Jump to content

Gillian B. Loeb: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Adding details to media appearance.
Line 37: Line 37:
==In other media==
==In other media==
===Television===
===Television===
* Gillian B. Loeb first appears in the ''[[Gotham (TV series)|Gotham]]'' episode "What the Little Bird Told Him," portrayed by [[Peter Scolari]]. As in the comics, he is the police commissioner of the Gotham City Police Department and is secretly allied with Carmine Falcone. After Jim Gordon captures [[Electrocutioner|Jack Gruber]] during an attack on the GCPD headquarters, Loeb is forced to reinstate Gordon as a detective. In the episode "Everyone Has a Cobblepot," Loeb blackmails Gordon's partner [[Harvey Bullock (comics)|Harvey Bullock]] into exonerating [[Arnold John Flass|Arnold Flass]] of the murder of Leon Winkler which led to Flass being reinstated. Gordon soon learns that Loeb has incriminating files on every cop in the department. With help from [[Penguin (comics)|Oswald Cobblepot]], Gordon and Bullock discover Loeb's secret: twenty years earlier, his mentally ill daughter Miriam (portrayed by [[Nicholle Tom]]) murdered his wife, and he covered it up. Using this information, Gordon blackmails Loeb into nominating him for head of the police union as well as giving him Bullock's file resulting in Bullock being released from Loeb's hold on him.
* Gillian B. Loeb first appears in the ''[[Gotham (TV series)|Gotham]]'' episode "What the Little Bird Told Him," portrayed by [[Peter Scolari]]. As in the comics, he is the police commissioner of the Gotham City Police Department and is secretly allied with Carmine Falcone. After Jim Gordon captures [[Electrocutioner|Jack Gruber]] during an attack on the GCPD headquarters, Loeb is forced to reinstate Gordon as a detective. In the episode "Everyone Has a Cobblepot," Loeb blackmails Gordon's partner [[Harvey Bullock (comics)|Harvey Bullock]] into exonerating [[Arnold John Flass|Arnold Flass]] of the murder of Leon Winkler which led to Flass being reinstated. Gordon soon learns that Loeb has incriminating files on every cop in the department. With help from [[Penguin (comics)|Oswald Cobblepot]], Gordon and Bullock discover Loeb's secret: twenty years earlier, his mentally ill daughter Miriam (portrayed by [[Nicholle Tom]]) murdered his wife, and he covered it up. Using this information, Gordon blackmails Loeb into nominating him for head of the police union as well as giving him Bullock's file resulting in Bullock being released from Loeb's hold on him.


===Film===
===Film===

Revision as of 01:08, 14 April 2015

Commissioner Gillian B. Loeb
File:GillianLoeb.jpg
Gillian B. Loeb as seen in Batman #405 (March 1987)
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceBatman #404 (February 1987)
Created byFrank Miller (script)
David Mazzucchelli (art)
In-story information
SpeciesHuman
Team affiliationsGotham City Police Department

Gillian B. Loeb is a fictional character in the DC Universe. He first appeared in Batman #404, as part of the Batman: Year One story arc. He, along with his successor, Jack Grogan, are predecessors and foils of James Gordon.

Fictional character biography

Loeb is introduced in Batman: Year One as the commissioner of Gotham City's Police Department at about the time Batman begins his war on crime. He is in mob boss Carmine Falcone's pocket and immediately considers then-Lieutenant James Gordon's honesty a threat. However, he does not immediately share the same opinion about Batman, since the masked vigilante is targeting only low level criminals, and is popular with the public. One night, however, Batman attacks his house during a dinner party, which includes guests from Gotham's criminal underworld, and publicly announces that he intends to bring him down as well.

Enraged, Loeb orders Gordon to arrest Batman immediately. However, the vigilante proves frustratingly elusive, until one night in which the police corner him in an abandoned building following an impromptu rescue on the street. Loeb orders a bomb dropped on the building and a SWAT unit conducting an armed search of the rubble. As morning breaks however, Batman escapes, much to Loeb's annoyance.

When Gordon (alongside assistant district attorney Harvey Dent) begins surreptitiously helping Batman, Loeb blackmails him with evidence of his extramarital affair with Sgt. Sarah Essen. However, Gordon confesses his indiscretion to his wife Barbara.

Eventually, Batman, Gordon, and Dent expose Loeb's ties to the Falcone mob, and he is forced to resign. According to Gordon, Loeb's replacement, Jack Grogan, is just as corrupt. Gordon becomes the department's commissioner a few years later.

In Batman: Dark Victory, Loeb returns, hoping to use the Hangman killings as an excuse to try to get the city council to remove Gordon from his position as commissioner. His overall goal is to regain his former position, and he justifies taking over due to his "experience". However, before his plans can be fulfilled, he becomes a victim of the Hangman Killer himself.

