Ninjas

From Superhero Wiki Encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Home Books Clothing DVDs Posters Toys Video Games
Boards
Comic Book News

Comic Conventions
Clips and Trailers
Gallery
Features
Link to us

Online Comic Books
Resources
Store
Superhero Wiki
Wallpaper
Poster Sale Selection

Contents

Comic books

Marvel Universe

Marvel Universe

In the Marvel Comics' universe, ninja have been featured as exotic antagonists and allies, such as the White Ninja from Spider-Man, Ghost Rider's foe Death Ninja, Wolverine's mentor Ogun, Punisher's friend Katherine Yakamoto, or the original owner of Psylocke's Asian body, Revanche (Kwannon). In the Marvel Mangaverse, Spider-Man is the last member of a clan of ninja.

The Hand
A sinister ninja cult called The Hand is prominently featured in several comic series, particularly X-Men and Daredevil. The Hand and their associates were responsible for the martial training of Psylocke, Kitty Pryde, Elektra, Wolverine, and Daredevil.

GI Joe

GI Joe

The GI Joe series of comic books featured ninja far more than the cartoon series, and many story arcs revolved around Scarlett, Snake-Eyes, Storm Shadow, Jinx, Kamakura, Firefly and the Arishikage ninja clan, which consisted of an extended family of ninja characters (never featured in the toyline or cartoon). Other characters in the comic who received ninja training from the Arishkage clan and their associates were Cobra Commander's son Billy and the shapeshifter Zartan.

The massive popularity of the ninja characters completely overtook the more conventional army characters, and creator Larry Hama was pressured by Hasbro to create more ninja for the series.

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles

In the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (TMNT) series, all four main characters and many of their friends and foes are ninja, including the deadly Foot Clan (pastiche of Marvel's The Hand).

The comic archived a massive popularity in the 1980s and early 1990s, which resulted in a franchise of four movies, three animated series, numerous video games, and a wide range of toys and merchandise.

DC Universe

Characters with the sort of mystical and superhuman martial arts abilities attributed to the ninja occur in the DC Universe. One character who is portrayed in a fashion similar to a ninja is master martial artist and assassin Lady Shiva. The most recent Batgirl, Cassandra Cain, also has the qualities of the Western perception of a ninja.

The retconned stealth and martial arts training of the recent Batman incarnations, condensed in the Batman origin film, Batman Begins, has led many latter day Batman fans to assume, falsely,Template:Fact that Batman is a ninja. In fact, the various martial arts training sessions Batman or Bruce Wayne underwent were never explicitly associated with ninja or ninjutsu - rather, the association is likely the product of the Western proclivity to regard all black clad martial artists or employers of stealth as ninja.

Other

Empowered
Livewires
One of the main characters is Hollowpoint Ninja.
Kabuki
The series concerning a member of a government-backed circle of masked and costumed female assassins in the near-future Japan.
Mail Order Ninja
Original English-language manga book.
Mortal Kombat
Based on a series of video games featuring numerous ninja and ninja-like characters.
Ninja High School
A ninja/furry comedy series.
Ninjak
Nth Man: The Ultimate Ninja
A comic about an American ninja during the World War III.
Shi
Comic series about the modern-day "shadow war" between descendents of the warrior monks of medieval Japan.
Sin City
A noir-like graphic novel series by Frank Miller featuring a ninja woman named Miho.
The Tick
The Tick fights ninja enemies and has a female ninja ally. In the Tick's universe, most ninjas in America are generally bumbling characters who are seen as more of a nuisance than a threat. Their lair is a ninja-themed amusement park.
Usagi Yojimbo
Features various ninja in it. The major clans being the, Neko ninja, Mogura ninja, and the Komori ninja.
Zen the Intergalactic Ninja

Minor roles

Personal tools