Search/Recent Changes
DBTropes
...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!

Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)

 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
type
TVTItem
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
label
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
page
GreenLantern1941
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
comment
Green Lantern is a 1941 superhero comic book from DC Comics.The first volume of Green Lantern, the series tells the adventures of the Golden Age Green Lantern, Alan Scott.note Though he actually got his start in All-American Comics, which ran his stories until it was rebranded as an all-Western comic.The book started in 1941 and ran for 38 issues before being cancelled in 1949. The first five issues and the seventh were written by Bill Finger, with Joseph Greene, Henry Kuttner, Alfred Bester, Robert Bernstein, John Broome and Robert Kanigher writing the remaining 33. Martin Nodell did the art through issue 25, with Alex Toth and Irwin Hasen working on the remaining 13 issues.For the related character sheet, see Characters.Green Lantern 1941.
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
fetched
2024-04-15T01:32:05Z
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
parsed
2024-04-15T01:32:06Z
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
isPartOf
DBTropes
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_13eea985
type
Arbitrary Skepticism
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_13eea985
comment
Arbitrary Skepticism: There were a few chapters where Green Lantern would refuse to believe something like someone was really cursed with bad luck or his current opponent was really a legendary evildoer. In spite of getting his powers from magic, his archenemy being the reanimated hulk Solomon Grundy, and all the magical heavyweights he either threw down with or fought alongside in the Justice Society.
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_13eea985
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_13eea985
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_13eea985
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_14180452
type
Instantly Proven Wrong
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_14180452
comment
Instantly Proven Wrong: The very first story has a colleague telling Alan he's worried the head of a rival company will try to get revenge for their company getting the contract to build an important bridge. Alan tells him to stop worrying. The very next panel has the bridge being bombed, and Alan the only survivor because he was holding onto the magic lantern.
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_14180452
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_14180452
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_14180452
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_1c3e4c9
type
Gratuitous Animal Sidekick
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_1c3e4c9
comment
Gratuitous Animal Sidekick: Streak the Wonder Dog near the end of the comics' run. A Heroic Dog sidekick for Alan Scott. Who has internal monologues so the audience knows what he's thinking.
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_1c3e4c9
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_1c3e4c9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_1c3e4c9
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_28c40e81
type
Trapped in the Past
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_28c40e81
comment
Trapped in the Past: In a blatant homage to A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, Alan and Doiby were once transported to Arthurian England. They were there long enough that Alan's ring ran out of power, leaving the two of them apparently stranded. Thankfully, Alan's lantern was centuries old, and existed in that time period, so he was able to charge his ring and return to his own time.
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_28c40e81
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_28c40e81
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_28c40e81
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_3fbdb8aa
type
Quote Mine
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_3fbdb8aa
comment
Quote Mine: Not one, but two Golden Age stories involved criminals framing Alan Scott by stringing together words spoken on his radio broadcasts to make a record that seems to make him say something incriminating.
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_3fbdb8aa
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_3fbdb8aa
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_3fbdb8aa
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_4a9c731e
type
When Trees Attack
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_4a9c731e
comment
When Trees Attack: In one of Alan Scott's stranger adventures, he and sidekick Doiby Dickles shrink down to microscopic size and discover a world of walking, talking trees called Mossboles. The Mossboles are stealing food from the other inhabitants of the micro-world, who had been stealing Doiby's goldfish in order not to starve. Yeah. Anyway, in the end, Alan discovers that the trees just want to eat some dirt, which doesn't exist in the micro-world, so he enlarges them to full size and turns them loose in the forest. Problem solved.
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_4a9c731e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_4a9c731e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_4a9c731e
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_4d359d57
type
Loyal Phlebotinum
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_4d359d57
comment
Loyal Phlebotinum: Some thugs once subdued Alan Scott and stole his power ring after figuring out that it was the source of his power. One of the thugs tried the ring on, and the ring killed him for doing so.
