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There is perhaps no comic book character, at either DC or Marvel, who has had as long a path to A-list status as Black Adam. And when we say long, we mean over sixty years to get there. Read on for all the details on how the powerful Teth Adam, soon to be played by Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson in a major motion picture, went from a villain meant to appear only once during the 1940s, to one changing the hierarchy of the DC Universe on the big screen.
Black Adam first appeared as a one-off villain in Fawcett Comics’ The Marvel Family #1 in 1945, which featured Captain Marvel and his entire super-powered clan in different adventures. Back then, “Shazam” was merely the magic word Billy Batson said to transform into the heroic Captain Marvel. It didn’t become his heroic name until 2012, despite all comics featuring the character having the title Shazam! for legal reasons involving Marvel Comics. (That’s its own whole own quagmire, for which we will refer you to this explainer).
In that original story, for which the broad strokes have mostly stuck for decades now, we learned about an ancient Egyptian by the name of Teth-Adam (which meant “Mighty Human”). He was chosen by the wizard Shazam some 5,000 years prior as being his successor because of his bravery and supposed pure heart. Just as with Billy Batson centuries later, whenever Teth-Adam uttered the magic word, the wizard’s name “Shazam”, he transformed into Mighty Adam, a super-powered hero with the same powers that Captain Marvel would later have.
Black Adam’s powers were originally described as coming from the Greco-Roman pantheon of gods, the same as Captain Marvel’s. But in the ‘70s, they revealed that the gods from which he received his powers were Egyptian. In Black Adam’s case, the “S” in Shazam stood for Shu (stamina), Hershef (strength), Amon (power), Zehuti (wisdom), Anpu (speed), and Menthu (courage). In subsequent, more modern incarnations, his ties to ancient Egypt and its mythology have only become stronger.
As the saying goes, about “absolute power corrupting absolutely,” Mighty Adam would eventually become corrupted by his new abilities, becoming Black Adam. He overthrew and murdered the Pharoah, and declared himself ruler of the world. Unable to take back the powers he had granted Teth-Adam, the wizard Shazam banished him to the most distant star known. It took him 5,000 years, but Black Adam actually flew back home through space. (Oh, what a long and boring trip that must have been).
When he reached Earth, he battled his replacements, the Marvel Family, and it all went badly for him when he’s tricked into saying “Shazam,” thus reverting to his human form. When that happens, he aged 5,000 years and turned to dust after one punch from Captain Marvel. For the first sixty years of his comic book existence, Adam was definitely a villain. The only allusion to his antihero status of any kind was the reference to his heroism before the power corrupted him. We never saw a hint of that good-guy nature again until the mid-2000s.
Black Adam had almost unlimited stamina, strength, and speed that came very close to matching that of Shazam or Superman. He had vast scholarly wisdom, allowing him to access most known scientific facts on a whim, and that allowed him to know just about every language on Earth. He can also fly at supersonic speeds. In his superpowered form, he did not age. Or aged at a snail’s pace. When his wife Isis died, he absorbed her powers of telekinesis as well, along with some of her powers over nature. These things combined to make him one of the greatest powers in the DC Universe.
Black Adam can die, despite all of his godlike powers. In fact, he has died before, in different continuities. The first time he died, he reverted to his true age when the power of Shazam was removed from him, leaving him as dust. This happened more than once, in fact. But through various magical means and spells, that dust was given the form of a man again. Due to his magical nature, all of Black Adam’s deaths were merely temporary.
Black Adam didn’t appear in another Shazam! story for nearly thirty years, until after DC Comics purchased Fawcett Comics in the early ‘70s. Even during this Bronze Age, Black Adam would only make a handful of appearances, not exactly fitting for a character who should have been Captain Marvel’s arch-nemesis. He appeared more than once in the 1981 Saturday morning cartoon show Shazam!, which probably introduced him to millions of new fans. But the comics wouldn’t cash in on his higher profile for several more decades.
