Luther Strode



One day a young teenager named Luthor Strode decided he needed a change. With the recent separation of his mother from his father due to his father's abuse, Luther decided he no longer wanted to be weak and powerless. Searching online, he found a book called The Hercules Method that guaranteed results to any student dedicated and willing enough to commit themselves to its teaching. Not long after receiving the book in the mail and beginning his training, strange things start to happen to Luthor. He finds that he needs to each much more than usual and that he no longer needs his glasses to see. But even more unnerving is that he is beginning to see normal people as figures of muscle, blood and bone.

Little did Luthor realize the effect that learning "The Method" would have on him -- or its secret dark origins.

Luther Strode is a six-issue miniseries written by Justin Jordan, illustrated by Tradd Moore and colored by Felipe Sobreiro published by Image Comics. This series is not for the squeamish and contains gratuitous, almost artistic levels of blood, gore, and mutilation. The first series started with The Strange Talent of Luthor Strode followed by The Legend of Luthor Strode and The Legacy of Luthor Strode.


 * Asshole Victim:
 * Asskicking Equals Authority:
 * Awesomeness By Analysis:


 * Berserk Button:
 * Biblical Bad Guy:
 * Big Bad:
 * But I Read a Book About It:
 * Charles Atlas Superpower:
 * Breath Weapon:
 * Combat Clairvoyance:
 * Healing Factor:
 * Immortality:
 * Mind Over Matter:
 * Super Reflexes:
 * Super Senses:
 * Super Speed:
 * Super Strength:
 * Super Toughness:
 * X-Ray Vision:
 * Curb Stomp Battle:
 * Deadpan Snarker:
 * Deconstruction:
 * Decon Recon Switch: While the series begins as a deconstruction of what it would really be like to have Charles Atlas Superpower in the normal world and the kind of trauma associated with an evil secret society being after you, midway through the second series through the third series, the concepts of With Great Power Comes Great Responsibility and regardless of the effects of your abilities, it's up to you to choose what you are and what you do with your gifts.
 * Domestic Abuse:
 * The Dreaded:
 * Enlightenment Superpowers:
 * Even Evil Has Standards:
 * Everyone Has Standards:
 * Evil Counterpart:
 * Faux Affably Evil:
 * Genius Bruiser:
 * Good Thing You Can Heal:
 * It Amused Me:
 * Jerk Jock: Jacobson. So much so, one would think the "V" on his varsity jacket stands for "Violent." The friends he surround himself with are very much in line with his thinking too.
 * Logical Weakness: The Method Relies on using the mind to control the body. This makes the users vulnerable to anything which targets their nerves (electricity, aesthetics) as it disrupts conscious connection to the body. They are likewise also vulnerable while unconscious though not to the same extent as their training is ingrained into them on a subconscious level giving them reduced and passive enhancement even while out cold.
 * Martial Pacifist:
 * Master of Your Domain:
 * Mook Horror Show:
 * Noble Demon: Any of the criminals or students of the Method who have some standards if not morals count as this.
 * Omnicidal Maniac:
 * Pay Evil Unto Evil :
 * Person of Mass Destruction:
 * Pulling Themselves Together:
 * Reconstruction: Toward the end of Legend of Luther Strode and throughout Legacy of Luthor strode, the series starts to show that it's the user of the Method that decides whether or not to become a monster and while the Method itself pushes one towards violence, it is possible to use something made for evil to help people and bring a measure of justice to the world.
 * Toward the end of Legend of Luther Strode, Luther overcomes his self-loathing and uses his power to rescue Petra and realizes have her around means he has something to live for and that he is not alone while. He then uses his skills to kill Jack the Ripper with Petra's help.
 * Legacy of Luther Strode Reconstructs Bad Powers, Good People by showing how Luther overcame the inherent blood lust that's part of learning the method and the reader is later introduced to The Shooter, who was once a slave over 100 years ago and models himself as a noble cowboy while targeting modern underground slave trafficking rings and killing the people involved with the buying and selling of people. Later, Luther manages to reach Delilah who had been under Cain's thrall for over 1000 years and show her through his compassion and example that she can be better and more than what Cain allows her to be.
 * Religion of Evil: The Hercules Method is actually the initiation for students to enter into the death cult created by the first murderer Cain. Students who don't simply revel in their power but actively serve Cain and his organization are acolytes that consider the act of murder "holy".
 * Removing the Head or Destroying the Brain: The only sure way to kill a user of the method. While destruction of major portions of there bodies and/or extensive damage to most of their vital organs will work, the odds of anyone being able to deal that kind of damage before the student pounces on them and turning them into a pile of meat are slim to none. Headshots are the only way to instantly kill a student and not give them time to recover and defend themselves. Since the Method itself relies on the mind to control the body, there is no way for students to heal or recover head trauma that disrupts their ability to control their bodies.
 * Sealed Evil in a Can:.
 * Social Darwinist:
 * Takes One to Kill One: Yes and No. While conventional modern weapons are capable of killing users of the Method, the difficulty is in having normal human beings trying to compete physically with the reflexes, perception, speed and strength of super-human walking engines of carnage. The only time normal humans end up killing students of the method is when the student is caught off guard or killed in one shot via sneak attack. Any other way and the normal humans (even people with special forces training and combat experience) are nothing more than walking targets Made of Plasticine to even "normal" students of the Method.
 * Technical Pacifist:
 * The Paragon: By the end of the series as a whole, this is what Luther has become. He is not only one of the strongest users of the method but he managed to defeat and kill (albeit with some help) the creator of the method and its oldest practitioner Cain. More than that Luther has successfully reigned in the inherent bloodlust that comes with learning the Method and does his best to see that violence is the last resort. He doesn't always succeed but his genuine willingness to try to talk to people rather than fight and his insistence on minimal force to subdue his opponents before going all out to defeat them has successfully won over The Shooter, Miyamoto Musashi, and Delilah.
 * Took a Level in Badass:
 * Training from Hell: This is a Zig-Zagging Trope in that the Hercules method itself is actually more about focus and training your mind to control your body but the things the students do to practice count as this on a straight and figurative level. Many of the students were either the most renown warriors in history like Miyamoto Musashi or the most monstrous killers to walk the earth like Jack the Ripper. Most of the students cut themselves off from society or subject themselves to the worst humanity has to offer so they're either dealing with human garbage at their worst like The Shooter or they're training and isolating themselves in the middle of nowhere like The Bear in the Russian tundra.
 * Weak but Skilled: