Teen Titans

For the animated TV series based on this comic, see Teen Titans (TV series). See The Superman/Aquaman Hour of Adventure for the Teen Titans segments from that show.

Teen Titans

Cover to Teen Titans (vol. 3) #50 (2007).
Art by Alé Garza and Scott Williams.
Publication information
Publisher DC Comics
First appearance The Brave & the Bold (vol. 1) #54 (July 1964)
Created by Bob Haney
Bruno Premiani
In-story information
Base(s) Titans Tower:
New York City (1980–91, 1999–02)
San Francisco (2003–Present)
Other:
Solar Tower, Metropolis (1997–98), USS Argus, Earth Orbit (1994–95), Titans Liberty Island Base, New Jersey (1991–94), Gabriel's Horn, Farmingdale, Long Island (1976), Titans' Lair, Gotham City (1966–76)
Member(s) Teen Titans :
Blue Beetle (Jaime Reyes)
Bombshell
Red Devil
Robin
Wonder Girl
Titans :
Beast Boy
Cyborg
Flash
Nightwing
Raven
Red Arrow
Starfire
Troia
Roster
See:List of Teen Titans members

The Teen Titans, also known as The New Teen Titans, New Titans, or The Titans, is a DC Comics superhero team. The first incarnation of the group unofficially debuted in The Brave and the Bold #54 (July 1964), with the group making its first appearance under the name “The Teen Titans” in Brave and the Bold #60. As the group's name suggests, its membership is usually composed of teenaged superheroes. In the group's first adventure, the team was a junior Justice League of sorts, featuring Robin (Dick Grayson), Kid Flash (Wally West) and Aqualad, the sidekicks of Leaguers Batman, the Flash and Aquaman, respectively.

In its second appearance, the group branched out with the introduction of Wonder Girl, a character introduced for the group to serve as an analogue for Wonder Woman. In Donna Troy's wake, many additional new characters were introduced into the Titans team, many of which were not teenaged sidekicks to adult characters, most notably the college-aged heroes in the 1980 New Teen Titans revival Cyborg, Starfire, Beast Boy, and Raven.

While only a modest success with its original incarnation, the series became a huge hit with its 1980s revival, under the stewardship of writer Marv Wolfman and artist George Pérez. In 1980, the two relaunched Teen Titans as The New Teen Titans, aging the characters to young adulthood and featuring a level of complex storytelling and character exploration unheard of from DC Comics at the time. However, the departure of George Pérez from the book, the launch of a direct market-only Titans book, Marv Wolfman's own creative burnout (influenced partially by the departure of his longtime collaborator Perez), and editorial interference left the franchise decimated and the series was canceled in 1995 after 130 issues.

Since the cancellation of New Titans the concept has fluctuated in terms of success as creative teams have come and gone, though the most recent revival of the series has garnered both commercial and critical success. The animated television show, as well as the spin off comic, have also helped lead to a successful rejuvenation.

Contents

Publication history

Teen Titans

The original Teen Titans. Cover to Teen Titans Annual #1, 1967 issue (published in 1999). Art by Nick Cardy.
Publication information
Publisher DC Comics
Schedule Monthly
Format Ongoing
Publication date (vol. 1): 1966 - 1976
(vol. 2): 1996 - 1998
(vol. 3): 2003 -
Number of issues (vol. 1): 53
(vol. 2): 24
(vol. 3): -
Creative team
Writer(s) various
Artist(s) various
Creator(s) (vol. 1):
Bob Haney
Nick Cardy
(vol. 2):
Dan Jurgens
(vol. 3):
Geoff Johns
Mike McKone

Original Incarnation

The genesis of the Teen Titans lays in the events of The Brave and the Bold #54 (July 1964), where Robin, Kid Flash, and Aqualad first teamed up to defeat a weather-controlling villain known as Mr. Twister. The trio end up deciding to form their own super-group as a result of the team-up.

In The Brave and the Bold #60, the group officially debuted with the team officially named “The Teen Titans” and sporting a brand new member: Wonder Girl. The character of Donna Troy (Wonder Girl) was created explicitly for the Teen Titans group, as Wonder Woman had no teen sidekick at the time, though the name “Wonder Girl” itself had been regularly used for a variety of flashback tales of Wonder Woman's childhood exploits at the time. Readers never saw Donna Troy join the team, though in the story “Who is Wonder Girl?”, Marv Wolfman revealed that Donna had joined the group shortly after the defeat of Mr. Twister and was the one responsible for coming up with the “Teen Titans” name for the group, unconsciously inspired by her post-Crisis tenure as a young charge of the Titans of Myth.

