Lex Luthor is a fictional character, a DC Comics supervillain and archenemy of Superman. Created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, Luthor first appeared in Action Comics #23 (1940). His history has been retconned several times since then, with his current canonical origin being Mark Waid's 2004 limited series Birthright.
The (usually) bald-headed Luthor has been Superman's main foe for most of the superhero's existence and has unveiled countless plots to destroy him and take over the world. Originally Luthor was a mad scientist but has since been rewritten as a Machiavellian industrialist and white-collar criminal. For a brief period in the early 2000s, he was President of the United States.
Luthor is one of several Superman characters with the initials "LL", including Lois Lane, Lucy Lane, Lana Lang, Lori Lemaris, and several others.
There are several notable appearances of Luthor in most adaptations of Superman outside comic books. In the film series of the late 1970s and 1980s, Gene Hackman took a comical approach to the character. In the 1990s television drama The New Adventures of Superman, John Shea portrayed him as a ruthless businessman. In the 2000s live-action series Smallville, Luthor as a young adult is played by Michael Rosenbaum. The role of Lex Luthor is played by Kevin Spacey in the 2006 movie Superman Returns.
The original Luthor of the 1940s (who did not have a first name) was one of many pulps-inspired mad scientists who plotted to take over the world, or destroy it, through the use of various diabolical schemes. He donned disguises a few times, but generally he preferred to make himself known to the world as his master plans came to fruition... until he was foiled, time and time again, by the Man of Steel. He soon became Superman's greatest foe, the antithesis of everything Superman stood for; and even though his plans for world domination were repeatedly dashed, he always managed to get away (or escape from prison) to threaten the world time and time again.
Luthor's originally stated goals were to kill Superman and to take over Earth as a stepping stone to dominating the universe. Over the years, Luthor came up with every conceivable plan to destroy Superman: he has synthesized kryptonite; traveled back in time; summoned beings from the fourth dimension; created robots, clones, and genetic monstrosities; allied himself with the alien super-computer android Brainiac; animated kryptonite rocks; detonated H-bombs; and has masqueraded and taken on a number of aliases. Although none of his schemes worked permanently (though one classic non-canonical "imaginary story" from the 1960s called The Death of Superman has Luthor finally killing Superman with Kryptonite after lulling him by pretending to go straight), Luthor's persistence has made him Superman's most troublesome foe.
In Adventure Comics #271 in 1960 (written by Jerry Siegel), the Silver Age origin of Luthor is first revealed, along with Luthor finally gaining a first name, "Lex." It was revealed that when Luthor was a teenager, his family moved to Smallville, with Lex becoming a large fan of Superboy. In gratitude and to encourage Lex's scientific pursuits, Superboy built for Lex a fully stocked laboratory. There, Lex began an experiment in creating an artificial new form of life, along with a cure for kryptonite poisoning.
However, when a fire caught in his lab, Superboy mistakenly used his super-breath to extinguish the flames. This rescue attempt spilled chemicals that caused Luthor to go prematurely bald and destroyed both his kryptonite cure and his artificial life form. Luthor attributed Superboy's actions to jealousy and vowed revenge. First, he tried to show Superboy up with grandiose technological projects to improve the life of Smallville's residents, which time and again went dangerously out of control and required Superboy's intervention. Unwilling to accept responsibility for these accidents, Lex rationalized that Superboy was out to humiliate him and vowed to spend the rest of his life proving to the world he was Superboy's (and later Superman's) superior by eliminating the hero.
This origin first made Luthor's fight with Superman a personal one, giving him a dimension beyond his previous mad scientist archetype and suggesting that if events had unfolded differently, Luthor might have become a more noble person; these elements were played up in various stories in the 1970s and 1980s, particularly in Elliot S. Maggin's text novel Last Son of Krypton.
