PHANTOM ZONE

The 'Phantom Zone' is a fictional prison dimension featured in the Superman comic books and related media. It was frequently used in the Superman comics before the continuity was rebooted in the 1980s, after ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'', and has appeared occasionally since.

Contents
Pre-Crisis
Post-Crisis
Depiction in other media
Movies
Television
DC Animated Universe
Smallville
Other media
Parodies
External link

Pre-Crisis


The Phantom Zone was discovered by Jor-El and used on the planet Krypton as a method of imprisoning criminals. The Phantom Zone criminals first appeared in Adventure Comics (Superboy stories), and soon began appearing in Superman stories. The inmates of this dimension are cast into the Phantom Zone and reside in a featureless state of existence from which they observe, but cannot interact with, the regular dimension clearly. Inmates do not age or require sustenance in the Phantom Zone; furthermore, they are telepathic and mutually insubstantial.
As such, they survived the destruction of Krypton and focused their attention on Earth, seeing as how most of the surviving Kryptonians now reside there. Most have a particular grudge against Superman seeing as how his father created the method of their own damnation. As such, they usually cause destructive trouble when they manage to escape while Superman struggles to return them to the Phantom Zone.
Among the Phantom Zone criminals were Kru-El, the weapon's designer cousin of Jor-El, and thus a relative of Superman. Faora Hu-Ul, a Martial Arts expert and hater of males, was another criminal who was reproduced in a tamer form for the movie '''Superman II''' where her name was changed to Ursa. Professor Va-Kox, a mad geneticist whose mutagenic formula, the "Force of Life" created violent, mutated monsters from the aquatic life of the Great Lake of Krypton. Nadira (last name unknown who was a telekinetic) and Az-Rel (a Kryptonian pyrokinetic) were two petty criminals from the Krypton Isle of Bokos (the Island of Thieves). Jax-Ur was a rocket & missile engineer turned rogue criminal who unintenionally destroyed one of Krypton's two moons, Wegthor, which was populated with 500 Kryptonian colonists. He was also the only criminal sentenced to spend all existence within the Phantom Zone, without the possibility of any kind of parole. The cause of Wegthor's destruction was by a nuclear warhead-equipped test missile unleashed by Jax-Ur. However, if Jax-Ur's test was "successful" as he himself had planned, he would have then amassed a full-scale nuclear arsenal with which he planned to take over all of Krypton. Jax-Ur is considered Krypton’s worst criminal.
Quex-Ul was the only innocent person sentenced to the Phantom Zone. Quex-Ul was put in the Phantom Zone for killing a herd of the sacred Rondors. Rondor horns had healing properties and were therefore sacred to Kryptonians. Quex-Ul was caught at the scene of the crime and was convicted and sentenced to 25 Sun Cycles in the Phantom Zone. Superman proved his innocence and released him and Quex-Ul in turn saved Superman from exposure to Gold Kryptonite. Ak-Var was a petty criminal who upon his release became the assistant and partner of Superman's cousin, Van-Zee. Van-Zee was a Kandorian scientist who was secretly Nightwing with Ak-Var as his partner Flamebird. Doctor Xadu (first name unknown) was a physician who killed dozens of patients while performing forbidden cryogenics experiments upon them. And finally there was General Dru-Zod, who created an army of clones in an attempt to take over as ruler of Krypton. Later others who survived Krypton's destruction became criminals, like Jer-Em, who caused the destruction of Argo City, the birth place of Supergirl. A jealous Kryptonian female from the bottle city of Kandor named Zora Vi-Lar (who took on the name of Black Flame) escaped from Kandor to fight Supergirl. And then there was Nam-Ek, who was the Kryptonian who killed the Rondor herd and used their horns to become immortal. Superman found Nam-Ek floating in space and rescued him, but the transformation into an immortal being had turned Nam-Ek into a bipedal version of a Rondor and also drove him to insanity. These criminals were also sentenced to serve time within the Phantom Zone.
The only exception is Mon-El, a Daxamite youth who met Superboy on Earth and discovered he was acutely vulnerable to exposure to lead (this is described in the comics as "lead poisoning," though it is not the same as real-life lead poisoning). To keep him alive, Superboy cast Mon-El, with his permission, into the Phantom Zone where he resided until the 30th century where Brainiac 5 of the Legion of Super-Heroes developed a cure which allowed him to leave safely.
Another character trapped in the Phantom Zone was Green Lantern Guy Gardner who experienced an extended and tortuous stay after an explosion of a Green Lantern Power Battery sent him there, until rescued by Superman and Green Lantern Hal Jordan who had believed him to be dead all that time.
Superman developed communications equipment for the Phantom Zone, like the Zone-o-phone, and refinements to the project. In addition, the City of Kandor used the Phantom Zone regularly, with parole hearings sometimes chaired by Superman. However, since the departure of Kandor, that is, outside of Mon-El, most of the inhabitants were confined-to-lifers and generally not inclined to making conversation with their jailer.
In the Steve Gerber miniseries ''The Phantom Zone'', it was revealed that the Zone not only had a back exit through which villains could escape, but was also home to terrible beasts.

