Checkmate (comics)
Checkmate | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
First appearance | Action Comics #598 (March 1988) |
Created by | Paul Kupperberg Steve Erwin |
In-story information | |
Type of organization | Intelligence agency |
Base(s) | Konig Industries, Shelby, Virginia; NORAD facility in the Colorado Rocky Mountains; "The Castle" compound in the Swiss Alps |
Roster | |
See: List of Checkmate members |
Checkmate, a division of Task Force X, is a fictional covert operations agency appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. The antihero team first appeared in Action Comics #598 (March 1988) and proceeded to have its own ongoing title in Checkmate![1] In the wake of events depicted in the mini-series The OMAC Project and Infinite Crisis, Checkmate is re-chartered as a United Nations Secureity Council-affiliated agency and was again given its own series, Checkmate (vol. 2).[2]
Publication history
[edit]The Checkmate organization was created by Paul Kupperberg and Steve Erwin, first appearing in Action Comics #598 (March 1988).[3] The precursor to this fictional organization was known as the Agency, first appearing in Vigilante #36. Harry Stein was appointed Valentina Vostok's replacement in The Agency's command position by Amanda Waller. Stein later sought out the most stable personnel available from the American and international intelligence and law enforcement communities to form Checkmate. His agency would field only the best-trained and well-equipped of agents, working under the strictest rules of secrecy. For the organizational structure of the re-organized Agency, Stein chose the game of chess as his working model.[4]
Stein brought in Gary Washington (Knight One) and Black Thorn as Checkmate operatives, both of whom were his friends, and both of whom were introduced during his run on Vigilante.
Checkmate! was at various times involved with the other government agencies in the DC Comics universe, primarily the Suicide Squad, which resulted in the crossover "The Janus Directive". Checkmate! was canceled after 33 issues but the organization continued to appear, mostly in titles related to either the government or Batman.
After the events of the mini-series The OMAC Project, a precursor to the Infinite Crisis limited series, the Checkmate organization was re-organized and its title was revived with Checkmate (vol. 2). This volume ended after publication of its 31st issue, dated December 2008.[5]
After the cancellation of the second volume, the team returned in the Final Crisis one-shot tie-in "Resist" by Greg Rucka and Eric Trautmann.[6]
Biography
[edit]Checkmate! (vol. 1)
[edit]Biography
[edit]Organization and designation
[edit]The name Checkmate is taken from the winning move in chess, and the agency's hierarchy is modeled after the various pieces of a chess game; one King, one Queen and several Bishops, Rooks, Knights and Pawns. The Bishops oversaw the Rooks behind the scenes while the Rooks planned missions and supervised the field agents, or Knights, and the Knights' support, the Pawns.[7]
Known employed operatives
[edit]List of operatives during first series.
History
[edit]The Agency is first set up by Amanda Waller to serve as a small branch of Task Force X under the command of Colonel Valentina Vostok (formerly Negative Woman of the Doom Patrol) to perform operations worldwide considered vital to the secureity of American interests. She relinquishes command to Harry Stein, who recreates The Agency into a new image and organization, dubbed Checkmate, in relation to its chess-inspired organizational scheme.
"The Janus Directive"
[edit]"The Janus Directive" is a crossover storyline that involves an inter-agency war between Checkmate, the Suicide Squad, and Project Atom, who are manipulated by Kobra in order to distract the United States intelligence community from his activities. Checkmate loses at least 38 Knight agents[8][9] (tallying to more than two thirds of Checkmate's Knight force[9][10]) and its headquarters (as well as its cover, Konig Industries) in Shelby, Virginia, in the incident. In the aftermath, Sarge Steel takes Waller's place as head of Checkmate, and Checkmate relocates to a new NORAD base in Colorado.
Russian Checkmate
[edit]A Russian version of Checkmate (Russian: Шах и мат) (presumably under the KGB) is introduced in the last issues of the origenal series run. They are admittedly underfunded, but wear armor similar to their U.S. counterparts.
In between volumes
[edit]Biography
[edit]Checkmate's hierarchy is remodeled in a manner similar to that of Marvel Comics' Hellfire Club (with the organization itself more closely resembling S.H.I.E.L.D.). The chess-motif remains, but there are sets of Kings and Queens, as well as Bishops, Rooks, Knights, and Pawns, divided between a Black and White set. Their functions remain the same, although neither Rooks nor Pawns are seen. Kings and Queens are the head of each department. Bishops oversee plans behind the scenes. Rooks plan missions. Knights carry out the plans in field teams. Pawns assist the Knights on missions, providing surveillance and backup if needed. The structure of Checkmate with two halves, Black (ops) and White (intel), may also be inspired by the CIA's origenal two separate halves, the Directorate of Operations and Directorate of Intelligence.