Though he was a noted villain and an evil mastermind on Earth, Luthor was revered as a hero on the alien world of Lexor, where he used his scientific genius to rediscover the planet's technology and rebuild society for the inhabitants. Luthor used the planet as a base for his operations to strike against Superman using equipment such as the distinctive and flight capable purple and green suit he took to wearing in stories starting in the 1970s. In Action Comics #544 in 1983, Lex was given a makeover for Superman's 45th anniversary in comics, and was shown using long-lost (but highly advanced) Lexorian technology to build a much more powerful battlesuit, capable of facing Superman in individual combat. It was during one such battle that an energy salvo from Lex's battlesuit accidentally overloaded a device called the "Neutrarod" Lex had earlier constructed as a means to counter Lexor's geological instability. This led to the destruction of the planet, killing all inhabitants including Lex's local wife and son. Superman initially assumed Lex had also been killed in the blast, but this was due to his unfamiliarity with the rugged design of Lex's new battlesuit. Lex eventually returned to Earth, psychologically unable to accept his own role in Lexor's destruction and blaming Superman for it.
Superman himself has acknowledged that Luthor is a man of his word who would honor promises he made. Luthor had a younger blond-haired sister, Lena Thorul (shamed by Lex's criminal acts, Lex's parents, Jules and Arlene, disowned him, moved away and changed their name to the anagram "Thorul"), an empath who grew up unaware of her familial connection with the noted villain. Protective of his sister, Luthor had strived to hide his connection and had been assisted towards this end by both Supergirl and Superman.
In his early teens, Lex cultivated relationships with criminals in Suicide Slum, who were impressed and amused by his intelligence. Two boys who bullied Lex were themselves savagely beaten by Lex's adult criminal friends. Later, Lex took out a large insurance policy on his parents without their knowledge and sabotaged their car's brakes, killing them. These details were uncovered decades later by a down-on-his-luck writer named Peter Sands while researching a potential book titled The Unauthorized Biography (the story is detailed in the 1989 graphic novel of the same name by James Hudnall with art by Eduardo Barreto and Adam Kubert) and confirmed by Lex himself, before he had Sands killed and his research destroyed.
Lex was put into a foster home while he waited until he became of legal age to collect the insurance money. However, Lex found that his foster parents were even worse than his biological parents. Greedy and manipulative, they schemed to find out the location of Lex's money and steal it from him. Shortly after Lex turned the age in which he could have access to his money, he secretly put it in a savings account with the explicit instruction that only he be allowed to make withdrawals. When his foster parents found bank documents Lex had hidden from them, Lex's foster father confronted his daughter Lena and demanded that she seduce Lex (who had fallen in love with Lena) into giving her parents the money under the lie that they would use the money to pay for their daughter's college education, which they had no plans on doing.
Lena, who had feelings for Lex, refused and for her trouble was beaten to death by her father. Lex was absent from the home at the time, having been talked into going to a football game by his friend Perry. When Lex returned home, he was heartbroken to find Lena murdered by her father. This event would serve as the turning point for Lex Luthor, who vowed to do whatever it took to gain power and to destroy anyone who got in his way. Later in life, on the day Lex's daughter was born, he arranged for his foster father to assassinate the mayor of Metropolis, in another bid for power, and then later, as payment, murdered his foster father himself. He named his daughter Lena.
Perry White was the first target of Lex's turn to evil. Lex blamed Perry for keeping him from being at the house when Lena died and got his revenge by seducing Perry's wife shortly after their marriage and getting her pregnant with Lex's child. The offspring Jerry White, would later learn of his true parentage during his late teens before being killed by a local streetgang that Jerry had associated with. Years later, Lex would on several occasions purchase ownership of the Daily Planet, much to Perry's shock, and attempt to kill the newspaper out of complete spite for Perry.
In the comics series, Lex used his money and natural genius to create a multi-national corporation known as "LexCorp" that would ultimately come to dominate the city of Metropolis. One of his earliest projects was an experimental airplane and other similar technology themed enterprises would be the hallmark of LexCorp's output.
Lex became the most powerful man in Metropolis, both financially and in the world of organized crime. Lex would create havoc on the streets by selling weapons to the gangs of Metropolis and using his primarily female staff of underlings to keep blackmail files on all of the major organized crime groups in the city, so that Lex could use them to further any schemes he had planned. However, this all ended with the arrival of Superman.
