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Brotherhood of Evil

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Group of DC Comics supervillains
For the team of mutant terrorists, seeBrotherhood of Mutants.
Brotherhood of Evil
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceDoom Patrol #86
(March 1964)
Created byArnold Drake
Bruno Premiani
In-story information
Member(s)The Brain (leader)
Monsieur Mallah
Gemini
Warp
Plasmus
Houngan
Phobia
Trinity
Elephant Man
Goldilocks
General Immortus
Madame Rouge
Garguax

TheBrotherhood of Evil is a group ofDC Comicssupervillains, archenemies of theDoom Patrol,Justice League andTeen Titans.

The Brotherhood of Evil appears in the third season of theHBO Max seriesDoom Patrol.

Publication history

[edit]

The Brotherhood of Evil first appeared inDoom Patrol #86 (March 1964) and were created byArnold Drake andBruno Premiani.[1]

Fictional team history

[edit]

Origins

[edit]

The Brotherhood of Evil is founded by the enigmatic villain theBrain. In the beginning, the group's motivation is world domination.[2] It is later revealed that Brain's true purpose for the Brotherhood was to destroyNiles Caulder and his "colleagues". Caulder murdered Brain so he could turn the scientist intoRobotman without Brain's consent, but his plans were foiled by the Brain's creation, the intelligentgorillaMonsieur Mallah, who preserved his brain in a robotic container. Brain swore revenge against Caulder and his "pets", the Doom Patrol, who like Brain were often victims of experimentation in order to create an army of super-heroes through the ruining of innocent lives (several members were experiments of the Nazi war criminalGeneral Zahl).

The original line-up consists of the Brain, Mallah, and their first recruit, the shapeshifterMadame Rouge. They battle the Doom Patrol on a regular basis and are later briefly joined by fellow Doom Patrol villainsGeneral Immortus and the alienGarguax.[3] The group is aided by the clumsy henchmanMr. Morden, who often operates robotic devices for the Brain.

The group's constant failure to defeat the Doom Patrol, combined with the growing romantic attraction between Madame Rouge and Niles Caulder, leads to Rouge breaking free of the mental conditioning the Brain used to recruit her. Rouge quits the Brotherhood to join the Doom Patrol, but the Brain quickly recaptures Rouge and brainwashes her again. However, Rouge turns against the Brotherhood and launches a missile to destroy the Brain and Mallah.

Aided by General Zahl, Madame Rouge captures the Doom Patrol and threatens to destroyCodsville, a smallMaine fishing village, with a nuclear weapon. The Doom Patrol members reluctantly choose death and sacrifice themselves to save Codsville.[4]

Return

[edit]

Madame Rouge and Zahl remain in hiding for many years, gathering an army of minions to conquerZandia. Meanwhile, the Doom Patrol had reformed, with Robotman as the only surviving original member. Along withMento, the Doom Patrol avoid going after Rouge for the murders of Doom Patrol as they did not want to involveBeast Boy in their vendetta. When Beast Boy (now calling himself "Changeling") joins the NewTeen Titans, the two adult Doom Patrol members go after Rouge. Both are defeated: Mento is tortured until he suffers a mental breakdown, while Robotman is left deactivated and hung outside as a warning to trespassers.[volume & issue needed]

The New Teen Titans go looking for Robotman and Mento when Beast Boy does not hear back from them, which ultimately leads to a battle with Rouge and Zahl. To their surprise, the heroes are aided by the Brain and Mallah and their new version of the Brotherhood of Evil. Brain and Mallah had predicted Rouge's betrayal and went into hiding, leaving decoys that Rouge ultimately destroyed. Rouge and Zahl both die while fighting Beast Boy and Robotman respectively. The Brain's new Brotherhood leaves the Titans, knowing that they would soon come into conflict.[5]

The Brain and the new Brotherhood of Evil come into conflict withBrother Blood, whose life-restoring blood pits Brain seeks to use to prolong his own life. To deal with Blood's inhuman powers, the group repeatedly attack the Titans to kidnapRaven and force her to aid them in defeating Blood. They ultimately succeed in kidnapping Raven with the Brain's influence and the fear-manipulating power ofPhobia, briefly turning Raven to the Brotherhood's side. Raven's demonic fatherTrigon gains control of her body and nearly kills both the Titans and the Brotherhood before being stopped byDonna Troy.[volume & issue needed]

The Brotherhood resurfaces again inZandia as the New Teen Titans battle to rescue Raven andNightwing from Brother Blood's cult. During the battle, Brain and Mallah gain access to the blood pits of Blood while the Brotherhood capturesJericho. A cave-in traps Mallah and Brain underground, separating them from their team.[6]

Meanwhile, Mr. Morden, now transformed intoMr. Nobody, attempts to reform the Brotherhood in Paris, but eventually decides that the name and focus of the group should be changed to reflect the fact that "the universe is a drooling idiot with no fashion sense". Nobody founds theBrotherhood of Dada, which battles the Doom Patrol on two occasions.[volume & issue needed]

Meanwhile, Brain and Mallah make their way to the United States and steal one of Robotman's spare bodies for the Brain. Now with a body, Brain declares his undying love for Mallah just as the spare body explodes. The robot body had gained sentience, a fact the two were unaware of, and had vowed to destroy itself rather than have a human brain inserted into it again.[7]

The rest of the Brotherhood rechristen themselves the "Society of Sin" and recruited a new female member named Trinity. This incarnation of the Brotherhood would only exist for one battle with the Titans before the group returned to their existing name and dropped Trinity from its roster.[volume & issue needed]

