Jump to content

Apache Chief

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Apache Chief
Super Friends and Harvey Birdman character
Apache Chief as he appeared in Hanna-Barbera's Super Friends animated series in the 1970s and '80s.
First appearance"The Antidote" (The All-New Super Friends Hour; 1977)
Last appearance"The Death of Harvey" (Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law; 2007)
Created byHanna-Barbera
Voiced by
In-universe information
SpeciesMetahuman
GenderMale
OccupationSuperhero
AffiliationSuper Friends
Justice League
Multi-Culture Pals
Significant otherSybil Scussler (girlfriend)
Partnerships
Abilities
  • Size alteration
  • Clairvoyance
  • Omnilingualism
  • Master tracker and survivalist

Apache Chief is a Native American superhero from the various Hanna-Barbera Super Friends and Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law cartoons and the DC comic book series of the same name.[which?] He was one of the new heroes added (along with Black Vulcan, El Dorado and Samurai) to increase the number of non-white characters in the Super Friends' ranks. The visual look of the character was created by cartoonist Alex Toth, who designed many superheroes for Hanna-Barbera beginning in the 1960s. He was voiced by Michael Rye in most of his Super Friends appearances, Regis Cordic in his debut appearance, Al Fann in "History of Doom", and Maurice LaMarche in Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law.

In the Challenge of the Superfriends series, Apache Chief was seen in every episode except one, but had spoken lines in only nine out of the sixteen episodes of the series. His arch-enemy from the Legion of Doom was Giganta, who was originally an enemy of Wonder Woman.

Fictional character biography

[edit]

Super Friends

[edit]

Apache Chief first appears in The All-New Super Friends Hour, voiced initially by Regis Cordic and later by Michael Rye, who reprises the role in Challenge of the Superfriends. Apache Chief's origin, shown as a recording in the episode "History of Doom", was thus: while still a young brave, he went for a walk with a Native American Elder, who was also his mentor. The two men are quickly attacked by a grizzly bear, but the Elder, recognizing that the young brave might be ready for a test such as this, gives the younger man a pouch of a special magic powder which will amplify the user's thoughts and abilities a hundredfold. The young man resolves to be strong and brave (heeding the Elder's advice that whatever is in his mind at the time will be amplified by the powder), and upon sprinkling himself with the powder and invoking the magic phrase grows to fifty feet in size, becoming stronger and braver. He disposes of the bear without violence, proving that he has passed the test. However, a girl horseback riding witnesses the entire affair, hoping to use the powder to become big and famous, and uses her lasso to steal the pouch. Despite the Elder telling her that her thoughts were evil, she uses the magic powder on herself and becomes the evil Giganta, proclaiming: "The Medicine Man was right, Apache Chief! Your fifty feet of good are now matched by my fifty feet of evil!".

Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law

[edit]

Apache Chief returns in Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law, voiced by Maurice LaMarche. Having taken on various odd jobs in addition to his superheroics after being fired from the Super Friends, he develops a fear of coffee and other such hot liquids after being doused in the lap with one such cup in his debut episode "Very Personal Injury" had temporarily lead to him losing his ability to physically change in size, at the end of the episode forming the "Multi-Culture Pals" with Black Vulcan and Jesse Jackson after regaining his powers thanks to the physical appearance of Sybil Scussler, whom he goes on to date. In the series finale, "The Death of Harvey", Apache Chief is once again doused again with coffee and burned shortly after his case is retried.

Powers and abilities

[edit]

By speaking the words "inee choh", which are the Western Apache words meaning "man big", Apache Chief could grow to unlimited sizes. In the episode "Colossus", Apache Chief grows to many times the size of the Earth, making himself able to battle the Colossus, a titanic space creature that plucked Earth from its orbit and placed it in a small (relative to him) glass bottle. Originally his tribal powers limited his growth to only 50 feet tall, but in one episode, "Man in the Moon", he used the Atom's knowledge of atomic size and was able to increase his growing to unlimited size. He was then able to grow to 1/5 the size of the earth, with one foot the size of the entire eastern United States and defeated the creature, sending it back inside the moon.

He also spoke in stereotypical "Native American English" and recited vaguely Native American philosophy. In the 1978 episodes "Revenge on Gorilla City" and "The Time Trap", and the 1984 short episode entitled "The Village of Lost Souls", Apache Chief also has exceptional tracking ability.

Other versions

[edit]
  • A character inspired by Apache Chief[citation needed] named Long Shadow appears in Justice League Unlimited, voiced by Gregg Rainwater.[citation needed] Possessing enhanced hearing along with the ability to grow several stories high, Long Shadow is a genetically engineered superhero created by Project Cadmus to serve as a member of their Ultimen and work independently of the Justice League, though the former group are led to believe that they are regular metahumans. In the episode "Ultimatum", the Ultimen have several encounters with the League, during which Long Shadow expresses interest in joining them and catches Wonder Woman's attention while his teammates focus on reaping material rewards for their work. After discovering the truth behind their creation and that they are suffering from cellular breakdown, Long Shadow reluctantly joins the other Ultimen in attacking their manager, Maxwell Lord, in an attempt to find Cadmus member Amanda Waller, but later defects to the League and helps them defeat his former teammates. Cadmus retakes custody of most of the Ultimen, but Wonder Woman and Batman convince them to let Long Shadow remain with the League for the remainder of his life. In the episode "Panic in the Sky", Cadmus utilizes an army of Ultimen clones in their siege on the League's Watchtower.
  • A version of Long Shadow appears as Tye Longshadow in Young Justice, with Gregg Rainwater reprising the voice. He is descended from a long line of Apache chiefs, including his grandfather, Holling Longshadow (Michael Horse), an elderly Native American who lives in an RV park called Happy Trails. Tye is a friend of Jaime Reyes. While running away from home, Tye is captured and experimented on by the Reach, who activate his meta-gene, granting him the ability to project an "astral" version of himself that can grow several stories tall. The Team rescue Tye and his fellow captives and place some of them in S.T.A.R. Labs' custody, but he joins Virgil Hawkins, Asami Koizumi, and Ed Dorado in escaping. In the process, they are unknowingly manipulated by Lex Luthor into helping the Light until Arsenal reveals the truth to the four. After helping the Team and the Justice League thwart the Reach's invasion of Earth, Tye returns to his regular life to live with his mother. As of the third season, he and Asami have begun dating.

In other media

[edit]

Comics

[edit]

In the comics, a somewhat similar character called Manitou Raven was created, as an homage to him,[1] and joined the canonical JLA. Both Manitou Raven and his widow, Manitou Dawn, have been shown to use "inuk chuk" when casting spells or invoking powers.

Film

[edit]
[edit]

Merchandise

[edit]
  • Apache Chief received a "Collect & Connect" build-a-figure in series 18 of Mattel's DC Universe Classics.[3]
  • Apache Chief received a Lego minifigure in The Lego Batman Movie tie-in toy line.
  • Apache Chief received an 8-inch figure by Figures Toy Company.[4]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Comic Book Legends Revealed #327". CBR. 2011-08-12. Retrieved 2018-04-30.
  2. ^ "The LEGO Batman Movie Easter Eggs & References". Screen Rant. 2017-02-11. Retrieved 2018-04-30.
  3. ^ OAFE - DC Universe Classics 18: Apache Chief Build-A-Figure review
  4. ^ "Figures Toy Company". Figures Toy Company. Archived from the original on 2016-10-02. Retrieved 2016-09-21.