.[93] He serves as one of the main story characters.
- Hal Jordan appears as a playable character in the multiplayer battle arena game Infinite Crisis.[94]
Audio play
- Hal Jordan appears in Green Lantern: The Emerald Protector created by Eric L. Busby for Darker Projects. He is voiced by Darren Marlar.
Miscellaneous
- Hal Jordan is a member of the Super Friends in the direct-to-video original animation DC Super Friends: The Joker's Playhouse (2010) voiced by Grant Moninger.
Collected editions
Hal Jordan's stories have been collected into a number of volumes:
Title | Material collected | ISBN |
---|---|---|
Green Lantern Archives (color, hardcover) | ||
Green Lantern Archives Vol. 1 | Showcase #22-24; Green Lantern vol. 2, #1-5 | HC: 1-56389-087-9[95] |
Green Lantern Archives Vol. 2 | Green Lantern vol. 2, #6-13 | HC: 1-56389-566-8[96] |
Green Lantern Archives Vol. 3 | Green Lantern vol. 2, #14-21 | HC: 1-56389-713-X[97] |
Green Lantern Archives Vol. 4 | Green Lantern vol. 2, #22-29 | HC: 1-56389-811-X[98] |
Green Lantern Archives Vol. 5 | Green Lantern vol. 2, #30-38 | HC: 1-4012-0404-X[99] |
Green Lantern Archives Vol. 6 | Green Lantern vol. 2, #39-47 | HC: 1-4012-1189-5[100] |
The Green Lantern Omnibus (color, hardcover) | ||
The Green Lantern Omnibus Vol. 1 | Showcase #22-24; Green Lantern vol. 2, #1-21 | HC: 1-4012-3056-3 |
The Green Lantern Omnibus Vol. 2 | Green Lantern vol. 2, #22-45 | HC: 1-4012-3295-7 |
Green Lantern Chronicles (color, paperback) | ||
Green Lantern Chronicles Vol. 1 | Showcase #22-24; Green Lantern vol. 2, #1-3 | SC: 1-4012-2163-7[101] |
Green Lantern Chronicles Vol. 2 | Green Lantern vol. 2, #4-9 | SC: 1-4012-2499-7 |
Green Lantern Chronicles Vol. 3 | Green Lantern vol. 2, #10-14; The Flash #143 | SC: 1-4012-2915-8 |
Green Lantern Chronicles Vol. 4 | Green Lantern vol. 2, #15-20 | SC: 1-4012-3396-1 |
Showcase Presents: Green Lantern (black and white, paperback) | ||
Showcase Presents: Green Lantern Vol. 1 | Showcase #22-24; Green Lantern vol. 2, #1-17 | SC: 1-4012-0759-6[102] |
Showcase Presents: Green Lantern Vol. 2 | Green Lantern vol. 2, #18-37; The Flash #143 | SC: 1-4012-1264-6[103] |
Showcase Presents: Green Lantern Vol. 3 | Green Lantern vol. 2, #39-59 | SC: 1-4012-1792-3[104] |
Showcase Presents: Green Lantern Vol. 4 | Green Lantern vol. 2, #60-75 | SC: 1-4012-2278-1[105] |
Green Lantern/Green Arrow | ||
Green Lantern/Green Arrow Vol. 1 | Green Lantern vol. 2, #76-82 | SC: 1-4012-0224-1[106] |
Green Lantern/Green Arrow Vol. 2 | Green Lantern vol. 2, #83-87, 89; back-ups from Flash vol. 2, #212-219 | SC: 1-4012-0230-6[107] |
Miscellaneous | ||
Cosmic Odyssey | Cosmic Odyssey #1-4 (miniseries) | SC: 1-56389-051-8 |
Green Lantern: The Road Back | Green Lantern vol. 3, #1-8 | SC: 1-56389-045-3[108] |
Green Lantern: Emerald Dawn | Green Lantern: Emerald Dawn #1-6 (miniseries) | SC: 1-4352-4580-6[109] |
Green Lantern: Emerald Dawn II | Green Lantern: Emerald Dawn II #1-6 (miniseries) | SC: 1-4012-0016-8[110] |
Green Lantern: Ganthet's Tale | Graphic Novel | SC: 1-56389-026-7 |
Superman: The Return of Superman | Green Lantern vol. 3, #46; Action Comics #687-691; The Adventures of Superman #500-505; Superman vol. 2, #78-82; Superman: The Man of Steel #22-26 | SC: 1-56389-149-2 |
Green Lantern: Emerald Twilight | Green Lantern vol. 3, #48-50 | SC: 1-56389-164-6 |
As Parallax | ||
Zero Hour: Crisis in Time | Showcase '94 #8-9, Zero Hour: Crisis in Time #0-4 (miniseries) | SC: 1-56389-184-0 |
