Rag Doll (Peter Merkel Jr.)

Rag Doll (Peter Merkel Jr.) is a supervillain and anti-hero in the DC Comics universe. He first appeared in Villains United #1 (July 2005), and was created by Gail Simone and Dale Eaglesham. He is a member of the Secret Six and the son of the original Rag Doll, Peter Merkel.

Rag Doll
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceVillains United #1 (July 2005)
Created byGail Simone (writer)
Dale Eaglesham (artist)
In-story information
Alter egoPeter Merkel Jr.
Team affiliationsSecret Six
Abilities
  • Contortionist
  • Adequate hand-to-hand combatant

Fictional character biography

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Peter Merkel Jr. is the son of Peter Merkel, the original Rag Doll.[1] However, he does not inherit his father's abilities, and instead has cybernetic implants to replicate them.[2] Furthermore, his sister Alex is the villain Junior and the leader of a West Coast mob.[3]

The new Rag Doll also had a strange relationship with a Parademon, who referred to Rag Doll as "Clown".[4] It considered itself the Rag Doll's guard-dog, threatening to hurt or kill anyone who even inconvenienced the Rag Doll, despite his protests. The Parademon died, however, detonating ten Mother Boxes to cover the Secret Six's escape during a battle with the Society.

He briefly battled his father, the original Rag Doll (who was representing the Society). This was just prior to the original Rag Doll abandoning the Society and rejoining the Injustice Society (which led to his eventual death). Their battle was cut short by the intervention of the Parademon.[5]

Rag Doll next pushes Parademon replacement Mad Hatter off the roof of Vandal Savage's stronghold, claiming there is only room for one freak on the team.[6]

Rag Doll next appears on with new sixth member Harley Quinn, retrieving a box that is later revealed to contain the deceased Justice League member Ice. The Birds of Prey retrieve Ice's body and the Six escape unpaid.[7]

Doctor Psycho later uses his powers to cause Rag Doll to attack his teammates.

The Six, with new members Jeannette and Bane, are hired to retrieve a card that supposedly gets its owner out of Hell "free". They are attacked by many supervillains who want the card, most acting under orders from Junior, a mysterious mob boss who controls the West Coast. In a confrontation, it is revealed that Junior is actually Rag Doll's sister Alex, who (after implied sexual abuse from their father) mutilated herself horrifically to "bring the ugly out where I can look at it".[8]

Catman, Bane, and Rag Doll (who is disguised as Robin) go to Gotham City after the death of Batman and kill members of a crime ring that goes after rich peoples' children, but Nightwing shows up at the last house and sends them all away.[9]

After Bane declares himself the new leader of the Six and fires Scandal, the sixth member becomes Black Alice, a Goth teen with the power to copy the abilities of magic users across the Universe. After Alice infiltrates a cult and is uncovered, Rag Doll saves her life[10] and she begins a flirtation with him, much to Bane's chagrin. Catman's son is targeted for murder, all of the pre-existing team members leave the Six to help Catman after he steals their plane, leaving Bane and Jeanette to create a temporary Six until the others return.[11] On their journey to South Africa to try to find Catman, he is very shocked to discover that Alice does indeed consider Rag Doll to be her boyfriend, and attacks Scandal in the mistaken belief that she wants him, despite Scandal's lesbianism. Alice summons Etrigan's powers to fight Scandal, but promptly gives up, turning back to normal in tears. She explains that she knows Rag Doll does not like her like that (especially with the knowledge that she is unaware of his lack of reproductive organs), but acted out simply from the strain and guilt of having given her father cancer by mistake. Rag Doll attempts to offer her comfort, and when Deadshot takes it as an attempt to flirt with her, Rag Doll actually stands up straight (literally and figuratively) for the first time, defending Alice.[12]

Rag Doll later accompanies the rest of the Secret Six when they go to Oolong Island in order to defeat the Doom Patrol and take over the island. He nearly kills Negative Man, but is defeated after being attacked by a seagull. While leaving the island, it is revealed that Rag Doll had captured Bumblebee and kept her bound and gagged in his pocket. Before Rag Doll could leave the island with his taped-up "souvenir", Bumblebee was taken from him by Elasti-Girl.[13]

