- This article is about the fictional organization in DC Comics. S.T.A.R. Labs is not related to S.T.A.R.S.
S.T.A.R. Labs | |
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![]() Interior artwork from Who's Who: The Definitive Directory of the DC Universe vol. 1, 20 (October, 1986 DC Comics) Art by Ross Andru and Ricardo Villagran | |
Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
First appearance | Superman vol. 1 #246 (December 1971) |
Created by | Cary Bates (writer) Rich Buckler (artist) |
In-story information | |
Type of business | Research and development |
Base(s) | Gotham City Metropolis Central City Detroit San Francisco Seattle Wichita San Jose Palo Alto Sunnyvale Philadelphia Boston |
Owner(s) | Garrison Slate New Earth |
Employee(s) | W.D.CGlobal leadership |
Scientific and Technological Advanced Research Labs (S.T.A.R. Labs) is a fictional scientific research facility and organization appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. It first appeared in Superman #246 (December 1971) and was created by Cary Bates and Rich Buckler.
Publication history[]
S.T.A.R. Labs was introduced in Superman #246 (December 1971). In the Superman comics, Professor Hamilton formerly worked there, and Dr. Kitty Faulkner, also known as the superheroine Rampage, is currently employed there. The Metropolis location is featured in a battle and as a plot point in Armageddon 2001. In Teen Titans, Cyborg's parents, Silas and Eleanor Stone, and his former love interest, Dr. Sarah Charles, all worked for S.T.A.R. Labs. Past S.T.A.R. Labs employees are Murray Takamoto,[1] Dr. Jenet Klyburn, and Dr. Albert Michaels (the first Atomic Skull). The 1993 comics miniseries S.T.A.R. Corps was about a group of superhumans who had inadvertently gained their powers in a S.T.A.R. Labs experiment. The labs are featured in the 1996 mini-series The Final Night. As eternal winter threatens the world, thanks to the Sun-Eater, S.T.A.R. Labs keeps their webpage updated with encouragement and various information related to the emergency. The San Francisco and Montana branches play an important role in the arc in Justice League of America #110–114 (2005). 52 Aftermath: The Four Horsemen #1 (October 2007) shows a S.T.A.R. Labs relief operation working, side by side with Waynetech, in the devastated remains of the country of Bialya. All the relief workers are slain by outside forces. The latter few issues of DC Universe: Legacies showcases the life of Metropolis Star Labs security director Jim Mahoney.[2]
Fictional history[]
S.T.A.R. was founded by scientist Garrison Slate, who wanted a nationwide chain of research laboratories unconnected to the government or any business interests. He succeeded not only on a national scale, but an international one as well: S.T.A.R. Labs currently maintains facilities in Canada, Europe, Australia, and Japan as well as in the United States, with the total number of facilities numbering between twenty and thirty at last recorded count.
S.T.A.R. Labs is one of the companies providing sponsorship to the superhero team The Conglomerate. The other sponsors included American Steel, Dante Foods, Dupree Chemical, Ferris Aircraft, LexCorp, Ovel Oil, Pax Entertainment, Stagg Enterprises.[3]
Locations[]
A partial list of some known locations of S.T.A.R. Labs facilities and their research focuses, where either is known, includes:
- Austin, Texas
- Central City, Missouri, Home of the Flash
- Chicago, Illinois: specializing in research and technology
- Detroit, Michigan: specialized in physics research. Closed down in 2004. New facility seen in 2017.[4]
- Fawcett City: specializing in extraterrestrial research[5]
- Gotham City: specializing in weaponry
- Keystone City, Kansas
- Kyoto, Japan[6]
- Los Angeles, California: specializing in genetics and disease control
- Melbourne, Australia
- Metropolis (Queensland Park Borough, near Metropolis Harbor): specializing in marine biology
- Metropolis (central branch, New Troy Island): catch-all facility
- Missoula County, Montana[7]
- New York City, New York: specializing in research and technology. Destroyed in explosion.[8]
- Palo Alto, medical facility
- Phoenix, Arizona: specializing in meteorology and natural disasters
- Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, radioactive storage and testing centers
- Salt Lake City, Utah:[9] specializing in physics
- San Diego, California: specializing in chemical research
- San Francisco, California: specializing in studying metahumans
- Seattle, Washington: specializing in studying psychology and psionics.
