Bloodshot (comics)

Bloodshot is a fictional superhero appearing in books published by the American publisher Valiant Comics. The character was created by Kevin VanHook, Don Perlin, and Bob Layton. First appearing in 1992, the character was a hitman named Angelo Mortalli. After Acclaim Entertainment bought Valiant Comics, the character was rebooted in 1997 by Len Kaminski with art by Sal Velluto, given a different origin and said to be government operative Raymond Garrison (Mortalli was now said to be a cover identity he used temporarily). After Valiant Entertainment bought the character rights in 2004, Bloodshot was rebooted again in 2012 under the direction of Duane Swierczynski, Arturo Lozzi and Manuel Garcia. This version of the character remains in publication. Nicknamed "Every Man", he is the latest in a line of experimental Bloodshot super-soldiers beginning in World War II. Given false memories of other lives (such as Angelo Mortalli) in order to motivate and control him, he eventually learns his real name might be Raymond "Ray" Garrison.

Bloodshot
Textless cover of Bloodshot #1 (July 2012).
Art by Arturo Lozzi.
Publication information
PublisherValiant Comics
First appearanceCameo appearance: Eternal Warrior #4 (November 1992)
Full appearance: Rai #0 (November 1992)
Created byKevin VanHook
Don Perlin
Bob Layton
In-story information
Alter egoAngelo Mortalli (original)
Raymond Garrison (reboot)
Team affiliationsUnity
H.A.R.D. Corps
Notable aliasesMichael Lazarus
Mr. Blood Moon
Every Man
Harbinger Hunter
Psiot Killer
Angelo Mortalli (alias after reboot)
Abilities Formerly: H.A.R.D. Corps implants

Throughout the various reboots, the Bloodshot character is a man of violence who has "nanobots" or nanites (microscopic machines) injected into his bloodstream (hence the nickname). This results in Bloodshot having superhuman powers such as enhanced physical traits, the ability to repair injuries and life-threatening damage to his body, an internal database of weapons training and hand-to-hand combat skills, and a mental connection to computers (technopathy). Other powers vary with each incarnation. The original Valiant Comics Bloodshot was a human given superhuman abilities while the Acclaim Entertainment reboot and Valiant Entertainment reboot involved a man who was killed then resurrected by experimental science; each version of Bloodshot loses his memory in the process, motivating him to investigate his past as he confronts or evades various enemies.

Publication history

Bloodshot was created by Kevin VanHook, Don Perlin, and Bob Layton during a wave of popularity for Valiant Comics.[1] The character's name was suggested by artist David Chlystek.[2] The character first appeared in three panels on the last page of Eternal Warrior #4 (November 1992), before making his first full appearance in Rai #0 (November 1992) a week later. The character got enough fan interest to earn his own series Bloodshot (Volume 1) in 1993, initially written by VanHook with artwork by Don Perlin. The series lasted 52 issues, concluding in 1996 just as Acclaim Entertainment bought Valiant Comics. In 1997, Acclaim Entertainment rebooted the Valiant Universe. The new series Bloodshot (Volume 2), written by Len Kaminski with art by Sal Velluto, introduced a slightly altered version of the character and lasted 16 issues, ending in 1998. When Acclaim went out of business in 2004, Valiant Comics was rebranded as Valiant Entertainment and bought the rights to Bloodshot.