Luthor was a man driven to be the best, having fought his way up from lowly beginnings by his own (dubious) efforts, and was resentful of how Superman was given his powers by random fate of birth. Superman survived subsequent attempts Luthor made on his life, but had never been able to prove Luthor's role in the attacks.
Luthor's hand had to be amputated to prevent the cancer's spread, but unfortunately by then it had already metastasized; it was eventually determined that the disease was terminal. Luthor faked his own death shortly afterward by taking his personally designed jet, the Lexwing, on a proposed trip around the world and crashing it in some mountains, using this as cover for the transplant of his brain into a healthy clone of himself which he then passed off as his hitherto unknown, illegitimate Australian son and heir, Lex Luthor II; his deception helped by his new body having a full head of red hair and a beard.
Luthor used his new identity as his own son to seduce Supergirl and continue to torment Superman from the shadows. However everything quickly fell apart, when Luthor's new clone body began to deteriorate and age at a rapid rate (his being one of many clones that were becoming ill at the time). This caused Luthor to begin to slip, as Lois Lane discovered proof that Lex Luthor had years earlier murdered a female LexCorp employee and framed an innocent man for the murder. This led Lois to find out the truth about Lex faking his death and being his own son, which caused Luthor to systematically destroy Lois' life and have her fired from the Daily Planet. Lois fought back and with help from Superman, exposed the truth about Lex Luthor, his faked death, and his evil criminal activities to the public. Luthor, right before his body became so old that he couldn't move or communicate, activated a "Doomsday Plan" to destroy Metropolis. The city was burned to the ground and thousands killed as Luthor became a permanent prisoner in his cloned body. However, aid would come in the form of the demon Neron; Luthor promptly sold his soul in exchange for Neron restoring his body to perfect health. Returning to a rebuilt Metropolis, Luthor turned himself over to the police and was put on trial, where he was acquitted of all crimes when Luthor claimed to have been kidnapped by renegade scientists who replaced him with a clone, who was responsible for all the crimes he was charged with.
The post-Crisis Lex Luthor has been married eight times, though the first seven marriages occurred off-panel in Luthor's past. While his previous seven marriages were hinted to have been based on love (or as close to the concept of love as Lex Luthor understands it) Luthor's eighth marriage to Contessa Erica Alexandra Del Portenza (or "The Contessa" as the characters call her) was a marriage that was based on mutual manipulation and greed.
The Contessa had bought controlling interest in LexCorp after Luthor was exposed as evil, forcing Lex into a marriage with her in order to regain control over the company. The marriage was doomed from the beginning as the two fought constantly and never loved each other. The Contessa quickly became pregnant with Lex's child and began using the unborn child to dominate Lex into doing her bidding. Luthor's response to the Contessa's actions was to use her desire to be unconscious during childbirth to lock her in the basement of his corporate headquarters in a permanently drugged unconscious state.
Luthor took over as a single father to his daughter (named Lena after his childhood sweetheart) and vowed never to marry again, stating that he wanted to never have to share his daughter's love with anyone else. The Contessa later escaped, but Luthor had her killed with a barrage of missiles.
Despite Luthor's more villainous traits, he was assisted by the extreme unpopularity of the previous administration due to its mishandling of the Gotham City earthquake crisis. Ironically, Batman would ultimately learn that Luthor was involved in the mishandling of the entire Gotham City rebuilding process, resulting with Bruce severing all military contract ties between the U.S. government and his company Wayne Enterprises in protest of Lex Luthor's election as President. Luthor responded in kind by ordering the murder of Wayne's lover Vesper Fairchild and framing Bruce Wayne for the murder (although the frame was only truly successful due to Luthor hiring, by sheer coincidence, the assassin David Cain, who was aware of Batman's true identity and thus made it appear to the Bat-family that Wayne had murdered Fairchild after she had discovered he was Batman).
