World Comic Book Review

26th March 2024

Deathstroke #1 (review)

Deathstroke #1 (review)
DC Comics, September 2016
Writer: Christopher Priest

American publisher DC Comics has from time to time published the adventures of an arch-villain, an assassin named “Deathstroke” (originally, “Deathstroke the Terminator”, the epithet pre-dating the first James Cameron-directed “Terminator” motion picture by four years, in 1980).

Colonel Slade Wilson is a mercenary with superpowers – enhanced strength and reflexes. His actions caused his eldest son to have his throat slit rendering him mute (the character later turned up as a forgettable superhero then villain named “Jericho”) and his younger son decided to follow his father into the mercenary business, to his doom. Repulsed by his actions, Wilson’s wife endeavoured to shoot him in the head at point blank range, but Wilson’s super fast reflexes resulted only in the loss of an eye. Deathstroke’s iconic mask, the right hemisphere entirely black, reflects this partial blindness. To paraphrase another character, Deathstroke is so competent at his job that he doesn’t mind conveying the message that his right eye is missing through the symbolism of his mask.

In this first issue by writer Christopher Priest, Deathstroke is on a mission in what looks suspiciously like South Sudan. An aged and apparently terminally ill super villain called Clock King is holed up under the protection of a local warlord. Deathstroke has been commissioned by the families of Clock King’s victims to assassinate him. Deathstroke is distracted from that task by learning this his best friend and long-time butler/handler Wintergreen is nearby.

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