In 2012, Valiant Entertainment rebooted the Valiant Universe again with a new line of comics. Bloodshot (Volume 3) introduced a new take on the Bloodshot character, written by Duane Swierczynski with art by Arturo Lozzi and Manuel Garcia. The series lasted 27 issues, though it was temporarily rebranded as Bloodshot and H.A.R.D. Corps after Valiant's Harbinger Wars crossover in 2013, then regained its original title after the Armor Hunters crossover in 2014 (which included a miniseries titled Armor Hunters: Bloodshot). In 2015, a new ongoing series titled Bloodshot Reborn began under the direction of Jeff Lemire and Mico Suayan, lasting 18 issues and concluding in 2016, and supplemented with a miniseries titled Bloodshot U.S.A. and the one-shot Bloodshot's Day Off. In 2017, the 12 issue series Bloodshot Salvation was done by Lemire and Suayan, along with Lewis LaRosa. From 2018 to 2019, Valiant published a prequel 8-issue series titled Bloodshot Rising Spirit written by Kevin Grevioux, Lonnie Nadler, and Zac Thompson, with art by Ken Lashley. A new series set in the present began afterward, simply titled Bloodshot (Volume 4), written by Tim Seeley and illustrated by Brett Booth.

Plot summary

Original Valiant Comics Version - 1992

Angelo Mortalli is a ruthless and arrogant hitman climbing the mob ranks and about to marry the daughter of mobster Gino Canelli, head of one of New York City's major crime families. When it is discovered Mortalli is having an affair, Canelli takes revenge by framing him for murder. Mortalli offers evidence in exchange for federal witness protection rather than prison. But Canelli learns about this further betrayal and buys off an FBI agent to kidnap Mortalli. Rather than kill the former hitman, Canelli has him delivered as a new test subject for Project Rising Spirit, an illegal and clandestine attempt to turn people into living weapons, headed by the corrupt scientist Hideyoshi Iwatsu.[3]

Mortalli's body is injected with microscopic technology called nanites, leaving blood-red circle scarring on his chest. The nanites rebuild his brain and body, making Angelo superhuman but erasing his memory in the process. When Angelo uses his superhuman abilities or his nanites detect combat situations, his skin becomes paler, often turning chalk-white, and his eyes turn red.

Cover image of Bloodshot #40. Art by Jeff Johnson.

Escaping from the lab, Mortalli takes the name "Bloodshot" and determines to learn who he was and how he was altered. While fighting and killing many members of the New York mob, Mortalli joins forces with the "Eternal Warrior" called Gilad. They had been enemies before but Abrams does not hold a grudge because he believes Mortalli metaphorically "died" the night Bloodshot was born. Mortalli is later disillusioned after learning about his past actions as a hitman. Having no desire to remain in New York or return to his old life, Bloodshot goes to Europe and uses his powers to fight corruption. With the help of Abrams, he creates a new cover identity for himself, "Michael Lazarus," and operates as Bloodshot when he deems it necessary.[4] He battles a variety of villains and criminals, some of who are "psiots" or "harbingers" (people born with superhuman powers), such as including Ax, a psiot obsessed with attaining advanced technology such as Bloodshot's nanites or the alien armor of X-O Manowar.

Readers learn that in the future, the heroic line of Rai warriors adopt a similar appearance to Bloodshot to remember his heroism in the 20th century. The last Rai warrior even inherits Mortalli's nanites.[5]

Acclaim Entertainment Reboot - 1997

In Bloodshot (Volume 2), Bloodshot now permanently has alabaster skin and red eyes. Instead of a mobster who was captured and experimented on while alive, he is now a mobster killed by the Canelli crime family then resurrected into a Frankenstein monster-like superhuman with nanites by Project Lazarus, an experiment created and directed by Dr. Frederick J. Stroheim, son of late Nazi scientist Klaus Stroheim (the "Mengele of Dachau"). Amnesiac, Bloodshot investigates his past to learn about his previous life as mobster Angelo Mortalli. This brings him into conflict with not only the mob but also the Domestic Operations Authority (D.O.A.), a U.S. government covert operations division that created Project Lazarus and is under the purview of Director Simon Oreck. To fight and retrieve Bloodshot, the D.O.A. sends out the Special Circumstances Division (nicknamed "the Chainsaw"), a team of mercenaries equipped with advanced technology. While eliminating evidence of Mortalli's life that could lead back to them and Project Lazarus, the D.O.A. kills the hitman's former lover Gina DeCarlo.[6]

