Zatanna
Zatanna | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
First appearance | Hawkman #4 (October 10th 1964) |
Created by | Gardner Fox (writer) Murphy Anderson (artist) |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Zatanna Zatara |
Species | Homo magi |
Place of origin | San Francisco, California |
Team affiliations | Justice League Dark Justice League Sentinels of Magic Seven Soldiers |
Partnerships | Doctor Fate (various) John Constantine Batman Wonder Woman Black Canary Swamp Thing The Flash Raven |
Notable aliases | Mistress of Magic Princess of Prestidigitation Sorceress Supreme |
Abilities |
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Altered in-story information for adaptations to other media | |
Notable aliases | Doctor Fate |
Zatanna Zatara (/zəˈtænə zəˈtɑːrə/), known mononymously as Zatanna, is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. The character was created by Gardner Fox and Murphy Anderson, and first appeared in Hawkman #4 (November 1964).[1] Throughout the character's history, Zatanna is depicted as one of DC Comics' most well-regarded supernatural superheroes.
The character is depicted as a renown sorceress belonging to the fictional Homo magi race, a subset of humans endowed with innate potential to manipulate magic. She is also the daughter of Giovanni Zatara and Sindella, the former a renown stage magician and sorcerer whom she models herself after and the latter whose lineage connects her to the royal line of Atlantis.[2][3] As a superhero, Zatanna balances her life as a international celebrity stage magician and hero who often fights against the forces of evil and serves as both a mystic consultant and a notable member of several teams such as the Justice League, Justice League Dark, and the Sentinels of Magic. Within the DC Universe, she is often regarded as one of the most powerful magic users.[4][5]
Zatanna has appeared in several different media adaptations, including appearing in several television series in the DC Animated Universe, notably voiced by Julie Brown and Jennifer Hale. She has also appeared as a recurring character in the final three seasons of Smallville, portrayed by Serinda Swan. A younger version of the character appears in Young Justice and Justice League Action, voiced by Lacey Chabert, and DC Super Hero Girls, voiced by Kari Wahlgren.
Publication history
[edit]Created by writer Gardner Fox and artist Murphy Anderson, Zatanna first appeared in Hawkman #4 (November 1964). When she is introduced, she is on a quest to find her father Zatara who made his first appearance in Action Comics #1 but had not been published regularly for several years.[6] The storyline crossed multiple comics published by DC at the time, culminating in issues of Justice League of America, also written by Fox.
Fictional character biography
[edit]Pre-Crisis on Infinite Earth
[edit]Original origin
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In her original origin, Zatanna was born to human Giovanni Zatara and Homo magi Sindella, inheriting her mother's natural affinity for magical powers. Six months after her birth, her mother disappeared and was presumably dead, leading her to be raised by her father. Growing up to be a stage magician with genuine magical powers and modelling herself similarly to her father, Zatara later mysteriously disappears, leading her to travel abroad to perfect her magical craft while searching for her father.[7][8] Unknown to her, the details of her parents' disappearance were revealed overtime; her mother would later return to her people, a clan of Homo magi known as the "Hidden Ones" and her father was cursed by evil sorceress Allura that would kill both himself and his daughter should he see her again, leading him to reluctantly distance himself from her.[7][9][8]
Zatara Quest and the JLA
[edit]In her debut, she is introduced during her quest to find her father, first encountering Hawkman and Hawkgirl.[10][7] During her quest, she encountered various other superheroes such as Batman and Robin (wherein she was disguised as a witch under the control of villain the Outsider)[11] and teams up with others including the Atom,[12] Green Lantern,[13] and the Elongated Man.[14] Eventually, she learns her father's fate and finds him in the mystic dimension of Kharma and encounters the evil Allura, where her good counterpart forced her to lift the curse, reuniting father and daughter after 2 decades.[15][9][7]
