User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
- a puzzler
Extensive Definition
The Riddler (Edward Nashton, alias Edward Nigma
or sometimes Nygma) is a fictional
character, a DC Comics
supervillain, an
enemy of Batman, and more
recently a partial ally to Batman. Created by writer Bill Finger
and artist Dick Sprang,
the character first appears in Detective
Comics #140 (October
1948).
Character overview
The Riddler is obsessed with riddles, puzzles and word games. He delights in forewarning both Batman and the police of his capers by sending them complex clues. As the Riddler, the character is often depicted as wearing a domino mask either with a green suit and bowler hat, or a green jumpsuit. He carries with him a brass cane that is shaped like an elongated question mark, and is known for his catch phrase, "riddle me this, riddle me that".Like most major Batman villains, the Riddler has
become a darker, more three-dimensional character in recent years;
whereas he was once depicted as a playful yet sane trickster, he is
now typically portrayed as a smooth-talking, yet quirky, victim of
an intense
obsessive compulsion. This was first introduced in the 1965
issue of Batman (titled, "The Remarkable Ruse of The Riddler") in
which he tries to refrain from leaving a riddle, but fails. This
compulsion has been a recurring theme, as shown in a 1999 issue of
Gotham
Adventures, in which he tried to commit a crime without leaving
a riddle, but fails: "You don't understand. .. I really didn't want
to leave you any clues. I really planned never to go back to
Arkham
Asylum. But I left you a clue anyway. So I... I have to go back
there. Because I might need help. I... I might actually be
crazy."
The Riddler was popularized by Frank
Gorshin’s over-the-top, Emmy-nominated
portrayal in the 1960s Batman
television series. Jim Carrey
played the Riddler in the 1995 film Batman
Forever with Gorshin as his inspiration. The character was also
featured in
Batman: The Animated Series and The
Batman.
Fictional character biography
The Riddler's criminal modus operandi is so deeply ingrained into his personality that he is virtually powerless to stop himself from acting it out. He cannot simply kill his opponents when he has the upper hand; he has to put them in a deathtrap to see if he can devise a life and death intellectual challenge that the hero cannot solve and escape. However, unlike many of Batman's themed enemies, Riddler's compulsion is quite flexible, allowing him to commit any crime as long as he can describe it in a riddle or puzzle. He often has two female assistants, named Query and Echo.In his very first appearance, Nigma was depicted
as an employee of a carnival who enjoyed cheating his customers out
of their money with his bizzare puzzles and mindgames, most of
which were rigged in his favor. He soon finds himself longing for
greater challenges and thrills, and dons the guise of the Riddler
to challenge Batman, whom he believes could possibly be a worthy
adversary for him.
Some notable writers, such as Alex Ross and
Shane
McCarthy, have suggested that the Riddler's compulsion stems
from parental abuse that he endured as a child. After scoring high
on some important tests in school, his father, unable to grasp the
fact that his son was brilliant, beat him out of envy. This, in
theory, left him with a strong internal desire to tell the truth,
and prove his innocence. This desire manifests itself in the form
of his obsession with riddles.
Others, like Chuck Dixon,
suggest that his madness, as well as his descent into crime in
general, have roots in a yearning to rise above anonymity that he
possessed as a youth. It is in Dixon's 1995 origin story for the
Riddler that the famous 'puzzle contest' backstory is introduced.
After a teacher announces that a contest over who can solve a
puzzle the fastest will be held, a young Edward Nigma sets his
sights on winning this, craving the glory and satisfaction that
will come with the victory. He sneaks into the school one night,
takes the puzzle out of the teacher's desk, and practices it until
he is able to solve it in under a minute. As predicted, he wins the
contest and is given a book about riddles as a prize. Through this
book, he develops a deep fascination for brainteasers and
conundrums. This may have been what fueled the fire for a few
aspects of his modus operandi. After finishing school, Nigma spends
a short period of time as a "productive member of society" before
engaging in criminal activities. He starts off by indulging in
several instances of minor and petty theft, but a longing for
something bigger, and more theatrical soon surfaces.
