Crime Doctor (comics)

The Crime Doctor is the name of two fictional characters in DC Comics

Publication History

The first Crime Doctor first appeared in Detective Comics #77 (July 1943), and was created by Bill Finger and Bob Kane.

Fictional character biography

Crime Doctor I

Crime Doctor

The Crime Doctor on the cover of Detective Comics #77
Art by Bob Kane
Publication information
Publisher DC Comics
First appearance Detective Comics #77
(July 1943)
Created by Thorne:
Bill Finger (writer)
Bob Kane (artist)
In-story information
Alter ego Matthew Thorne
Team affiliations Secret Society of Super Villains
Notable aliases Bradford Thorne
Abilities Skilled surgeon
Expert torturer
Use of injector gun and scalpel

The Crime Doctor is surgeon Matthew Thorne originally named "Bradford Thorne". In post-Crisis continuity, it has been revealed he is the brother of the Gotham City gangster Rupert Thorne.

Thorne started out as a rogue physician in Gotham City, setting up an illegal clinic and treating criminals for money. He was stopped and apprehended time and again by the Batman.

For a while, it seemed that Thorne's mind had been destroyed due to mercury poisoning at the hands of the Sterling Silversmith, but Thorne later returned to his criminal career, his mind seemingly intact. The Crime Doctor usually never took part in physical battles against superheroes, but he was recruited by Lex Luthor and Brainiac into their supervillain army during the Crisis on Infinite Earths.

Initially, the Crime Doctor took his career as a doctor very seriously, and would not commit crimes that conflicted with his Hippocratic Oath. In later appearances however, he seemed to abandon this principle.

The Crime Doctor's recent appearances have all depicted him wearing star-shaped glasses. It was later revealed that those glasses were a trophy taken from his first victim, a young nurse named Katherine Wheyhall, who had suspected his sadistic inclination to murder and torture while witnessing him deliberately botching a surgery.

Later, the Crime Doctor paid a visit to the nurse and killed her, thus setting the basis of his newfound criminal career.

The Crime Doctor appears in Villains United (2006), where he tortures the Secret Six for the identity of Mockingbird. This fails in the case of the 'Parademon', who equates torture with love. Breaking his restraints, Catman knocks him out with a metal tray table (where the Doctor had his medical equipment).[1]

In the "Progeny" arc of Birds of Prey, the Crime Doctor tries to 'defect' from the Secret Society of Super Villains. The Society sends Prometheus to repay the Crime Doctor by torturing and killing his daughter as he had done to his victims. After a gruesome battle, the Birds of Prey almost manage to subdue Prometheus, but the Crime Doctor decides to kill himself, thus ensuring his own punishment, and sparing his daughter, who, alone and outcast by the other children, subsequently falls prey to the ambition of Lady Shiva to have a young apprentice to mold in her image.[2]

Crime Doctor II

A new, female Crime Doctor appeared in Manhunter vol. 4 #32 (2008), a Romanian widow and survivor of the Nicolae Ceauşescu regime named Anica Balcescu.

Following the Final Crisis, Anica Balcescu was seen as a member of Cheetah's Secret Society of Super Villains as she grafted Wonder Woman's lasso to Genocide.

Powers and abilities

The original Crime Doctor had no super human powers, however he was a skilled physician and an expert torturer. He sometimes carried an injector gun which could gas opponents to sleep. He also sometimes used a scalpel to assault his opponents.

In other media

Television

References

  1. "Privileged to Spill Her Blood" Villains United 3 (September 2005), DC Comics
  2. Simone, Gail (w), Siqueira, Paulo, Prado, Joe (p), Riggs, Robin, Giordano, Dick (i). "Progeny" Birds of Prey 92-95 (May-August 2006), DC Comics

External links