Not long after, she is eventually elected became a valued member of the Justice League of America although in her tenure, her powers were original diminished, allowing her powers to only control natural forces.[16] Both her mother and background is later revealed to her, where Zatanna learns the cause of her mother's disappearance and reason for faking her death: possessing a "medula jewel" within her brain, it acted as a source of power for her clan of the Hidden Ones. Fearing her clan would hunt down her daughter, who also inherited a medulla jewel, she telepathically warns her, with Sindella's magic having the odd side-effect of transforming her costume to one resembling her own. With her father and JLA, they meet Sindella, where she explains her disappearances and sacrifices herself to save Zatanna and Zatara from captivity.[17][9]
Post Crisis on Infinite Earths
[edit]Revised background
[edit]After the Crisis on Infinite Earth crossover event, much of Zatanna's history remained the same although several changes came about to her background; her new history reinforced her father's disappearance to have taken place when she was eighteen years old.[8] At some point prior to her father's death, a young Zatanna also met John Constantine, who she once engaged in tantric sex. Her father later became aware of their relationship, disapproving of Constantine.[18]
The the 1998 DCU Heroes Secret Files reveals her birth to be thirty years ago, placing her birth year at around 1958. Other key events for the character is referenced to having taken place, including her becoming a superhero and stage magician nine years prior (1989) and her attempt to rescue her mother alongside her father and the JLA five years prior.[19] It is also eventually revealed she is childhood friends with Bruce Wayne (the future Batman), who came to be trained in escape artistry under her father in his training.[7]
Death of Zatara and Timothy Hunter
[edit]In the "Murder of Crows" storyline, a seance is held by John Constantine, Zatara, Mento, and Sargon the Sorcerer, and Zatanna in an effort to come together and combat the entity known as the Great Evil Beast alongside demonic and divine forces at Wintersgate Manor, the home of Baron Winters in Georgetown, Washington D.C., which is also a temporal threshold to other planes of reality. Due to her past history with Constantine, Giovanni is unusually more protective against Constantine. During the seance, the Beast becomes aware of the seance and after Sargon's death, targets Zatanna by attempting to burn her to death. Giovanni sacrifices himself by taking the effects instead, killing him but sparing his daughter's life.[18] In Neil Gaiman's The Books of Magic limited series, for a time, Zatanna looks after a young boy name Timothy Hunter, destined to become the most powerful wizard in the world, and his girlfriend Molly, cursed by the Queen of Fairies to unable to touch anything in the human world.[20][21]
Come Together and onwards
[edit]In her 1993 limited series titled Zatanna: Come Together, she battles the dark sorcerer Tannarak while her mother's spirit, Sindella, encourages her to battle the demon Xaos. Within the series, her lineage is revealed to be connected to the royalty of Atlantis (particularly the Lord of Order, Arion) and the Xaos demon was responsible for it's sinking. She also undergoes a change in costume and opt out of using logomancy in favor of amplifying her magical powers with her mother's artifacts and traditional spell-casting.[22]
In the 1997 JLA series, Zatanna appears when When the Justice League vanish in the past as they attempt to rescue the missing Aquaman, an emergency protocol set up by Batman assembles a new League, with this team including Jason Blood as its magical expert. However, when the current threat is identified as Gamemnae, an ancient Atlantean sorceress who seeks to conquer the world, she uses a quagmire spell to absorb Zatanna and Tempest into herself. When new League leader Nightwing attempts to order Blood to transform into Etrigan to help them against Gamemnae, Blood insists that Zatanna is the one they need, sacrificing himself to Gamemnae's quagmire spell in order to free Zatanna. She subsequently joins Nightwing, Firestorm and Hawkgirl in travelling back to ancient Atlantis, where Aquaman has been trapped in a pool of water as a water wraith, Firestorm creating a channel between the pool and the sea before Zatanna casts a spell that allowed the water-based Aquaman to control the entire ocean as his body, allowing him to sink Atlantis in the past and present and disrupt Gamemnae's power.
