Plastic Man
Small-time crook Patrick 'Eel' O'Brian was shot during a warehouse robbery and doused with an unknown chemical acid. The substance mutated his body, granting him limitless elasticity and shapeshifting ability — a second chance that inspired him to abandon crime and fight for the law instead.
Few characters can claim a Golden Age debut and still be stretching their way through comics more than eight decades later, but Plastic Man is exactly that kind of enduring original — born in the pages of Police Comics #1 in 1941, created by Vern Henkel, and still going strong into the 2020s across 232 catalogued appearances. He's built a home across Police Comics, his own self-titled series, and the prestige pages of JLA, where he shares adventures with the absolute cream of the DC universe — Superman, Batman, The Flash, and the alter egos Bruce Wayne and Clark Kent among them. With seven key issues to his name, collectors have long recognized that this malleable Golden Age original carries real significance in the DC canon, and any fan who hasn't dipped into his remarkable run is in for a treat.
Real name. Patrick "Eel" O'Brian
Powers. Full-body elasticity/malleability/shapeshifting; can stretch, flatten, and reshape into nearly any form and color; near-immortality with extreme durability and regeneration.

Trivia
- Quality Comics' implosion handed DC a ready-made legacy character rather than a homegrown creation, making him one of the genuinely rare Golden Age heroes whose publishing lineage stretches across two distinct companies before landing in the DC universe.cbr.com
- At a time when capes-and-tights storytelling defaulted to stone-faced earnestness, he stood out as one of the first major comics characters built around deliberate absurdist comedy, laying an early blueprint for every satirical superhero who followed.cbr.com
Top series












Covers through the years — 1941–2021
★ 1941
1948
1966
1972
1981
1984
1991
★ 2000
2002
2008
2014
2021