An early triumph of his political career was the Our Worlds At War crisis, in which he coordinated the U.S. Army, Earth's superheroes and a number of untrustworthy alien forces to battle the story's villain, Imperiex. However, as it would later be revealed, Lex knew about the alien invasion in advance and did nothing to alert Earth's heroes to it.
Lex Luthor finally figured out Superman's secret identity in 2002, when a lowly scientist was able to get a meeting with Lex and reveal top secret government documents showing the rocket containing baby Superman crashing near the farm of Martha and Jonathan Kent (Ironically, one of Luthor's employees had once managed to work out that Clark Kent and Superman were the same person shortly after their vendetta began, but Luthor rejected it at the time because he believed that someone as powerful as Superman would never pretend to be someone as insignificant as Clark). Killing the scientist, Lex surprisingly decided to keep the knowledge a secret even as Clark Kent took the fall for Lois publishing proof that Lex Luthor knew of the alien invasion of "Our Worlds At War" but had opted not to make any defensive plans to save the people of Kansas from attack. In the end, the villain Manchester Black erased all knowledge that Clark Kent was Superman from Lex's mind in revenge for Lex helping Superman defeat him.
Although the changes in Lex's character and background were controversial among fans (given contradictions with established Luthor history) and slow to appear in other titles, writers Geoff Johns and Mark Verheiden have since referred to Lex's time in Smallville, reinforcing Birthright's canonical status.
It was recently revealed that as a result of Superboy-Prime's attempts to escape reality, his assault on the border between worlds created ripples that rewrote history, causing various revisions of events to occur; one of these revisions was the changing of Luthor's origin from the Man of Steel version to the Birthright version.
2005 saw the release of the limited series Lex Luthor: Man of Steel, which showed the motivation behind Luthor's distrust of Superman (events in this series that contradict current comics, particularly Lex Luthor's position as a legitimate businessman, make it difficult to place in context of recent continuity).
As one of the premier reformers of "The Society", Alex Luthor has recruited Black Adam, Doctor Psycho, Calculator, Talia Head, and Deathstroke as his inner circle. With the new knowledge of Doctor Light's brainwashing, the new Society exploited the villain community's fear of similar mind-wipes at the hands of the Justice League to recruit a literal army of villains under the guise of creating their own "mind-wipe" device designed to erase the memories of Earth's heroes as payback. However, this is just another cover for his even darker scheme involving the kidnapping heroes, each representing alternate earths, to power the giant tower being used to perform a major act of alteration to reality. It is not yet clear whether Alex's goal is the restoration of the entire multiverse, the transformation of the DC Universe into a single universe resembling one of the pre-Crisis Earths (as he told the Golden Age Superman), or something else even more complex or dangerous entirely.
Not one to sit back and watch his identity be usurped, Lex Luthor took the identity of Mockingbird and formed a super-villain version of the Secret Six, whose purpose was to subvert the Society. He swore vengeance against the impostor for taking his place.
In Infinite Crisis #3, Lex confronted Alex Luthor after tailing him for several months. Alex's identity was exposed to Lex during the following fight. Alex and Superboy-Prime managed to destroy his battlesuit, but Lex escaped via short-range teleporter. Lex also discovered that close proximity with Alex's theta brainwaves disrupted his thought process.
Luthor returned in the pages of Infinite Crisis #5, where he visited Conner Kent (in recovery at Titans Tower). Luthor gave words of vengeance against Alex Luthor and Superboy-Prime, and slipped into Conner's pants a crystal shard (collected in Infinite Crisis #3) showing the location of Alexander's Arctic Fortress. Conner later went to Nightwing and the two agreed to stop Alexander. At the end of Infinite Crisis #7, Lex Luthor oversees the Joker's execution of Alexander.
Lex had shown a great deal—at least by his standards—of compassion for Conner Kent; it seemed by watching Superboy throughout the course of his short life, Lex came to see Conner as his son. When Conner died during the Crisis, Lex visited his memorial statue in Metropolis and placed flowers there.