In her 2003 solo one-shot Zatanna: Everyday Magic, in which she fought Nimue Ravensong, a magic-user jealous of Zatanna's ability to use magic naturally and without committing sacrifices. Nimue seduced and cursed John Constantine, leading Zatanna into conflict with the sorceress.[23]
Identity Crisis and the aftermath
[edit]During the 2004 Identity Crisis storyline, it was revealed that Doctor Light had years earlier raped the now-murdered Sue Dibney, the wife of hero Elongated Man. Opting for a magical lobotomization of Light due to threatening other JLA members' family. When Batman appears in the middle of the process and tries to stop it, Zatanna Batman's memories are also erased. In the present time, Light becomes a suspect as his memories return, prompting the League towards a manhunt but Zatanna's role in mind-wiping others is revealed. While Jean Lorning's role in Sue's murder alongside implicating other villains is revealed, Zatanna's role in erasing various villain's memories throughout the years causes a moral rift within the League as her reputation deteriorates and her trustworthiness is called into questioned, especially by longtime friends such as Batman.[24] In storylines exploring the aftermath such as "Crisis of Conscience", Catwoman and the Secret Society of Super-Villains are among those mind-wiped in earlier years, the former done to force her towards a more righteous path.[25]
A 2005 four-issue Zatanna limited series was published as part of Grant Morrison's Seven Soldiers event.[26] In it, at a support group for superheroes, she recounts a failed magical ritual to search for her father's tomes, during which one of her past spells summons a shapeshifter named Gwydion, who kills her companions. This trauma, combined with her guilt from her former mind-wipes, robs her of her powers. With the help of her new apprentice, Misty Kilgore, she captures Gwydion to use as her own. She eventually regains her confidence and powers, and uses them to defeat Zor, a rogue Time Tailor who released the Sheeda as a plague to infect and degrade the entire universe. As a reward, the other Time Tailors allow her one last meeting with her father, who reveals that his books were written for her, his "greatest spell and gift to the world". In the final battle against the Sheeda, Zatanna casts a spell to move time and space, retroactively positioning the Seven Soldiers to overthrow the Sheeda.
In Detective Comics #833 (August 2007), it is stated that Zatanna's father was a friend of Thomas Wayne. Zatara trained Bruce Wayne in the art of escape, and Bruce and Zatanna were childhood friends, although Batman believes that he has never met her in Justice League of America #51, and her only memory of meeting him is while she was disguised. Bruce helps Zatanna investigate the death of one of her former assistants; all clues point to a performer named Ivar Loxias. Loxias is revealed to be the Joker in disguise; he shoots Zatanna in the throat and incapacitates Batman. Zatanna is able to heal herself by writing a curing spell in her own blood, and she is instrumental in foiling the Joker's scheme, driving Joker insane in the process. Bruce puts Zatanna's betrayal behind him, allowing the two to renew their friendship.
On the "Roll Call" of Justice League of America #22 (August 2008), Zatanna is listed as a part of the team. Called upon to help with the Red Tornado's restoration in his android form, she aids the League when they are attacked by a new, powerful iteration of Amazo. During the battle, Zatanna has her mouth magically removed with her spells, and once again uses her blood to write out spells and restore it.[27] After that Wonder Woman throws off Amazo's concentration and free Zatanna. Zatanna then defeats Amazo once and for all by using the Red Tornado's soul. Following this battle, Zatanna rejoins the team.[28]
Zatanna later accompanies Firestorm, Black Lightning, and Batman to Metropolis after they come to believe Kimiyo Hoshi has been kidnapped by agents of the covert metahuman team known as the Shadow Cabinet.[29][30] After a brief conflict, Zatanna and the others are informed by teenage superheroine Rocket that Kimiyo's perceived abduction was actually a misunderstanding caused by the Shadow Cabinet's mission to seek out her help in dealing with the cosmic vampire known as Starbreaker.[31][32] With assistance from Hardware and Icon, Zatanna and her comrades are able to defeat Starbreaker in a battle in the Himalayas.[33][34][35]
