General Wade Eiling
{{short description|DC Comics villain}}
{{confuse|General (DC Comics)}}
{{Infobox comics character
|character_name = General Wade Eiling
|image = Wade Eiling (DC Comics character).jpg
|converted = y
|caption = General Wade Eiling as depicted in Who's Who Update '88 #4 (January 1995).
Art by Pat Broderick.
|publisher = DC Comics
|debut = Captain Atom #1 (March 1987)
|creators = Cary Bates
Pat Broderick
|alter_ego = Wade Eiling
|species =
|homeworld =
|alliances = Suicide Squad
The Society
Injustice Gang
United States Army
|partners =
|aliases = The General
Shaggy Man
|supports =
|powers =
- Superhuman strength, stamina, durability, speed, and sense of smell
- Regeneration
- Military expertise
|cat = super
|subcat = DC Comics
|villain = y
|sortkey = Eiling, Wade
}}
General Wade Eiling, sometimes known as The General, is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. He is a prominent military general who contributed to Nathaniel Adam's transformation into Captain Atom and later becomes a supervillain after transferring his brain into Shaggy Man's body.
Eiling appears in The Flash, portrayed by Clancy Brown, and Justice League Unlimited, voiced by J. K. Simmons. In the latter series, he is a member of Project Cadmus who later transforms into a monstrous form reminiscent of Shaggy Man using a World War II-era super-serum.
Publication history
Wade Eiling first appeared in Captain Atom #1 (March 1987) and was created by Cary Bates and Pat Broderick.{{Citation | last = Jimenez | first = Phil | author-link = Phil Jimenez | contribution = General, The | editor-last = Dougall | editor-first = Alastair | title = The DC Comics Encyclopedia | pages = 135 | publisher = Dorling Kindersley | place = New York | year = 2008 | isbn = 978-0-7566-4119-1 | oclc = 213309017}}
Fictional character biography
Wade Eiling is a military tactician who blackmails the accused Nathaniel Adam into participating in the atomic experiment that turns Nathaniel into the nuclear being Captain Atom, and causes Adam to disappear for 18 years.
During Adam's disappearance, Eiling marries Adam's wife and raises his two children. Following Adam's return, Eiling manipulates him into serving the military.
Eiling is later diagnosed with an inoperable brain tumor, recovers the body of the first Shaggy Man, and transfers his brain into it to save himself. Eiling battles the Justice League before they transport him to the asteroid 433 Eros.{{cite thesis |last=Lloyd |first=John |title=Exploring the Dynamics of Relationships and Emotional Processes of Comic Book Characters for Potential Implications in Family Therapy: A Content Analysis Approach |date=May 2020 |access-date=December 31, 2020 |type=PhD |url=https://twu-ir.tdl.org/handle/11274/12437 |page=81}}JLA #24 (December 1998)
Eiling is later rescued and joins Lex Luthor's Injustice Gang. In Infinite Crisis, Eiling joins Alexander Luthor Jr.'s Secret Society of Super-Villains.Infinite Crisis #3 (February 2006)Infinite Crisis #7 (June 2006)
Eiling later joins the Suicide Squad. After he betrays the team to their intended target, Rick Flag detonates a bomb implanted in Eiling's head. His head regenerates, but he is rendered amnesiac.Suicide Squad (vol. 3) #8 (June 2008)
Eiling is reintroduced in The New 52 continuity reboot, where he uses Captain Atom as a weapon.Captain Atom (vol. 3) #3 - 4 (January - February 2012) He also appears in the series The Fury of Firestorm: The Nuclear Men, where he opposes the eponymous hero.The Fury of Firestorm: The Nuclear Men #15 (February 2013)
Powers and abilities
Other versions
The General appears in JLA/Avengers #4 as a brainwashed minion of Krona.JLA/Avengers #4 (February 2004)
In other media
=Television=
- General Wade Eiling appears in Justice League Unlimited, voiced by J. K. Simmons.{{cite web |title=Wade Eiling Voices (DC Universe) |url=https://www.behindthevoiceactors.com/characters/DC-Universe/Wade-Eiling/ |access-date=May 19, 2024 |publisher=Behind The Voice Actors}} A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its credits or other reliable sources of information. This version is an Air Force General and member of Project Cadmus who regards metahumans as a threat to humanity. Following Cadmus' disbandment, he is relegated to a "pencil pusher". Upon learning that his former superior Amanda Waller no longer considers the Justice League a threat, Eiling injects himself with Captain Nazi's super-soldier serum and transforms into a monster. He battles the Justice League before being convinced to surrender, but vows to return if the League becomes a threat.
