Chase (comics)

Chase was a comic book series published by DC Comics. It was written by Dan Curtis Johnson, illustrated by J.H. Williams III[1] and inked by Mick Gray. It lasted ten issues (including a special #1,000,000 issue). The character of Cameron Chase first appeared in Batman #550 (January 1998) written by Doug Moench and drawn by Kelley Jones. The Batman appearance was used to promote the upcoming series.

Cameron Chase
Artwork for the cover of Chase vol. 1, #1 (February 1998 DC Comics) 
Art by J.H. Williams III
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceBatman #550 (January 1998)
Created byDan Curtis Johnson (writer)
J.H. Williams III (artist)
In-story information
Alter egoCameron Chase
Team affiliationsDepartment of Extranormal Operations
Suicide Squad
Global Peace Agency
AbilitiesNegates metahuman talents
Chase
Cameron Chase on the cover of Chase vol. 1 #1,
art by J.H. Williams III.
Series publication information
Schedulevol. 1: Monthly
FormatOngoing series
Publication datevol. 1: February 1998 – November 1998
Number of issuesvol. 1: 10
Main character(s)Department of Extranormal Operations
Suicide Squad
Global Peace Agency
Creative team
Writer(s)Daniel Curtis Johnson
J.H. Williams, III
Doug Moench
Penciller(s)J.H. Williams, III
Robert P Hall
Eric Canete
Diego Barreto
Greg Scott
Yanick Paquette
Kelley Jones
Rick Burchett
Charlie Adlard
Inker(s)John Beatty
Mick Gray
Shawn Martinbrough
Rick Burchett
Charlie Adlard
Colorist(s)J.H. Williams, III
Gregory Wright
Tom McCraw
Digital Chameleon
Lee Loughridge
Kelley Jones

The original Chase series was reprinted in graphic novel form in December 2011.

Fictional character biography

The series focused on Cameron Chase, an agent of the Department of Extranormal Operations tasked with monitoring and neutralizing metahuman threats to national security. A New York City resident and former private detective, Chase was actively recruited by Director Bones, head of the DEO's Northeastern division.[2][3]

Doctor Trap kills the Acro-Bat

.

Trauma

Cameron was the eldest daughter of Walter Chase. Walter led a secret second life as the little-known hero called the Acro-Bat who led of a team of altruistic, but inexperienced, heroes known as the Justice Experience. Walter was murdered by a deranged ex-scientist named Doctor Trap, who used his cybernetic jaws to tear the hero's throat out.

Doctor Trap was in reality Larry Trapp, a man who had lost his girlfriend Caroline Anders due to a public battle between the Justice Experience and their archenemies, the House of Pain, and blamed her death on all involved. Trap thereupon set about trapping and killing the members of both teams. Trap left Acro-Bat's body on the kitchen floor of the Chase family's home, where a young Cameron found it first. Her father's murder deeply scarred Cameron Chase, and left her with a deep hatred of superbeings.[4]

Assignments

Cameron has since been assigned to a number of cases, including one involving the Suicide Squad and Russian Mafiya-controlled Rocket Reds in issues #2 and #3, a job watching the Teen Titans in issue #4, and the Cult of the Broken Circle in issue #5. While watching the Titans, she works with Booster Gold and Firehawk to stop an attack from the Clock King and his Clockwatchers. Her most noteworthy case involved her attempts to ascertain the true identity of the Batman, as seen in Chase #7-8. She also discovered the alternate lives employed by the shape-changing Martian Manhunter while working under Director Bones after searching for answers about the link between John Jones and the Martian Manhunter, and after examining varying statements from witnesses of a suspicious battle between J'onn J'onzz and the metacriminal Ron Gomz. She was completely unaware that she was closer to the Martian Manhunter than she would have liked to be, though he would later save her life when Doctor Trap attempted to kill her.