In the 2009 Gotham City Sirens series, Zatanna is visited and restrained by Poison Ivy, who interacts via a tree and asks her if her encounter with Catwoman changed Selina in any way.[36] She later a leave of absence from the JLA, only to reappear during a battle with Despero. Once he is defeated, Zatanna informs the League of the apocalyptic events of the Blackest Night taking place across the globe.[37] After taking the team to the Hall of Justice to find Firestorm, she is forced to fight the undead form of her father, continually pitting the black magic he wields against her own.[38] it is implied while she was successful in banishing the Black Lantern, she was left psychologically scarred from having to kill her father again.[39] In the aftermath of, Kimiyo mentions that Zatanna is one of the members who has left the team.[40]
In her self-titled solo series in 2010, no longer an active member of the JLA, Zatanna is asked by officer Dale Colton to help solve a murder case at a restaurant frequented by mobsters. Zatanna informs Dale that the murderer was the sorcerer Brother Night, who rules the supernatural crime scene in San Francisco. After Zatanna shows up at Night's demonic nightclub and threatens him, he responds by summoning a demon,[41] but Zatanna defeats and imprisons the demon to aid her later.[42] A crooked casino owner who had made a deal for eternal youth with the demon of avarice by selling the souls of his brides to the demon attempts to use a love potion to win Zatanna's soul.[43] When her cousin Zachary Zatara breaks the spell, the casino owner begs Zatanna to turn him into a soulless lump of gold in order to escape torment in Hell.[44] Aside from Brother Night, Zatanna faces other threats, such as Oscar Hample, a man who tried to murder her when she was a child and was turned into a puppet by her father.[45][46][47][48] The Zatanna series ended with issue #16 (October 2011).
The New 52
[edit]![]() | This article needs to be updated.(August 2017) |
In September 2011, The New 52 rebooted DC's continuity. Zatanna is one of the main characters in Peter Milligan's Justice League Dark series. She sports a new costume, though she still wears her classic magician's outfit during shows. In the first issue, she learns that Superman, Wonder Woman, and Cyborg have been defeated by the Enchantress and volunteers her services to the League.[49]
The Black Canary and Zatanna graphic novel Bloodspell written by Paul Dini and drawn by Joe Quinones was to be released in 2012, but was delayed until May 2014.[50] The story centered around a 16-year-old Black Canary's first meeting Zatanna.[51]
DC Rebirth
[edit]Zatanna made her first Rebirth appearance in Detective Comics #958, assisting Bruce Wayne in taking out a robot chasing after a cult member. Later on, Zatanna shows Bruce magic. Later Bruce sees her again and asks her to teach him more about magic. Ultimately she declines and wipes his memory.[52] After the conclusion of the main storyline of the DC Rebirth Batwoman series, Zatanna is implied to be an outpatient therapist of sorts for Beth Kane, Kate Kane's twin sister.[53]
In 2018, a new Justice League Dark series began, with a redesigned Zatanna being part of the team.[54] Zatanna travels to Northern Italy to bind a group of demons called Il Osservatori in a story called Zatanna: Sleight of Hand, published in the DC New Talent Showcase 2018 #1.[55]
Character overview
[edit]Characterization
[edit]In the DC Universe, Zatanna is commonly depicted as having a public identity as both a stage magician and genuine sorceress that battles evil.[56] She has adopted several roles as a superhero, serving as a prominent mystic consultant,[4][5] valued member of several superhero teams, and a popular leader.[57] The character also owns a side business providing special service in magical and multiverse matters to those whom are in need of it and promises confidentiality.[3]
Themes involving reputation and stardom
[edit]One reoccurring theme for Zatanna's character includes her public identity as a traveling, international celebrity status as she balances it with her popular superhero dual life, having adopted the lifestyle due to her father's influence.[8] During her first ongoing solo series, her dual life has interfered with her attempts to support Zachary, her cousin and aspiring stage magician whom looks up to his older relative as a source of inspiration and desired her attention and approval.[58] Her trustworthiness as a superhero has also been tested after the events of Infinite Crisis, wherein it is revealed Zatanna was responsible for mind-wiping of super-villains' memories when they learned secret identities of heroes, performed magical lobotomizations to alter the personalities of villains against their will, and also erased the knowledge of these things from certain heroes, the latter two presenting a moral dilemma cumulating to trust issues from team members.[24][25][7]