Post-Crisis


In the post-Crisis DC Universe, the Phantom Zone first appeared when Superman returned from space with a Kryptonian artifact called the Eradicator. This device, created by his Kryptonian ancestor Kem-L, attempted to recreate Krypton on Earth, building the Fortress of Solitude; the extradimensional space in which the Eradicator found the Kryptonian materials necessary was called the Phantom Zone. A Phantom Zone Projector is part of Superman's current Fortress. It has been used to access the Bottle City of Kandor and to trap villains such as the White Martians. The projector was also used by Supernova as the basis of his powers and then later used against Skeets who somehow enveloped the Phantom Zone within himself.
The Phantom Zone has also been independently discovered by the Bgztlians, the White Martians, and the villains Loophole, Prometheus, and the first Queen Bee, who call it the "Buffer Zone," the "Still Zone," the "Stasis Zone," the "Ghost Zone," and the "Honeycomb," respectively. In post-Crisis/post-''Zero Hour'' continuity, it was Loophole's "Stasis Zone" technology that exiled Mon-El, known in the new continuity as Valor/M'Onel, into the Phantom Zone for a thousand years.
Superman was able to fashion the Phantom Zone technology into an arrow projectile which upon striking a victim will lock them into the Phantom Zone. Roy Harper, the original Speedy, stole this arrow from Superman when the original Teen Titans were invited for a visit many years ago. Roy, however, never used the arrow and passed it on to his replacement, Mia Dearden, who used the arrow in the recent Infinite Crisis on Superboy-Prime. Unfortunately, he was too strong for even the Phantom Zone, and managed to break out.
At one point, the White Martians imprisoned Batman in the Phantom Zone and took his identity as Bruce Wayne.
Recently in ''Action Comics'', General Zod, along with Ursa and Non, appeared in search for the son of Zod and Ursa.
''Supergirl'' #16 showed a form of life native to the Phantom Zone. These Phantoms were enraged over the use of their universe to house criminals and sought revenge on the one responsible.