- Toronto, Ontario, Canada[10]
- Tulsa, Oklahoma
- Wichita, Kansas, specializing in robotics
In other media[]
Television[]
Animated[]
- S.T.A.R. Labs is shown in the Superman episode "The Hunter."
- S.T.A.R. Labs has mentioned in an episode of Batman: The Animated Series.
- In Superman: The Animated Series, S.T.A.R. Labs and scientist Professor Hamilton made regular appearances as a source of information and equipment for Superman. In addition to housing Kryptonite rocks under lock and key, S.T.A.R. custodian Rudy Jones was transformed into the monstrous Parasite during an attempt to steal hazardous materials. The episode "Two's a Crowd" featured a scientist named Earl Garver who stole isotopes which he made into a bomb until he was stopped by Superman.
- S.T.A.R. Labs made appearances in Justice League Unlimited.
- S.T.A.R. Labs was also mentioned in the Teen Titans cartoon, as the makers of the "Maximum 7", a microchip Cyborg uses to upgrade himself in the episode "Overdrive".
- S.T.A.R. Labs is also featured in the animated series Krypto the Superdog; it has an unintentional hand in creating Stretch-O-Mutt.
- A van that has "S.T.A.R. LABS" written on it can be seen at the end of the Batman: The Brave and the Bold episode "Invasion of the Secret Santas." Masked men from S.T.A.R. Labs are loading the remains of Red Tornado into it to be repaired. In "The Color of Revenge," an S.T.A.R. Labs facility in Bludhaven is later attacked by Crazy Quilt when he comes to steal the Stimulated Emission Light Amplifier. A group of bound and gagged S.T.A.R. scientists briefly appear, but have no lines.
- A S.T.A.R. Labs facility appears in the Young Justice episode "Infiltrator". The facility is raided and destroyed by the Swarm, a cloud of dangerous nanites used by the League of Shadows. In "Misplaced," Klarion the Witch Boy, Wotan, Blackbriar Thorn, Felix Faust and Wizard's spell that split the Earth into the kids dimension and the adults dimension enabled a diversion for Riddler and Sportsmaster to steal an organism (which resembles a part of Starro) from S.T.A.R. Labs. It is brought before Brain during his meeting with the other members of The Light (Project Cadmus' Board of Directors) as Brain tells Klarion the Witch Boy that they plan to bring it "into the Light." The only know members of S.T.A.R. Labs in this continuity are Adam Strange and Eduardo Dorado, S
Live action[]
- In the 1990 series The Flash, Dr. Christina "Tina" McGee (Amanda Pays), the scientist who helps Barry Allen (John Wesley Shipp) deal with the super-speed that makes him The Flash, works for S.T.A.R. Labs in Central City.
- In Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman, S.T.A.R. Labs was often mentioned as a source of scientific information. It gained more prominence with the introduction of S.T.A.R. scientist Dr. Bernard Klein as a recurring character from the third season onwards. Dallas City Hall doubles as S.T.A.R. Labs' building exterior for long shots during the series.
- In Smallville, Winslow Schott is a scientific inventor of S.T.A.R. Labs who was hired by Oliver Queen to work for Queen Industries. It is later revealed that S.T.A.R. Labs was founded by Virgil Swann. Season 11 comics, is where Superman starts his first year as being a superhero and learns about his origins and his powers. S.T.A.R. Labs is also run by Dr. Emil Hamilton who took over Dr. Virgil Swann place to help Superman's powers and his origin.