Three weeks after the Crisis, the GCPD find a body in an alley that looks like Lex Luthor. Four days later, John Henry Irons examines the body at S.T.A.R. Labs and notices that contact lenses were inserted post-mortem to make the green eyes appear blue, like Lex's. Lex Luthor then barges in with a throng of reporters, claiming that the body is that of an impostor from another Earth and that the man is the one responsible for Lex's own various crimes, while he had been held prisoner in the impostor's alternate dimension.
One week and three days later, Lex publicly continues to rebuild his fallen reputation, in various news broadcasts throughout the country, he claims to have engineered a way to make meta-humans out of ordinary citizens, saying that everyone should have a right to have powers, not just a select few.
Two weeks and two days later, a large group of people have gathered at the Lexcorp building at as Lois Lane, who is also there puts it, "an open call for volunteers to participate in his metagene testing program", apparently announced by Lex. A week, four days and three nights later, fullblown mobs of people have lined up just outside the building, vying for consideration. Lex himself appears and revels in it, calling the desperate people his slaves. Lex then spots and approaches Natasha Irons, the niece of John Henry. After a short talk, he gladly agrees to let her be the "first candidate of the day..." That night, Lex oversees Natasha's treatment himself. Insisting that Natasha "wants it all.....and wants it now." Lex orders the technician to preceed without the regular screenings give her "the whole package". The story is ongoing.
In the late 1990s Earth 2 graphic novel, an updated version of Earth-Three and its version of Luthor were reintroduced to the post-Crisis DC Universe. The physical appearance of this Lex resembles the Pre-Crisis Earth-One version from 1983s Action Comics (down to the battlesuit he wears). In this version of events, the heroic Luthor travelled from his Earth (located in an anti-matter universe rather than an alternate positive one) to the mainstream DC Earth, and asked the Justice League to help him rebuild his world. However, since "evil always wins" in this alternate world, the attempt failed, and Luthor resigned himself to being the only noble character on his Earth until he formed the Justice Underground.
After Shea's departure from the show after the first season, the character of Lex Luthor was constantly built in dialogue leading to his guest appearances in subsequent seasons. Some viewers saw this move as appropriate, giving the character a mystique and legendary status on the show, and giving appropriate hyperbole with the title of Superman's greatest enemy.
Luthor returned later to join the Legion of Doom, but, ironically, not as the leader (Gorilla Grodd was the leader). Luthor agreed to join in order to obtain the last remaining piece of Brainiac, which Grodd has in his possession. Luthor is obsessed with rebuilding Brainiac, as what is left of him is inhabiting Luthor's mind, giving him a sort of dissociative identity disorder. It is unclear to the viewer, however, if Brainiac really exists and inhabits his mind or if he is simply a mad figment of his imagination. Later on, using the failure of Grodd's silly masterplan to turn all humans into apes as pretext, Lex Luthor shot Gorilla Grodd and took over as leader, and imprisons Grodd.
After taking over as leader of the Legion, Luthor went back to obsession of trying resurrect Brainiac. Using the power of the Legion headquarters, Luthor spent tireless hours trying to bring a fragment of Brainiac back online. After nearly destroying the power supply, Luthor had Tala use her magic to garner any information from the fragment. Tala shows Luthor a vision of Brainiac's base (seen in the episode "Twilight") before its destruction and Luthor reconfigures the Legion base into a spaceship with hyperspace capability.
During the journey to the remnants of Brainiac's base, Tala frees Gorilla Grodd and he mounts an insurrection against Luthor with fellow Legion members. The battle caps off with Luthor fighting Grodd in hand-to-hand combat. Just as Grodd moves to use his telepathic power on Luthor, Luthor uses his belt to take over Grodd's mind. Afterwards, Luthor forces Grodd into an airlock and jettisons him into space.