Depiction in other media


Movies

In the movies starring Christopher Reeve, the Phantom Zone is presented as a large, flat shard of crystal. Susannah York (Lara) refers to the Phantom Zone by name in Superman II when she first makes the revelation about the Three Villains. In DVD commentary, Director Richard Donner refers to as "the Zone of Silence.") General Zod and his co-conspirators Ursa and Non appear to be transferred to a two-dimensional space on the crystal's surface. The crystal is then flung into space.
Years later, in ''Superman II'', a nuclear explosion from a bomb Superman was forced to fling from Earth into space inadvertently shatters the prison and releases the prisoners. Now free, General Zod and his cohorts travel to Earth, wreaking havoc with the powers granted to them by Earth's yellow sun.
The Phantom Zone appears in Richard Donner's cut of , released in November 2006. In this version the crystal shard imprisoning Zod, Ursa, & Non is shattered by the XK-101 rocket Superman threw into space in . The Zone is shown splitting into three separate shards, one containing each villain, before it finally shatters, freeing them.
In the ''Supergirl'' movie, Kara is banished to the Phantom Zone by means of a summoned crystal shard. The crystal transports her to a barren, desolate world where it shatters, casting her to the ground. This depiction of the Phantom Zone suggests that the crystal shard seen in the first two Superman movies is not the Phantom Zone itself, but simply a vehicle that takes prisoners to this desolate wasteland which is referred to as the Phantom Zone. In this movie, it is also revealed that there is a way out of the Zone, but the trip to the exit portal is extremely dangerous.
Television

DC Animated Universe

'' and ''Justice League Unlimited'' have made use of the Phantom Zone at various times. The Phantom Zone is first mentioned in the first episode of '', "The Last Son of Krypton, Part 1," where Jor-El attempted to convince everyone to enter the Phantom Zone to be saved from Krypton's destruction, and one man would be sent via spaceship to re-establish Krypton's population on a new world. Since this idea was not accepted, Jor-El sent his son in the spaceship to Earth along with the Phantom Zone projector.
In the episode "Blasts from the Past," Superman discovers the Phantom Zone projector, which also has a communication function that allows him to converse with the inmates. Making contact with the convicted traitor Mala (a loose adaptation of ''Superman II's Ursa) and upon further research, learning that her sentence is finished, he releases her. Unfortunately, Superman learns that Mala is arrogant and power-hungry badly enough to possibly require returning her to the Phantom Zone. When she learns that Kal-El prefers the company of a certain Terran named Lois Lane, Mala turns against Superman and later releases Jax-Ur (a version of General Zod, although named after another villain from the Superman comics) to take over Earth. Banished once again into the Phantom Zone at the end of the story, Jax-Ur and Mala are later accidentally released on another remote planet, and ultimately sent into a black hole.
In the ''Justice League Unlimited'' episode "The Doomsday Sanction," Superman and the Justice League send the nearly unstoppable Doomsday into the Phantom Zone after his capture. This usage of the Phantom Zone, effectively sentencing Doomsday to life imprisonment without trial, presented massive arguments about the Justice League's right to make such judgments. Batman was especially troubled by this move.
In the 1978 series ''Superfriends'' there is an episode entitled "Terror from the Phantom Zone" in which a comet's collision causes the Phantom Zone to release three Kryptonian villains. The villains go on a crime spree and banish the Superfriends to the Phantom Zone but keep Superman on Earth...exposing him to red kryptonite which causes him to age quickly. The villains get great enjoyment showing off "old Superman" to the world...Superman then manages to figure out with help from the Justice League computer that blue kryptonite may reverse the aging process because blue kryptonite is harmful to backwards ''Bizarro'' and therefore should be helpful to Superman. Superman finds the blue kryptonite and is aged back to normal and then goes on his quest to rescue the other Superfriends from the Phantom Zone and ultimately send the three villains back into the Phantom Zone. This episode can be found on the DVD collection "Superfriends: Volume Two", which features 16 Superfriends cartoons from 1978.
The Superfriends' version of the Phantom Zone is described as, "Far beyond the boundaries of the Milky Way. In the uncharted void of deep space. An incredible 5th dimension of space and time, lies parallel to the universe that we know. This interesting interstellar warp which holds the most sinister and ruthless criminals in the galaxy is the infamous Phantom Zone." Anyone in the zone causes the person's molecular structure to appear white and black. Batman's devices and the Wonder Twins Exxor Powers are useless within the Phantom Zone.
Smallville