Bloodshot finally learns that while he was really Raymond Garrison, a D.O.A. agent sent to infiltrate the Canelli crime family by using the cover identity "Angelo Mortalli." When they later decided he was a traitor, the mobsters killed him. The D.O.A. brought his remains to Project Lazarus, where Dr. Stroheim resurrected him as a superhuman "angel of death." Dr. Stroheim reveals Garrison was his first true success but that he cannot replicate the results unless he first removes a "prime assembler" unit implanted in Bloodshot along with his nanites. Rather than allow others to be transformed into undead weapons, Bloodshot destroys Stroheim's lab and leaves to discover more about who Raymond Garrison really is.[7]

Valiant Entertainment Reboot - 2012

Bloodshot (Volume 3)

The 2012 relaunch by Valiant Entertainment reintroduces the Bloodshot mythology by saying that the Rising Spirit Program has created different super-soldiers over the decades starting with World War II. At some point, there was also a dog test subject nicknamed Bloodhound. The Bloodshot super-soldiers, later collectively known as the "Bloodshot Squad," are distinguished by nicknames: Tank Man (Winston Grover) first served in World War II, described as an "animated Frankenstein"; the science greatly improved for Viet Man (Sergeant Dell Palmer), who served in the Vietnam War and was "fully repairable and adaptable to his environment"; Cold Man was an operative who could adopt a more human appearance and blend in, helping him act as a covert agent during the Cold War. All of these subjects were near-mindless weapons with little restraint against causing civilian casualties. Starting with Quiet Man, who served in the Gulf War, the Bloodshot program used nanites to transfer memories from dead soldiers, providing some semblance of a conscience with restraint as well as motivation factors that could be manipulated to ensure control.[8] An unnamed Bloodshot cyborg has multiple false identities implanted over time, but this leads to violent insanity and he has to be destroyed in 2010.[9] The techniques and technology used on him are improved on for on the modern-day Bloodshot, also known as Every Man, who serves in many Special Ops missions, including in Syria and Afghanistan. Bloodshot (Volume 3) follows the life of Every Man, who at the start of the series believes he is Raymond "Ray" Garrison, a soldier with a wife and son back home.

In 2007, Dr. Emmanuel Kuretich discovers Project Rising Spirit Director Simon Oreck is using Bloodshot super-soldiers to capture "psiots" or "harbingers", rare people born with superhuman abilities (particularly children psiots). Alarmed, Kuretich leaves and joins Toyo Harada's Harbinger Foundation, secretly making plans to stop P.R.S. Years later, while on a routine mission in Afghanistan, the modern-day Bloodshot soldier is captured by the Harbinger Foundation. Intending to expose Project Rising Sun to the world. Kuretich forcibly extracts mental records of his missions. The process causes Bloodshot to realize he has repeatedly been given false memories of different lives and identities in order to motivate him and control him. He believed he was Ray Garrison but now sees conflicting memories of other families, lives, and names (such as "Angelo Mortalli").[10]

After escaping from Kuretich, Bloodshot learns P.R.S. is willing to destroy him if necessary and evades them too, realizing all his memories may lies. Bloodshot later finds a P.R.S. facility known as the Nursery, built to house captured psiot children. Freeing the captives, he confronts the Nursery's sadistic jailer Gamma as well as an "outdated" cyborg hit squad called Chainsaw. His actions at the Nursery help lead to the Harbinger Wars crossover.[11] Several free psiots join together to oppose both the Harbinger Foundation and P.R.S., calling themselves the Renegades, including a hacker activist named @x (pronounced "Ax").