After a final appearance in one of DC's anthology comic books, Showcase #59, the Teen Titans were spun off into their own series, with “Teen Titans” #1, cover-dated February 1966.

The series' original premise revolved around the Teen Titans helping teenagers, answering calls from around the world. Their first set of stories included saving a town from a band of thieves who were impersonating a popular surf-rock band while committing their crimes, helping a teenager's burglar brother reform, investigating international teen tension at the Japanese Olympics and vindicating a teenager who claims interdimensional aliens were infiltrating his high school. Green Arrow's sidekick Speedy also soon joined in Teen Titans (vol. 1) #4 (and was later given “founder status” along with Robin, Wonder Girl, Aqualad and Kid Flash). Additional team members were created for membership, most notably Lilith Clay[1] and Mal Duncan.[2] Other existing heroes such as Hawk and Dove,[3] a duo of teenaged superpowered brothers while Beast Boy of the Doom Patrol made a guest appearance seeking membership (though he was rejected for being too young at the time). Honorary members included Aquagirl[4] and Gnaark.[5]

The theme of teenagers learning to take on adult roles and responsibilities was common throughout the series. The series explored (though not too deeply) then current events such as inner-city racial tension and various protests against the Vietnam War. One storyline beginning in issue #25 (February 1970) saw the Titans deal with the accidental death of a peace activist, leading them to reconsider their methods. As a result, the Teen Titans briefly abandoned their identities to work as ordinary, powerless civilians, but the change was unpopular with fans and was quickly abandoned. Along the way, Aqualad was removed from the series and the character of Mr. Jupiter, who was Lilith's mentor and employer, was introduced and financially backed the Titans for a brief period. Ultimately the book was quietly canceled with #43 (February 1973).

1970s revival

A few years after its cancellation, the series resumed with issue #44 (November 1976), but struggled to find focus. The few stories from the brief revival included the introduction of the African-American super-heroine Bumblebee, the introduction of the “Titans West” team, consisting of a number of other teen heroes including Bat-Girl (Betty Kane) and Golden Eagle, and the introduction of Joker's Daughter in Teen Titans #48. The revival was short-lived, and the series was canceled as of #53 (February 1978). Tellingly, in the last issue the heroes realized that, now in their early 20s, they had simply outgrown the "Teen" Titans. In the last panel, without speaking, they go their separate ways.

The title was used again in 1999 for the Teen Titans Annual #1, 1967 issue (ISBN 1-56389-486-6), a one-shot special that reprinted selected Silver Age stories in the 1960s-style 80-Page Giant format, as a companion piece to the original comic book series, had an Annual issue been published at that time.


New Teen Titans (1980–1996)

New Teen Titans

The New Teen Titans #1 (November 1980), cover art by George Pérez and Dick Giordano.
Publication information
Publisher DC Comics
Schedule Monthly
Format Ongoing
Publication date (vol. 1): 1980 - 1988
(Changed to Tales of the Teen Titans with #41)
(vol. 2): 1984 - 1996
(Changed to New Titans with #50)
Number of issues (vol. 1): 91
(vol. 2): 130
Creative team
Writer(s) various
Artist(s) various
Creator(s) Marv Wolfman
George Pérez

DC Comics Presents #26 introduced a team of new Titans, anchored by founding members Robin, Wonder Girl and Kid Flash, soon followed by The New Teen Titans #1 (November 1980).

It re-introduced the Doom Patrol's Beast Boy as Changeling and introduced the machine man Cyborg, the alien Starfire and the dark empath Raven. Raven, an expert manipulator, formed the group to fight her demonic father Trigon and the team remained together thereafter as a group of young adult heroes.

The villains' motivations were often complex, following trends that were coming to a head at that time towards greater depth in comics, particularly in the case of Deathstroke the Terminator, a mercenary who took a contract to kill the Titans in order to fulfill a job his son was unable to complete. This led to the Titans' most complex adventure in which a psychopathic girl named Terra, with the destructive power to manipulate earth and all-earth related materials, infiltrated the Titans in order to destroy them.

This story also featured Dick Grayson, the original Robin, adopting the identity of Nightwing, Wally West giving up on his Kid Flash persona and quitting the New Teen Titans which eventually led to him becoming the Flash, and the introduction of a new member in Jericho, the son of Deathstroke. New Teen Titans also regularly featured the Monitor as a background character.