- S.T.A.R. Labs appears as a major location in the Arrowverse. It is first mentioned in the second season of Arrow during the episode "Three Ghosts" when Barry Allen (Grant Gustin), having helped Oliver Queen thwart one of Sebastian Blood's schemes in Starling City, returns to his home of Central City, only to be simultaneously hit by both lightning and an explosion caused by the meltdown of S.T.A.R. Labs's particle accelerator and rendered comatose for nine months. Later, in "The Man Under the Hood," S.T.A.R. scientists Caitlin Snow (Danielle Panabaker) and Cisco Ramon (Carlos Valdes) are recruited by Felicity Smoak (Emily Bett Rickards) to synthesize a cure to Mirakuru drug using a blood sample. The villain Deathstroke (Manu Bennett) also attacks S.T.A.R. Labs in the same episode on the hunt for some equipment.
- S.T.A.R. Labs returns in the 2014 series The Flash. Following the events of the second season of Arrow, Barry awakens from his coma and learns that he has gained super speed. He joins forces with Caitlin, Cisco, S.T.A.R. founder Harrison Wells (Tom Cavanagh), and his adoptive father Joe West (Jesse L. Martin) to combat individuals who were also affected by the particle accelerator explosion (dubbed metahumans) but are using their newfound abilities for nefarious purposes, using S.T.A.R. Labs as a primary base of operations and reappropriating the old particle accelerator as a makeshift prison for them. It is revealed throughout the events of the first season that Eobard Thawne (Cavanagh/Matt Letscher), who had been masquerading as Wells, had engineered the explosion to give Barry his powers and groomed him into becoming the Flash in order to use Barry to return to his original time in the future.
- In the second season, Barry, having defeated Eobard, is given ownership of S.T.A.R. Labs by Eobard through his will. However, Team Flash discover that a breach to parallel worlds has appeared in S.T.A.R. Labs as a result of the events of the first season, and through it they meet Jay Garrick (Teddy Sears) and a second Harrison Wells, who have come to stop the villainous Zoom, a murderous speedster from their world (dubbed "Earth-2") who plans to steal Barry's speed for himself. The second season also introduces the S.T.A.R. Labs of Earth-2, which was also responsible for creating metahumans. Wells, Barry and Cisco briefly reside there with the intention of closing the breaches between the two Earths in order to trap Zoom in Earth-2, but they are forced to evacuate when Zoom attacks the building.
- The third season introduces a new room called the "Speed Lab", an exercise chamber for Barry and other speedsters that was created as a result of Barry creating a new timeline. It also introduces a third S.T.A.R. Labs on Earth-19 whose Harrison Wells is recruited by the team. Unlike the S.T.A.R. Labs of other Earths, however, its leading scientific mind is not Wells but instead his partner, Randolf Morgan (Adam Bergquist), whose work Wells often claims credit for. During his time on Earth-1 the Wells from Earth-19 begins the process of turning S.T.A.R. Labs into a museum
Film[]
Animated[]
- S.T.A.R. Labs makes an appearance in Justice League: Doom. After Superman is shot by a Kryptonite bullet, the Flash is sent to a S.T.A.R. Labs facility in Kyoto, Japan, where they are making a Kryptonite scalpel (this being the only tool that could allow doctors to operate and remove the bullet). The scalpel ends up being unnecessary, as Batman has Cyborg use his blaster filtered through a piece of Kryptonite crystal to serve as a cutting laser, and Martian Manhunter uses his shape-shifting abilities to remove the bullet.
- In Justice League: The Flashpoint Paradox, Superman tells Batman & Flash that he will take Professor Zoom to S.T.A.R. Labs after they successfully remove Zoom's 25th century bombs off the Rogues. However, this version of S.T.A.R Labs appears to be in the Watchtower after Superman is seen taking Professor Zoom towards the sky.
- S.T.A.R. Labs first makes an appearance in Justice League: War when Victor Stone goes there after a football game to confront his father as to his absence during the game, Captain Marvel later returns several Parademons to Star Labs through the whole in the roof shortly after the creation of Cyborg, It is shown again at the end of the movie while it is under-repair.
- S.T.A.R. Labs makes several appearances in Justice League: Throne of Atlantis Where it is being used as a headquarters for the Justice League albeit with the group's original name The Super Seven much to Steve Trevor's annoyance, This is later corrected at the end of the movie with the name Justice League above the HQ Doors.