Throughout her publication history, her reputation as a sorceress has varied; her depictions during the 80's expressed that while she was a powerful sorceress and a force to reckon with, she was not among most powerful.[59] Overtime, this portrayal has changed to expressing the character to be among the most powerful of sorcerers in the world.[60][61] In a recent times, both Zatanna and Doctor Fate (Khalid Nassour) are remarked as the "finest mystical warriors on the planet",[62] with Zatanna also credited with the title of "Sorceress Supreme".[63]
Heritage and ancestry
[edit]Originally, the character was portrayed as half human and half homo magi, with her human lineage stemming from her father's side. Through her paternal line, she is a descendant of Leonardo da Vinci and is related to Nostradamus, Alessandro Cagliostro, Nicholas Flamel, and Evan Fulcanelli, making her of French and Italian descent.[64] However, later retellings of Giovanni's background established her as a full homo magi.[65] From her maternal line, she is a descendant of the ancient Atlantean royal demigod, Sorcerer Supreme, and Lord of Order, Arion.[66][67] Alongside Arion, she is also connected to the Magi clan, the Hidden Ones, and her lineage additionally includes other mages and seers dating back to ancient Atlantis, inheriting various specialties of each.[68]
Love interests
[edit]Within comics, Zatanna has had dated several other superheroes such as Doctor Thirteen,[69][70] Cyborg,[71] and Nick Necro.[72] She has also dated Batman, whom first began as her childhood friend. In earlier portayals, both considered pursuing one another but opted out for their own reasons and Catwoman believed her to be a serious contender for his interest alongside Jezebel Jet, his then-fiancé.[73] In later depictions, it was instead said the pair dated at one point in the past prior to Bruce becoming Batman.[74] Additionally, she had a flirtatious relationship with Flash (Barry Allen), having considered even dating him,[75][16] and Blue Devil. Within alternate universes, she is also romantically involved with Etrigan[76][77] and Sebastian Faust, son of infamous Felix Faust.[78] Within her solo series, her love interests included civilians such as Josh, an African-American and son of coven witch leader whom Zatanna has known for years prior to them exploring a relationship, and Dale Colton, a San Francisco detective whom is also revealed to he the son of one of her major enemies, Brother Night.
Her most significant love interest is John Constantine, whose affiliation has been characterized as turbulent within in various stories. The pair first met some time shortly into Zatanna's adulthood, having once practiced tantric sex.[18] More recent stories emphasized their relationship, having first began from a polyamorous one also involving Nick Necro before the pair broke away from Necro due to his obsession with the Books of Magic deteriorating their shared relationship, resulting in Constantine and Zatanna becoming exclusive to one-another for a time.[72]
Powers, abilities, and resources
[edit]Her heritage gives her command over mystic and cosmic forces,[1] allowing her to manipulate them in many ways and form.[59] Her chief and most preferred method includes performing magic by saying phrases and/or spells backwards. This variation of magic ("Logomancy"), requires focus in order to used[59] and can be alternatively casted via written form[7] or using sign language in a backwards formation.[79] The character versed in different variations of magic such as black magic, tarot reading for insight or divination, and can draw power from a collection of mystic artifacts collected by her family similarly to other magic practitioners.[80] In a diminished state, her magical powers only allowed her to manipulate natural forces (earth, air, water, wind) and objects.[9]
Zatanna is also a talented stage magician, a trained hand-to-hand combatant,[8][9] and is versed in several different languages including Spanish and ASL.[79]
Resources and artifacts