The Legion, back under Luthor's power, returns to their task of resurrecting Brainiac. Luthor hooks Tala up to a machine, reminiscent of Brainiac's machine used against Superman, to transmutate remnants of Brainiac's base back into a working body of Brainiac. Before Luthor begins the process, Metron stops time and appears to him warning that he may be unleashing something that will affect the past, present and future. Luthor, still obsessed with becoming a god, ignores him and the process begins.
However, although the process is successful, Luthor ends up resurrecting Darkseid, who attempts to destroy the Legion. The remnants of the Legion, under Luthor, return to the Watchtower and appeal to the Justice League for aid. With the aid of the New God Metron, Luthor manages to acquire the Anti-Life Equation long sought by Darkseid, and uses it on the lord of Apokolips, sacrificing his own life in the process. However, as Batman is skeptical of his death, and Luthor is not known for his altruism, it is likely that he is still very much alive.
Lex Luthor was also featured in this direct-to-video animated movie. Lex's character designs from Superman: The Animated Series, his job as a criminal businessman and his bodyguard Mercy Graves were used for this movie, but this version of Luthor acted similar to Gene Hackman's campy Luthor from The Movie. He constantly spouted one-liners and at one point threw a Tiki Torch Luau to celebrate Superman's presumed death. Lex Luthor was voiced by Powers Boothe in this movie.
Luthor's role in this movie, which was not made to fit into the continuity of the DC Animated Universe despite using its character/set designs and voice actors, had him forming an alliance with Brainiac (this is also treated as the first meeting between the two). He placed Brainiac in a new robot body and sent him to destroy Superman. Afterwards Brainiac would pretend to be defeated by Luthor and then leave Earth to conquer a different planet, while Luthor would appear as a hero to a people and then continue his quest to rule Earth. Naturally this plan failed, and it ended with a usual "Luthor under investigation" ending.
The 2000s television series Smallville features a Lex Luthor, played by Michael Rosenbaum, whose history echoes many previous versions of the character, though this version of Lex has not yet (as of December 2005) become a bona fide villain. In this series, the character's full name is Alexander Luthor. In episodes having to do with Lex's childhood, it has been noticed that the women that raised Lex called him Alexander, including his mother Lillian Luthor (in the season 3 episode "Memoria") and his nanny Pamela Jenkins (who appeared, dying of cancer, in the Season One episode "Crush"). As in the Silver Age, Lex is one of teenaged Clark Kent's closest friends. This Lex, however, is heir to his father's fortune, once again invoking the corrupt businessman version of the character. (Many details about Lex's father in the series, Lionel Luthor, are clearly based on the actions and life of the comic-book Lex Luthor.) As a young boy, Lex was caught up in the meteor shower which brought baby Kal-El's rocket ship to Earth from Krypton. The explosion resulting from the meteor's impact caused Lex to lose his hair. (Clark being indirectly responsible for Lex's hair loss is similar to the Silver Age comic mythos.) When Lex was about twelve he had some kind of mental illness (possibly schizophrenia) and had a breakdown where he thought a blanket was his deceased baby brother, Julian Luthor. It was revealed in third season that he discovered the murder of the infant Julian by his mother, Lillian Luthor, assumed the blame himself and later apparently repressed the memory. In the third season he was drugged and institutionalized by Lionel. When Clark was a teenager, and still learning how to deal with his emerging superpowers, he rescued Lex when Lex's car crashed through a bridge rail and plunged into water below. The two bonded, and Lex, living in Smallville as he ran his father's local business, considered Clark a "younger brother." However, Lex also developed a particular interest in Clark's mysterious background and began looking into it, which has often caused rifts in his relationship with Clark. More recently, the series has emphasized Lex's dark side as he slowly descends to evil. The depiction of the inevitable corruption of Lex and the development of his future enmity with Clark is a major plot arc of the series. It has also been revealed that due to his exposure to either Kal-El's ship or to the abundant kryptonite in the Smallville area, Lex possesses a preternaturally strong immune system.