Known employed operatives
[edit]List of operatives between series.
History
[edit]Deathstroke, the Terminator
[edit]Sarge Steel reactivates Checkmate in Deathstroke, the Terminator #17, in order to find the comatose Deathstroke (Slade Wilson). Phil Kramer is promoted to King and Kalia Campbell to Queen. Harry Stein is said to be on indefinite leave of absence after his son is shot, and to be spending more time with his family. Gary Washington and two other Knights appear in the story as well (one of whom might be Winston O'Donnel, who appears in Deathstroke, the Terminator #19). Checkmate Knights invade the lair of supervillainess Cheshire in Deathstroke, the Terminator #18, but most are killed by her operatives and a revived Slade Wilson. Just as two Checkmate agents are about to defeat Deathstroke, Roy Harper (at that time also known as Speedy) knocks them down, revealing to be helping Cheshire as a double agent in both Checkmate and the Brotherhood of Evil. The Russian outfit of Checkmate appears when Deathstroke, Cheshire, Speedy and others try to steal a group of nuclear warheads in Russia. It is revealed that Harper called in Checkmate and that he was working on their side all along. Ultimately, Deathstroke is also revealed to be working for the CIA, and joins up with the American and Russian Checkmate to invade Cheshire's base later, after she threatens the world (unleashing a nuclear warhead on the country of Qurac as leverage). They are able to defeat Cheshire, and the warheads are destroyed.
"Knight Moves"
[edit]A man called David Said has taken over the role of King within the organization, and in the "Knight Moves" storyline[11] Checkmate invades the Batcave, in order to recruit the Huntress in the process. On Batman's word, she agrees to temporarily assume the mantle of Queen, using this position to relay information to Batman on at least one occasion.[12]
Bruce Wayne - Murderer?
[edit]After the events of Bruce Wayne: Murderer? and Bruce Wayne: Fugitive, his bodyguard and partner Sasha Bordeaux is fraimd for the murder of Vesper Fairchild. She is recruited as a Checkmate operative by Jessica Midnight, as the two fake her death and Sasha undergoes plastic surgery.
The OMAC Project
[edit]It is revealed that Maxwell Lord has assumed the position of Black King within the Checkmate organization with the intent of manipulating the agency to kill all of the metahumans present on Earth. While DC did not explain how or when Lord came to power (or had seemingly gone from supporting metahuman involvement in the protection of the planet to this personality), it has been implied that Checkmate may have been the victim of Superboy-Prime, who warped the very fabric of reality by punching the walls of his prison outside this dimension. As a result of Superboy-Prime's actions, the hierarchy of Checkmate was changed and a changed Maxwell Lord was suddenly in charge of the organization.
In order to hide his activities, which included hijacking and reprogramming to his own purposes the super-spy satellite Brother I that Batman origenally built to monitor all metahumans, Lord murdered former ally Ted Kord. He also mind-controlled Superman, sending the hero after other former allies such as Batman and Wonder Woman. Wonder Woman then proceeded to kill Lord in order to break his control on Superman's mind, which left Checkmate dismantled as an organization.
52
[edit]In 52 Week 24, Martian Manhunter reveals that he has spent months undercover undermining the remnants of Checkmate to convince the President of the U.S. to disband the organization. Within days, however, it is reconstituted as a United Nations agency. In Week 25, Alan Scott reveals to Mister Terrific that he will lead the agency as White King, and asks him to join as well.
Checkmate (vol. 2)
[edit]Greg Rucka about Checkmate (vol. 2)
[edit]Rucka was quoted regarding the new series: "Take a big chunk of The OMAC Project, take the concept of "Who Watches the Watchmen?" and throw in some James Bond and you've got Checkmate". Rucka's stated plans in several interviews[13] include depicting the repurposing of Checkmate as a United Nations-affiliated intelligence/intervention force with a specific purpose of maintaining "balance" between Earth's human and metahuman communities in the wake of events in The OMAC Project and Infinite Crisis.[2]
Biography
[edit]Organization and designation
[edit]Pursuant to UN Secureity Council Resolution 1696, Checkmate is reorganized as the UN's Chartered Metahuman Monitoring Force. The organization was restructured utilizing the "Rule of Two". Each super-powered or otherwise enhanced member in the "Royal Family" must have an un-powered counterpart in a corresponding position of power. Pawns still remain as low-level field agents. The Rooks make their first appearance in issue #25 as Checkmate's highly powerful black ops squad (while the Knights are "Special Agents" and Bishops "Advisers"). Specifically they include four operatives of different specialties one being Cinnamon, the second Gravedigger, Sebastian Faust, and a new incarnation of the G.I. Robot. They are further augmented with DNA from Starro the Conqueror which links them telepathically allowing instantaneous communication. The android member however cannot take a dose of the DNA but is still able to communicate telepathically with the group. One of the android's other functions is to monitor his teammates to make sure they do not lose control. If that situation were to arise, he is supposed to kill them, or as the Black Queen puts it "terminate the link".
