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Hank Hall
Hawk and Dove2.jpg
Hank Hall as Hawk. Cover by Rob Liefeld.
Publication information
Publisher DC Comics
First appearance As Hawk:
Showcase #75 (1967)
As Monarch:
Armageddon 2001 #1 (1991)
As Extant:
Zero Hour #4
Created by Hank Hall/Hawk:
Steve Ditko
Steve Skeates
Monarch/Extant:
Archie Goodwin
Denny O'Neil
Dan Jurgens
In-story information
Alter ego Henry "Hank" Hall
Team affiliations Hawk and Dove
Teen Titans
Black Lantern Corps
Notable aliases Hawk, Extant, Monarch
Abilities Superhuman strength speed and stamina, Invulnerability, (As Extant) Time travel, Chronokinesis, Energy Blasts, Flight, Nigh-Omniscient

Hank Hall is a fictional character in the DC Comics universe who first appeared in Showcase #75 as Hawk of Hawk and Dove. He later became the supervillain Monarch in the crossover event limited series Armageddon 2001. He later became known as Extant, and appeared in the Zero Hour limited series (as well as some related tie-ins).[1]

Contents

[edit] Fictional character history

[edit] Hawk and Dove

Hank Hall was originally the superhero Hawk, of Hawk and Dove. Hawk represented "chaos", while Dove represented "order." His brother, Don Hall, the original Dove, died during Crisis on Infinite Earths. Don was replaced with Dawn Granger, who mysteriously acquired her powers in London.[1]

[edit] Armageddon 2001: Monarch

Monarch was an oppressive tyrant from a bleak, dystopian Earth fifty years in the future. The people were unhappy with his rule, particularly a scientist named Matthew Ryder, an expert on temporal studies, who was convinced he could use his technology to travel back in time and prevent the maniacal ruler from ever coming to power. He learned that forty years ago, one of Earth's heroes would eventually turn evil and become Monarch, and ten years from that would conquer the world. During a time travel experiment, Matthew was transformed into a being called "Waverider", and began searching the timestream for the hero who would become Monarch, not knowing that Monarch was following him. When Monarch came into battle with the heroes of the present day, he killed Dove, and her enraged partner killed him for it. Removing the villain's mask, Hank discovered that he was Monarch, and donned the armor.[1]

[edit] Armageddon: The Alien Agenda

When hostile aliens encounter Monarch and Atom in the past (sometime between 230 and 65 million years ago), they attempt to enlist both (without either's knowledge) to assist them in creating a wormhole. The wormhole's creation would destroy the universe in which the primitive Earth existed, but would allow the aliens to travel freely.

[edit] Zero Hour: Extant

Shortly after returning to the present, Monarch confronted Waverider and used his power to see past and future to become aware of the power within him. It is explained at this point, that when Monarch killed Dove, her powers went directly into Hawk. Realising this, Monarch unleashes his hidden powers to become Extant. Extant removes the Waveriders time-traveling device and joins forces with renegade Green Lantern Hal Jordan, now known as Parallax, in a plan to alter time as they saw fit (as seen in Zero Hour).[1]

His first act was to alter the future so that he could have a meta-human army at his disposal, mostly consisting of members of the Teen Titans; his plan was to amass an army so powerful that no one could interfere with his efforts to control time itself. Several heroes banded together to stop his plans before they began in the 30th century, and altered history so that his followers never came to exist in the future.

Down, but not out, Extant began to strike back at the heroes at Ground Zero, the beginning of time. Parallax had warped several meta-humans from various time periods together for the ultimate assault, and Extant hit the Atom with a chronal blast, de-aging him into a teenager. Sensing defeat was imminent, he escaped the fight, only to engage the Justice Society on a later date as he sought to acquire the reality-warping power of the Worlogog, recently dismantled by Hourman because he feared its power. Although Extant succeeded in his goal with the aid of Metron's stolen Mobius Chair, Doctor Fate learned from the imprisoned Mordru that when Hourman had dismantled the Worlogog, he had retained a small fragment of it, thus creating infinitesimal flaw in the prime Worlogog that the JSA could exploit.