Bloodshot and H.A.R.D. Corps

When Bloodshot later meets Toyo Harada, his free will is overridden by the "Harada Protocol", a hidden Rising Spirit program compelling him to terminate the man. A vicious battle leaves Harada seriously wounded and Bloodshot with a depleted nanite count. Bloodshot becomes a prisoner of Harada's Harbinger Foundation. Harada subjects him to painful tests, hoping to learn more about his unique technology. Not wishing the Harbinger Foundation to uncover the secrets of their experiments, Project Rising Spirit sends out a superhuman combat team, the Harbinger Active Resistance Division Corps (known more simply as H.A.R.D. Corps). Despite losses, the team retrieves Bloodshot. In exchange for P.R.S. restoring his health and nanites, Bloodshot accepts membership in the H.A.R.D. Corps and joins the team on various global missions, including retrieving a former Project Rising Spirit test subject codenamed Prodigal, and fighting the duo of Archer & Armstrong in the crossover story "Mission Improbable."[12] During this time, Bloodshot (Volume 3) is temporarily retitled Bloodshot and H.A.R.D. Corps.[13]

Bloodshot pretends to become a loyal soldier and H.A.R.D Corps member in order to regain his health, as well as access to the Project's resources. As a reward for his cooperation and sign of good faith, Project Rising Spirit gives Bloodshot a file that seems to reveal his true identity is indeed Raymond "Ray" Garrison (though this could be another false life created by P.R.S.). Once Bloodshot is sure he can survive without their aid, he breaks free of P.R.S. and H.A.R.D. Corps, determined to be his own person rather than anyone's weapon. The series resumes the title Bloodshot for its final issues, #24 and 25. Deciding to retire from violence, Bloodshot disappears.

Bloodshot Reborn

Published in 2015 with creators Jeff Lemire and Mico Suayan, this series ran for 19 regular issues and had an annual issue, as well as the Bloodshot USA 4-issue miniseries and the one-shot Bloodshot's Day Off. After having his nanites removed by Kay McHenry (Geomancer), Bloodshot tries to live a normal life as Ray Garrison. But when a number of shootings are carried out by men who look like Bloodshot, he investigates and returns to the life he left behind.

Bloodshot Salvation

Published in 2017 with creators Jeff Lemire, Mico Suayan and Lewis LaRosa, this series ran for 12 regular issues plus a number of event tie ins. Following directly after Bloodshot Reborn, Bloodshot must now protect his girlfriend Magic and their daughter from Magic's sadistic family.

Bloodshot Rising Spirit

An 8-issue prequel series launched in 2018 under the writing trio of Kevin Grevioux, Lonnie Nadler and Zac Thompson, with artist Ken Lashley. The story takes place in 2010, before the beginning of the modern adventures of the Every Man Bloodshot. Project Rising Spirit creates a cyborg super-soldier regularly given new memories and identities to control and motivate him, including "Angelo Mortalli." This process drives him insane and he turns on his handlers, forcing Project Rising Spirit to destroy him. This cyborg has no official name and is often referred to by fans simply as "Bloodshot Rising Spirit." Because the techniques and technology used on him are earlier forms of those used to make Raymond Garrison into a Bloodshot soldier, the cyborg is seen by many as an immediate "prototype" to the modern day Bloodshot.

Bloodshot (Volume Four)

In 2019, writer Tim Seeley and artist Brett Booth launched the current ongoing Bloodshot series.

Superhuman Abilities

Original Valiant Comics Continuity

Angelo Mortalli is a living man injected with nanites that control his blood flow, oxygen, and adrenaline levels, and almost immediately rebuild damaged and torn muscle. This gives him augmented reflexes, strength, speed, senses, and healing. The microscopic machines connect his mind to a pre-programmed database of martial arts styles, combat skills, and weapons information. When Mortalli has to heal from serious wounds, he needs to consume animal tissue and protein (such as raw meat) to replace the lost mass and flesh. Alternatively, he can hold such replacement tissue and protein against the wound that needs repair and let his body absorb it over time. Angelo's default appearance is identical to how he appeared before his nanite injection. When he uses his superhuman abilities or his nanites detect a combat situation, his skin becomes paler until it is chalk-white and his eyes turn red.[3]