Other notable New Teen Titans stories included "Terror of Trigon", which featured Raven's father, the evil interdimensional demon, Trigon the Terrible, attempting to take over Earth which led to most of Raven's struggle to remain good despite Trigon's evil demonic blood inside her, plaguing her; "A Day in the Life..." featured a day in the team members’ personal lives; "Who is Donna Troy?" depicted Robin investigating Wonder Girl's true identity and "We are Gathered Here Today..." telling the story of Wonder Girl's wedding, noteworthy for being the rare superhero wedding in which a fight didn't break out.

Tales of the New Teen Titans, a four-part limited series by Wolfman and Perez, was published in 1982, detailing the back stories of Cyborg, Raven, Starfire, and Changeling.

New Teen Titans and the Uncanny X-Men

The brainchild of writer Marv Wolfman and artist George Pérez, New Teen Titans was widely thought of as DC's answer to the increasingly popular Uncanny X-Men from Marvel Comics as both series featured all-new members and depicted young heroes from disparate backgrounds whose internal conflicts were as integral to the series as was their combat against villains. The two teams met in the 1982 crossover one-shot entitled "Apokolips ...Now", which teamed Darkseid with Dark Phoenix against both teams.

New Teen Titans (vol. 2)

The New Teen Titans series experienced some title and numbering confusion in 1984 when the title was relaunched with a new #1 issue as part of a new initiative at DC informally referred to as "hardcover/softcover." The New Teen Titans, along with Legion of Super-Heroes and Batman and the Outsiders, were the first and only titles included in this program, where the same stories would be published twice, first in a more expensive edition with higher-quality printing and paper distributed exclusively to comic book specialty stores, then republished a year later in the original low-budget format and distributed to newsstands. The New Teen Titans (vol. 1) title was renamed Tales of the Teen Titans (not to be confused with the earlier limited series), while a new concurrently published series named The New Teen Titans (vol. 2) launched with a new #1. After both titles ran new stories for one year, the former book began reprinting the latter's stories for the newsstand, continuing until the "hardcover/softcover" idea was abandoned after Tales of the Teen Titans #91.

Issue #1 of New Teen Titans (vol. 2) created controversy when Dick Grayson and Starfire were depicted in bed together, although it had been established for some time that they were a couple. Pérez left the series after New Teen Titans (vol. 2) #5. José Luis Garcia Lopez followed Pérez as the title's artist, and Eduardo Barreto contributed a lengthy run after Garcia Lopez. Paul Levitz scripted and wrote several issues when Wolfman briefly took a break from the book. Pérez temporarly returned as co-plotter/penciller with issue #50, with the series name being amended to The New Titans (without the "Teen" prefix), as the characters were no longer teenagers.

Issue #50 told a new origin story for Wonder Girl, her link to Wonder Woman having been severed due to retcons created in the aftermath of Crisis on Infinite Earths. Pérez remained as penciller with the book through to issue #55, 57 and 60, while only providing layouts for issues #58-59, and 61, with artist Tom Grummett finishing pencils and Bob McLeod as inker. Perez remained as inker for the cover art to issues #62-67. He would return for the series final issue with #130 (Feb. 1996) providing cover art.

The series introduced a number of new characters and put older characters through radical changes during the next seven years. Members during this time included Phantasm,[6] Pantha,[7] Red Star,[8] Impulse,[9] Damage,[10] Green Lantern (Kyle Rayner),[11] Supergirl,[12] Rose Wilson,[13] Minion[14] and Baby Wildebeest. As a result, the group that appeared in the final issue, #130 (February 1996), had little resemblance to the one that anchored DC's line-up in the early 1980s.

Teen Titans Spotlight On

With the Teen Titans properties rivaling Marvel's X-Men for popularity, another new title was launched in August, 1986, this time to focus less on the team itself than on individual Titans, hence "Spotlight".[15] The series aimed to "put the spotlight on individual members of the Teen Titans, one at a time, and let each story dictate how many issues it should run,"[16] most storylines running to just a single issue, after the series launched with a two-part focus on Starfire and a four-issue highlighting of Jericho.[17] The series ran for 21 issues, the last issue departing slightly from its aim to highlight individuals, culminating in a 'Spotlight' on the 1960s Teen Titans team as a whole (April, 1988).[18]

Team Titans

Main article: Team Titans

The Team Titans were one of 100 groups sent back through time to prevent the birth of Lord Chaos, the son of Donna Troy and Terry Long. Their mission was to kill the pregnant Donna Troy before she could give birth. Mirage, Killowat, Redwing, Terra, Dagon, Prestor Jon and Battalion made up the team.