After the resurrected Dove sacrificed herself to distract Extant, Hourman divided his Hour of Power amongst his teammates, thus granting them all immunity to his reality warping powers for four minutes, each of them attacking him on a different temporal plane until they were able to separate him from the Worlogog. Following this setback, Extant again attempted to escape. Instead, Extant was teleported by Hourman and Metron, at Atom-Smasher's behest, into the seat of an airplane whose crash Kobra had caused earlier (in his relative timestream). As a result of this, Atom-Smasher's mother was saved- she was on the plane when it crashed-, but Atom Smasher replaced his mother with a weakened Extant, saving her life but murdering the supervillain. Extant is believed to have died as a result, and, indeed, his appearance as a zombie in Teen Titans #31 (2006) (alongside his brother Don) would seem to confirm his death.

Extant made an appearance in Booster Gold (vol. 2) #0 (2008), in a time travel adventure where Booster Gold crosses paths with Extant in the time-stream during the events of Zero Hour.

[edit] Extreme Justice: Captain Atom

In the Justice League spinoff, Extreme Justice, a new version of Monarch was introduced, but he now had the identity of Nathaniel Adam, better known as Captain Atom. He revealed that Captain Atom was actually a copy of him, created as a side-effect of the process that trapped him in the timestream.

[edit] Blackest Night

In the Blackest Night crossover, Hank Hall reanimated as a member of the undead Black Lantern Corps. The black power rings also try to reanimated his brother Don, but are denied; stating "Don Hall of Earth at Peace."[2] Hank then tracks down and attacks Dawn and the new Hawk, her sister Holly. After a short battle, Hank rams his hand into Holly's chest, ripping her heart out, and using it to charge his ring.[3] Holly's body is then revived by a black ring, and the two attack Dawn together. Outmatched, Dawn retreats, with Hank and Holly giving chase.[4] Hank and Holly follow Dawn to Titans Tower, where more Black Lantern Titans are attacking the living heroes. The two eventually overwhelm Dawn, with Holly plunging her hand into Dawn's chest. Dawn suddenly radiates a white energy that completely destroys Holly's body and ring. The others Black Lanterns seeing Dawn as their greatest threat attack her, however she turns the light on them, destroying all but Hank, Tempest and Terra, who quickly retreat.[5]

[edit] Powers

Whether he is Monarch or Extant, Hank Hall possesses the same superpowers: enhanced strength and speed. Without his partner Dove to suppress his violent nature, his rage is boundless. His armor, crafted using advanced technology, is highly durable. After absorbing the powers of Waverider, he became Extant, giving him the ability to travel through time and control time. After piecing together the Worlogog, Extant was elevated to a nigh-omnipotent, god-like status, only lacking a slight fraction of the power necessary to be truly omnipotent.

As a member of the Black Lantern Corps, Hank wields a black power ring, which allows him to fly and generate black energy constructs. He is also able to perceive emotional auras. However, whilst he is able to perceive Holly's aura as red for rage, he sees Dawn's as a pure white that his ring cannot identify.

[edit] Monarch origin retcons

  • In order to explain why the irrational Hawk had become the evil but rational Monarch, some issues of Showcase revealed that a portion of Dove's ordered and rational soul had fused within Hank. This led to his change into Extant.
  • A second retcon, shown in JSA, revealed that Hall was possessed by Mordru, but when Mordru left Hank's body, he had already been corrupted and become evil.

[edit] Other versions

  • In the Elseworlds storyline JLA: The Nail, and its sequel JLA: Another Nail, a version of Hank Hall exists, alongside the original Dove.
  • Justice League of America (vol. 2) #26 features an alternate reality created by the trickster god Anansi. In this reality, an armored version of Hawk is seen.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d Greenberger, Robert (2008), "Extant", in Dougall, Alastair, The DC Comics Encyclopedia, New York: Dorling Kindersley, pp. 117, ISBN 0-7566-4119-5, OCLC 213309017 
  2. ^ Blackest Night #2 (August 2009)
  3. ^ Blackest Night: Titans #1 (August 2009)
  4. ^ Blackest Night: Titans #2 (September 2009)
  5. ^ Blackest Night: Titans #3 (October 2009)

[edit] Other sources




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