Batman: martina_the_witch's Poison Ivy cosplay is haunting

Batman: martina_the_witch's Poison Ivy cosplay is haunting

Batman

Poison Ivy is undoubtedly one of the most fascinating and well-known villains of Batman's long publishing history and today comes to life thanks to a truly captivating martina_the_witch (Daria_Martina) cosplay.

Poison Ivy's debut in comics dates back to 1966, with the origins of the villain that have changed several times over time. After the Crisis on Infinite Earths, however, the basics of the character are defined almost permanently: Pamela Lillian Isley is a biochemist who, due to a mutation, has obtained superhuman physical abilities, can poison any living being simply by touching it and controlling any form of plant life . Thanks to her powers she becomes an ecoterrorist and one of the Dark Knight's most dangerous enemies, but sometimes also a heroine or an anti-heroine.

In the past we have already seen martina_the_witch's Poison Ivy in action in a double cosplay with Harley Quinn and once again the model hits the mark with a masterful interpretation. The cosplay is strictly faithful to the original character, there is no lack of thick red hair that contrasts with the greenish skin and the costume is simply perfect, enhancing the (lethal) charm of Poison Ivy without neglecting the attention to detail, such as leaves and carnivorous plants. .


If you are looking for other cosplay, we recommend that of Starlight from the Amazon Prime Video series The Boys by Kalinka Fox. How not to mention the cosplay of Makima from Chain Saw made by Purin and that of the demoness Daki from Demon Slayer by Yume No Doll.

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Batman: Every Live-Action Commissioner Gordon Ranked Worst To Best

Gordon (Pat Hingle) has a relatively peripheral presence in the 'Burtonverse' Batman movies - beginning with Burton's Batman and ending with Batman & Robin - with his appearances basically amounting to mere extended cameos.


It's no secret that Burton had little interest in sticking faithfully to the Batman comics, and while it makes sense that Gordon and Batman's (Michael Keaton) relationship would be a little frosty in the '89 film, little time is spent developing it in the three sequels.


Pat Hingle certainly does a fine job with the material he has, but the deep relationship with Batman that has defined the character in his best versions certainly makes him feel comparatively lacking here.


This iteration of Gordon also had to suffer through the indignity of being seduced by Poison Ivy (Uma Thurman) in Batman & Robin - a terrible look that made him absolutely impossible to keep taking seriously.





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