Teen Titans (vol. 2, 1996–1998)

A new Teen Titans series written & penciled by Dan Jurgens began later that year with a new #1 (October 1996), with former New Teen Titans co-creator George Pérez as inker (Pérez would ink the first 15 issues of the series). Atom, who had become a teenager following the events of Zero Hour, leads the brand-new team, with Arsenal becoming a mentor about halfway through the twenty four-issue run, which ended in September 1998.

In an attempt to boost sales, a contest was held in the letter pages to determine who would join the team. Robin (Tim Drake), won the vote, but editors on the Batman titles banned Robin from appearing in the Teen Titans, forcing Jurgens to use Captain Marvel, Jr. instead. The inclusion of Captain Marvel, Jr failed to boost sales of the title, which was then canceled.

The Titans (1999–2002)

The team was revived in a three-issue limited series, JLA/Titans: The Technis Imperative, featuring nearly every character who had been a Titan and showcased the return of Cyborg. This limited series led into The Titans written by Devin Grayson, starting with Titans Secret Files #1 (March 1999).

This incarnation of the team consisted of a mix of former original Titans, including Nightwing, Troia, Arsenal, Tempest and the Flash (Wally West), from the original team; Starfire, Cyborg and Changeling, from the New Teen Titans; Damage from the New Titans (the 1994 series); and Argent from the Teen Titans (the 1996 series). There was one new member, Jesse Quick. This version of the team lasted until issue #50 (2002).

The West Coast branch of the team, Titans L.A., appeared once, in the pages of Titans Secret Files #2.

Between the end of Teen Titans and the beginning of The Titans, the next generation of young heroes: Superboy, Robin, Impulse, Wonder Girl, Secret and Arrowette; formed their own team in Young Justice, a series similar to the original Teen Titans.

Both series were concluded with the three-issue limited series Titans/Young Justice: Graduation Day, which led into new Teen Titans and Outsiders ongoing series.

Teen Titans (vol. 3, 2003 - present)

Teen Titans (vol. 3)

Teen Titans #1 (July 2003), cover art by Mike McKone.
Publication information
Publisher DC Comics
Schedule Monthly
Format Ongoing
Publication date (vol. 3): 2003 - Current
Number of issues (vol. 3): 53
Creative team
Writer(s) Geoff Johns
Adam Beechen
Sean McKeever
Artist(s) various
Creator(s) Geoff Johns
Mike McKone

Writer Geoff Johns’ Teen Titans series began in 2003, featuring a mix of previous and new members, most of whom had been part of Young Justice. Geoff wrote the book for the first forty-five issues before turning it over to Adam Beechen, who wrote the book for a four issue run from #46 to 49 after Geoff Johns' departure. Sean McKeever became the series' current writer as of #50.

The series’ original lineup parallels the lineup of Marv Wolfman's New Teen Titans series: veteran members Cyborg, Starfire and Beast Boy return, joined by younger heroes Robin, Superboy, Wonder Girl and Kid Flash. Raven re-joins the team in issue #12, and the new Speedy joins the team in Green Arrow #46, first appearing in the Titans book in issue #21. Starfire left the Teen Titans for the Outsiders. During the “Insiders” crossover with The Outsiders (issues #24–25), Superboy comes under Lex Luthor's control and attacks the team, afterwards taking a leave of absence that ends during Infinite Crisis.

The new series sees the team’s relocation from the east to the west coast, its headquarters located in San Francisco instead of the traditional New York City location. The new Titans Tower also has a memorial hall with statues of the fallen Titans.

One Year Later: The new Teen Titans

Main article: One Year Later

In the one year jump after Infinite Crisis, Robin has returned to the Teen Titans, Wonder Girl has quit and has been fighting the Brotherhood of Evil. Starfire is missing in action after her journey into space. Raven's whereabouts are unknown, and Beast Boy has left the Titans to join the new Doom Patrol, along with former Titans Bumblebee and Herald, now called Vox. Speedy is said to be currently on an island with Connor Hawke. Kid Flash has aged into adulthood and become the fourth Flash. Cyborg has been damaged and inactive since his return from space, but 16-year-old genius fraternal twins Wendy and Marvin, have repaired him and given him new abilities. New members include Kid Devil and Ravager.