The Final Night | Final Night Preview, #1-4 (miniseries); Parallax: Emerald Night (one-shot) | SC: 1-56389-419-X |
Green Lantern: Emerald Knights | Green Lantern vol. 3, #99-106; Green Arrow #136 | SC: 1-56389-475-0[111] |
Flashbacks | ||
Flash & Green Lantern: The Brave and the Bold | Flash & Green Lantern: The Brave and the Bold #1-6 (miniseries) | SC: 1-56389-708-3 |
Green Lantern: Willworld | Graphic Novel | HC: 1-56389-782-2[112]
SC: 1-56389-993-0[113] |
As Spectre | ||
Green Lantern: The Power of Ion | Green Lantern vol. 3, #142-150 | SC: 1-56389-972-8 |
Green Lantern: Brother's Keeper | Green Lantern vol. 3, #151-155; Green Lantern Secret Files #3 | SC: 1-4012-0078-8 |
On his return | ||
Green Lantern: Rebirth | Green Lantern: Rebirth #1-6 (miniseries) | HC: 1-4012-0710-3[114]
SC: 1-4012-0465-1[115] |
Green Lantern: No Fear | Green Lantern vol. 4, #1-6; Green Lantern Secret Files and Origins #1 | HC: 1-4012-0466-X[116]
SC: 1-4012-1058-9[117] |
Green Lantern Corps: Recharge | Green Lantern Corps: Recharge #1-5 (miniseries) | SC: 1-4012-0962-9[118] |
Green Lantern: Revenge of the Green Lanterns | Green Lantern vol. 4, #7-13 | HC: 1-4012-1167-4[119]
SC: 1-4012-0960-2[120] |
Green Lantern: Wanted: Hal Jordan | Green Lantern vol. 4, #14-20 | HC: 1-4012-1339-1[121]
SC: 1-4012-1590-4[122] |
Green Lantern Corps: To Be a Lantern | Green Lantern Corps vol. 2, #1-6 | SC: 1-4012-1356-1[123] |
Green Lantern Corps: The Dark Side of Green | Green Lantern Corps vol. 2, #7-13 | SC: 1-4352-5617-4[124] |
Sinestro Corps War Vol. 1 | Green Lantern vol. 4, #21-23; Green Lantern Corps (vol. 2) #14-15; Green Lantern: Sinestro Corps Special | HC: 1-4012-1650-1[125]
SC: 1-4012-1870-9[126] |
Sinestro Corps War Vol. 2 | Green Lantern vol. 4, #24-25; Green Lantern Corps vol. 2, #16-19 | HC: 1-4012-1800-8[127]
SC: 1-4012-2036-3[128] |
Tales of the Sinestro Corps Wars | Green Lantern: Sinestro Corps Special; Tales of the Sinestro Corps: Ion; Tales of the Sinestro Corps: Parallax; Tales of the Sinestro Corps: Cyborg Superman; Tales of the Sinestro Corps: Superman Prime; Green Lantern/Sinestro Corps Secret Files; back-up stories from Green Lantern #18-20 | HC: 1-4012-1801-6[129]
SC: 1-4012-2326-5[130] |
Green Lantern Corps: Ring Quest | Green Lantern Corps vol. 2, #19-20,23-26 | SC: 1-4012-1975-6[131] |
Green Lantern: Rage of the Red Lanterns | Green Lantern vol. 4, #26-28, 36-38; Final Crisis: Rage of the Red Lanterns | HC: 1-4012-2301-X[132] |
Green Lantern: Secret Origin | Green Lantern vol. 4, #29-35 | HC: 1-4012-1990-X[133] |
Green Lantern Corps: Sins of the Star Sapphire | Green Lantern Corps vol. 2, #27-32 | SC: 1-4012-2273-0[134] |
Green Lantern: Agent Orange | Green Lantern vol. 4, #39-42 | HC: 1-4012-2421-0 |
Green Lantern Corps: Emerald Eclipse | Green Lantern Corps vol. 2, #33-38 | HC: 1-4012-2528-4 |
During Blackest Night | ||
Blackest Night | Blackest Night #0-8 | HC: 1-4012-2693-0 |
Blackest Night: Green Lantern | Green Lantern vol. 4, #43-52 | HC: 1-4012-2786-4 |
Blackest Night: Green Lantern Corps | Green Lantern Corps vol. 2, #39-47 | HC: 1-4012-2788-0 |
During Brightest Day | ||
Brightest Day: Vol. 1 | Brightest Day #0-7 | HC: 1-4012-2966-2 |
Brightest Day: Vol. 2 | Brightest Day #8-16 | HC: 1-4012-3083-0 |
Brightest Day: Vol. 3 | Brightest Day #17-24 | HC: 1-4012-3216-7 |
Green Lantern: Brightest Day | Green Lantern #53-62 | HC: 1-4012-3181-0 |
See also
Footnotes
- ↑ "IGN's Top 100 Comic Book Heroes". Retrieved 9 July 2015.