- General Wade Eiling appears in Young Justice, voiced by Jeff Bennett.
- General Wade Eiling appears in The Flash, portrayed by Clancy Brown.{{cite web |last=Ng |first=Philiana |date=August 8, 2014 |title=The Flash Recruits Sleepy Hollow Actor as DC Heavy Hitter (Exclusive) |url=http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/live-feed/flash-clancy-brown-wade-eiling-724233 |access-date=August 8, 2014 |work=The Hollywood Reporter}}{{cite book |last=Egan |first=James |title=1000 Facts About TV Shows Vol. 1 |publisher=Lulu Publishing Services |date=2016 |isbn=9781326660536 |chapter=The Flash 2014}} This version is a U.S. Army major general who worked with S.T.A.R. Labs five years prior to the series to develop a means of creating psychic interrogators until Harrison Wells learned he was abusing the program's test subject Grodd and broke ties with him.
- General Wade Eiling makes a non-speaking cameo appearance in the My Adventures with Superman episode "Two Lanes Diverged".
=Video games=
General Wade Eiling as the General appears in the Nintendo DS version of Justice League Heroes.
=Miscellaneous=
- General Wade Eiling as the General appears in issue #5 of the Justice League Unlimited tie-in comic.
- General Wade Eiling appears in the Young Justice tie-in comic.
Reception and analysis
The Slings & Arrows Comic Guide found that in the character of General Wade Eiling the comic had created "an appalling specimen of military pigheadedness who can justify every iniquitous piece of behaviour under the blanket of national security".{{cite book |editor-last=Plowright |editor-first=Frank |title=The Slings & Arrows Comic Guide |publisher=Slings & Arrows |date=2003 |isbn=978-0954458904 |page=108}} The Supervillain Book summed up Eiling's character as an "immoral soldier".{{cite book |editor1-last=Misiroglu |editor-first=Gina Renée |editor2-last=Eury |editor2-first=Michael |title=The Supervillain Book: The Evil Side of Comics and Hollywood |publisher=Visible Ink Press |date=2006 |isbn=978-1578591787}}
According to George A. Gonzalez, the Justice League Unlimited incarnation of Eiling represents the negative side of "aggressive military policies of the 2000s" by the US government, like "wanton violence" and "fixation on 'power' (i.e. military force)". Through his deliberate transformation into "a huge, hideous, grayish monster with superpowers", Eiling "embodies the ugliness of militarism".{{cite journal|last=Gonzalez|first=George A|date=2016|title=Justice League Unlimited and the Politics of Globalization|url=http://fanac.org/fanzines/Foundation/Foundation123.pdf|journal=Foundation: The International Review of Science Fiction|volume=45|issue=123|pages=5–13}} Eiling also serves as an example of the development of comics over the decades: While in the 1940s and 50s comic heroes were "unabashed patriots", in the figure of General Eiling from the 2000s they fight against a representative of a misunderstood patriotism that values the reputation of the nation-state higher than the lives of any number of civilians.
Markus Engelns gives a different characterization of Eiling based on the World War III storyline, in a later stage in the character's development: Eiling no longer has his function as a general and has lost any discernable motive beyond fighting, which emphasizes his dangerous nature even more.{{cite journal |last=Engelns |first=Markus |date=2009-09-07 |title=Der Dritte Weltkrieg als Reifeprüfung |url=https://www.medienobservationen.de/artikel/comics/comics_pdf/engelns_weltkrieg.pdf |journal=Medien Observationen |access-date=2020-12-14}}
References
{{reflist}}
{{Captain Atom}}
{{Justice League characters}}
{{Justice Society of America}}
{{Suicide Squad}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Eiling, Wade}}
Category:Characters created by Cary Bates
Category:Characters created by Pat Broderick
Category:Comics characters introduced in 1987
Category:DC Comics characters who can move at superhuman speeds
Category:DC Comics characters with accelerated healing
Category:DC Comics characters with superhuman durability or invulnerability
Category:DC Comics characters with superhuman senses
Category:DC Comics characters with superhuman strength
Category:DC Comics military personnel
Category:DC Comics television characters
Category:Fictional major generals