Live action[]
- In Man of Steel, S.T.A.R. Labs has several cameo appearances through the film.[11]
- In Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, S.T.A.R. Labs appears in video obtained by Bruce Wayne from a LexCorp drive and emailed to Diana Prince. In the Ultimate Edition, Jena Malone appears as Jenet Klyburn in a separate role as a weapons expert and ballistics specialist.
Video games[]
- S.T.A.R. Labs is featured in the video game Justice League Heroes. Superman and Batman travel to S.T.A.R. Labs to fight Brainiac and his robotic minions. After Brainiac is defeated, Superman and Batman discover it is only a clone of Brainiac.
- S.T.A.R. Labs is featured in DC Universe Online. In the hero campaign, the players can gain the trust of S.T.A.R. Lab's personnel by completing certain missions, collecting specific bounties, and gain access to equipment from S.T.A.R. Labs Vendors. An old S.T.A.R. Labs building can be seen in Downtown Metropolis, where villainous players are enlisted to help Gorilla Grodd reclaim his technology confiscated by S.T.A.R. Labs troops and defeat both the original Flash and the current Flash. There is also a S.T.A.R. Labs building in the Otisburg section of Gotham City. S.T.A.R. Labs' soldiers consist of S.T.A.R. Labs Heavy Troopers, S.T.A.R. Labs Security Guards, and S.T.A.R. Labs Shock Troopers.
- Injustice: Gods Among Us has a stage titled Insurgency, which is inspired by S.T.A.R. Labs' facilities and is used by Batman. A section of the game called "S.T.A.R. Labs Missions" is present.
Web series[]
- S.T.A.R. Labs have a cameo appearance in DC Super Hero Girls.
See also[]
- LexCorp
- S.T.A.R. Corps
- Wayne Enterprises
References[]
- ↑ Wein, Len (w), Andru, Ross (p), Bulanadi, Danny (i). "If This Works, It'll Be A Miracle!" Blue Beetle 21: 12/7 (February, 1988), DC Comics
- ↑ DC Universe: Legacies #1-10 (May 2010-March 2011)
- ↑ Justice League Quarterly #1 (Winter 1990)
- ↑ Batman: The Murder Machine #1 (2017)
- ↑ Justice League: Cry for Justice #2 (October 2009)
- ↑ Justice League: Doom
- ↑ JLA #110 (March 2005)
- ↑ Blackest Night: JSA #1–3 (February–April 2010)
- ↑ Baron, Mike (w), Guice, Jackson (p), Mahlstedt, Larry (i). "The Kilg%re" The Flash v2, 3: 3-4 (August 1987), DC Comics
- ↑ Action Comics (vol. 1) #883 (January 2010)
- ↑ [1][dead link]
External links[]
- S.T.A.R. Labs at Titans Tower
- STAR Labs on DC Database, an external wiki, a DC Comics wiki
- S.T.A.R. Labs on Arrowverse Wiki, an external wiki
The Flash | ||
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Creators | Gardner Fox • Harry Lampert (Jay Garrick) • Bob Kanigher • Carmine Infantino • John Broome (Barry Allen) • John Broome • Carmine Infantino (Wally West) • Mark Waid • Mike Wieringo (Bart Allen) | |
The Flash Family | The Flash | Jay Garrick • Barry Allen • Wally West • Bart Allen |
Kid Flash | Wally West • Iris West II • Bart Allen • Wally West II | |
Associates | Iris West Allen • Jesse Chambers • Impulse • Johnny Quick • Max Mercury • Linda Park • Tornado Twins • XS | |
Supporting characters | Green Lantern (Hal Jordan) • Green Lantern (Kyle Rayner) • Elongated Man • Tina McGee • Valerie Perez • Pied Piper • Red Trinity • David Singh • Solovar • Patty Spivot • Winky, Blinky, and Noddy | |
Enemies | General | Doctor Alchemy • Fiddler • Godspeed • Gorilla Grodd • Rag Doll • Rainbow Raider • Savitar • Shade • Thinker • Turtle / Turtle Man • T. O. Morrow |