The 1994 Power of Shazam! post-Crisis reboot of the character actually split him into two distinct versions. The first Black Adam stuck to the first origin story. He was still Teth-Adam, son of a Pharaoh, who became a benevolent ruler, after his father gave him the province of Kahndaq. The wizard Shazam made him his champion.
It was only later that Black Adam’s propensity for violent justice took hold, as a result of the murder of his wife and children by the evil Ahk-ton. After Ahk-ton’s death, Adam reconquered his homeland, and used any means necessary to do so. This new brutality disgusted the wizard Shazam, and he removed his powers, awaiting a new and better champion. Shazam then stored all of his powers in a magical scarab, sealing said scarab into an ancient tomb.
In the 20th century, we met our second Black Adam. This was the original Teth Adam’s descendant Theo Adam, who worked alongside archaeologists C.C. and Marylin Batson. Together, they discovered the tomb where the wizard hid the scarab. Drawn to its power, and its roots with his ancestor, Theo discovered the scarab and killed the Batsons, unleashing the power of Black Adam into himself. The Batson’s son Billy, now Captain Marvel, fought Black Adam as his archenemy, something he never really was until now. After all, this Black Adam actually murdered his parents.
Eventually, the original Teth-Adam returned, and revealed that Black Adam and Theo Adam were two distinct personalities. The original Black Adam was back, and less mustache twirly than his usurper. This all led to the Black Adam redemption arc we saw in 21st-century DC Comics. Particularly in the pages of JSA, and more recently, in Justice League of America. All of this informed the eventual film version.
Although they’ve only fought a handful of times, the instances where Black Adam fought the Man of Steel were memorable. The first time was way back in 1978, in the Superman vs. Shazam! Treasury Edition. In this special oversized comic, Captain Marvel attacks Superman, and the two have a brutal fight in Metropolis. Only later they revealed Captain Marvel was really Black Adam in disguise. He hoped this would result in Superman thrashing his enemy. (It did).
Later, Kal-El teamed up with the real Captain Marvel to take down Black Adam. During this era, the Shazam characters lived on a different Earth than Superman. But we should note, that in the first solo fight, Adam won. The three would later all come to blows again in 1982′ DC Comics Presents #49. In the 2000s, in Black Adam’s mid-2000s antihero phase, he fought Superman in Action Comics. It was a stalemate there too, proving they are just about on equal footing power-wise.
Black Adam’s brutal and uncompromising stance in meting out justice rubbed other superheroes the wrong way. Nevertheless, he eventually joined the Justice Society of America, and was a member in good standing for some time. This was mainly during the JSA series by Geoff Johns, which ran from 1999-2006. But his brutal ways ultimately forced him to leave the team, despite bonding with teammate Atom Smasher. (JSA member Captain Marvel, for obvious reasons, never warmed to Black Adam being on the team).
Black Adam reconquered Khandaq after his stint as a JSA member, and found a new family with the similarly powered heroes Isis and Osiris. He found love again with Isis, and she convinced him to become a more measured (less murderous) hero. But when they were killed, he unleashed hell on the nation that took them, Bialya, resulting in the deaths of two million people. This put him squarely back in the “villain” column. However, the New 52 reboot happened not too long after, and Black Adam was given yet another new backstory, making him an outward villain again. But the subsequent “Rebirth” era DC Universe seems to have restored his previous, early 2000s origins again.
Since 2007, Dwayne Johnson has been interested in bringing Teth Adam to the screen. It only took 15 years to happen, but Black Adam, directed by Jaume Collet-Serra, hits theaters this fall. It will draw heavily from the antihero version seen in modern DC Comics. In the film, he’ll fight the Justice Society of America, including characters like Hawkman and Doctor Fate. Dwayne Johnson’s costume as seen on screen appears very close to his comic book counterpart’s. Will Shazam or Superman make cameos? Only time will tell. Black Adam will arrive on October 21, 2022
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