![]() then Starfire discovers this deception, she confronts Blackfire in her prison and renounces her as her sister for pulling such a cruel stunt. Her final appearance is in #46 where it is revealed that she sent Madame Rouge into the Teen Titans' base disguised as Wildfire. The plans are thwarted when the few remaining managed to sneak aboard her ship and she is defeated by Wonder Girl. She appears again in #36 as the leader of the Gordanians (the same aliens from the episode "Go!") and uses them to capture the Titans and their allies. However the whole thing is a trap to dispatch the Titans and take revenge on Starfire, however, the Titans overcome her tricks and she is forced to flee the planet. In Issue #7, she returns apparently reformed, and challenges Starfire to a race. ![]() It is also possible she could be still in jail, this time in a prison that can hold her or purposely not.īlackfire eventually returns in Teen Titans Go! issue "Overthrow".īlackfire appears a few more times in the comics. When her ruse was uncovered, Blackfire was once again defeated by Starfire and banished from Tamaran.īlackfire was one of the only villains missing from the lineup of the Brotherhood of Evil, suggesting the fact that she was not out to get all the superheroes, or even the Titans, but simply to just take out Starfire. This was actually part of an elaborate plot between Blackfire and Glgrdsklechhh by marrying Starfire to Glgrdsklechhh, he would reward Blackfire with a very powerful jewel. Blackfire attempted to get revenge on Starfire by forcing her to marry Glgrdsklechhh, a hideous alien. She was about to attack again however, the Centauri Police catch her from behind and she's taken to prison, swearing revenge on her sister.īlackfire later broke out from prison and wrested control of Tamaran as its new Grand Ruler. Blackfire, who was leaving Earth at that exact moment, was defeated by Starfire after her right hand was hit by Starfire's star bolts. The Titans then discovered that Blackfire had framed Starfire for crimes by giving her a stolen jewel from the Centauri System. When Starfire thought of leaving Earth, the Centauri Police showed up and captured her. She was especially unhappy with her sister's attempts at flirting with Robin. The Titans seemed to like her so much, Starfire was beginning to think they wouldn't need her around anymore. Blackfire won the Teen Titans's support by having fun with them and telling them stories of adventures she had throughout her travels in the galaxy. She gave Starfire a centauri jewel and pretended to enjoy being reunited with her. Blackfire is also quite vain and loves telling stories about herself.īlackfire first appeared when she arrived on Earth in the episode Sisters. She has a very sarcastic humor and always hurts Starfire's feelings. The two of them are poster children for sibling rivalry. Blackfire loves fighting her sister and rubbing the fact that she is older and stronger in her 'little' sister's face. The two almost never get along well, except when Blackfire tricks Starfire into thinking she's being nice. She also has the optimum qualities of a villain, and she is cunning, deceitful, immoral, sadistic and unremorseful. But that doesn't stop this from being far superior episode to all the sheit that's come before.Even though Blackfire is Starfire's older sister, the two are polar opposites, which is they are not the same person. The color palette still hurts to look at, a few awkward shoehorned-in jokes persist, and the episode title and how it ties in to the narrative are both really facepalm-worthy. Why aren't MORE episodes like this?! Now, that's not to say this episode is perfect. ![]() The episode had an actual story that was borrowed from Glen Murakami's original show, the characters didn't act like the annoying douchebags that Aaron Horvath seems to think kids like for some reason, and it ended on a legitimately funny note that doesn't cost any of the characters their integrity. And now, here he is, displaying the chops that he put into writing the 50 million Land Before Time sequels he's worked on. John Loy wrote my most hated episode of any show I've ever seen, "Staring at the Future". What's even more perplexing is the writer. ![]() ![]() The universe wasn't broken, Satan wasn't laying the foundations for an ice rink, all pigs remained on the ground for the duration of the watching. Out of the 20 or so episodes of Teen Titans Go that I've seen, this was the first that didn't make me rage. ![]()
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