In the television series ''Smallville'', in the fifth season premiere "Arrival", Clark Kent battles two Kryptonians, and when he refuses to join them in their quest to subjugate Earth, the Kryptonians attempt to banish Clark to the Phantom Zone using a metallic bracelet, inscribed with Kryptonian symbols, that opens up a vortex. However, Clark manages to turn the tables, sending them into the portal instead. Aside from its entrance, the Phantom Zone is represented as a floating black square similar to its depiction in the ''Superman'' films.
In the episode "Solitude," the Kryptonian artificial intelligence known as Brainiac, posing as Professor Milton Fine, manipulates Clark into believing that Jor-El is responsible for Martha's mysterious illness; this is all part of a plot to free the imprisoned General Zod. Professor Fine persuades Clark to take him to the Fortress of Solitude, where he gives Clark a black crystal and instructs him to insert it into the Fortress' control console, misleadingly saying that it will destroy Jor-El and therefore save Martha. However, the crystal, once inserted into the console, instead opens up a vortex in which another black square is seen, with a figure resembling General Zod as portrayed in the ''Superman'' movies. However, Brainiac's plan is thwarted once Clark removes the crystal.
In the episode "Vessel," General Zod is finally freed from the Phantom Zone. After inhabiting Lex Luthor, Zod traps Clark inside the Phantom Zone, using a Kryptonian bracelet similar to the one used in the episode "Arrival."
In the season premiere of the sixth season, the Phantom Zone itself is shown as a desolate wasteland, and it is revealed that it was found by Jor-El, not created, as a prison for not only Kryptonian convicts, but also criminals from the "28 known galaxies." Most of the prisoners (e.g. General Zod) are stripped of their corporeal forms, and their spirits are then cast into the Zone.
Clark escapes with the help of a Kryptonian woman named Raya, who claims to have known Jor-El. To ensure her survival, Jor-El sent Raya to the Phantom Zone just before the destruction of Krypton. Raya reveals that those of the blood of Jor-El's house can utilize a secret exit from the Phantom Zone, meaning Clark can utilize it. Upon escaping the Phantom Zone, Clark accidentally releases Raya and various prisoners and phantoms to Earth. Chloe Sullivan later refers to the escaped convicts as "Zoners."
Other media


★ In the direct-to-video animated feature '', Superman must enter the Phantom Zone to retrieve a rare element which will cure Lois Lane of a deadly disease. This version of the Phantom Zone differs from previous animated continuity, as it is shown to actually be populated by "phantoms."

★ In the ''Legion of Super Heroes'' animated series, the Phantom Zone is close to its classical portrayal as a parallel dimension where criminals are sent. As a throwback to the Pre-Crisis version, inhabitants of the Zone become incorporeal - essentially, ghost-like phantoms, thus giving the Zone its name. In this series, Superman discovers his previous self's Phantom Zone projector, which he accidentally uses to free a villain named Drax. The projector is eventually turned on the other Legionnaires, but with Phantom Girl's help, they manage to escape without it and send Drax back at the same time.
Parodies

In the ''Family Guy'' episode "Lethal Weapons," Peter enrages the three Kryptonian villains from ''Superman II'' which Lois promptly sends into the Phantom Zone through the crystal shard.
In the ''South Park'' episode "Krazy Kripples," Christopher Reeve is sent into space in the crystal shard Phantom Zone after stem cells give him superpowers which ironically make him evil in that episode.
In the beginning of the second season of ''Robot Chicken'', Seth Green gets sentenced to cancellation and gets put into the Phantom Zone and the Phantom Zone gets hit by a UFO, releasing him and he gets his second season.
The Galacticast video blog parodies the Phantom Zone in the episode Superman I.V where the three criminals come to grip with cramped quarters and lack of personal hygiene.
Though not necessarily a parody, the Phantom Zone was referenced during The Word portion of the Colbert Report as a possible alternative to Guantanamo Bay.
In the first person shooter BZFlag, your tank can enter the "phantom zone," but your tank is a bit more of a "ghost".

External link



Supermanica: Phantom Zone Supermanica entry on the Pre-Crisis Phantom Zone

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