Reverse-Flashes | Professor Zoom (Eobard Thawne) • Zoom (Hunter Zolomon) | |
The Rogues | Abra Kadabra • Captain Boomerang • Captain Cold • Golden Glider • Heat Wave • Mirror Master • Pied Piper • Top • Trickster • Weather Wizard | |
Publications | Flash Comics • All-Flash • Comic Cavalcade • The Flash • The Flash: Rebirth (2009) • Flashpoint • Flashpoint (Elseworlds) • The Flash Chronicles | |
Locations | Blue Valley • Central City (Central City Police Department) • Flash Museum • Gorilla City • Iron Heights Penitentiary • Keystone City • S.T.A.R. Labs | |
In other media | Film | Justice League: The New Frontier • Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths • Justice League: Doom • Justice League: The Flashpoint Paradox • Justice League: War • Justice League: Throne of Atlantis • Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice • Justice League vs. Teen Titans • Suicide Squad • Justice League |
Television | The Superman/Aquaman Hour of Adventure • Super Friends • Legends of the Superheroes • The Flash (1990) • Justice League of America (pilot) • Justice League • Justice League Unlimited • Smallville • Young Justice • Arrow • The Flash (2014) (characters • episodes) • Vixen • Legends of Tomorrow • Supergirl | |
Video games | The Flash (video game) • Justice League Task Force • Justice League Heroes: The Flash • Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe • DC Universe Online • Injustice: Gods Among Us • Infinite Crisis • Injustice 2 | |
Related articles | Cosmic treadmill • "Flash of Two Worlds" • Speed Force |
Superman | ||
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Creators | Jerry Siegel • Joe Shuster | |
Superman family | Superman (Clark Kent) • Superboy (Kal-El • Kon-El • Jonathan Samuel Kent) • Krypto • Supergirl (Kara Zor-El • Matrix • Linda Danvers • Power Girl) • Superwoman • Mon-El • Nightwing (Chris Kent/Lor-Zod) • Flamebird (Thara Ak-Var) • The Eradicator • Steel (John Henry Irons) • Natasha Irons | |
Supporting characters | Bibbo Bibbowski • Cat Grant • David Corporon • Emil Hamilton • Inspector Henderson • Jimmy Olsen • Jor-El • Jonathan and Martha Kent • Lois Lane • Lucy Lane • Sam Lane • Lana Lang • Lara • Lori Lemaris • Steve Lombard • Lena Luthor • Maxima • Chief Parker • Professor Potter • Pete Ross • Maggie Sawyer • George Taylor • Ron Troupe • Dan Turpin • Perry White • Zor-El | |
Antagonists | Atomic Skull • Bizarro • Brainiac • Codename: Assassin • Conduit • Cyborg Superman (Hank Henshaw) • Darkseid • Doomsday • Faora • General Zod • Mercy Graves • Imperiex • Intergang (Morgan Edge • Bruno Mannheim) • Jax-Ur • Kryptonite Man • Lex Luthor • Livewire • Metallo • Mister Mxyzptlk • Mongul • Neutron • Non • Parasite • Prankster • Silver Banshee • Titano • Toyman • Ultra-Humanite • Ursa | |
Locations | Metropolis | Ace o' Clubs • Daily Planet • Daily Star • Galaxy Communications • LexCorp • Project Cadmus • Suicide Slum • List of areas, landmarks, institutions and businesses |
Krypton | Argo City • Kandor • Kryptonopolis • Vathlo Island | |
Other | Apokolips • Bizarro World • Colu • Daxam • Fortress of Solitude • Phantom Zone • S.T.A.R. Labs • Smallville • Stryker's Island • Warworld | |
Objects and material | Kryptonite • Superman robots • Supermobile | |
History and themes | Character and cast • Dynasty • Kryptonian • Origin • Powers and abilities • Publication history (Action Comics #1) • Superman and Lois Lane • Symbol | |