After several failed attempts to put gangs
together, Nigma, now calling himself the Riddler, encounters Batman
on a rooftop during one of his robberies. Previously believing that
the Dark Knight was nothing more than a mere myth, Nigma narrowly
evades capture, and first encounters his future sidekicks, Query and
Echo, shortly afterwards. He hires them right away, and
together, the trio concoct a plan to rob one of Gotham City's
biggest banks. Their next scheme centered around the "ransom" of a
large number of priceless antique fiddles. During the exchange
process, the owner of the fiddles turned out to be Batman in
disguise. Query and Echo were apprehended immediately, and Batman
tracked the Riddler down to an opera house and defeated him.
In
Batman: The Long Halloween, the image of a smooth-talking
egomaniac is thrown out in exchange for the embodiment of a minor
supporting role, serving more as a source of information for Batman
rather than an all-out serious threat. He first appears when
Carmine "The Roman" Falcone hires him to figure out who the Holiday
Killer is. Despite giving several reasonable theories as to who is
behind the killer's identity, the Roman eventually loses his
patience, and orders his daughter, Sophia, to force the Riddler to
leave. Upon exiting Falcone's office, the Riddler is attacked, but
for some reason left alive, by Holiday. The attack was planned to
coincide with the holiday of April
Fool's, and several items pertaining to it were left at the
scene. He appeared again in the same chapter of the story that
Harvey
Dent gets disfigured in, when Batman comes to him for
information about the attack.
He plays a slightly larger role in the story's
sequel, Dark
Victory, in which Batman turns to him to figure out the
significance of the lost games of hangman that are left at the
scenes of the Hangman killer's crimes. He later showed up as a
member of Two-Face's jury during the Hangman's trial.
In the one-shot "Riddler and the Riddle Factory",
the Riddler becomes the host of an underground gameshow that
focuses on digging up dirt on celebrities. Many of the famous
people that he humiliates end up committing suicide shortly
afterwards, suggesting that perhaps the Riddler did more than just
inspire their deaths. In the end, his actions turn out to be a
front for his attempts to find the hidden treasures of "Scarface"
Scarelli, a Gotham City
gangster who lived long before Batman's reign of
crimefighting.
In the three-part
Legends of the Dark Knight storyline "The Primal Riddle", the
Riddler engineers what could possibly be called one of his greatest
deathtraps: Batman is thrown into a narrow pit that is slowly
filling up with water. The walls are electrically wired, and a set
of bumpers are the only thing that prevents the water from touching
the walls and causing Batman to die by electrocution. The only
options Batman appears to have are death by electrocution and death
by drowning, but as always, Batman manages to tamper with the traps
design and develop a route of escape.
Riddler had a working relationship with The Cluemaster,
although he initially resented the villain for seemingly copying
his modus operandi. In their first encounter, he set his fellow
rogue up with a bomb and sent Batman off chasing riddles that would
lead to its defusal, as well as away from his real plan: to steal a
vast amount of priceless baseball merchandise. The two
teamed up on a few occasions afterwards, and were working together
on a big scheme shortly before Cluemaster's apparent death in the
pages of The
Suicide Squad.
He seems to be more rational and cautious than
his fellow rogues. During the Batman crossover storyline No
Man's Land, after Gotham City is ravaged by an earthquake and
Arkham Asylum frees its inmates, Riddler elects to flee Gotham
rather than stay behind in the lawless chaos that ensues.
It is during this period that he makes the poor
choice of attacking Black Canary
and Green
Arrow in Star City, where he is easily defeated. This event
helps lay the foundations for Riddler's future confrontations with
Green Arrow (see below).
Hush
In the 12-part storyline Hush, it is revealed that Riddler suffers from cancer, which also afflicted Dr. Thomas Elliott's mother. Riddler uses one of Ra's Al Ghul's Lazarus Pits to rid himself of the disease, and offers Elliot the chance to cure his mother as well, provided he pays a large sum of money. However, Elliott is in fact eager for his mother to die in order to inherit her fortune. Elliott, who goes on to secretly become the masked criminal Hush, explains he wants to get revenge on his childhood friend Bruce Wayne. The two of them agree to work together and the Riddler sets Killer Croc, Poison Ivy, Harley Quinn, Joker, Clayface and Scarecrow out to destroy Batman, with Ra's and Talia Al Ghul, Lady Shiva and Superman being temporarily drawn into the scheme as well.During the psychotic break that follows
exposure to the Lazarus Pit, Riddler deduces Batman's secret
identity, and that the late Jason Todd was
once Robin. He then tells Clayface to shapeshift into a replica of
Jason in order to torment Batman, who is haunted by the former
Robin's death. Batman first thinks that Riddler had stolen Jason's
corpse and hid it outside of Gotham Cemetery, but it turns out that
Jason is alive the whole time. When the Riddler threatens to expose
Batman's secret identity, however, the Caped Crusader mockingly
labels it an empty threat, pointing out that if Riddler revealed
the answer to the riddle "who is Batman?", it would become
worthless, something Riddler wouldn't be able to stand. In
addition, Batman warns him that if he reveals the secret, it would
give Ra's al Ghul a vital clue that he used a Lazarus Pit without
his permission, and the League
of Assassins would subsequently retaliate against him.
