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DC officially confirms Poison Ivy's design for Batman's new appearance
Batman helps Poison Ivy in the Dark Knight's new appearance, as DC officially confirms what the beloved villain looks like ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. (Image Source: DC / Mike Perkins) Feral Trees finds Poison Ivy and Swamp Thing joined together in an uneasy alliance. Both sense ...
Dr. Jason Woodrue, the Floronic Man (a.k.a. Floro), has stacked the deck in his favor. Neither Ivy’s powers nor her allies are enough to put an end to Floro and his devilish plan to turn Ivy’s victims ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The Trekkie roots of Poison Ivy are revealed in “Marasmius” by Gretchen Felker-Martin and Claire Roe. The story finds Pamela Isley ...
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Meet DC's New Male Poison Ivy, 'The Poisoned Man'
There is a new, re-imagined version of Poison Ivy in the DC Multiverse, marking one of the most drastic changes to the femme fatale in recent memory. More than a costume change, a new romance to ...
Poison Ivy's relationship to The Green, the pandimensional connection established by Alan Moore in Swamp Thing forty years ago, that connects all plant life in the DC Universe, has often been up for ...
Shane Romanchick is a TV and Movie News author for Collider. He also runs his own blog Entershanement Reviews where he writes about and reviews the latest movies. He graduated from Regis College in ...
DC Comics’ Poison Ivy made comic book debut in June 1966: “Trouble between the dynamic duo,” the cover read, featuring Batman and Robin glaring at each other over an early Ivy adaption – “Is she the ...
In the year and a half that Absolute Batman has been around, we’ve seen several of the Dark Knight’s rogues. One of the most consistent parts about them is that they are rarely what they appear to be ...
Once upon a time, there were two Poison Ivys. Born out of warring editorial forces at DC Comics who saw Poison Ivy in very different ways, the battle played out on the page. Was she a genocidal bad ...
Pamela Isley doesn’t seem the sort to enjoy science fiction. While a scientist by trade, she is also obsessed with her work and seems to have few hobbies outside of it. However, a story in DC Pride ...
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