Ongoing publications | Action Comics • Batman/Superman • Superboy • Supergirl • Superman • Superman/Wonder Woman | |
Alternative versions | Superman | Earth-One version • Earth-Two version • Earth-Three version (Ultraman) • Earth Prime version (Superboy-Prime) • Kingdom Come version • Superman Red/Superman Blue • Clark Kent (Smallville) |
Other | Alternative versions of Lex Luthor • Alternative versions of Supergirl | |
In other media | In film | |
Miscellanea | Superwoman • Beppo • Streaky • Comet • Superman (gene) • Joanne Siegel |
Teen Titans | ||
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Creators | Bob Haney • Bruno Premiani | |
Founding members | Aqualad/Garth • Kid Flash/Wally West • Robin/Dick Grayson • Wonder Girl/Donna Troy • Speedy/Roy Harper | |
Current members | Teen Titans | Robin/Damian Wayne • Kid Flash/Wallace West • Red Arrow/Emiko Queen |
Titans | Donna Troy • Beast Boy/Garfield Logan • Raven/Rachel Roth • Steel/Natasha Irons • Miss Martian/M'gann M'orzz • Green Lantern/Kyle Rayner | |
Notable members | Aqualad (Jackson Hyde) • Arsenal • Argent • Atom (Ray Palmer • Ryan Choi) • Baby Wildebeest • Blue Beetle/Jaime Reyes • Bombshell • Bumblebee • Bunker • Bushido • Captain Marvel Jr. • Cyborg • Damage • Duela Dent • Mal Duncan • Gnarrk • Hawk and Dove • Impulse/Kid Flash/Bart Allen • Hot Spot • Jericho • Kid Devil/Red Devil • Kole • Minion • Nightwing/Dick Grayson • Omen • Osiris • Pantha • Phantasm • Prysm • Ravager/Rose Wilson • Red Star • Risk • Robin/Red Robin/Tim Drake • Speedy/Mia Dearden • Solstice • Starfire/Koriand'r • Static • Superboy (Kon-El • Jonathan Samuel Kent) • Supergirl (Kara Zor-El • Matrix • Linda Danvers) • Tempest • Terra • Wonder Girl/Cassie Sandsmark | |
Supporting characters | Dubbilex • Justice League • Mento • Sarge Steel • Silas Stone • Thunder and Lightning • Wendy, Marvin and Wonder Dog | |
Enemies | Antagonists | Blackfire • Brain • Brother Blood • Cheshire • Cinderblock • Clock King • Copperhead • Deathstroke the Terminator • Ding Dong Daddy • Disruptor • Disruptor II • Doctor Light • Dreadbolt • General Immortus • Gizmo • Gorilla Grodd • H'San Natall • Hybrid • Jericho • Jinx • Lady Vic • Mad Mod • Madame Rouge • Mammoth • Mister Twister • Mongul • Monsieur Mallah • Persuader • Phobia • Plasmus • Psimon • Ravager • The Reach • Red Panzer • Shimmer • Siren • Superboy-Prime • Terra I • Trident • Trigon • Vandal Savage • Warp • Wintergreen • Zookeeper |
Organizations | Brotherhood of Evil • Dark Nemesis • Fearsome Five • H.I.V.E. • Tartarus • Terror Titans • Wildebeest Society | |
Locations | S.T.A.R. Labs • Tamaran • Titans Tower | |
Publications and storylines | "Superboy and the Legion" • Team Titans • Teen Titans Go! • Teen Titans: The Lost Annual • Tiny Titans • Titans Tomorrow • Titans/Young Justice: Graduation Day • The Uncanny X-Men and The New Teen Titans | |
Affiliated teams | Doom Patrol • Legion of Super-Heroes • Titans East • Young Justice | |
In other media | Films | Trouble in Tokyo • Justice League vs. Teen Titans • The Judas Contract • Go! To the Movies • Go! vs. Teen Titans • Justice League Dark: Apokolips War |
Television | Teen Titans (episodes • characters • Red X) • Teen Titans Go! (episodes • characters • "The Night Begins to Shine") • Titans | |
Video games | Teen Titans (2005) • Teen Titans (2006) |