[edit]Due to her lineage from both sides of the family, Zatanna has access to a diverse collection of arcane objects amassed throughout generations from her families. Much of these are stored in the Shadowcrest Manor, the sentient and ancestral home of the Zatara family which relocates to different locations periodically and is invisible to ordinary observation.[81] The manor can only be accessed by special magic keys or voice recognition[82] and houses the collection of arcane objects, a private library, bestiary, and is inhabited by magical constructs that serve Zatanna, including Hassan the Mummy, who protects the manor.[81] Zatanna also owns a personal apartment in Gotham City, serving as her more publicly accessible residence. Known as the Curious Abode of Zatanna Zatara, it also serves as the central location for her side business.[83]
Some artifacts includes the Talisman of Atlantis and a magical staff owned by her father. When using both artifacts in tandem, it offers easier control and usage over magical manipulation compared to her Logomancy.[80] The Demongraphy is a book offering a comprehensive, encyclopedic entries on demonic entities and is updated magically in real-time.[84] The Gnosis Sphere, able to answer any questions posed directly to it, is regarded as the most dangerous object protected by the Zatara family.[85] She also appropriated the Sleepless Queen's sword, an enchanted blade capable of transforming those damaged by it into nightmarish forms of themselves (a process known as "Knighted").[86]
Zatanna also possess a "medula jewel", a unnatural source of magic developed within the brain of royals in the Hidden Ones clan that can act as a source of magic. It appears within one person per generation, with Sindella being the previous one prior to Zatanna.[17]
Weaknesses
[edit]Zatanna, as a practitioner of Logomancy, utilizes speech as the primary channel for her magical abilities. This reliance on verbal communication has made her vulnerable to being incapacitated by villains who restrain her through binding and gagging. It is observed that her magical powers tend to increase when unused,[87] but excessive use can deplete them, leading to a strain on her physical well-being. Similar to other magic users, Zatanna can only replenish her waning powers through an extended period of rest. Additionally, there appears to be a connection between Zatanna's powers and her self-confidence. In the narrative Seven Soldiers, a series of significant mistakes left her emotionally and psychologically shattered, rendering her powerless. It was only through the process of restoring her lost confidence that she was able to regain her magical abilities.
Other versions
[edit]- Conjura, a character based on Zatanna, appears in DC Super Dictionary.[88]
- An alternate universe variant of Zatanna appears in Batman: Holy Terror. This version is an agent of the Privy Council, a totalitarian religious group that rules over North America.
- Wanda Zatara / White Witch, a fusion of Zatanna and Marvel Comics character Scarlet Witch, appears in the Amalgam Comics universe.[89]
- An alternate universe variant of Zatanna appears in JLA: Another Nail.
- Annataz Arataz, Zatanna's evil Earth-3 counterpart, appears in Countdown to Final Crisis #23.
- An alternate universe variant of Zatanna appears in the Flashpoint storyline. This version is a member of the Secret Seven and part of a motorcycle gang.[90]
- An alternate universe variant of Zatanna appears in DC Comics Bombshells. This version is of Jewish and Romani descent and was previously forced to aid the Nazis, during which she befriended Raven before eventually escaping.
- An alternate universe variant of Zatanna appears in Mystik U.[91][78] This version is a student of the titular academy and girlfriend of Sebastian Faust.
- Zatanna appears in the web comic Zatanna and the Ripper, co-published by DC Comics and Webtoon.[92][93]
- Zatanna appears in the graphic novel Zatanna and the House of Secrets. This version lives in the titular house with her father Zatara and rabbit Pocus.[94][95][96]
- Zatanna appears in the graphic novel Zatanna: The Jewel of Gravesend.[97][98]
In other media
[edit]Television
[edit]- Zatanna appears in series set in the DC Animated Universe (DCAU):
- She first appears in a self-titled episode of Batman: The Animated Series, voiced by Julie Brown.[99] This version befriended Batman as a youth and developed a crush on him while he was training under her father Zatara. In the present, while working as a magician, she reunites with Batman while foiling criminal magic debunker Montague Kane's plans.