InThe New Titans #97-99, Brain and Mallah return to the Brotherhood withRita Farr, the sole member of the original Doom Patrol who had not been resurrected. However, Brain is suffering from severe mental deterioration; Mallah proclaims that only Mento's helmet could save him. The group force Changeling to steal the helmet for them in exchange for Brain helping restoreCyborg, who has been rendered a brain-dead automaton. Changeling steals the helmet, but quickly changes his mind about giving it to Brain, leading "Rita Farr" to make her presence known and attack her son from behind while "Mallah" distracts Changeling with energy-based abilities that he did not possess beforehand. This causes the Brotherhood to realize that the three are not who they claimed to be, leading toWarp escaping and bringing the Titans in to save Changeling and his teammates from the fake Elasti-Girl, Brain, and Mallah. Several weeks later, the imposters attack the Titans again and are revealed to be energy beings who serve a sentient alien computer called Technis, which needed to assimilate Cyborg in order to survive.

Brotherhood lives again

[edit]

The Brotherhood of Evil are not seen during the second half of the 1990s and would not return until 2005, inJSA Classified #1-3. Brain and Mallah returned a year prior during theIdentity Crisis event. The Titans interrogate the two to learn the location ofPlasmus and Warp, who are suspects in the murder ofSue Dibny.

With Madame Rouge's daughterGemini now a member, the group reunites with Phobia, Mallah, and Brain and joins theSecret Society of Super Villains under the command of inner circle memberDeathstroke. Deathstroke has the group acquireChemo for the Society. Chemo is dropped onto the city ofBlüdhaven, killing several million people.[8] Furthermore, Warp is recruited byDoctor Psycho to freeDoomsday for the Society as part of the group's final endgame against Earth's heroes.

After theone-year gap between the end ofInfinite Crisis andTeen Titans (vol. 3) #34, the Brotherhood has gained members Elephant Man and Goldilocks while losing Phobia, who opts to stay a freelance villain but maintains ties with the Brotherhood.

The Brotherhood returns to their independent roots and launches a massive crime wave independent of the remains of the Secret Society of Super-Villains. Their goals include cloning a new body for the Brain as well as creating unstable clones of existing super-heroes, putting the team in conflict with the Teen Titans, Doom Patrol, and theOutsiders.

The Brain, Monsieur Mallah, General Immortus, Phobia, Plasmus, and Warp appear in theSalvation Run mini-series. InSalvation Run #4, the Brain and Mallah are killed byGorilla Grodd. Plasmus and Warp are used byLex Luthor as a power source for a teleportation device and are seemingly killed when it self-destructs.[9]

The New 52

[edit]

In September 2011,The New 52 rebooted DC's continuity. In this new timeline, the Brotherhood of Evil is featured as its members Phobia, Plasmus, and Warp compete withLa Dama's agents to obtain the scarab. The scarab ends up in the possession of Jaime Reyes, who becomesBlue Beetle and manages to fight off both villain groups. To ensure that Phobia, Plasmus, and Warp succeed in reclaiming the scarab, a robotic gorilla named Silverback is sent to meet up with them. Silverback warns the three villains that if they fail again, he will be the one who will "clean up the mess".[10]

Membership

[edit]
The Brotherhood of Evil at its originalDoom Patrol series peak:
Madame Rouge,General Immortus,Garguax,The Brain andMonsieur Mallah.

Brotherhood of Evil

[edit]

Second Brotherhood of Evil/Society of Sin

[edit]

Third Brotherhood of Evil

[edit]

Fourth Brotherhood of Evil

[edit]

Fifth Brotherhood of Evil

[edit]

In other media

[edit]

Television

[edit]
The Brotherhood of Evil as depicted inTeen Titans.

Miscellaneous

[edit]

The Brotherhood of Evil appear inTeen Titans Go!. Additionally, a heroic, alternate universe version of the Brotherhood called theBrotherhood of Justice appear in issue #48, consisting of General Immortus,Doctor Light,Mammoth, Madame Rouge, and Psimon.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Cowsill, Alan; Irvine, Alex; Korte, Steve; Manning, Matt; Wiacek, Win; Wilson, Sven (2016).The DC Comics Encyclopedia: The Definitive Guide to the Characters of the DC Universe.DK Publishing. p. 56.ISBN 978-1-4654-5357-0.
  2. ^Wells, John (2015).American Comic Book Chronicles: 1960-64.TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 180.ISBN 978-1605490458.
  3. ^Rovin, Jeff (1987).The Encyclopedia of Super-Villains. New York: Facts on File. pp. 386–387.ISBN 0-8160-1356-X.
  4. ^Doom Patrol #121 (October 1968)
  5. ^The New Teen Titans #15 (January 1982)
  6. ^The New Teen Titans (vol. 2) #26 - 28 (December 1986 - February 1987)
  7. ^Doom Patrol (vol. 2) #34 (July 1990)
  8. ^Infinite Crisis #4 (March 2006)
  9. ^Salvation Run #4 (April 2008)
  10. ^Blue Beetle (vol. 8) #1 - 3 (November 2011 - January 2012)
  11. ^The New Titans #103 (November 1993)
  12. ^Batgirl #61 (April 2005)
  13. ^abTeen Titans (vol. 3) #35 (June 2006)
  14. ^Unstoppable Doom Patrol #1 (May 2023)
  15. ^Zachary, Brandon (April 2, 2023)."A Classic Doom Patrol Villain Just Suffered a Shocking Betrayal - And an Even Worse Death".CBR. RetrievedJuly 26, 2025.
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