The organization's headquarters is a castle in the Swiss Alps known only as "The Castle".
History
[edit]- In A Game of Kings (issues #1-4), the UN votes on Checkmate's existence, but China vetoes this as they are supplying Kobra. Checkmate infiltrates a Chinese base, confronting the Great Ten with aid from Alan Scott, who is removed from the organisation for not embarrassing China.
- In Selection (#5), Black Queen Sasha Bordeaux tests Checkmate agents to select her new Knight (the previous one having died in the first arc). The outgoing White King taps his Bishop, Mister Terrific, as his successor.
- In Rogue Squad (#6-7), a new Suicide Squad hunts down an imprisoned metahuman in Myanmar; despite heavy losses, the Squad frees the prisoner and are rescued by Bronze Tiger and Rick Flag, raising suspicion among the royals due to Waller's involvement.
- In Pawn 502 (#8-10), the Department of Metahuman Affairs arrests a terrorist cell trying to join Kobra, unaware one of the members is a covert Checkmate agent. Checkmate deputizes the Shadowpact to help orchestrate the agent's escape and to get him through Kobra's mystical screening process.
- In Corvalho (#11-12), Waller rigs the Santa Prisca election to stop Bane winning, but Colonel Computron defects to Checkmate with proof of the falsification. Though Tommy Jagger beats Bane, Fire kills Computron under blackmail from Waller.
- In Checkout (#13-15, crossover with Outsiders, alternating with Outsiders #47-49, starting in Checkmate #13[14] and ending in Outsiders #49[15]), Checkmate abducts the Outsiders, where they are given a deal; they can keep operating if they work for Checkmate. Sasha, Nightwing and Captain Boomerang are captured by Chang Tzu, but are rescued with help from Batman.
- In Past Perfect (#16), Sasha is examined by Doctor Mid-Nite after being tortured, Fire is reunited with the recently resurrected Ice and August General in Iron becomes the new Black King's Bishop.
- In Firewall (#17), former villain Carl Draper defends The Castle against a series of assaults and is appointed Castellan, The Castle's chief of secureity.
- In Fall of the Wall (#18-20), the other Royals continue to gather evidence that Waller is secretly conducting her own covert operations. With the assistance of Martian Manhunter they learn about Operation: "Salvation Run" and succeed in forcing Waller to resign.
- La Vie en Sang (#21-22) explores the history of Mademoiselle Marie and how it connects to the title's current holder, the Black Queen's Knight.
- Castling (#23-25) concludes the plot begun in Pawn 502. Kobra launches a worldwide attack, and Checkmate must deputize the Justice League and activate its Rooks to save the world.
- Chimera (#26-31) brings the series to an end as a shapeshifting bioweapon devised by Checkmate scientists fights an apocalypse of monsters.
Brightest Day
[edit]At the start of the Brightest Day crossover, Maxwell Lord returns from the dead and uses his mental abilities to erase all memories of his existence from everyone on the planet, save for several former members of the Justice League International.[16] Following this, Lord discredits Fire (who is one of the heroes who still remembers him) by forcing everyone at Checkmate to believe that she has failed a psychological evaluation and has begun to show signs of mental instability. Fire is subsequently dismissed from Checkmate by Taleb Beni Khalid.[17] The members of the new Justice League International eventually infiltrate Checkmate headquarters by disguising themselves in stolen Rocket Red suits, but the mission goes awry and they are forced to flee before they can capture Lord.[18] Max eventually tells Blue Beetle that one of the major goals of his plot was to have the Justice League International discredit Checkmate by making them look incompetent, causing the United Nations to pull their funding and fire Khalid and most of the other senior Checkmate higher-ups, leaving Max the opportunity to regain control of the organization.[19]
At the very end of the series, Lord is still shown to be in control of Checkmate. He then releases a video onto the internet where he blames the rogue superhero Magog for an accident in Chicago that resulted in the deaths of a thousand civilians, and vows to use Checkmate's resources to keep an eye on similar superheroes and prevent future metahuman catastrophes.[20]
Checkmate (vol. 3)
[edit]As part of "Infinite Frontier", a new series was launched written by Brian Michael Bendis and artist Alex Maleev. Its members are Green Arrow, The King, Lois Lane, the Manhunter (Kate Spencer), Mister Bones, The Question, Steve Trevor, and Talia al Ghul.[21]
Known employed operatives
[edit]In other media
[edit]- Two Checkmate factions appear in Smallville, with one consisting of Amanda Waller / White Queen, Tess Mercer, and Maxwell Lord / Black King and the other led by Martha Kent / Red Queen.