Aftermath
The fallout from Riddler's failed scheme is played out in Batman: Gotham Knights #50-53. In the story "Pushback," Hush reappears and beats Riddler senseless across a rooftop. Seeking refuge, Riddler goes to the Joker and the Penguin. He offers to tell the Joker who had killed his wife if the Clown Prince of Crime would protect him from Hush. The Joker agrees, but eventually Hush, with the help of Prometheus, defeats him, forcing the Riddler to flee for his life.In Detective Comics #797-799, the Riddler faces a
great humiliation at the hands of Poison
Ivy. In this encounter, the Riddler seeks shelter from Ivy only
to be humiliated. Riddler and Ivy then face off in a physical duel,
which Ivy wins easily.
Riddler is stripped of his deductive powers and
left to rot as a member of Gotham City's
vast and invisible homeless population. A chance
encounter with an ex-NSA codebreaker gives
him a positive environment in which to recover his mind. During
that stay, he experiences an induced
flashback that leads him to realize that his father had abused
him many years ago. Envious of his sons academic achievements in
school, and unable to understand his brilliance, his father
believed he had cheated in his accomplishments, and beat him out of
jealousy. Once Riddler discovers this, he also realizes that his
compulsion is born out of a strong desire to tell the truth to
prove his innocence of deception.
Having made this connection, the Riddler spends
some of his vast fortune, acquired over many years of crime, to get
minor plastic
surgery and extensive tattooing, covering most of his
torso with his trademark question insignia. He returns and kills
the codebreaker- who had pieced together his identity but couldn't
act on it- then promptly steals a priceless scroll out from under
Batman's nose. Since then, the Riddler has spent most of his time
either legally amassing a huge fortune or attacking various heroes
in order to prove his newfound power.
After orchestrating a brutal series of assaults
on Green
Arrow, as revenge against his defeat at his hands during the No
Man's Land era, Riddler gravely injures and almost kills both
Green
Arrow and Arsenal.
He once again escapes before the Outsiders
arrive to save them. Sometime between this incident and the events
of Hush, the
Riddler was hired to steal artifacts imbued with mystical powers
from one of Star City's museums, and then distract the authorities
so that the related rituals could be commenced. He sends Team Arrow
on a wild goose chase around the City, and then reveals that he has
an atomic bomb housed in the stadium where the Star City Rockets
play. However, as a side effect of the ritual performed with the
artifacts, the city is plunged into complete darkness, and Green
Arrow uses this to his advantage, moving in and apprehending the
Riddler.
Riddler later shows up in Infinite
Crisis #1, with a group of villains, which includes the
Fisherman
and Murmur,
attacking the
Gotham City Police Department. He is next seen escaping
Arkham
Asylum during the world-wide supervillain breakout engineered
by the
Secret Society of Super Villains in Villains
United: Infinite Crisis Special #1, which takes place only days
after the prior supernatural disaster. Riddler re-appears as part
of the Society's "Phase Three" attack
on Metropolis. He is defeated by the Shining
Knight and is struck in the head by the Knight's mace.
Riddler Reformed
In Detective Comics #822, The Riddler returns,
having spent much of the previous
year in a coma due to
the one-sided fight against the Knight. He has seemingly reformed,
and is now a private consultant on the murder of a wealthy
socialite. Hired by the socialite's father, he proves that a photo
of Bruce Wayne apparently implicating him in the crime depicts an
impostor, and briefly works with Batman to investigate the crime.
As a result of his coma, The Riddler has apparently lost his
compulsion for riddles, but retains both his intellect and his
mammoth ego. Furthermore, he
suffered severe memory loss; upon emerging from his coma, he barely
remembers his own name. He does not appear to remember that Bruce
Wayne and Batman are one and the same, though he does harbor some
suspicions of once knowing something about Bruce Wayne.
