Dooey Jo wrote:How about a geriatric man, who is blind, and has specialised telekinesis. He can only use it to operate his weapon; a bow that shoots chainsaws. He lost his eyes in the Korean war, and recently had a radar system installed in his wheelchair, which he can plug into his brain to replace his eyes. He is also a very tragic character, for while he is considerate and kind, and has great sex appeal, he has severe erectile dysfunction and is immune to Viagra (which may or may not be another one of his super-powers. A super villain could spread Viagra in the water for instance, and the old man wouldn't be fazed). He got his super-powers while fighting a crocodile in the Fountain of Youth, which later turned out to be filled with radioactive water. The crocodile later mutated into a super-intelligent bear with a crocodile head and top hat and is his arch-nemesis.
His real name is Gary, but when fighting crime, he is known as... Oldman.
Rob Liefeld did it already. The six-part miniseries came out in 1994, was based on Isaac Asimov's unpublished last manuscript, and was
masterfully drawn by Liefeld. The miniseries was so well-received by the comic world that it received four Eisner awards and even got attention in the mainstream newsmedia. A made-for-tv movie of
Oldman starring David Hasselhoff appeared on the Fox network in 1995, but was not as well received. After Rob Liefeld's fall from grace in 1996, everybody forgot about all of this, just like we all forgot that the Sentry was a great silver age hero, because Rob Liefeld's work only lives in our minds as long as we all believe in Rob Liefeld; that's his super power. Since we all hate Rob Liefeld, we can no longer recall
Oldman or twelve other formerly award-winning series by Rob Liefeld ... we are left only with the memory of
Youngblood and the crime against humanity which was Rob Liefeld's
X-Force.