During the lost year, at least 24[19] new members joined the team, all of them short-term. Without proper leadership or the feeling of family the Titans normally provides, none of the new members could get along and work together.

Robin, Kid Devil, and Ravager reform the Teen Titans along with Wonder Girl, Cyborg, Raven, new member Miss Martian, and a resurrected Jericho.[20] Robin tells Wonder Girl that he believes Raven could bring Superboy back to life, as she did with Jericho.[21] Raven, reveals that she can not because Conner's soul has moved on.[22] A memorial to Superboy has been erected outside Titans Tower. Unknown to the other Titans, Robin has secretly been attempting to re-clone Superboy, with nearly 100 failed attempts. This was until Wonder Girl found the lab, where she and Robin shared an unexpected kiss brought on by their mutual pain.

The Titans face a group calling themselves "Titans East", led by Deathstroke and intent on defeating the Titans. Deathstroke's team includes Risk, Sun Girl, Batgirl, Kid Crusader, Match, Inertia, Duela Dent and Enigma.[23] Deathstroke has been manipulating his Titans East, blackmailing Risk, drugging Batgirl, and giving Inertia "Velocity 9", a drug which allows him to regain his super-speed without adverse effects. Robin cures Batgirl, and she, along with Duela Dent, who defects, allows the Teen Titans to gain the upper hand, and defeat Deathstroke's team.

Discussing the story arc, Geoff Johns referred to Titans East as juvenile delinquents who will be causing trouble, and described Risk as the first white trash superhero.

Soon after, events related to the Countdown story arc affect the Titans. Two members, Duela Dent and Bart Allen are killed in separate events. At the same time, the team reorganizes. Cyborg leaves the team for his own pursuits, Supergirl joins the team, and Blue Beetle is invited to Titans Tower to train whenever he wants.

The Titans Tomorrow return, allied with Lex Luthor, and intent on altering the present to fit their future. During the fight, Miss Martian's future counterpart reveals the rationale behind the Sinestro Corps and their war to subjugate the universe. The vision spurs Miss Martian to act, and she frees Robin, who again confronts his future self, who has become Batman. Cassie intervenes, and changes the future by kissing Robin, causing the future versions to fade out. The Titans then join the fight against the Sinestro Corps.

After their encounter with their future selves, Supergirl quits after Wonder Girl confesses their friendship is based in her sense of missing Conner. Cassie and Tim begin a brief relationship, while Kid Devil pines for Rose. Miss Martian finds that her future self has implanted a piece of her demented psyche within M'Ganns mind. Kid Devil is left in Titans Tower alone and throws a massive party for local Titans fans, which leads to him being captured by Dreadbolt.

A week later, while Robin and Wonder Girl discuss Kid Devil's absence, Ravager and the twins are attacked inside the tower by Persuader and Copperhead, who are being directed by the Clock King. Disruptor is sent to capture Miss Martian. Clock King describes his group as Terror Titans, and intends to sell his captives to "The Dark Side Club"[24] to fight in arena combat. Though Ravager rescues the twins, she explodes the Tower in an effort to force her opponents to reveal Kid Devil's location. M'gann frees Kid Devil from Clock King's psychological conditioning. Robin, Wonder Girl, and Blue Beetle arrive, and help defeat the Terror Titans, freeing their teammates. Following the Terror Titans attack, Kid Devil sets out to capture Shockwave and is, to his dismay, helped by Blue Beetle. Although they don't get along and argue the whole time they eventually work out their problems and stop Shockwave, with the help of Kid Devil's new teleportation powers. After the battle Eddie takes the code name Red Devil, along with a new costume, assuring his teammates that the change is not in relation to his future counterpart. During some down time Marvin and Wendy find themselves tired of being the Titans "maids" and think about leaving when they find a dog on Titans' Island. The dog is quickly named Wonderdog. Miss Martian suddenly tells her teammates she has some issues to work out and leaves the team assuring them she'd be back. While searching the tower for Wonderdog, Wendy stumbles upon Marvin's dead body at the feet of a transformed Wonderdog. She tries to run and call for help but is mauled by the beast. Wonderdog then flees to his awaiting master, the son of Ares, King Lycus. Wendy survives the attack, but is left severely injured and apparently in a coma.[25]

It has been recently revealed that Static and Kid Eternity will join the team in the near future.[26]

Titans (vol. 2, 2008 - present)