A younger Loeb appears as a captain in flashbacks in Wrath Child (Batman Confidential #13-16), where he arranges Gordon's transfer to Chicago for 15 years after Gordon shot a corrupt cop and his wife in self-defense. Loeb fears the news could bring him and other corrupt cops down, and threatens Gordon with the death of the cop's son to force him to accept the transfer.

Loeb is referred to in DC Comics' Hitman series. Moe Dubelz, one of Gotham City's most powerful mob bosses, says that Loeb helped his criminal empire to flourish by keeping the police at bay, in return for generous payments. Dubelz remembers Loeb's term as commissioner as the "good times" for his organization.[1]

In The New 52 (a reboot of the DC Comics universe), Loeb is once again the commissioner, and is still corrupt. In Detective Comics #25, Loeb sets up Gordon with a corrupt partner, Henshaw, who means to give Gordon to Black Mask's henchmen. Batman saves Gordon. Many of the corrupt police officers under Loeb's command who were associated with the Black Mask gang perish, leading Batman and Gordon to theorize that Loeb has suffered some manner of emotional collapse.[2] Later, during the Blackout, the Riddler attacks GCPD blimps, while taking over the city's power grid and allowing the city to be flooded by a hurricane, causing many to crash. Loeb is on one of them. After the crisis is resolved and the Riddler is captured, thanks to the efforts of Batman, Gordon, and Lucius Fox, Loeb resigns, leaving Gordon to become the department's commissioner, by a month later.

In other media

Television

  • Gillian B. Loeb first appears in the Gotham episode "What the Little Bird Told Him," portrayed by Peter Scolari. As in the comics, he is the police commissioner of the Gotham City Police Department and is secretly allied with Carmine Falcone. After Jim Gordon captures Jack Gruber during an attack on the GCPD headquarters, Loeb is forced to reinstate Gordon as a detective. In the episode "Everyone Has a Cobblepot," Loeb blackmails Gordon's partner Harvey Bullock into exonerating Arnold Flass of the murder of Leon Winkler which led to Flass being reinstated. Gordon soon learns that Loeb has incriminating files on every cop in the department. With help from Oswald Cobblepot, Gordon and Bullock discover Loeb's secret: twenty years earlier, his mentally ill daughter Miriam (portrayed by Nicholle Tom) murdered his wife, and he covered it up. Using this information, Gordon blackmails Loeb into nominating him for head of the police union as well as giving him Bullock's file resulting in Bullock being released from Loeb's hold on him. In the episode "Beasts of Prey," Bullock learned from Len Moore that Loeb had arranged for Gordon to be set on the Ogre case. Upon being told of this, Gordon confronts Loeb before leaving where he states his knowledge of being manipulated into handling the Ogre case. Gordon states to Loeb that when he has apprehended the Ogre, he will come after him next.

Film

  • Gillian B. Loeb appears in the 2005 film Batman Begins and its 2008 sequel, The Dark Knight. He is played by British actor Colin McFarlane in both films. Unlike in the comics, the Loeb in these films is African-American a somewhat self-preserving yet honest officer. He first appears when informing young Bruce Wayne that they have caught Joe Chill for murdering Bruce's parents. Though shown to be at odds with Batman (launching a police task force to arrest him), Loeb is portrayed more sympathetic in the films, with no indications that he is corrupt or under the influence of Carmine Falcone, though he at times will appear self-centered. In The Dark Knight, The Joker kills him by poisoning his whiskey with acid.

Video games

  • Gillian Loeb appears in Batman: Arkham Origins with Jon Polito reprising his role. At the start of the game, Loeb is taken hostage by Black Mask at Blackgate Prison in retaliation for keeping his men behind bars even though he was under Black Mask's payroll. Black Mask tells Loeb that his organization is moving in a direction that Loeb simply isn't part of before forcing Loeb into a gas chamber and killing him. He reappears in a hallucination caused by Copperhead's poisons, saying that Batman could have saved him if he arrived sooner. He also is the subject of three extortion tapes by Enigma. The first is him conversing with Black Mask on how to deal with James Gordon regarding his strong moral compass. The second is him telling Harvey Bullock to work with Gordon in an attempt to dig up any potential blackmail material to force him to bend to their will. The last one has him telling SWAT leader Howard Branden to hunt down Batman after the latter managed to intimidate most of the SWAT team into taking sick days before taking a call from Martin Joseph.

Novel

  • In the novelization of The Dark Knight, Loeb's full name is given as Perry Loeb rather than Gillian Loeb. In The Dark Knight viral campaign however, he is referred to as Gillian B. Loeb as in the comics. Loeb's first name is given as "Joseph" in Matt Wagner's limited-series comic Batman and the Monster Men (2005–2006), a likely reference to writer Jeph Loeb, whose first name is Joseph.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Scan of the page of the Hitman issue in which Loeb is mentioned". Retrieved 2010-12-30.
  2. ^ Detective Comics #25