Who Are the First Two Blue Beetles in the BLUE BEETLE Movie?

Although teenage Jaime Reyes is the current Blue Beetle in both comics and film, the new Blue Beetle trailer shows he was not the first to wear the mantle. In one scene, two Blue Beetle costumes are seen on mannequins, and they are very comics accurate. This suggests that in the film, just as in the comics, there were two previous Beetles before Jaimie, and he’s a legacy hero. But who are the first two costumed adventurers who used that name? They have a long comics history, with the first Blue Beetle going all the way back to the 1930s.

The costumes of the first two Blue Beetles, Dan Garrett and Ted Kord, and their comic book counterparts.
Warner Bros/DC Comics

Blue Beetle I (Dan Garret)

The original Blue Beetle debuted in 1939 from Fox Comics, a mere few months after Batman debuted at DC. And just a year after Superman. The original Beetle was Dan Garret, and there was shockingly little that was unique about Dan. He was a vigilante with no powers, who fought criminals at night. Garret was avenging the murder of his father, a police officer murdered by criminals. Yes, it’s all very Batman.

The original Blue Beetle, Dan Garret, in the Golden Age of Comics.
DC Comics

He eventually got a bulletproof suit, and took special vitamins that give him super strength (much like DC’s Hourman) to give him something more interesting. His girlfriend was a feisty reporter in the Lois Lane tradition. He even worked with a kid sidekick named Sparky, a clear Robin knock-off. At least he had a “Beetle Light,” which he flashed at his enemies using his emblem, something which later inspired Spider-Man. So for once, Beetle inspired another superhero, instead of the other way around.

Blue Beetle and Sparky, his kid sidekick, in the 1940s Blue Beetle series.
DC Comics

Dan Garret might not have been original or very interesting, but he was popular. At least for a short time. His comic series ran for 11 years and had 60 issues total, and he had a brief comic strip and a serialized radio show. Back in the Golden Age, the latter two things meant you were a big break-out comic book star. But post World War II, superhero popularity sank, and they canceled Blue Beetle. Eventually, comics publisher Fox went out of business, and for a long time, that was the end of the Dan Garret Blue Beetle.

Blue Beetle I (Take Two) Dan Garrett

The Charlton Comics version of Blue Beetle Dan Garrett, from 1964.
DC Comics

In the mid-sixties, Blue Beetle came back, now published by Charlton Comics. But they almost entirely revamped the character. His last name was now spelled Garrett, and he was an archeologist, not a police officer. He discovered an ancient scarab in an old Egyptian tomb, in an origin similar to DC Comics’ Doctor Fate. The scarab gave him super powers, and he fought crime for a few years. But Dan Garrett with two T’s was not as successful as his previous incarnation. So Charlton found a new hero to take up the mantle not long after.

Blue Beetle II Ted Kord

Ted Kord, the Silver Age Blue Beetle, as drawn by the legendary Steve Ditko.
DC Comics

In 1966, the dream team of Stan Lee and Steve Ditko, who had made The Amazing Spider-Man a smash hit for Marvel Comics, parted ways. Ditko went off to Charlton Comics, where he got to revamp several characters. Among the first was Blue Beetle. Under Ditko’s watch, Beetle got a new secret identity and costume, as well as a new origin story. This Blue Beetle was Ted Kord, a student of Dan Garrett’s. He was a genius inventor and athlete, and when he discovered his uncle was a criminal planning on taking over the world, he teamed up with Dan Garrett to stop him. Garrett died and passed on the scarab to Ted Kord, who became the second Blue Beetle.

The second Blue Beetle, Ted Kord, swings into action.
DC Comics

Interestingly, the scarab never worked for Ted. But he was still the Blue Beetle, and used his gadgets and training (and eventually, his vast wealth from his company) to fight crime. Ditko designed his new costume, and his favorite mode of transport, the hovering Bug ship. A lot of the Ted Kord version of Blue Beetle would inspire Nite Owl II in Alan Moore’s Watchmen. His solo series only ran for five issues in 1967, but in the ‘80s, DC Comics bought publisher Chartlon Comics’ characters, and Ted had a whole new life.

Blue Beetle Becomes a DC Hero

Blue Beetle and Booster Gold, DC's superhero BFFs.
DC Comics

Following the multiversal event Crisis on Infinite Earths, Ted Kord became part of the main DC Universe. He got his own ongoing series, which lasted two years. But his real popularity happened when he became a member of the Justice League International. The writers of that book teamed him up with Booster Gold, another hero with a recently canceled series. The two became best buds, a pair of lovable losers who went on many an adventure together. When Ted died in 2005’s Infinite Crisis, he left the scarab for Jaime Reyes. And the rest is history. Ted did eventually get better from the whole “being dead” thing though.

We don’t know what role the previous Blue Beetles will have in the upcoming film, beyond a reference to their existence. We know at some point, someone takes Ted’s Bug ship out for a ride. And The film’s villain, Victoria Kord (Susan Sarandon) is supposedly Ted Kord’s sister. Will we see Ted in the flesh in this movie? Rumors suggest Jason Sudeikis is playing him. With a Booster Gold series coming in James Gunn’s new DCU, we hope to see Ted and Booster together. We’ll find out when Blue Beetle hits theaters in August.