Titans (vol. 2)

Titans #1 (May 2008), cover art by Ian Churchill.
Publication information
Publisher DC Comics
Schedule Monthly
Format Ongoing
Publication date (vol. 2): April 2008 - Current
Number of issues (vol. 2): 4
Creative team
Writer(s) Judd Winick
Artist(s) Ian Churchill
Joe Benitez
Creator(s) Judd Winick
Ian Churchill

A second ongoing Teen Titans series, titled Titans,[27] launched in April 2008 and is written by Judd Winick. Issue one was drawn by Ian Churchill and Norm Rapmund, issue 2 by Joe Benitez and Victor Llamas. The opening storyline follows the events of the Teen Titans East Special one-shot that was released in November 2007, revealing all of the members of Cyborg's team survived the attack, except Power Boy, dead after being impaled. The team's new line up consists of former New Teen Titans Nightwing, Flash, Donna Troy, Beast Boy, Raven, Cyborg, Red Arrow, and Starfire.[28]

In the first story arc of the series, Trigon makes a series of attacks on every member, former or current, of the Teen Titans, and Trigon has 'another child' that, unlike Raven, will assist him in his attack. After reclaiming Titans Island and establishing a headquarters on the East River, Cyborg set out to create an East Coast Titans team. However, during a training session the team was brutally massacred by an unseen evil force. Though Cyborg survived the attack, Titans members past and present were attacked by demonic entities across the globe. Raven, sensing Trigon's presence once again, called upon her former Titans allies to defeat her fiendish father.

But after rescuing several Titans and questioning Trigon himself, the Titans learned that Trigon himself was not behind the attacks but rather has three children to prepare his second invasion for him. After investigating potential carriers of his children, the Titans realize the bestial assaults were actually orchestrated by Raven's three grown half brothers – Jacob, Jared and Jesse. Working together as a team, the Titans thwarted the Sons of Trigon and prevented Trigon's invasion plan. Following this adventure, Raven chose her adopted family over her biological family and Red Arrow decided to join his former teammates (although both he and Flash retain their JLA membership) - and the Titans were together as a team once again.

Following this, the team has settled themselves down at Titans Tower (supposedly the New York base), where they attempt to recover from recent events. While Dick and Kory attempt to make a decision on where their current relationship will lead, Raven and Beast Boy go out together on a "not-a-date". During this, Raven reveals that since she faced her brothers, she has begun to feel as if she is losing control and slipping back under the thrall of her father's powers. Although Beast Boy rejects the idea, he is unexpectedly blind-sided as Raven gives in to her darker side, under the influence of her half-brother's coaxing. Using her teleporting powers, she and the Sons of Trigon vanish, leaving a distraught Beast Boy behind to warn the others. Using a gem stone that carries Raven's pure essence within it, the Titans manage to free Raven of her father's evil, although there will always be the possibility of it happening again. As a result, Raven leaves each Titan with an amulet that can be used to cleanse any evil influence from her body.

Following this, Jericho, still inhabiting the body of Superboy's clone, Match, arrives, frantically asking for help due to the fact he cannot separate himself from Match's body.


Awards

The various series and characters have received a good deal of recognition over the years. The story "Then & Now" from Teen Titans (1996 series) issues 12–15, was a top voted candidate for the Comics Buyer's Guide Fan Award for Favorite Story for 1998.

Trade paperbacks

Silver Age Teen Titans

Trade Paperback by DC collecting the most well-known adventures of this era:

Title Material collected Pages ISBN#
Showcase Presents Teen Titans Vol. 1 The Brave and the Bold (vol. 1) #54 & #60
Showcase #59
Teen Titans (vol. 10 #1–18
528 ISBN 1-40120-788-X
Showcase Presents Teen Titans Vol. 2 Teen Titans (vol. 1) #19–36
The Brave and the Bold (vol. 1) #83 and 94
World's Finest Comics #205
512 ISBN 1-4012-1252-2
The Silver Age Teen Titans Archives Vol. 1 The Brave and the Bold (vol. 1) #54 & #60
Showcase #59
Teen Titans (vol. 1) #1–5
203 ISBN 1-40120-071-0
Teen Titans Annual #1, 1967 issue (published 1999) Showcase (vol. 1) #59
Teen Titans (vol. 1) #4
The Flash (vol. 1) #164
Wonder Woman (vol. 1) #144
80 ISBN 1-56389-486-6