It was later revealed that the Get Out Of Hell Free card that the Six had obtained was stolen from Scandal's safe, and Scandal correctly deduced the only one capable of stealing it was Rag Doll. When Scandal confronts and almost kills him, Rag Doll reveals to her he stole the card hoping to use it to revive Parademon, saying that Scandal's choice to use it for Knockout was misled and selfish. He then uses the card to transport himself to Hell and set an ambush as his teammates were sure to follow.[14] He explains that due to his emerging protectiveness of Black Alice, he had fled partly because of his fear of finally gaining a measure of sanity. He discovered after arriving that, due to being born without a soul, he was prophesied to rule in Hell, commanding a legion of demons and being given a fiancé (revealed to be Knockout) by Blaze herself. After the Six decide to fight (half of them being forced to owing to Deadshot shooting Rag Doll in the head) for Knockout rather than becoming lords of the Underworld at Merkel's side, Blaze herself intervenes. After Rag Doll decides that Scandal's love is more important than his friendship with Parademon (who as it turns out enjoys Hell due to his similar upbringing on Apokolips), the team departs with Knockout in tow.

Following Bane's decisions to retake Gotham, starting by eliminating several of Batman's closest allies, they are betrayed by the Penguin who was forcibly recruited due to his knowledge of Gotham's inner workings. A small army of superheroes arrive at the warehouse the Six are operating out of, and when given the choice to surrender they immediately fall to infighting. Rag Doll is the only one to understand that they have to stand together because they deserve each other. Deciding to go down fighting, they all ingest Venom, which Bane as a recovered user still carries. After a short but brutal battle in which they injure or knock out multiple heroes, the entire Secret Six is taken down with brutal force.

The New 52

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In The New 52 continuity reboot, Peter Merkel Jr. first appears as an inmate of Arkham Asylum.[15] He is later hired to "kill" Barbara Gordon's roommate, Alysia, and her friends, under the pretense that they are eco-terrorists. Operating as Rag Doll, he pursues Alysia, but Batgirl stops him and beats him. During the confrontation, Rag Doll realizes that the whole situation is a set-up and he reveals that he did not kill anyone. Later, he confronts and kills his employer for lying to him.[16]

Powers and abilities

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Through a series of surgeries, Rag Doll had his biological joints replaced with artificial ones. These joints allow him to bend, compress, and contort in ways even master contortionists cannot. Rag Doll requires a special emollient to keep his artificial joints from tearing through his skin. He often wields a knife and is an adequate hand-to-hand fighter.

Other versions

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An alternate universe variant of Rag Doll appears in the Flashpoint tie-in Deadman and the Flying Graysons. This version works at Haly's Circus before being killed in an Amazon attack.[17]

In other media

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Rag Doll makes a non-speaking appearance in the Harley Quinn episode "Icons Only" as an entertainer at Las Vegas.

References

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  1. ^ Villains United #1. DC Comics.
  2. ^ Villains United #3. DC Comics.
  3. ^ Secret Six #5
  4. ^ Secret Six #1. DC Comics.
  5. ^ Villains United #6. DC Comics.
  6. ^ Secret Six: Six Degrees of Separation #6. DC Comics.
  7. ^ Birds of Prey: Dead of Winter. DC Comics.
  8. ^ Secret Six: Unhinged. DC Comics.
  9. ^ Secret Six: Depths. DC Comics.
  10. ^ Secret Six #16. DC Comics.
  11. ^ Secret Six #20. DC Comics.
  12. ^ Secret Six #21–22. DC Comics.
  13. ^ Doom Patrol (vol. 5) #19. DC Comics.
  14. ^ Secret Six #31. DC Comics.
  15. ^ Resurrection Man (vol. 2) #6. DC Comics.
  16. ^ Batgirl (vol. 3) #31. DC Comics.
  17. ^ Flashpoint: Deadman and the Flying Graysons #1 (August - October 2011). DC Comics.