In Detective Comics #828, Riddler is a guest
along with Bruce Wayne on board a ship during a party. During the
party, an old friend of Bruce's falls overboard and is mauled to
death by sharks. The Riddler appears to solve the case with the
suicide of the apparent
murderer, and quickly takes the credit. However, Batman finds
evidence that the suicide was a setup to divert attention away from
the real killer. Bruce suspects foul play, and eventually tracks
down the killer, whom Riddler is also close to catching before
Nigma is bludgeoned over the head by a shark-tooth club. The killer
pushes Batman out the window, and is about to drop him to his
death, when Nigma wraps his tie around an arrow, lights it on fire,
and shoots it into the killer's back. As the assailant rolls around
screaming, Nigma taunts him, refusing to douse the flames. Batman
extinguishes the flame, and responds to Nigma's assertion that
they're now allies with hostile dismissal.
In Detective Comics #837 Riddler is hired by
Bruce Wayne to track down an experimental drug developed by Wayne
Enterprises currently being tested for muscle stamina and cellular
regeneration which has been stolen by a lab assistant named Lisa
Newman. He discovers that Newman is staying at the same Athenian
Women's Help Shelter as Harley Quinn. With Harley's help he defeats
Newman and returns the drug to Wayne Enterprises, earning Batman's
trust for the time being.
In Countdown
#42, Riddler claims to Mary Marvel
that he has gone straight and is now a detective. The two join
forces to defeat Clayface, and after witnessing Mary's new
malicious approach to crime fighting, suggests that she consider
finding a mentor to help her control her powers. Or at the very
least get some anger management.
As of the 2008 miniseries Gotham Underground,
Riddler has yet to return to his villainous ways, and is
investigating The
Penguin's involvement with the events of Salvation
Run. He saves Dick
Grayson, who was under cover during the Gotham Gang War between
Penguin
and Tobias Whale
and deduces he is Nightwing but
cannot uncover his secret identity. Recent solicitations for an
upcoming issue of Detective Comics also mention Riddler will become
involved in a murder investigation alongside both Batman and the
Gotham City Police Department .
Alternate versions
As one of Batman's most famed and popular
adversaries, the Riddler has been featured in several comics which
are not part of the official DC continuity.
- In the Elseworlds mini-series Thrillkiller, Nygma is a psychiatrist who counsels Barbara Gordon. Doctor Edward Nygma, author of Riddle Me This — What do We Really Mean?, keeps Barbara dosed with increasing amounts of valium and encourages her to mix with people she actually loathes. Nygma wears a green suit and the cushions of his couch bear the pattern of the Riddler's outfit. Alfred, her butler, takes the drugs away from her at the request of her father Commissioner Gordon who regards Nygma as a quack.
- The Riddler has a heroic counterpart in the antimatter universe called the Quizmaster, who is a member of Lex Luthor's Justice Underground (that Earth's version of the Secret Society of Super Villains) which opposes the evil Crime Syndicate of Amerika. He first appeared in JLA Secret Files 2004 #1. Similarly, on Earth-3, the Riddler's heroic counterpart (simply Riddler) is married to Three-Face (Evelyn Dent) and is the stepfather to the Jokester's daughter, Duela Dent.
- The character was featured in several issues of Batman and Robin Adventures. In his first appearance, he holds an entire Christmas party hostage, convinced that Batman and Robin are amongst the crowd. This issue is also the debut of his two assistants, Query and Echo, in the DCAU continuity. In a later issue, he kidnaps Commissioner Gordon and threatens Gotham City with a deadly nerve gas. Since Batman and Robin fail to show up, Batgirl is forced to take on the Riddler alone and save her father.
- The Riddler was featured quite prominently in Batman: Gotham Adventures, a spin-off of the TNBA series.
- In the Batman Adventures series, The Riddler makes yet another attempt to go straight in issue #2. Issue #11 shows that while reformed, The Riddler struggles to avoid the temptation of crime as well as planting riddles. To remedy that, Batman recruits The Riddler to answer a great riddle: How did The Penguin succeed in becoming mayor of Gotham City? In the process, he is heavily injured in #12 by The Clock King. At the end of the issue, he ends up in a coma. The series was canceled before The Riddler's fate could be resolved. The story planned for the Riddler would have him emerging from his coma stricken with amnesia, allowing him to solve the greatest riddle, "Who Am I?"
