A while back I did a series of posts for Superbabes. It was a lot fun. Part of the conceit of the posts was that all these various super-women like Kim Possible and Justice were gathered together to face an evil so bad that it takes all of them. Well that evil was a mad scientist by the name of the Refrigerator.
Here is what I posted then:
The big bad is this mad scientist known as The Refrigerator. He captures women and freezes them. Plenty of subtle and overt S&M and dominance context that makes this guy a bit creepier than Mr. Freeze or Captain Cold, yet fits rather well in this. After all the perfect foil for a Good Girl is a creepy misanthrope. All these heroes are gathered together, kick his ass and rescue the original team.
I also found this the other day from the August 1937 issue of Horror Stories.
Now here is the deal. This guy came, literally, out of a nightmare. Around 1982 or so (I was 12) I was hit with a double shot of women being frozen alive, the movies were "In Like Flint" and "Kiss the Girls and Make them Die". It really bugged the hell out of me and gave me nightmares for a long time.
Still kind of bugs me. Of course later I learned there is a whole creepy fetish thing related to this. I think my issue is far more basic. I hate being cold and think being frozen is quite possibly the worst thing ever.
But that picture above deserves a villain. I have not found the issue yet so I can't say if there is a story that goes with that cover. But I have enough of my own nightmare fuel.
History of The Refrigerator
Dr. Andreas Gelé was born to wealth and privilege but never to love. His father was a was a rich industrialist who made his money on the work of others and his mother was a noted and beautiful stage actress. From his father he gained his intellect and from his mother he learned lessons in cruelty.
As his mother aged she became more and more cruel. In his mind's eye he saw her as beautiful. This was reinforced by all the pictures of her on the wall of their estates where she was young, beautiful and happy. Frozen in time. Gelé began to work on a process to forever keep the beautiful women young. He was drawn to beautiful women, and his prestige later as a doctor and his wealth made that easy. But he never could talk to or relate to them having grown up socially stunted. So Gelé embarked on a plan so he could have his desires met.
His first experiments in cryonoics were failures. Animals would not return to life when frozen and even when he perfected the process they still had damage. Finally through a combination of fluids and gases at super cooled temperatures. He tested it first on his hated father. He died soon after he was free of the ice, but Gelé expected that since the old man's heart was now weak. He froze his mother next. He was overjoyed that the ice preserved her remaining beauty.
All his research though has left his fortunes depleted so he robs banks to keep himself funded for more research and to keep his "beauties" on ice.
Dr. Andreas Gelé "The Refrigerator"
12th level Gadgeteer, Male, Chaotic Evil
STR: 10 (0)
DEX: 13 (+1)
CON: 14 (+1)
INT: 18 (+3) P
WIS: 14 (+1)
CHA: 9 (0)
AC: 16 (protective lab coat, gloves, goggles)
HP: 51 (d6)
BtH: +3
Sanity
- Starting: 70
- Current: 55
- Max: 85* (Using his science as roughly the same as Arcana)
Fate Points: 10
Abilities: Medicine (removed Jury rig)
Background: Scientist (medical doctor, cryonics)
Trait: Focused
Languages: English, French, German, Russian
Gadget: Refrigeration Gun (self-created gadget)
Powers
- Freezing Stun (Sleep, 1st level)
- Freeze (Hold Person, 3rd level)
- Wall of Ice (Wall of Ice, 4th level)
- Freeze Ray (Cold of Cold, 5th level)
All in all a nasty piece of work. But a good bad guy. I can't wait to try him in other systems too.
Don't forget to support the Amazing Adventures Kickstarter.
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/676918054/amazing-adventures-rpg
Creepy connotations of the finale aside (and hey, the early '60s were often pretty creepy through modern eyes), I remember Kiss the Girls and Make Them Die as one of the better '60s spy spoofs. Decent gadgets and sets, and Mike Connors' one great non-Mannix role.
ReplyDeleteAs I'm sure you're aware, there's a whole sub-branch of criticism that is known as "Women in Refrigerators". The argument, as I understand it, is that this use of character deaths, particularly gruesome ones, to drive stories falls disproportionately on female characters, and that there should be, at least, a discussion of why this is so, if it should be addressed, and how.
ReplyDeleteFaoladh.
ReplyDeleteThat is where his name comes from.
Ha! Of course!
ReplyDelete