Unlike previous test subjects of the same science, Angelo develops technopathy, allowing him to read information from computers and certain other electronic equipment (he cannot read the information directly from a disc or CD by touching it but he can if he places it within any kind of electronic reader and touches it, regardless of encryption or password protection). When encountering assassins who are empowered by similar nanites, Mortalli's technopathy allows him to control their technology and kill them.[4]

The Acclaim Entertainment reboot version of Bloodshot, named Raymond Garrison, possesses the same powers but has the appearance of chalk-white skin and red eyes at all times. He differs from the previous incarnation by the fact that he died and was resurrected by nanite technology to become Bloodshot.

Valiant Entertainment Reboot

The modern-day Bloodshot, known as Every Man and Ray Garrison, is a soldier who died and then was resurrected when a billion nanites were shot into his bloodstream and rebuilt him. The latest in a long line of super-soldiers, his nanites are unique compared to others of the Bloodshot program. These nanites grant him an internal database, superhuman strength, and enhanced combat abilities (including a sonic scream), as well as the ability to mentally interface with technology and outside databases. He can deliver a "neuro-psychic pulse emission" if necessary. Bloodshot's normal appearance involves red eyes, near-chalk white skin, and scarring on his chest that resembles a red circle, but thanks to malleable anatomy and the ability to camouflage his coloring, he can perform a limited form of shape-shifting to blend in as an average looking person or replicate the appearance of a person he remembers. When he has to heal from serious wounds or use his camouflage and mass-shifting ability, he often has to consume animal tissue and protein (such as raw meat) to help the process and replace lost tissue and mass.[10]

Connection with other Valiant characters

Generally, the characters published by Valiant inhabit a shared universe/continuity. In the original canon from Valiant Comics, the Angelo Mortalli incarnation of Bloodshot is connected to the future-era hero Takao Konishi, the last Rai. In this continuity, the entire line of Rai warriors is created by Grandmother in the image of Bloodshot to honor his heroism. It is revealed that Konishi even has Mortalli's nanite powered blood in his veins, granting him some of Bloodshot's memories and all of his powers. This connection to Rai does not exist in the Acclaim Entertainment reboot canon or in the 2012 relaunched Valiant Universe.

In continuity launched by Valiant Entertainment in 2012, Bloodshot was made not only to perform covert ops and assassinations but also to capture "psiots" or "harbingers", the primary form of superhumans in the current Valiant Universe. This has forced him into contact and conflict with various superhumans from other comics.

Reception

Bloodshot is one of the best selling Valiant characters with total sales in all languages approaching seven million comics. Shortly before the debut of the Bloodshot series the title character made two introductory appearances in popular titles Rai and Eternal Warrior. Based on these appearances there was a groundswell of demand for the character to return and high anticipation for the premier issue. Bloodshot #1 (February 1993) was a much anticipated comic that became a best selling issue and has gone on to sell approximately one million copies.[14] The original series was written by Kevin VanHook and drawn by Don Perlin. The premiere issue featured the first "Chromium" comic book cover.[15]

Bloodshot #1 (July 2012) was awarded "Best Comic" by Diamond Comic Distributors (the American comics industry's leading distributor) and "Best Innovation" for its chromium cover. Bloodshot was named one of the Top Ten Comic-Book Series of 2012 by Nerdage.[16]

In other media

Film

Bloodshot

A film based on Bloodshot, titled Bloodshot, starring Vin Diesel[17] had a theatrical release in the United States on March 13, 2020, by Sony Pictures Releasing. It was intended to be the first installment in a series of films set within a Valiant Comics shared cinematic universe.[18] A version of the Valiant character Ax (who was an enemy of Bloodshot in his original incarnation) appeared in the film, while Project Rising Sun was altered to be a company called Rising Spirit Tech. Directed by David S. F. Wilson (in his feature directorial debut) from a screenplay by Jeff Wadlow and Eric Heisserer and a story by Wadlow,[19] the film stars Vin Diesel, Eiza González, Sam Heughan, Toby Kebbell, and Guy Pearce.