- An alternate version of the Riddler appears in the Emperor Joker storyline, in which is a member of the Joker's Justice League. After learning of the Joker's plans to destroy the Universe, he leads the League in an uprising against him. The Joker's vast and amazing powers cause the plan to fail, and the entire League is destroyed as a result.
Names and variations
Many adaptations of the Batman mythos have given the Riddler the real name Edward Nigma (or Nygma) or E. Nigma. Occasionally his full name has been given as Edward E. Nigma. Some have depicted this as a false name and his real name as Edward Nashton, who legally changed his name to Edward Nygma. Most recently, his origin in Countdown states that Nashton is his original name.In the French and Quebecois
translations of various Batman titles, his nom de plume has been
translated to Le Sphinx referencing
the riddle-posing monster of Greek
mythology that Oedipus confronted.
Sometimes, he's also known as L'Homme-Mystère,
which means "the Mystery Man" in French.
In Germany, the
villain has been called Mr. Sphinx, as well as Der Rätselknacker
(the riddle cracker).
In early Polish editions of
Batman comics Riddler was translated as Zagadka (The Riddle); in
Batman
Forever Riddler was known as Człowiek-Zagadka (Riddleman)
In Italy he is called
Enigmista, the literal translation of "Riddler".
In Latin
America, the Riddler is known as El Acertijo, which literally
means "The Riddle". In Brazil, the
character is named Charada, which also means "Riddle".
In Spain, the Riddler is
known as Enigma.
In Denmark, the
Riddler is known as Gækkeren, which, loosely translated, is a
person, who plays tricks on others, though not necessarily through
the use of riddles.
In Sweden, the Riddler
has been known as Gåtan, which is Swedish
for "the riddle", and sometimes Gåtmannen (=Riddleman).
In Russia, he is called
Ребус (Russian for Rebus). In some
translations, the Riddler is also called Человек-загадка
(Chelovek-zagadka; literally, "the Mystery Man") or Человек-вопрос
(Chelovek-vopros, "the Question Man").
In Finland, the
Riddler is known as Arvuuttaja. (Translates directly to "Riddler"
or "Puzzler.")
Other media
Television
Batman (TV series)
Frank Gorshin played the Riddler in the 1960s Batman television series and spin-off movie, with John Astin substituting once on the series. The popular television series was inspired by the first Silver Age appearance of the Riddler, with the premiere episode being an adaptation of this issue (Batman #171). Before the television series, the character was a minor villain with only three appearances in two decades, but the exposure of the series - especially with Gorshin's extremely popular interpretation - elevated the character in the comics to a major enemy. Riddler's real name was never mentioned in the TV show. Gorshin also portrayed the Riddler in Legends of the Superheroes in 1979.The Batman/Superman Hour
The Riddler made his first appearance in animated form in the Filmation Batman installments first seen on CBS Saturday Morning in 1968 as part of The Batman/Superman Hour. While he didn't appear in The New Adventures of Batman episodes, he is shown briefly in the opening theme, wearing a red costume, rather than his traditional green. He is also referenced in one episode.Super Friends
He later appeared in Hanna-Barbera's Challenge of the SuperFriends as a member of the Legion of Doom. Playing off the Gorshin model, this Riddler is a hyperactive lunatic whose contrived riddles baffle all but Batman and Robin. He was voiced by Michael Bell.He made his only solo appearance in a Super
Friends short episode, "Around The World In 80 Riddles", where he
sprays Superman, Wonder
Woman, Batman and Robin with a chemical to reduce their
intelligence to that of two-year-olds.
DC animated universe
In Batman: The Animated Series, John Glover voiced the Riddler. For this version, the producers decided to play against the popular Gorshin image of a giggling trickster and have the character as a smooth intellectual, who presented genuinely challenging puzzles. In this incarnation, Nygma is a game designer fired by a greedy executive name Daniel Mockridge for suing after not getting royalties for a game he created called "Riddle of the Minotaur." He seeks revenge as the Riddler by kidnapping Daniel and placing him in an elaborate maze deathtrap. As a testament to his ingenuity, the Riddler is one of the few villains in the animated series who emerges victorious in his first appearance; while he does not kill his victim, the Riddler escapes Batman and has the satisfaction that Daniel Mockridge now lives in fear of his return. As with the other versions, this Riddler has a fondness for elaborate deathtraps that Batman often escapes from by "cheating," or finding flaws in the trap's design and exploiting them; for instance, Batman deliberately went after the flying Hand of Fate device, hotwired it to his palmtop computer and flew towards the center of the maze.In his second appearance on the show, he traps
Commissioner Gordon inside a deadly virtual reality video game,
which Batman is forced to enter in order to save him. While dodging
the traps laid out in the construct and chasing clues, Batman
discovers that he can change and mold his virtual body into forms
that will better suit the tasks at hand, and he uses this
newly-discovered ability to fool the Riddler into causing his
program to overload. During the confusion, Batman escapes the
construct with the Commissioner, and the Riddler's mind is briefly
trapped inside the virtual reality device.