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_4d359d57
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_4d359d57
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_4d359d57
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_51beab21
type
Good Old Fisticuffs
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_51beab21
comment
Good Old Fisticuffs: Alan Scott's preferred method of taking down the villains early in his career. In any given Green Lantern story, he's far more likely to throw a punch at a gangster than to use his ring to stop them.
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_51beab21
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_51beab21
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_51beab21
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_57a91010
type
Green Rocks
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_57a91010
comment
Green Rocks: Despite all the differences between Alan Scott and all the other Green Lanterns that would follow, it's interesting to note that even in his 1940 origin story, the source of Alan's power is extraterrestrial Green Rocks. A burning green meteor crashes in China, and it is first formed into a lamp, then a lantern, and finally comes to Alan Scott to grant him power.
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_57a91010
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_57a91010
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_57a91010
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_6badd0a5
type
Anti-Climactic Unmasking
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_6badd0a5
comment
Anti-Climactic Unmasking: Having captured Green Lantern, a group of thugs are all eager to learn who he is, only to have no clue once they remove his mask. Doiby Dickles on the other hand learns that Alan is GL due to this incident.
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_6badd0a5
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_6badd0a5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_6badd0a5
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_938e9bc0
type
Absent-Minded Professor
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_938e9bc0
comment
Absent-Minded Professor: One story had a "Professor Nobody" who was a genius, but couldn't remember anything, including his own name. Let alone that he was being financed by a gangster, or what the machine he was building actually did (ironically, it gave its recipient a flawless memory).
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_938e9bc0
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_938e9bc0
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_938e9bc0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_94332264
type
Busman's Holiday
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_94332264
comment
Busman's Holiday: Doiby Dickles, a cab driver, is ordered by his doctor to take some time off for his shoulder and arm to heal and while on vacation accidentally buys a cab due to the language barrier.
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_94332264
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_94332264
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_94332264
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_a7aef9ff
type
Obfuscating Stupidity
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_a7aef9ff
comment
Obfuscating Stupidity: Villain The Fool would act like a silly, harmless prankster who knew all his stupid plans just couldn't work against GL, but there was always a twist that made his silly pranks dangerous for awhile.
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_a7aef9ff
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_a7aef9ff
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_a7aef9ff
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_ad66049e
type
Inspiration Nod
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_ad66049e
comment
Inspiration Nod: With DC Comics being based in New York City the name Green Lantern is likely a reference to the New York City Police Department's use of green lights on either side of the main entrances to all of their precinct houses. According to the NYPD's website:
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_ad66049e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_ad66049e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_ad66049e
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_b1a7cd14
type
Tap on the Head
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_b1a7cd14
comment
Tap on the Head: What Green Lantern's vulnerability to wood usually came down to. Most Golden Age stories would have GL get knocked out by some convenient wooden object or another falling on his head or a hood getting in a lucky shot with a wooden object midway through, so the villains would have a chance to get away, and the story could make it to full length.
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_b1a7cd14
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_b1a7cd14
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_b1a7cd14
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_b3f0fc91
type
Track Trouble
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_b3f0fc91
comment
Track Trouble: Alan Scott became the Green Lantern when the Lantern saved his life after a blown up bridge killed everyone else aboard the train he was on.
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_b3f0fc91
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_b3f0fc91
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_b3f0fc91
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_b9c4a653
type
Character in the Logo
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_b9c4a653
comment
Character in the Logo: Alan Scott's face is depicted inside the lantern in the logo on each cover.
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_b9c4a653
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_b9c4a653
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_b9c4a653
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_bcbf7aef
type
Plucky Comic Relief
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_bcbf7aef
comment
Plucky Comic Relief: Doiby Dickles is actually often fairly stalwart for a comic relief sidekick. He still has to ask Alan what things like being called a "moron" means, the answer to which gets him riled up enough to go deck the criminal who'd called him such.
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_bcbf7aef
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_bcbf7aef
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_bcbf7aef
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_bf927e82
type
Non-Human Sidekick
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_bf927e82
comment
Non-Human Sidekick: Streak, the Wonder Dog, Alan's pet... who had human thoughts and eventually just about took over the book, right before it was cancelled!
