O.M.A.C.: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Robotic Reveal]]: She was the only person at his job who was ever ''nice'' to Buddy, too.
* [[Robotic Reveal]]: She was the only person at his job who was ever ''nice'' to Buddy, too.
* [[Super Soldier]]: OMAC
* [[Super Soldier]]: OMAC
* [[Super Powered Alter Ego]]: Kevin and the ''[[Batman the Brave And The Bold (Animation)|Batman the Brave And The Bold]]'' version of Buddy.
* [[Super-Powered Alter Ego]]: Kevin and the ''[[Batman the Brave And The Bold (Animation)|Batman the Brave And The Bold]]'' version of Buddy.
* [[Teleporters and Transporters]]: Brother Eye can do this with Kevin, transporting him to places of Eye's choosing.
* [[Teleporters and Transporters]]: Brother Eye can do this with Kevin, transporting him to places of Eye's choosing.
* [[Time Travel]]: Used by the [[Pre Crisis]] OMAC to [[The Terminator|stop a robot sent to the past to kill his ancestor]] with help from [[Superman]].
* [[Time Travel]]: Used by the [[Pre Crisis]] OMAC to [[The Terminator|stop a robot sent to the past to kill his ancestor]] with help from [[Superman]].

Revision as of 13:03, 26 January 2014

Rush hour can be murder.

 "OMAC lives... so that Man may live!"

O.M.A.C. ("One Man Army Corps") is a DC Comics character, originally a superhero in a futuristic setting, although reinvented a few times since. It was created by artist Jack Kirby during his tenure at DC in the 1970s. He first appeared in "OMAC" #1 (September, 1974). The series only lasted for 8 issues, ending in December, 1975.

The original OMAC was Buddy Blank, a janitor who was chosen by the secret organization called the Global Peace Agency to be their super soldier against the forces of the evil megacorporations that were taking over the world. With the aid of a sentient orbiting satellite called Brother Eye, OMAC tried to prevent a power struggle that would destroy civilization.

He failed.

In fact, Buddy was the old man who raised Kamandi, The Last Boy On Earth (another Kirby series) several years after the mysterious Great Disaster shattered the world. He died in the first issue, leaving Kamandi to roam alone the strange new world Earth had become.

All of this was before the Crisis On Infinite Earths event changed the history of the DC universe. Afterwards, OMAC was reintroduced in a miniseries by artist John Byrne that was, however, not considered canonical.

Around the time of the Infinite Crisis miniseries, the OMAC concept was reintroduced as an army of humans mutated by Nanotechnology and controlled by Brother Eye, which was now supposedly created by Batman to monitor and control metahumans (Observational Metahuman Activity Construct). Except the villainous Maxwell Lord reprogrammed it and used it to attack Earth's heroes instead.

During Countdown to Final Crisis it would be revealed that the actual creator of this Brother Eye was Buddy (who is a scientist now; Batman commissioned it from him.) A subsequent (and poorly explained) chain of events led to the destruction of an Alternate Universe that then became Kamandi's world.

DC's New 52 relaunch introduced a new iteration of OMAC: Kevin Kho, a scientist at Cadmus Industries, found Brother Eye repeatedly transforming him into a hulking monster to serve as its agent on Earth.

OMAC (the original) also appeared in an episode of Batman the Brave And The Bold; in this version a clumsy Hero Worshipper Buddy Blank was regularly transformed into a gung-ho OMAC and back again, with neither side aware of the other's existence.

Not to be confused with One-Man Army, although it was obviously based on the idea.


Tropes shown in OMAC over the years:

  • Affably Evil: The "New 52/DCnU" incarnation of Brother Eye, at times. For instance, when introducing himself to Kevin Kho:

 Brother Eye: What I want is your complete attention and for you to understand that your life is now mine. I am BROTHER EYE, and you and eye have much to talk about. But first, call your girlfriend. She's worried about you.