- ↑ Schedeen, Jesse (2013-11-19). "The Top 25 Heroes of DC Comics". IGN. Retrieved 2015-11-01.
- ↑ comic book urban legends revealed #148, comicbookresources.com
- 1 2 3 4 5 Wells, John (December 2010). "Green Lantern/Green Arrow: And Through Them Change an Industry". Back Issue!. TwoMorrows Publishing (45): 39–54.
- ↑ Green Lantern/Green Arrow #1 (October 1983)
- ↑ Zimmerman, Dwight Jon (August 1986). "Denny O'Neil". Comics Interview (35). Fictioneer Books. pp. 22–37.
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 3) #46
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 3) #48
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 3) #50
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 3) #100
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 3) #105
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 3) #106
- ↑ Day of Judgment at the Grand Comics Database
- ↑ Identity Crisis #4 (October 2004)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 4) #1 (May 2005)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 4) #2 (June 2005)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 4) #3 (August 2005)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 4) #4 (August 2005)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 4) #5 (November 2005)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 4) #6 (December 2005)
- ↑ Infinite Crisis #6
- ↑ Infinite Crisis #7
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 4) #17 (November 2006)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 4) #29 (March 2008)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 4) #30 (April 2008)
- ↑ Green Lantern Sinestro Corps Special
- ↑ Final Crisis #1
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 4) #42 (June 2009)
- ↑ Brave and the Bold (vol. 3) #2
- ↑ Justice League: Cry for Justice #1 (July 2009)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 4) #65
- ↑ Green Lantern Corps (vol. 2) #59
- ↑ Green Lantern: Emerald Warriors #9
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 4) #66 (June 2011)
- ↑ Green Lantern Emerald Warriors #10 (May 2011)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 4) #67 (July 2011)
- ↑ War of the Green Lanterns: Aftermath #1 (July 2011)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 5) #1 (September 2011)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 5) #2 (October 2011)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 5) #3 (November 2011)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 5) #4 (December 2011)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 5) #5 (January 2012)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 5) #6 (February 2012)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 5) #7 (March 2012)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 5) #8 (April 2012)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 5) #9 (May 2012)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 5) #10 (June 2012)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 5) #11 (July 2012)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 5) #12 (August 2012)
- ↑ Green Lantern Annual #1 (August 2012)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 5) #0 (September 2012)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 5) #14 (November 2012)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 5) #16 (January 2013)
- ↑ Green Lantern (vol. 5) #18 (March 2013)
- 1 2 Green Lantern (vol. 5) #20 (May 2013)
- ↑ Justice League vol. 2, #1 (August 2011)
- ↑ Justice League vol. 2, #2 (October 2011)
- ↑ Justice League vol. 2, #5 (January 2012)
- ↑ Justice League vol. 2, #12 (August 2012)
- ↑ Hal Jordan and the Green Lantern Corps: Rebirth one-shot (July 2016)
- ↑ Action Comics #856
- 1 2 Countdown: Arena #2
- ↑ JLA: Age of Wonder #1
- ↑ DC: The New Frontier #4
- ↑ Superman: Red Son 3
- ↑ JLA: The Nail #1-3
- ↑ Green Lantern: Evil's Might #2
- ↑ Superman and Batman: Generations 2 #2
- ↑ All Star Batman and Robin the Boy Wonder #9
- ↑ The Dark Knight Strikes Again #3
- ↑ Dark Knight Universe Presents: Green Lantern #1
- ↑ Justice League of America (vol. 2) #50 (2010)
- ↑ Flashpoint: Hal Jordan #1 (June 2011)
- ↑ Flastpoint: Abin Sur - The Green Lantern #2 (July 2011)
- ↑ Flashpoint: Hal Jordan #2 (July 2011)
- ↑ Flashpoint #4 (August 2011)
- ↑ Flashpoint: Hal Jordan #3 (August 2011)
- ↑ Green Lantern: Futures End #1
- ↑ Star Trek/Green Lantern: The Spectrum War #3
- ↑ Star Trek/Green Lantern: The Spectrum War #1
- ↑ Star Trek/Green Lantern: The Spectrum War #6
- ↑ Convergence: Green Lantern/Parallax #1–2
- ↑ Convergence #7
- ↑ Convergence #8
- ↑ DC Bombshells #4
- ↑ G-Man (2010-07-24). "Comic-Con: Brave and the Bold & Young Justice Panel". Comic Vine. Retrieved 2010-07-26.
- ↑ http://www.comicscontinuum.com/stories/1104/07/index.htm
- ↑ https://twitter.com/joshkeaton/status/756242632913723392
- ↑ Ryan Reynolds is the "Green Lantern", Variety, July 10, 2009
- ↑
- ↑ McGloin, Matt (December 5, 2015). "WB SHOWS OFF GREEN LANTERN CORPS CONCEPT ART AGAIN FEATURING HAL JORDAN & JOHN STEWART". Cosmic Book News.
- ↑ Vieira, Anthony (December 5, 2015). "Green Lantern Corps Concept Art Showed Hal Jordan & John Stewart". Screen Rant.
- ↑ https://twitter.com/LEGOBatmanGame/status/491242911111970816/photo/1
- ↑ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K3m1dQjIaWo
- ↑ Green Lantern Archives: Volume 1 at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Green Lantern Archives: Volume 2 at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Green Lantern Archives: Volume 3 at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Green Lantern Archives: Volume 4 at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Green Lantern Archives: Volume 5 at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Green Lantern Archives: Volume 6 at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Green Lantern Chronicles: Volume 1 at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Showcase Presents: Green Lantern: Volume 1 at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Showcase Presents: Green Lantern: Volume 2 at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Showcase Presents: Green Lantern: Volume 3 at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Showcase Presents: Green Lantern: Volume 4 at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Green Lantern/Green Arrow: Volume 1 at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Green Lantern/Green Arrow: Volume 2 at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Green Lantern: The Road Back at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Emerald Dawn at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Emerald Dawn II at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Emerald Knights at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Willworld hardcover at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Willworld softcover at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Green Lantern: Rebirth hardcover at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Green Lantern: Rebirth softcover at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Green Lantern: No Fear softcover at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Green Lantern: No Fear softcover at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Green Lantern Corps: Recharge at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Revenge of the Green Lantern hardcover at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Revenge of the Green Lantern softcover at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Wanted: Hal Jordan hardcover at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Wanted: Hal Jordan softcover at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Green Lantern Corps: To Be a Lantern at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Green Lantern Corps: The Dark Side of Green at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Sinestro Corps War: Volume 1 hardcover, at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Sinestro Corps War: Volume 1 softcover, at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Sinestro Corps War: Volume 2 hardcover, at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Sinestro Corps War: Volume 2 softcover, at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Green Lantern: Tales of the Sinestro Corps hardcover at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Green Lantern: Tales of the Sinestro Corps softcover at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Green Lantern Corps: Ring Quest at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Rage of the Red Lanterns at DC Comics.com
- ↑ Green Lantern: Secret Origin hardcover
- ↑ Green Lantern Corps: Sins of the Star Sapphire at DC Comics.com
References
- Daniels, Les DC Comics: Sixty Years of the World’s Favorite Comic Book Heroes. Boston, MA: Bulfinch, 1995. ISBN 0-8212-2076-4
- O'Neil, Dennis "Introduction by Dennis O'Neil". Green Lantern/Green Arrow Volume One. Ed. Robert Greenberger. New York, NY: DC Comics, 2000. ISBN 1-4012-0224-1
- Giordano, Dick "Introduction by Dick Giordano". Green Lantern/Green Arrow: More Hard-Traveling Heroes. Ed. Robert Greenberger. New York, NY: DC Comics, 1993. ISBN 1-56389-086-0
- Lawrence, Christopher "Neal Adams". Wizard. Sept. 2003.
- Casey, Todd "Green Mile". Wizard. Nov. 2004.
External links
- Green Lantern (Hal Jordan) at the Comic Book DB
- Hal Jordan at the Internet Movie Database
- Official Green Lantern (Hal Jordan) Website
- Green Lantern (1959) at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on August 29, 2016.
- Brady, Matt (January 22, 2007). "Geoff Johns, Amon Sur, and Everything Green Lantern". Newsarama.com. Archived from the original on January 28, 2007.
- Green Lantern's (Hal Jordan's) origin @ dccomics.com
- Bio at the Unofficial Green Lantern Corps Webpage