Smallville also established a new reason for Lex's (future) hatred of Superman, which has been to some extent adopted into comics continuity. In the series, there is a Native American legend that a man with superhuman powers named Naman (Superman) would protect the Earth, and that his arch-nemesis Sageeth would start out as his friend (Luthor). In one episode, Lex gave his version of the story, and explained that Sageeth would have to be brave to confront someone like Naman, who if left unchecked could become a tyrant and enslave the world. A variation of this reasoning is briefly alluded to in Superman Returns (see below), when Lex chastises Superman's refusal to share his technology with humanity, and compares himself to Prometheus. Brian Azzarello's comic limited series Lex Luthor: Man of Steel subsequently incorporated a similar motivation for Luthor: a kind of secular humanism, and an unflappable belief that Superman merely existing would herald "the end of * potential." Some fans consider this motivation (in which Luthor sees his opposition to Superman as heroic) to be more logical and three-dimensional than the explanations given in the original comics (both pre- and post-Crisis).
In season 5, Lex Luthor was in the race to be a Kansas state senator, competing for the seat against Jonathan Kent. After Jonathan won the seat, he died later that evening in a confrontation with Lex's father, Lionel. The senate seat was offered to Jonathan's wife, Martha Kent who has taken the senate spot. It has also been revealed (through a dream Lex has when in a coma and subtly built up throughtout all five seasons) that Lex is in love with Clark's current love interest, Lana Lang. Now that Clark and Lana have separated, it is possible Lex may pursue her and this could lead to another explanation of a future final rift between Lex and Clark. Recently, Lex's romantic feelings for Lana were returned. The two shared a passionate kiss by the fire in the Luthor mansion, to the shock of many viewers. They are currently dating, much to Clark's alarm.
Lex entered into a brief alliance with Brainiac. Apparently believing he was helping the US Government to create a cure for an alien virus, Lex and LuthorCorp were instead making a chemical that would allow near superhuman abilities to be transferred into a human. After its creation, Brainiac injected Lex with the chemical compound and he started developing Kryptonian powers similar to Clark. He was taken aboard Brainiac's ship and reborn to serve as the vessel for General Zod's consciousness. After a battle with Clark in the Kent's Barn, Lex's body was taken from him and his mind was replaced by that of General Zod.
He can also speak fluent Spanish, German, and Japanese.
In the film, Lex Luthor has spent five years in prison, giving him a harder, more violent edge, as well as a desire for revenge on Superman. During Superman's disappearance, he is released from prison on an appeal. His machinations once again concern real estate, as they did in the Richard Donner film. Luthor plans to use crystals (like the one Superman used to create the Fortress of Solitude) stolen from Superman to create a new landmass off the east coast of the United States. In doing so, he will create a vast new real estate opportunity and spite Superman at the same time. After his scheme fails, Luthor uses a helicopter to escape capture, but it runs out of fuel, stranding him on a deserted island.
Unlike Hackman, this Luthor seems comfortable being bald, despite several jokes made about his lack of hair throughout the film. He does use wigs at several points in the film (usually as part of a disguise) and is shown to have a collection of them from which to choose, but in his private life he goes without.
Lex Luthor appeared in almost every Superman games starting from "Superman" for Atari to the upcoming video game, "Superman Returns: the videogame" It's unknown what exactly Lex will do in the game, possibly similar to the movie.
In Smallville, his full name is Alexander, after Alexander the Great, the historical general whom Lionel Luthor most admires and encourages his son to pattern himself after.
DC Comics supervillains | Superman villains | Outsiders villains | Teen Titans villains | Justice League villains | Supervillains without aliases | Supervillains without costumes | Secret Society of Super Villains | Smallville characters | DC Comics titles | Fictional Americans in DC Comics | Fictional evil geniuses | Fictional atheists | Fictional businesspeople | Fictional geniuses | Fictional inventors | Fictional Kansans | Fictional mad scientists | Fictional millionaires | Fictional Presidents of the United States | Clancy Brown-potrayed characters
Lex Luthor | Lex Luthor | Lex Luthor | Lex Luthor | Lex Luthor | לקס לות'ור | Lex Luthor | Lex Luthor | Lex Luthor
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Lex Luthor".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world