- Zatanna makes a non-speaking cameo appearance in The New Batman Adventures episode "Chemistry".
- Zatanna makes a cameo appearance in a photograph depicted in the Batman Beyond episode "Out of the Past".
- Zatanna appears in Justice League Unlimited, voiced by Jennifer Hale in "This Little Piggy" and by Juliet Landau in "The Balance".[99] As of this series, she has joined the Justice League while continuing her stage magician career. Additionally, she is capable of reciting spells without speaking and while speaking normally.
- Zatanna appears in Smallville, portrayed by Serinda Swan.
- Zatanna appears in the teaser for the Batman: The Brave and the Bold episode "Chill of the Night!", voiced again by Jennifer Hale.[99]
- Zatanna appears in Young Justice, voiced by Lacey Chabert.[99][100] This version is initially a teenager and member of the Team who becomes romantically involved with Robin. After donning the Helmet of Fate to defeat Klarion the Witch Boy, Nabu refuses to release her until Zatara offers to take her place. Ever since, she works to free her father. In the second season, an adult Zatanna joins the Justice League. In the fourth season, Zatanna trains the Sentinels of Magic to help her free Zatara by convincing Nabu to rotate between all of them.[101]
- Zatanna appears in Teen Titans Go!, voiced by Kari Wahlgren.[99]
- Zatanna appears in Justice League Action, voiced again by Lacey Chabert as an adult and by Dayci Brookshire as a child.[99]
- Zatanna appears in DC Super Hero Girls, voiced again by Kari Wahlgren.[99] This version, also known by her first name "Zee", is a dramatic fashionista and student at Metropolis High.
- Zatanna makes non-speaking cameo appearances in Harley Quinn as an associate of the Justice League. As of "A Very Problematic Valentine's Day Special", she has entered a relationship with the Flash.
Film
[edit]Live-action
[edit]- In 2005, screenwriter Hadley Davis announced that she had written an action-comedy featuring a teenage version of Zatanna.[102]
- Zatanna appears in a proposed Guillermo del Toro film project based on the Justice League Dark, which was meant to be part of the DC Extended Universe.[103][104]
- A live-action Zatanna film, developed by Warner Bros. Discovery and Bad Robot and with Emerald Fennell serving as a writer, was in production before it was cancelled as of March 2021.[105][106]
Animation
[edit]- An unnamed alternate universe version of Zatanna makes a non-speaking cameo appearance in Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths as a minor member of the Crime Syndicate.
- The Young Justice incarnation of Zatanna makes a non-speaking cameo appearance in Scooby-Doo! WrestleMania Mystery.[107][108]
- Zatanna appears in the DC Animated Movie Universe (DCAMU) films Justice League Dark and Justice League Dark: Apokolips War, voiced by Camilla Luddington.[109][99] This version is a member of Justice League Dark.
- Zatanna appears in Lego DC Comics Super Heroes: The Flash, voiced by Kate Micucci.[99]
- Zatanna makes a cameo appearance in Teen Titans Go! To the Movies.[99]
- Zatanna appears in Justice League: Crisis on Infinite Earths.[110]
Video games
[edit]- Zatanna appears as a playable character in Justice League Heroes, voiced by Kari Wahlgren.[99]
- Zatanna appears as a non-playable character (NPC) in DC Universe Online, voiced by Claire Hamilton.[99]
- Zatanna appears as a downloadable playable character in Lego Batman 2: DC Super Heroes, voiced again by Kari Wahlgren.[111]
- Zatanna appears as a playable character in Young Justice: Legacy, voiced again by Lacey Chabert.[99]
- Zatanna appears as a downloadable playable character in Injustice: Gods Among Us, voiced again by Lacey Chabert.[112]
- Zatanna appears as a playable character in Lego Batman 3: Beyond Gotham, voiced again by Kari Wahlgren.
- Zatanna appears as a playable character in Infinite Crisis.