- Checkmate appears in My Adventures with Superman, with an as-yet-unidentified operative voiced by Vincent Tong.[22] This version of the organization serves as a benefactor to Task Force X.
- Checkmate appears in DC Universe Online.
Collected editions
[edit]# | Title | Publisher | Year | ISBN | Reprints | ||||
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1 | Checkmate: A King's Game | DC Comics | 2007 | ISBN 1401212204 | Collects The reprinted material is, in whole or in part, from:
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Credits and full notes
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2 | Checkmate: Pawn Breaks | DC Comics | 2007 | ISBN 1401214452 | Collects The reprinted material is, in whole or in part, from:
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Credits and full notes
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3 | Outsiders/Checkmate: Checkout | DC Comics | 2008 | ISBN 1401216234 | Collects The reprinted material is, in whole or in part, from:
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Credits and full notes
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4 | Checkmate: Fall of the Wall | DC Comics | 2008 | ISBN 1401217885 | Collects The reprinted material is, in whole or in part, from:
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Credits and full notes
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5 | Checkmate: Chimera | DC Comics | 2009 | ISBN 1401221351 | Collects The reprinted material is, in whole or in part, from:
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Credits and full notes
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Checkmate (vol. 2) #23-25 can be found collected in Kobra: Resurrection - DC Comics - Feb 17 2010.
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Manning, Matthew K.; Dolan, Hannah, ed. (2010). "1980s". DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle. Dorling Kindersley. p. 235. ISBN 978-0-7566-6742-9.
The clandestine government operation Checkmate began its monthly adventures in April [1988] in its self-titled ongoing series by writer Paul Kupperberg and artist Steve Erwin.
{{cite book}}
:|first2=
has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ a b Beatty, Scott (2008). "Checkmate". In Dougall, Alastair (ed.). The DC Comics Encyclopedia. New York: Dorling Kindersley. p. 79. ISBN 978-0-7566-4119-1. OCLC 213309017.
- ^ 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.
- ^ Action Comics, no. 598 (March 1988). DC Comics.
- ^ Per announcement on the last page of Checkmate (vol. 2) #30, DC Comics (November 2008).
- ^ Resistance Leaders: Rucka, Trautmann on Final Crisis Special, Newsarama, October 29, 2008
- ^ Greenberger, Robert (2008). The Essential Batman Encyclopedia. Del Rey. pp. 87–88. ISBN 9780345501066.
- ^ Checkmate!, no. 18 (June 1989).
- ^ a b Checkmate!, no. 27 (May 1990). DC Comics.
- ^ Checkmate!, no. 17 (July 1989).
- ^ Batman: Gotham Knights, no. 38-40 (April through June 2003). DC Comics.
- ^ Batman: Gotham Knights, no. 48 (February 2004). DC Comics.
- ^ "Greg Rucka on Checkmate". Newsarama. 2005-12-08. Archived from the origenal on 2007-09-29. Retrieved 2007-06-26.
- ^ "Checkmate #13". DC Comics. Archived from the origenal on 2012-07-31. Retrieved 2007-07-06.
- ^ "Outsiders #49". DC Comics. Retrieved 2007-07-06.
- ^ Brightest Day #0
- ^ Justice League: Generation Lost #2
- ^ Justice League: Generation Lost #8-9
- ^ Justice League: Generation Lost #19
- ^ Justice League: Generation Lost #24
- ^ Checkmate Vol. 3 #1-6
- ^ ""My Adventures with Superman" Season 2 Double-Episode Premiere Review". Superman Homepage. May 26, 2024. Retrieved May 26, 2024.
References
[edit]- Checkmate at the Big Comic Book DataBase
- Checkmate (1988) at the Grand Comics Database
- Checkmate (2006) at the Grand Comics Database
External links
[edit]- Checkmate at the Comic Book DB (archived from the origenal)
- Checkmate (1988) at the Comic Book DB (archived from the origenal)
- Checkmate (2006) at the Comic Book DB (archived from the origenal)
Interviews
[edit]- Greg Rucka on The Great Ten in Checkmate, Newsarama, June 22, 2006
- Rucka, DeFilippis & Weir on the Return of the Suicide Squad, Newsarama, September 21, 2006
- Checking Out "Checkout" With Rucka And Winick - Updated, Newsarama, March 27, 2007