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_bf927e82
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_bf927e82
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_bf927e82
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_c09dbbbb
type
Weaksauce Weakness
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_c09dbbbb
comment
Weaksauce Weakness: While it doesn't really effect him much initially (save when fighting foes with forms of plant control) Alan's ring supposedly doesn't work against wood, which started out as a counterpoint to his immunity from metals. At first it was a case of being able to shrug off bullets, while at the same time being unprotected from organic items like a club or a fist. As flanderization took hold over time later issues would describe wood as "Green Lantern's greatest enemy!"
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_c09dbbbb
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_c09dbbbb
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_c09dbbbb
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_c4976d7c
type
Vehicular Sabotage
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_c4976d7c
comment
Vehicular Sabotage: While Alan's original introduction in All-American Comics made it clear that it was the bridge that was sabotaged by his business rival which lead to the catastrophic train accident that killed all onboard except for Alan, in the retelling in Green Lantern #1 its not made clear whether it was part of the train or the bridge where the explosion originated from.
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_c4976d7c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_c4976d7c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_c4976d7c
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_cd336741
type
"Wanted!" Poster
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_cd336741
comment
"Wanted!" Poster: On the cover of issue 12 Green Lantern and Doiby Dickles are looking at a wanted poster for the Gambler posted up on the wall while the Gambler's distinctive shadow, with gun drawn, is cast on them from behind.
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_cd336741
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_cd336741
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_cd336741
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_cdcd7a78
type
Derelict Graveyard
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_cdcd7a78
comment
Derelict Graveyard: Alan Scott discovers one in the middle of the Atlantic in Green Lantern #3. It's filled with ships from across the centuries who have become trapped there, and the descendants of the original crew still live in and around the ships. Things are great until the Nazis try to take over the area...
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_cdcd7a78
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_cdcd7a78
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_cdcd7a78
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_e9e35e8f
type
Exact Words
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_e9e35e8f
comment
Exact Words: One story had an Oriental cult thinking Doiby was their reincarnated god, its leader going around hypnotizing people who got in his way. This led to some humorous outcomes, like when he un-hypnotized a gangster, he commanded him to become a "normal man". This made the gangster stop acting like a monkey, but it also made him stop acting like a gangster, making a good and honest man out of him.
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_e9e35e8f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_e9e35e8f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_e9e35e8f
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_fc9b6be5
type
Foe Romance Subtext
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_fc9b6be5
comment
Foe Romance Subtext: Harlequin isn't shy about her obsession with GL, and while GL claims not to feel the same about her he's still got subtext. The fact that Harlequin was later revealed to be mostly a government agent who is infiltrating villain groups rather than a dangerous supervillain in her own right helped later writers use this subtext to see the two get married, but in this book there's no real reciprocated feelings.
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_fc9b6be5
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_fc9b6be5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_fc9b6be5
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_name
type
ItemName
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_name
comment
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_name
featureApplicability
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_name
featureConfidence
1.0
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_name
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book) / int_name
itemName
Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Black Blood / int_6c148044
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Brooklyn Rage / int_6c148044
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Busman's Holiday / int_6c148044
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Derelict Graveyard / int_6c148044
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Goggles Do Something Unusual / int_6c148044
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Good Old Fisticuffs / int_6c148044
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Green Rocks / int_6c148044
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Ironic Nursery Tune / int_6c148044
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Loyal Phlebotinum / int_6c148044
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Muggle Best Friend / int_6c148044
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Mundane Solution / int_6c148044
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Non-Human Sidekick / int_6c148044
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Plant Person / int_6c148044
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Plucky Comic Relief / int_6c148044
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Resurrective Immortality / int_6c148044
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Swiss-Army Superpower / int_6c148044
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
The '40s / int_6c148044
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Track Trouble / int_6c148044
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Twin Telepathy / int_6c148044
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
"Wanted!" Poster / int_6c148044
 Green Lantern (1941) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
When Trees Attack / int_6c148044