In DC Comics’ 2005-2006 event series Infinite Crisis‘ third issue, readers met Texas teenager Jaime Reyes. Months after the tragic death of Ted Kord (the second Blue Beetle), Jaime Reyes finds the ...
ComicBook.com’s Brandon Davis recently had the chance to speak with Soto, and the Blue Beetle director revealed why the film has a practical costume and what inspired it. According to Soto, Blue ...
Blue Beetle, played by Xolo Maridueña, is an obscure character with a rich history in DC comics dating back to 1939. The character has gone through several iterations, with Jaime Reyes being the most ...
Conrad Carapax first appeared in 1986’s Blue Beetle #1, thanks to writer Len Wein and artist Paris Cullins. He fought the Ted Kord version of Blue Beetle, in what was his first DC Comics ongoing ...
Does Blue Beetle Have A Post-Credits Scene? Yes, Blue Beetle does keep up the comic book movie tradition of having after-credits scenes, with both a mid-credits scene and a post-credits scene for fans ...
While each of the aforementioned Jaime Reyes stories is a great place to start for fans eager to explore the character’s comic book history, those looking to check out his origin story should read ...
Franz Kafka never realized how close he came to kickstarting a superhero franchise. Ever since Gregor Samsa awoke in his bed to find himself transformed into a monstrous dung beetle in The ...
The first appearance of the original Blue Beetle, Mystery Men Comics #1 remains one of the most overlooked key comic books of the golden age. Hitting newsstands around June 15, 1939, this series was ...
Alright folks, it seems DC is chomping at the bit to toss our little Blue Beetle back into the fray with Blue Beetle #2, set to hit your local comic book dumpster or fine comic shop (whatever floats ...
The final scene of DC‘s latest Blue Beetle series ends with an apparent gruesome death. What makes the scene all the more shocking is how it calls back to another infamous comic death. While death in ...
Give the waning days of the old era of DC movies at Warner Bros some credit for going out in style. I might have been something of a dissenting voice, but I thought June’s big-screen The Flash, ...