Starro’s First Appearance Also Marked The Introduction Of The Justice League
The Brave and the Bold #28 is one of the most important in the history of DC Comics. After all, it was the issue that introduced one of the most important teams in the history of comics in general. In the March 1960 issue, characters including Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Green Lantern, The Flash, Aquaman, and Martian Manhunter teamed up for the first time, revealing to readers for the first time the superhero group known as the Justice League Of America. And who was the foe that these powerful protagonists had to team up and defeat? None other than Starro.
Like how Loki was the first enemy faced by The Avengers, the greatest heroes of the DC universe had to work together to try and defeat a deadly foe from another world. And while the Suicide Squad was in no way involved with the fight, it is interesting to note that it was in the same Brave And The Bold series that Robert Kanigher and Ross Andru introduced the original group of soldiers that operated under that name.
Starro Looks Like A Giant Starfish
You’ve probably figured this out by now from the images that are featured in this article, but Starro’s appearance is notable in that it is a giant intergalactic starfish. Multiple versions of the character have been featured in the pages of DC Comics in the years since he debuted, but that is one aspect that has always remained consistent. The history of the species goes back billions of years, as the species exists to spread across the cosmos and dominate every world that it encounters.
Like a starfish, it has five “arms” that are prehensile tentacles and sees through a single eye that is located in the middle of its body. It has the ability to absorb energy and project it either through its arms or its eye, and can fly, making it a dangerous foe in battle, but there is one power that it possesses in particular that makes it a truly terrifying, world-ending threat.
Starro Controls People By Launching Spores
It’s much easier to take over a planet if all of the living things around support your drive to do so, and that is Starro’s big move. As mighty as it can be as a full-blown kaiju, the really scary thing about it is its ability to reproduce asexually and telepathically communicate with its offspring. Said offspring essentially are parasitic organisms, and what they do to survive is latch on to another organism’s face (not too dissimilar to the Facehuggers in the
Alien franchise). When they do this, they gain total control of their host, and the larger Starro can operate them like a puppet.
Once a Starro progeny is peeled off a person’s head the mind control ends, but it should be noted that isn’t the full extent of its psychic powers. Even without its parasites Starro has the ability to reach into people’s dreams/subconscious and manipulate them – which in turn makes them more vulnerable to further manipulation.
Like A Starfish, It Can Regenerate
Basing a dangerous DC villain on a starfish may seem like a rather silly thing on paper (as many old school comic elements do), but thinking that way also ignores that starfish are fascinating creatures. The most fascinating thing about them is their ability to regenerate – which extends to not only when a creature has a limb amputated/cut off, but also a lost limb re-growing an entire new body.
Naturally this is a quality that Starro creators Gardner Fox and Mike Sekowsky were inspired to include in their comic book creation. The giant starfish species is not only a threat to take over any world that it lands on, but it’s also damn hard to kill due to the fact that they can regrow from simple fragments. It’s easy to imagine that idea alone both being used to comedic and horror effect by James Gunn in
The Suicide Squad.