I think DC needs 2 Poison Ivys; one anti-heroine for Harley and one as villainess for the Bats.
If DC had done their research, they could have simply brought back Honey Suckle from the junior Super Foes.
I think DC needs 2 Poison Ivys; one anti-heroine for Harley and one as villainess for the Bats.
If DC had done their research, they could have simply brought back Honey Suckle from the junior Super Foes.
You know, I've said this elsewhere...But I feel that the relationship to Harley was quite a double edged sword to Ivy, good or evil. Originally in BTAS where the couple started, it was clear that whatever the girls were doing Pam was the brains of the operation and Harley was basically the sidekick (wasn't there a comic where the latter tried to work for Two Face for a bit?). For the past decade or so, she seems to be no more than Harley's girlfriend...
Heck they could have even used Rose/Thorn (Though I guess she's a teenager now?)
Last edited by Mistah K88; 10-06-2020 at 05:02 PM.
Last edited by prepmaster; 10-06-2020 at 07:12 PM.
The Villainous scientists who hates kids and is an ecological extremist.
The hating kids part doesn't have to make her evil. I just think a lot of women are happy being childfree forever and it's cool when they have a character with that trait.
december 21st has passed where are my superpowers?
The best way to have Ivy being evil make sense is too make her have a cold scientific view of the world.
Someone who believes in taking the best method to better the environment even if it includes unethical practices. Someone who doesn't purposely try to help or hurt anyone but simply takes the best course of action.
december 21st has passed where are my superpowers?
Except "hating kids" it flatly incorrect. Some of the most important Poison Ivy stories has her basically running Robinson Park as an orphanage. She did it in No Man's Land, and similar themes can be seen in Gotham Central 32 and other stories. The Cycle of Life and Death had her search of and raising children of her own as a key theme.
«Speaking generally, it is because of the desire of the tragic poets for the marvellous that so varied and inconsistent an account of Medea has been given out» (Diodorus Siculus, The Library of History [4.56.1])