In the final episode the character appeared in,
he has seemingly reformed, and a wealthy owner of a toy company
hires him to produce a line of puzzles and games that are aimed at
children. He deliberately hides clues in the company's
advertisements that correspond to crimes that he will eventually
commit. After a confrontation with Batman, the Riddler vows to rid
himself of his enemy once and for all, and lures him into one last
death trap. Batman manages to escape yet again, much to Nygma's
chagrin. He is sent back to Arkham Asylum, smitten with rage. His
only other appearance on the show was a small cameo in the episode
"The Trial", but he has been referenced and alluded to in a few
other episodes, as well.
The series' creators admit they didn't use him
very much because his character often made story plots too long,
too complex, or too bizarre. The writers described this problem
with the Riddler in an article in Comics Scene #43, published by
Starlog..
The Riddler is only seen briefly in
The New Batman Adventures episodes: first
in a dream sequence, then
in a rather short appearance where he is robbing a bank.
Despite his lack of appearances in the series, he was prominently
featured in Batman: Gotham Adventures, its comic book continuation.
He is featured in the episode, Judgement Day, where the Judge cuts
the rope suspending a giant book in the air, sending it crushing
down on the Riddler. Due to the previous nature of the Judge's
attacks, this may have killed him.
He also appears in the
Superman: The Animated Series episode "Knight Time",
where he is in league with Bane and
the Mad
Hatter. A Riddler Drone, along with Two Face and
Killer
Croc, fights Batman Beyond in the opening to "Terry's
Friend Dates A Robot".
As part of the original 13 members of the
Legion
of Doom, the Riddler was originally slated to appear again in
the DC Animated Universe in the third season of Justice
League Unlimited, but apparently due to a "Bat-Embargo"
enforced by Warner Bros., this did not occur.
The Batman
While Tim Burton was
slated to direct Batman
Forever, his intention was to have Michael
Keaton return as the title character, and use the Riddler
(Edward Nygma) as the main villain, who would be portrayed as a
menacing psychopath
with a question mark shaved into his hair. Robin
Williams was the first choice for the role, but he turned it
down. Burton went on to cast Micky
Dolenz, who screen tested for the role. Dolenz's involvement
ended once Joel
Schumacher was hired to direct. Schumacher instead decided to
bank on Jim Carrey for
the role. Michael
Jackson approached Schumacher about the role but Schumacher
felt that there wasn't a place for Jackson in the film. Carrey had
stated that he was attracted to the "stalker" angle added to the
character in the script. Nygma is shown to be obsessed with his
idol Bruce Wayne, his turn to crime a result of Wayne's rejection
of his mind-manipulation invention. Throughout the film, Nygma
obsesses over Wayne, copying Wayne's appearance down to a facial
mole, and he prevents Two-Face from
killing him. This version of the Riddler employs a device called
"the Box", disguised as a 3D
imagery device for TVs, that extracts victims' thoughts and
transmits them into the Riddler's head, making him smarter and
contributing to his descent into madness. In the end, Batman
damages the Box with a Batarang, and
Riddler's intelligence (as well as his sanity) is lost. Throughout
the film, he plants a series of riddles for Batman to find, which
lead to the disclosure of his identity. At the end of the film, he
is captured in Arkham Asylum and, in his madness, begins screaming
that he is Batman.
In Batman
& Robin, when Bane breaks
into Arkham Asylum's storage room to get Mr. Freeze's cryogenic
suit, both Two-Face and Riddler's costumes are visible in the
background.