Ninjak vs. the Valiant Universe

Bloodshot appears in Ninjak vs. the Valiant Universe, portrayed by Jason David Frank.[20][21][22]

Video games

Foreign editions

Chinese editions

  • Bloodshot #0 (1993 series) was reprinted in 1994 as the first Chinese (Cantonese) Valiant Comics book in Hong Kong.[25] The book was published as part of a collector's box of six Valiant Comics books.[26]
  • A limited number of promotional copies of Bloodshot #1 2015[27] were distributed at a press conference in Beijing when Valiant Entertainment announced a new partnership with DMG Entertainment on March 9, 2015. The promotional issue was translated and printed in Chinese (Mandarin).

References

  1. "NYCC 2017: Valiant Offers Limited-Edition BLOODSHOT SALVATION BEAR – Available Exclusively at New York Comic Con 2017!". Valiant Entertainment. September 15, 2017. Retrieved September 15, 2017.
  2. @dinesh_s (January 8, 2018). "With all the BLOODSHOT talk today the great @Bob_Layton, one of the characters chief architects, reminds us that Dave Chlystek named him!" (Tweet) via Twitter.
  3. Bloodshot (Volume 1) #0-2.
  4. Bloodshot (Volume 1) #1-7.
  5. Bloodshot (Volume 1) #5.
  6. Bloodshot (Volume 2) #1-4.
  7. Bloodshot (Volume 2) #5.
  8. Bloodshot (Vol. 3) #0. Bloodshot Reborn #14-18 (2016).
  9. Bloodshot Rising Spirit #1-8 (2018-2019).
  10. Bloodshot (Vol. 3) #1-4.
  11. Bloodshot (Vol. 3) #5-13. Harbinger #11-13. Harbinger Wars #1-4.
  12. Bloodshot and H.A.R.D. Corps #20-21.Archer & Armstrong Vol. 2 #18-19.
  13. Bloodshot and H.A.R.D. Corps #0, 14-21.
  14. "ValiantFans.com Home Page".
  15. Ginocchio, Mark (June 7, 2014). "10 silliest comic book gimmick covers from the 1990s". comicbook.com.
  16. Price, Matt (April 1, 2013). "Top Ten Comic-Book Series of 2012". Newsok.com. Retrieved June 6, 2013.
  17. Fleming, Mike Jr.; Hipes, Patrick (March 8, 2018). "Vin Diesel Back In Action With Sony's 'Bloodshot', Valiant Comic Adaptation With Dave Wilson Directing". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved March 9, 2018.
  18. Clark, Travis (September 18, 2019). "How Valiant Entertainment is jumping from comics to movies and TV". Business Insider.
  19. "Bloodshot". WGA Directory.
  20. @ValiantComics (September 30, 2016). "Look who's joining us at @NY_Comic_Con, @jdfffn! #NYCC" (Tweet) via Twitter.
  21. Mueller, Matthew (September 30, 2016). "First Look At Jason David Frank As Bloodshot". ComicBook.com.
  22. Lovett, Jamie (October 8, 2016). "Ninjak Vs. The Valiant Universe Trailer Released At NYCC". ComicBook.com.
  23. "Bloodshot". Cyplexia. Paul Taylor. April 23, 2010. Retrieved March 11, 2017.
  24. "Acclaim Kills Bloodshot". IGN. Imagine Media. January 6, 1999. Retrieved March 11, 2017.
  25. "Bloodshot 1994 Hong Kong edition". Grand Comics Database (GCD).
  26. "Rare Valiant Comics: 1994 VH-1 Hong Kong Edition".
  27. "Bloodshot 2015 Valiant/DMG Chinese edition". Grand Comics Database (GCD).
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