New Teen Titans

Trade Paperbacks by DC collecting the most well-known adventures of this era:

Title Material collected Pages ISBN#
DC Archives: The New Teen Titans Vol. 1 DC Comics Presents #26
The New Teen Titans (vol. 1) #1–8
230 ISBN 1563894858
DC Archives: The New Teen Titans Vol. 2 The New Teen Titans (vol. 1) #9–16
Best of DC (Blue Ribbon Digest) #18.
240 ISBN 1563899515
DC Archives: The New Teen Titans Vol. 3 The New Teen Titans (vol. 1) #17–20
Tales Of The New Teen Titans #1–4 .
228 ISBN 1401211445
DC Archives: The New Teen Titans Vol. 4 The New Teen Titans (vol. 1) #21–27
New Teen Titans Annual #1.
224 ISBN 1401219594
Terra Incognito The New Teen Titans (vol. 1) #28–34, select pages from #26
Annual #2
224 ISBN 1401209726
The Judas Contract The New Teen Titans (vol. 1) #39–40
Tales of the Teen Titans #41–44
Annual #3
192 ISBN 093028934X
The Terror of Trigon The New Teen Titans (vol. 2) #1–5 134 ISBN 1563899442
Who is Donna Troy? The New Teen Titans (vol. 1) #38
Tales of the Teen Titans #50
The New Titans #50-54, select pages from New Titans #55
The "Who Was Donna Troy" back-up story from Teen Titans/Outsiders Secret Files 2003.
224 ISBN 1401207243

The Titans

As yet, only the beginning and the end of this era have been collected in trade paperback form:

Title Material collected Pages ISBN#
JLA/Titans: The Technis Imperative JLA/Titans #1–3
Titans Secret Files #1
Titans/Young Justice: Graduation Day Titans/Young Justice: Graduation Day #1–3
(see also The Death and Return of Donna Troy below)

Teen Titans (2003-Present)

Note: Issues 27 and 28, penciled by artist Rob Liefeld and written by Gail Simone, are not collected in any of the trade paperbacks. The two issues, along with The Outsiders (vol. 3) #27-28, were designed as last minute fill-in issues, after DC Comics decided to publish The Return of Donna Troy (originally intended to run in the pages of Teen Titans (vol. 3) #27-28 and Outsiders (vol. 3) #27-28) as a stand-alone mini-series. Issues 48 and 49 (which tie in with the "Amazons Attack" Wonder Woman story) are likewise not collected in a trade paperback.

Vol. # Title Collected material Pages ISBN#
1 A Kid's Game Teen Titans (vol. 3) #1–7
Teen Titans/Outsiders Secret Files 2003
192 ISBN 1-40120-308-6
2 Family Lost Teen Titans (vol. 3) #8–12
Teen Titans #1/2
136 ISBN 1-40120-238-1
3 Beast Boys and Girls Beast Boy #1–4 (1999 limited series)
Teen Titans (vol. 3) #13–15
168 ISBN 1-40120-459-7
4 The Future is Now Teen Titans/Legion Special
Teen Titans (vol. 3) #16–23
224 ISBN 1-40120-475-9
Teen Titans/Outsiders: The Insiders Teen Titans (vol. 3) #24–26
Outsiders #24–25, 28
144 ISBN 1-40120-926-2
Teen Titans/Outsiders: The Death and Return of Donna Troy Titans/Young Justice: Graduation Day #1–3
Teen Titans/Outsiders Secret Files 2005
DC Special: The Return of Donna Troy #1–4
176 ISBN 1-40120-931-9
5 Life and Death Teen Titans (vol. 3) #29–33
Teen Titans Annual #1
Robin #146–147
208 ISBN 1-40120-978-5
6 Titans Around the World Teen Titans (vol. 3) #34–41 192 ISBN 1-40121-217-4
7 Titans East Teen Titans (vol. 3) #42–47 144 ISBN 1-40121447-9
8 Titans of Tomorrow Teen Titans (vol. 3) #50–54 144 ISBN 1401218075

In other media

Animation

The Superman/Aquaman Hour of Adventure

The team's first animated appearance was in Teen Titans segments of the 1967 Filmation series The Superman/Aquaman Hour of Adventure, featuring Speedy, Kid Flash, Wonder Girl, and Aqualad. They are voiced by Pat Harrington, Jr., Tommy Cook, Julie Bennett and Jerry Dexter.

