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Ratcatcher (comics)

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Template:Short description Template:Infobox comics character The Ratcatcher (Otis Flannegan) is a character appearing in American comic books and other media published by DC Comics, primarily as an enemy of Batman. He belongs to the collective of adversaries that make up the Dark Knight's rogues gallery. Once an actual rat-catcher in Gotham City, Flannegan sank into a life of crime. Calling himself the Ratcatcher because of his special ability to communicate with and train rats, Flannegan has used his minions to plague Gotham on more than one occasion by unleashing hordes of the vermin.

A female version of the character named Cleo Cazo / Ratcatcher 2 appears in the DC Extended Universe film The Suicide Squad (2021), portrayed by Daniela Melchior. Taika Waititi portrays the first Ratcatcher, Cleo's father.

Publication history

The Ratcatcher first appeared in Detective Comics #585 (April 1988) and was created by writers Alan Grant and John Wagner, and artist Norm Breyfogle.[1]

Fictional character biography

Otis Flannegan is a former rat-catcher in the Gotham City Sanitation Department who claims he could train rats to attack before he is arrested and sentenced to ten years in Gotham State Penitentiary after stabbing a man to death in a street fight. After being released, Flannegan kidnaps the officials responsible for his arrest and tortures them with his rats.[2]

After five years of captivity, one of Flannegan's prisoners escapes. Though he orders his rats to kill him, the latter reaches the surface, where Batman discovers his body, tracks down Flannegan, and easily defeats him upon dispersing his rats.[3] After being re-incarcerated, Flannegan escapes his parole hearing using a flute he carved to control rats via a high-pitched frequency, only to be foiled by Dick Grayson disguised as Batman and captured again.[4]

In Infinite Crisis, Flannegan is revealed to be an OMAC before being killed by a civilian.[5]

In The New 52 continuity reboot, Flannegan is resurrected and makes a minor appearance in Batman Eternal.[6]

Powers and abilities

The Ratcatcher possesses the ability to communicate and control an army of rats and in-depth knowledge of Gotham City's sewer system and Blackgate Penitentiary's layout. Additionally, he wields a gas gun and can manipulate various objects with cyanide gas.

Other versions

  • An original alternate universe incarnation of the Ratcatcher named Ransom Trappe appears in Master Comics as an enemy of Bulletman and Bulletgirl.[7]
  • An alternate reality variant of Otis Flannegan appears in Mother Panic. This version has reformed, retired, and moved into the basement of the hotel that Violet Paige uses as her headquarters.[8]

In other media

Television

  • The Ratcatcher appears in Harley Quinn, voiced by James Adomian.[9] This version is an underling of Two-Face.
  • The Ratcatcher appears in Suicide Squad Isekai, voiced by Yōji Ueda and Adam Noble in the Japanese and English dubs respectively.[10] This version bears a grudge against Deadshot for slandering him. After being recruited into the Suicide Squad and sent to another world, he escaped and gained a magic scepter that allows him to control other animals, such as werewolves. After Deadshot destroys his scepter, Ratcatcher's thralls betray him.

Film

An original, female incarnation of the Ratcatcher named Cleo Cazo / Ratcatcher 2 appears in The Suicide Squad, portrayed by Daniela Melchior.[11][12] This version is the daughter of an unnamed previous Ratcatcher (portrayed by Taika Waititi),[13] who was originally from Portugal and died from a heroin overdose. Following this, Cazo came to America and used her father's equipment to become a criminal, only to be arrested for armed bank robbery due to authorities considering rats as weapons and incarcerated in Belle Reve Penitentiary. Sometime later, Cazo and her pet rat Sebastian (vocal effects provided by Dee Bradley Baker) join the eponymous squad to infiltrate and destroy Jötenheim, a Corto Maltesean laboratory containing the alien Starro. Along the way, she forms bonds with her teammates Bloodsport, despite his fear of rats, and King Shark.

Video games

Miscellaneous

See also

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References

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External links

Template:Batman characters Template:Alan Grant

  1. Template:Cite book
  2. Detective Comics #585 (April 1988). DC Comics.
  3. Detective Comics #586 (May 1988). DC Comics.
  4. Detective Comics #678 (September 1994). DC Comics.
  5. Infinite Crisis #1 (December 2005). DC Comics.
  6. Batman Eternal #24 (September 2014). DC Comics.
  7. Master Comics #41 (August 1943). DC Comics.
  8. Mother Panic: Gotham A.D. #1 (May 2018). DC Comics.
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 Template:Cite web A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its credits or other reliable sources of information.
  10. Template:Cite web
  11. Template:Cite web
  12. Template:Cite news
  13. Template:Cite web
  14. Template:Cite web
  15. Batman: Arkham Unhinged #29 (May 2012). DC Comics.
  16. Batman: Arkham Unhinged #30 (May 2012). DC Comics.
  17. Batman: Arkham Unhinged #31 (May 2012). DC Comics.
  18. Batman: Arkham Knight – Genesis #1 (October 2015). DC Comics.
  19. Batman: The Adventures Continue #16 (December 2020). DC Comics.