Nolan series
Director Christopher Nolan took the helm as director of the new Batman franchise with the 2005 film Batman Begins and the upcoming 2008 film The Dark Knight.- David Tennant has expressed an interest in portraying the Riddler in a future Batman movie, as has Fraiser star David Hyde-Pierce.
- In the viral marketing for The Dark Knight, Edward Nashton, one of the alias of The Riddler, is credited for writing an editorial in The Gotham Times Volume 2 which features an article about a Batman statue being added to the Wax Museum as well. Madame Soleil's Wax Museum was used in a 1966 episode of the Batman TV series, where the Riddler used a Batman statue to smuggle in a 'Universal Wax Solvent' from France, to be used later against Batman. This could possibly hint to an appearance by The Riddler in The Dark Knight. Anthony Michael Hall was rumored for the role; however, it has been revealed that Hall is playing a reporter named Mike Engel.
Justice League New Frontier
Riddler makes a cameo in Justice League: The New Frontier among some other Batman villians during the famous speech by John F. Kennedy.Super Max
According to Latinoreview The Riddler is one of the villains locked up in SuperMax.Video games
The Riddler has also appeared in several video games based on Batman. He was a boss in Batman: The Animated Series, The Adventures of Batman & Robin for the SNES, The Adventures of Batman & Robin for the Sega CD and various video game adaptations of Batman Forever. The SNES game had Riddler re-using the Riddle of the Minotaur Maze from "If You're So Smart, Why Aren't You Rich?" (but this time with the Gordons as hostages) and the chess board from "What Is Reality?". In the Sega CD game, which had fully-animated cut scenes, John Glover reprised his role as the Riddler.In the PC game Toxic Chill, Riddler teams up with
Mr. Freeze, and leaves this riddle to Batman and Robin: "What gets
hotter when it gets colder?" The majority of the game is spent
gathering clues whilst battling Freeze, Riddler, and the Riddler's
gang with help from Batgirl and Alfred. The answer turns out to
be...Gotham City!
It turns out that Freeze has been building a weather machine to
cause a super-blizzard, and Riddler has been secretly been
double-crossing him by dumping chemicals under the ground into lava
tubes, shaping an enormous question mark upon spewing up from the
ground, triggered by the cold winds. However, Batman and Robin
manage to stop his chemicals from emptying into the bay. The
Riddler then attempts to destroy a light house, finishing his
symbol with a dot. Batman captures him and hauls him away to Arkham
before he is able to do this final devious act. Nygma is forced to
share a cell with Freeze, who presumably exacts revenge on Riddler
for betraying and nearly killing him with the hot chemicals. The
Riddler in here closely resembles the one in Batman: The Animated
Series in the game, but his personality more closely resembles that
of the version portrayed by Frank Gorshin.
He is mentioned by the JLA's Watchtower recorder
in Justice
League Heroes. The message, sent to Batman, is "Just now, a toy
sells death".
He is also seen in a trailer for the upcoming
Lego Batman: The Video Game
Action figures
Riddler has made several appearances as an action figure as part of Kenner's Batman: The Animated Series, Legends of Batman and Batman: Knight Force Ninjas lines, Mattel's The Batman line, and Art Asylum's minimates line. He has also been produced as a Heroclix. Five different Riddler figures were produced for the 1995 Batman Forever line, including one version that says phrases from the film.The Riddler is one of the rarest of Kenner's
Super
Powers Collection line. He is a repainted Green
Lantern figure that was only released in South
America. He was also part of the line of action figures called
the DC Comics SuperHeroes from Toy-Biz.
Three versions of the Riddler have appeared in
the DC Direct line, two based on his first appearance and one based
on his look in the Hush storyline. The Japanese toy company Yamato
has also produced a figure of him.
Roller coasters
Riddler's Revenge, the world's tallest and fastest stand-up roller coaster is themed after the Riddler. It is located in Six Flags Magic Mountain in Valencia, California.See also
Notes and references
External links
- DCDP: Riddler - DC Database Project
- Edward Nygma's Puzzle Web Site : puzzles, games and stories featuring the animated series Riddler.
- Riddler on DCComics.com
riddler in German: Riddler
riddler in Spanish: Riddler
riddler in French: Sphinx (Batman)
riddler in Italian: Enigmista
riddler in Hebrew: איש החידות
riddler in Dutch: Riddler
riddler in Japanese: リドラー
riddler in Portuguese: Charada
riddler in Finnish: Arvuuttaja
riddler in Turkish: Riddler