Cameron appeared as a supporting character in Manhunter alongside her friend and former college roommate, Kate Spencer, a.k.a. Manhunter. She was briefly in a relationship with Kate's blackmailed assistant, Dylan Battles.[3] In Manhunter #27 (January 2007), it is revealed that Doctor Trap is still alive and has kidnapped Terry. Eventually, Cameron finds Terry tied up in a wax museum with a piece of duct tape covering her mouth, furiously attempting to scream something to her beneath her gag. When Cameron removes the tape from Terry's mouth, she learns that the whole kidnapping was a setup, and is brutally attacked by Trap. At the last moment, both Cameron and Terry are saved by the timely intervention of Dylan Battles, wearing a version of the supervillain Firefly's napalm-suit.

The New 52

Director Bones eventually sends Chase to Gotham City in order to capture Batwoman, who is being investigated by the D.E.O. for possible connections to a terrorist cell.[5] During her investigation, she discovers that Beth Kane has been resurrected, and brings her to the D.E.O.[6] Chase attempts to arrest Batwoman during a confrontation at the Gotham waterfront, but Batwoman escapes after breaking's one of Cameron's arms.[7]

DC Rebirth

Chase reappears as the Director of the D.E.O., helping Supergirl recover her powers in exchange for the latter to collaborate with the Department and its missions.[8]

Powers and abilities

  • Cameron can dampen the superhuman talents of any metahuman within her sphere of influence when she is threatened. This ability appears to be subconscious.
  • Cameron is proficient in the use of a handgun, and is a skilled investigator.
  • She is also an excellent computer hacker.

In other media

Television

Cameron Chase appears in the TV series Supergirl, portrayed by Emma Caulfield. After Winslow Schott Sr. escaped from prison Cameron Chase along with several other FBI Agents went to CatCo Worldwide Media looking for Winslow Schott Jr. seeking to find out whether his father had contacted him or not. Though Winn denied his father contacting him to Chase after she thoroughly questioned him, when Cameron went to inform him that she was leaving an Agent with him just in case his father showed up, he revealed to her that his father had in actuality contacted him that morning. Chase then had Winn wear a wire when he went to go talk to his father at the arcade, barging in with her team when they had eyes on the senior Schott in the arcade. Inside, Chase demanded that Toyman put his hands up, though the latter refused causing Chase to order for her agents to open fire on him. While shooting him, they realized that it was projection of Schott, and not Schott himself. Soon after poison gas began to come out of several toys, though Supergirl arrived, sucking in the poison gas with her super breath, then flew up into the sky to release it. Afterwards, Agent Chase questioned Winn on several of the statements his father had made, though she was called away to look at something by another agent. The next day, Chase searched Winn's desk after he went missing on the day of the National City Toy Con, as she believed that Winn and his father might be working together. Later at the Toy Con, Agent Chase and her associates fired their guns at Winn after attempted to kill Chester Dunholtz, though he decided against it, firing in another direction.

Miscellaneous

A female, African-American Cameron Chase is featured in the Smallville Season 11 digital comic based on the TV series where she battles threats like Prometheus and Felix Faust. [9]

Awards

References

  1. Smith, Zack (November 3, 2006). "Chasing The Past: Looking Back on "Chase" with Johnson". Comic Book Resources.
  2. "The Unofficial Chase Biography". Dcuguide.com. Retrieved 2016-01-08.
  3. Wallace, Dan (2008). "Chase, Cameron". In Dougall, Alastair (ed.). The DC Comics Encyclopedia. New York: Dorling Kindersley. p. 78. ISBN 0-7566-4119-5. OCLC 213309017.
  4. Cowsill, Alan; Irvine, Alex; Korte, Steve; Manning, Matt; Wiacek, Win; Wilson, Sven (2016). The DC Comics Encyclopedia: The Definitive Guide to the Characters of the DC Universe. DK Publishing. p. 66. ISBN 978-1-4654-5357-0.
  5. Batwoman #1 (September 2011)
  6. Batwoman Vol. 2 #20 (July 2013).
  7. Batwoman #3 (November 2011)
  8. Supergirl: Rebirth #1 (August 2016)
  9. Smallville: Lantern #2
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.