conver of Teen Titans Year One #1

I tend to read comics backwards.

Well, not entirely, but usually I don’t start at the beginning and go on from there. For one, that’s a really intimidating number of comics for a lot of series, and for another, the comics from the silver and golden ages are fun to glance at, but the racism and sexism inherent to media of the time can get a little (or a lot) grating if I try to read too much of it at once. I started reading comics again by trying to read the Iron Man comics from Tales of Suspense, and if I hadn’t switched to reading some more recent miniseries instead of plugging my way through that, I might have given up on comics altogether. Luckily, I picked up Red Hood: Lost Days, and realized that grounding myself in current canon was probably going to be more my style than starting from the beginning.

With that in mind, I read the 90s run of Young Justice and part of the Teen Titans run that followed it before going back and reading some of the earlier stuff. I got a decent handle on the chronology of the Teen Titans (which I consider a personal victory, given that the timelines there look more like a tumbleweed than any sort of straight line), even though I skipped around a lot in the various runs and storylines. Eventually, I picked up Teen Titans: Year One, which was published in 2008, and updated the origin of the group.

The Teen Titans made their debut in 1964, starring in Brave and the Bold #54. Robin, Kid Flash, and Aqualad face off against a villain named Mr. Twister, soundly kick his behind, and decide that they kind of like working together. Their next adventure is in Brave and the Bold #60, where Wonder Girl joins them as they battle The Separated Man. They got their own ongoing series in 1966, and barring a few hiatuses, have been incredibly popular since.

panel from Brave and the Bold #60
Brave and the Bold #60: Robin explains the origin of the Teen Titans.

Teen Titans: Year One is a retelling of the origin of the Teen Titans. It was a six-issue miniseries published in 2008, well after the Teen Titans became popular, yet it does a great job of updating the origin without changing it drastically. It begins with Robin contacting his friends, trying to get some information about a case that he and Batman are working. Batman makes him leave for patrol before he gets a response, but we see Kid Flash reply as Robin is walking away from the computer terminal.

panel from Teen Titans: Year One #1
Teen Titans: Year One #1: This probably isn’t how it went down in 1964.

The younger set of heroes – Robin (Dick Grayson), Kid Flash (Wally West), Aqualad (Garth), Wonder Girl (Donna Troy), and Speedy (Roy Harper) – all notice that their mentors are acting strangely. The older heroes are going way overboard in their methods, and in some cases, are becoming worse than the criminals that they had always striven to put away. They’re downright cruel to their sidekicks, which causes the kids to band together to put a stop to their mentors’ strange behavior.

panel from Teen Titans: Year One #1
Teen Titans: Year One #1: Batman tells Dick that he no longer has a home.

Robin comes up with the idea for the Teen Titans to take on their mentors – but to switch up who attacks who, as the mentors know their own sidekicks too well for those attacks to be successful. They split into teams to take down Flash, Wonder Woman, Aquaman, and Green Arrow, and then team back up to take down Batman.

panel from Teen Titans: Year One #3
Teen Titans: Year One #3: He’s Batman. It’s gonna take a little more.

As it turns out, the adults are being mind controlled by a mist creature called The Antithesis (that thing that’s leaking out of Batman). Once it leaves Batman, it also leaves the other adults, who all congratulate their sidekicks. The young heroes talk amongst themselves and decide that they work pretty well as a team, and decide to give themselves a name.

panel from Teen Titans: Year One #3
Teen Titans: Year One #3: And now it’s official.

The second half of the story starts with half of the Teen Titans getting ready to do a live interview on television. Robin and Speedy are absent, so Kid Flash volunteers to be the spokesperson for the group during the interview. Before the interview can really get going, though, the team is attacked by The Ant. He mocks the team before taking them out one by one, taunting Robin into joining the fight. Robin leaves the post that Batman had assigned him to in order to save his friends. The entire fight is broadcast live, and when Robin takes The Ant out, the audience and crew go wild.

panel from Teen Titans: Year One #4
Teen Titans: Year One #4: Kid Flash is the only one who isn’t impressed.

We then go along with Wonder Girl as she gets ready for a date with Speedy. It goes smoothly at first; Speedy borrows the Arrow Car from Green Arrow, and drives Wonder Girl around to some of his favorite places in the city. Wonder Girl is appropriately charmed when Speedy takes her to a picturesque cliff overlooking the ocean. They get out and make their way down to the beach… and when they return, the Arrow Car is gone.

Wonder Girl offers to call the other Titans for help in searching for the car, but Speedy won’t let her, saying that he already knows who took the car. After refusing to let Wonder Girl carry him, they end up taking the public bus across town to where Ding Dong Daddy’s chop shop is located. Speedy once again tries to do it on his own, and when Wonder Girl intervenes to save his life, the Arrow Car is destroyed. Speedy yells at her, and Wonder Girl returns to Teen Titans headquarters on her own.

panel from Teen Titans: Year One #5
Teen Titans: Year One #5: Green Arrow is not going to be happy.