- Zatanna makes non-speaking cameo appearances in Doctor Fate and Raiden's endings in Injustice 2. In the latter, she serves as a founding member of Justice League Dark.
- Zatanna appears as a playable character in DC Unchained.
- Zatanna appears as a playable character in Lego DC Super-Villains via the "Justice League Dark" DLC pack.
- Zatanna appears in DC Super Hero Girls: Teen Power, voiced again by Kari Wahlgren.[99]
Miscellaneous
[edit]- Zatanna appears in Gotham Girls, voiced by Stacie Randall.[citation needed]
- A teenage Zatanna appears in the Zatanna: Trial of the Crystal Wand segment of Cartoon Monsoon, voiced by Tara Strong. This version takes inspiration from Sabrina, the Teenage Witch and Buffy Summers and has an older brother named Damon.[113]
- The Smallville incarnation of Zatanna appears in Smallville: Harbinger.[citation needed]
- The Injustice incarnation of Zatanna appears in the Injustice: Gods Among Us prequel comic.[citation needed]
- The DC Super Hero Girls incarnation of Zatanna appears in the franchise's tie-in novel Spaced Out.[citation needed]
Collected editions
[edit]Title | Material collected | Pages | Publication date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other collections | ||||
JLA: Zatanna's Search | The Atom #19, Hawkman #4, Green Lantern #42, Detective Comics #335 and #355, Justice League of America #51 | 128 | February 2004 | 978-1401201883 |
Black Canary and Zatanna: Bloodspell | Black Canary and Zatanna | 144 | June 2015 | 978-1401201883 |
Zatanna: Bring Down The House | Zatanna: Bring Down The House #1-5 | 176 | March 2025 | 978-1799500803 |
Volume 2 (2010—2011) | ||||
Zatanna: The Mistress of Magic | Zatanna #1–6 | 144 | March 2011 | 978-1401230074 |
Zatanna: Shades of the Past | Zatanna #7–12 | 232 | November 2011 | 978-1401233006 |
Zatanna by Paul Dini | Zatanna #1–16, Zatanna: Everyday Magic, DC Universe Rebirth Holiday Special, DC Infinite Halloween Special | 440 | March 2017 | 978 1779525833 |
Graphic novels | ||||
Zatanna and the House of Secrets | All chapters 1-6 | 160 | February 2020 | 978-1401290702 |
Zatanna: The Jewel of Gravesend | All chapters 1-8 | 200 | July 2022 | 978-1401296384 |
Webtoon | ||||
Zatanna & The Ripper Vol. 1 | Zatanna & The Ripper original material | 200 | October 2023 | 978-1401201883 |
Zatanna & The Ripper Vol. 2 | 200 | December 2023 | 978 1779522962 | |
Zatanna & The Ripper Vol. 3 | 208 | May 2024 | 978-1779526953 | |
Zatanna & The Ripper Vol. 4 | 208 | September 2024 | 978-1779528179 |
References
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{{cite book}}
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External links
[edit]- Zatanna at DC Comics.com
- Zatanna at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
- Zatanna Archived 2016-03-05 at the Wayback Machine at Mike's Amazing World of Comics
- DC Comics superheroes
- Characters created by Gardner Fox
- Characters created by Murphy Anderson
- Comics about magic
- Comics by Paul Dini
- Comics characters introduced in 1964
- DC Comics characters who can teleport
- DC Comics characters who use magic
- DC Comics fantasy characters
- DC Comics female superheroes
- DC Comics hybrids
- DC Comics psychics
- DC Comics telekinetics
- DC Comics telepaths
- DC Comics titles
- Fictional characters from San Francisco
- Fictional characters who can manipulate time
- Fictional characters with dimensional travel abilities
- Fictional characters with elemental and environmental abilities
- Fictional characters with weather abilities
- Fictional escapologists
- Fictional stage magicians
- Fictional characters who use magic
- Fictional superhuman healers
- Italian superheroes
- Superhero television characters
- Vigilante characters in comics