Super Friends

Robin was a member of the Super Friends. In addition, he and Cyborg appeared as a member of the Super Powers Team in The Super Powers Team: Galactic Guardians.

New Teen Titans (TV series)

In 1983, Hanna-Barbera created the animated version of New Teen Titans. It later got scrapped. It was supposed to air on ABC at September 17, 1983, but ABC didn't pick up the series. It was also supposedly going to share continuity with Super Friends.

Anti-Drug commercial

Wonder Girl, Starfire, Raven, Cyborg, Beast Boy, Kid Flash and Protector, temporarily replacing Robin appeared on a 1984 Nabisco anti-drug commercial.

DCAU

Though a Teen Titans team never actually appeared in the DCAU they made reference to them in to episodes of Static Shock. The first was in Hard as Nails when Batman tells Static that Robin had joined the Teen Titans. The second was in Rome in the Mix when Bernie Rast asks police officer on the phone for "the kid from the Titans. The green one." (which proabably means Beast Boy or Miss Martian). He was trying to get help to rescue Lil' Romeo after he tried to get Robin, who wasn't available.

Teen Titans (TV series)

For five seasons, from 2003 until 2006, a Teen Titans animated series was produced. Briefly airing on Kids' WB, Teen Titans premiered on and currently airs on Cartoon Network. Many episodes were based on beloved storylines like the Wolfman/Perez era The Judas Contract and The Terror of Trigon although some elements such as the romances between Starfire and Robin were dropped due to the characters' ages in the new show. The show was drawn in an anime-style based art form. The main characters are Robin, Starfire, Cyborg, Raven and Beast Boy. Many other Titans comic book characters appear, including Aqualad, Speedy, Deathstroke (named Slade), Bumblebee, Wildebeest and Terra. Other characters have been specifically created for the show, including Más y Menos (who were subsequently adopted into the mainstream comic series), Mumbo and Mother Mae-Eye.

The series was canceled after five seasons, with the final episode airing January 16 2006. A direct-to-DVD movie, Teen Titans: Trouble in Tokyo, premiered on Cartoon Network September 15 2006 at 7pm. Three video games were made based on the show.

Teen Titans: The Judas Contract

At Comic-Con 2006, a Judas Contract animated movie was announced. Marv Wolfman and George Pérez, creators of The New Teen Titans will be working on the direct-to-DVD movie. The movie's animation will not be done in the style of the Teen Titans series, but rather a style similar to the comics. However, the film has been postponed due to a lack of a "broad fanbase appeal" to put it ahead of other projects.[29]

Justice League: The New Frontier

The Titans appear in the animated film Justice League: The New Frontier.

Film

Warner Bros. is also in development on a Teen Titans movie in which Nightwing is the only confirmed member so far.[30]

See also

Notes

  1. The Teen Titans (vol. 1) #25
  2. The Teen Titans (vol. 1) #26
  3. The Teen Titans (vol. 1) #21
  4. The Teen Titans #30
  5. The Teen Titans (vol. 1) #32
  6. The New Titans #73
  7. TNT #74
  8. TNT #77
  9. TNT #0,
  10. TNT #0
  11. TNT #116
  12. TNT #121
  13. TNT #122
  14. TNT #123
  15. Titans Tower: Series Index - Teen Titans Spotlight On: (1986-1988). Accessed April 20, 2008
  16. Teen Titans Spotlight On: (Starfire) #1 (DC Comics, August 1986) quoted in the Titans Tower: Series Index - Teen Titans Spotlight On: (1986-1988). Accessed April 20, 2008
  17. Teen Titans Spotlight at the Comic Book DB. Accessed April 20, 2008
  18. Teen Titans Spotlight on: (Teen Titans) #21 at the Comic Book DB. Accessed April 20, 2008
  19. Teen Titans: One Year - Different, Newsarama, June 5, 2006
  20. Teen Titans (vol. 3) #40
  21. Teen Titans (vol. 3) #41
  22. Teen Titans (vol. 3) #43
  23. WWLA - DCU: One Year Greater Panel, Newsarama, March 18, 2006
  24. Teen Titans #58
  25. Teen Titans (vol. 3) #63
  26. Comic Book Resources > CBR News: CCI: McDuffie Reaches Milestone with DC
  27. DC Comics
  28. Wizard Magazine #193
  29. Newsarama.com : SDCC '08 - DC Animation Panel
  30. Kit, Borys. "Teen Titans growing up at Warner Bros.". The Hollywood Reporter. May 31, 2007.

References

External links