The final issue focuses on Robin. It begins with Dick asleep in bed, clearly having a nightmare. In his dream, he’s walking around in a graveyard, where he stumbles upon the graves of his teammates. When he bows his head and touches Wonder Girl’s tombstone, he phases through it and sees her in her bedroom at the Teen Titans headquarters, upset after her failed date with Speedy. He tries to talk to her, but she can’t hear him, which proves to be a real problem when Robin sees The Antithesis (the enemy who had taken over the adults earlier in the arc) stealing up behind Wonder Girl. She disappears before his eyes. Robin goes around the rest of the base, watching as first Aqualad and then Kid Flash are taken as well.

Back in the graveyard, Robin is pushed into his own empty grave, which is then filled in. He finds himself trapped in a void, where The Antithesis tells him he’ll be kept for eternity. Robin breaks out of the mind-prison, pulling the other Teen Titans out with him, and they realize that they’ll have to beat The Antithesis once and for all. We end with the first utterance of the Teen Titans’ battle cry:

panel from Teen Titans: Year One #6
Teen Titans: Year One #6: Titans Together!

One of the things that I love about this story is how true it stays to the original origin. Sure, they’ve brought in things like instant messaging and the Bat Computer, but Dick is wearing the original Robin costume instead of one of the updated versions that I was honestly expecting, and the Arrow Car still looks like something out of the 60s. It’s a modern art style, there’s no doubt, but at the same time it’s very reminiscent of what came before it.

There are story references to the original series as well; in issue 5, Roy and Donna’s date calls back to the relationship that they had back in the day. The Ant, the villain in issue 4, first showed up in Teen Titans #5. Similarly, Ding Dong Daddy from issue 5 showed up way back in Teen Titans #3. The Antithesis is a villain first mentioned in Teen Titans #53, which is a flashback to the first case that the Teen Titans ever solved together… fighting an enemy that turned their mentors evil.

One of the most prominent examples of how true Teen Titans: Year One stays to its roots is in issue 2, where Wolfram does a great job of establishing the time frame without forcing it. The first three Teen Titans to team up are Robin, Kid Flash, and Aqualad, and we get this scene:

panel from Teen Titans: Year One #2
Teen Titans: Year One #2: That’s quite a callback.

It’s a great reference, and it clearly grounds the story within the established continuity.

Updating origin stories is definitely a challenge, and it’s something that needs to be done every once in a while, both to keep the origin somewhat relevant and to give new readers a place to jump in (that is, if they read in some sot of order, like I clearly don’t). It’s been done across a lot of titles, some with more success than others, but Teen Titans: Year One updates its origin story almost effortlessly, giving a new generation of readers a great introduction to one of the most iconic, interesting, and varied teams in DC’s history.

Showcase Presents Teen Titans Vol. 1. Written by Bob Haney, Marv Wolfman, and Len Wein; art by Nick Cardy, Bruno Premiani, Bill Molno, Irv Novick, Lee Elias, Bill Draut, Sal Trapani, and Jack Abel. Published 2006; collects Brave and the Bold #54 and 60, Showcase #59, and Teen Titans #1-18. Find it on Amazon or buy it from comixology here and here.

Teen Titans: Year One. Written by Amy Wolfram; art by Karl Kerschl. Published 2008; collects Teen Titans: Year One #1-6. Find it on Amazon or buy it from comixology.

Comments? Questions? Leave a reply! I’ll be happy to talk comics with you.

By Kari Woodrow

Kari read her first comic at the age of nine – her brother's much-abused copy of Archie - and promptly forgot about it. Now, nearly two decades later, she has rediscovered the genre and has yet to look back. She enjoys some Marvel comics, but her heart lives in the DC universe.

2 thoughts on “Retelling Origins Without Erasing History: Teen Titans: Year One”
  1. It’s definitely a tightrope to walk when updating origins. It’s funny – at one point one of the arguments in favor would be that someone like Batman had his origin story told SO long ago that no one could afford reading the Detective Comics issue in which he first appeared. But that’s no longer the case now that we have digital comics.

    I think the best case for it is to bring the heroes and villains in line with present-day values. For example, the original Batman had a gun. Original Batman probably slapped a few women or said the word “negro” or “colored”. Then there’s the old technology and way of talking. Of course, if you’re only retelling the origin and leaving everything else canon, people are still going to have to read through that old stuff and the shift from instant messages to telephones could be quite jarring.

    Now that we have digital and less of a worry about printing costs, what might benefit Marvel (DC probably doesn’t need it since they’re resetting the universe every 15-20 years) would be to put out some comics every few years that contain the key plot points of their different teams characters. Like – catching up to Jean Grey 196x-2013. Or the X-Men or w/e. I know some of that is filled in by wikis, but it’d be nice to have something you could pull out to see the key plot points for a given character or team.

    1. I agree – I’d love to have something to consult with a key overview of a character. I’m not sure how that would work, but it would be great to have around. Maybe it could be an ongoing of sorts – “Marvel Presents” could do one character a month, and by the time they cycle through all of the characters that they want to talk about, it would be time for volume two and they can start over.

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