Posts Tagged ‘Superhero’

X-Men: Manifest Destiny

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

Cover of X-Men: Manifest Destiny #1 (Nov 2008). Art by Humberto Ramos.

Collected editions Uncanny X-Men: Manifest Destiny ISBN 0785138188 X-Men: Manifest Destiny ISBN 0785138188

Manifest Destiny” is an American comic book storyline published by Marvel Comics through the X-Men related titles and a number of limited series, including a self titled one. The arc was a follow-up to the storyline entitled “Divided We Stand” which started in the issues cover dated September 2008.

Storyline overview

“Manifest Destiny” deals with the change in the X-Men when they shift their headquarters from Westchester to San Francisco. This is the first time the X-Men have changed their headquarters since their brief relocation to Australia in the 1980s comics. This will be followed by “X-Infernus”, the sequel to “Inferno”.

Publication history

The X-Men: Manifest Destiny mini-series itself, is an anthology. The lead story is focused on Iceman and his journey to San Francisco. It is written by Mike Carey, with pencils by Michael Ryan. There are two back-up stories in every issue, focusing on different characters (Karma, Boom-Boom, Nuwa, Juggernaut, Colossus, Nightcrawler, Mercury and many others) and their live in San Francisco.

Plot summary

Uncanny X-Men

The X-Men open their new base in San Francisco and send a telepathic invitation to every remaining mutant on Earth. Their first fights were against Magneto, Sentinels and the newly formed Hellfire Club. This is also the introduction to the Sisterhood of Evil Mutants and Madelyne Pryor is seen alive.

Astonishing X-Men

The Astonishing X-Men shows up with a new line-up (Cyclops, Emma Frost, Beast, Storm, Armor, Wolverine). Their first mission was to investigate the murder of an undiscovered mutant.

Cable

X-Force captures Bishop and brings him to the X-Men Headquarters in San Francisco, while Cable is seen fighting in the future.

X-Men: Legacy

Cyclops secretly meets with Xavier as one last favor to his former teacher and friend. Elsewhere, the Hellfire Club is discussing Sunspot leaving their ranks and the void that leaves. As Sebastian Shaw tries to create some order, Castlemere and his new found cybernetic “upgrades” lay waste to another member of the Hellfire Club.

Rogue makes her way to the X-Men’s former base in Australia and ends up having a heart to heart talk with Mystique, whose persona is still in her head after the events in Messiah Complex.

Young X-Men

Cyclops takes Sunspot and Danielle as mentors of the Young X-Men. After establishing an abandoned cathedral in San Francisco as their new base, the Young X-Men (along with mentors Danielle Moonstar and Sunspot) form their team which includes Ink, Anole, Rockslide, and Dust, but without Blindfold.

Manifest Destiny

Iceman lands at an hospital after taking a flight with Opal Tanaka, who reveals herself to be Mystique. Disguised as a doctor, Mystique injects Iceman with a neural inhibitor but he manages to escape and flee on a truck. Mystique finds him yet again and destroys the truck, much to the truck driver’s dismay. Iceman saves him and asks him to contact the X-Men, while he faces off with Mystique and tells her to shoot him while looking him in the eyes.

Other short stories include:

  • Boom-Boom being defeated by Nuwa but taking her revenge by using coffee.
  • Karma failing to possess Emma Frost and realizing she needs to get her focus back.
  • The Juggernaut hesitating between a life of crime or as a hero.
  • Emma Frost coming to terms with the fact that the X-Men have accepted her.
  • Anole and Greymalkin bonding over their sexuality while Beast explores Greymalkin’s history.
  • Wolverine and Nightcrawler failing to cheer up Colossus, whose mood lightens when he helps a girl save her kitty.
  • X-23 helping Mercury realize she is more than just quicksilver and no one can tell her she is not a person after she defeats some Hellfire Cult members.
  • Nightcrawler being depressed over his lack of use as an X-Men and confiding it in a Danger Room created Kitty hologram.

Strangely, about half of these stories refer to Kitty’s disappearance.

Eternals/X-Men Manifest Destiny

The last three issues of the short Eternals run sees the relocation of the X-Men to San Francisco collide with Ikaris, his war with Druig, and the sentinel in Golden Gate Park. The final issue sees the X-Men assist with repelling the horde which has been foreshadowed as coming since issue one of the Eternals series.

Wolverine: Manifest Destiny

Main article: Wolverine: Manifest Destiny

Issues

The following issues are related to the storyline:

  • Astonishing X-Men #25-30
  • Cable #6
  • Eternals (vol. 4) #7-9
  • Manifest Destiny: Nightcrawler (previously announced as X-Men: Quitting Time)
  • Secret Invasion: X-Men #1-4
  • Uncanny X-Men #500-507
  • Wolverine: Manifest Destiny #1-4
  • X-Men: Legacy #215-216
  • X-Men: Manifest Destiny #1-5
  • Young X-Men #6-9
  • Runaways (Vol. 3) # 10

Collected editions

The storyline will be collected into a number of volumes:

  • Uncanny X-Men: Manifest Destiny (collects Uncanny X-Men #500-503, “X-Men Free Comic Book Day”, and Manifest Destiny, 208 pages, April 2009, ISBN 0-7851-3817-X)
  • X-Men: Manifest Destiny (collects Wolverine: Manifest Destiny #1-4, “X-Men Manifest Destiny: Nightcrawler” and X-Men: Manifest Destiny #1-5, 200 pages, hardcover, June 2009, ISBN 0-7851-3818-8, softcover, September 2009, ISBN 0-7851-3518-9)
  • Eternals Volume 2 (includes Eternals (vol. 4) #7-9, softcover, 104 pages, September 2009, ISBN 0-7851-2979-0)

X-Men: Divided We Stand

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

Cover of X-Men: Divided We Stand #1 (Jun 2008). Art by Brandon Peterson. Collected editions Cable: Messiah War ISBN 0785129723 Uncanny X-Men: Divided We Stand ISBN 0785119833 X-Factor: The Only Game In Town ISBN 0785128638 X-Force: Angels and Demons ISBN 0785129766 X-Men: Divided We Stand ISBN 0785132651 X-Men Legacy: Divided He Stands ISBN 0785130004 X-Men Legacy: Sins of the Father ISBN 0785130020 Young X-Men: Final Genesis ISBN 078513154X

X-Men: Divided We Stand” is the follow-up storyline to the crossover entitled “Messiah Complex”. The arc started with the issues of the X-Men related titles cover dated April 2008. This included: The Uncanny X-Men; Wolverine vol. 3; X-Factor vol. 3; and X-Men vol. 2, which was retitled X-Men: Legacy. It also launched three ongoing titles – Cable vol. 2, X-Force vol. 3, and Young X-Men – and a self titled, two issue limited series. Each ongoing series ran a separate story are with “Divided We Stand” providing an over all theme.

The arc was followed by “Manifest Destiny”.

Storyline overview

There is no main story, as the crossover deals with several characters trying to adapt to the X-Men’s disbandment. Here are the events that have happened in the titles so far:

  • In Uncanny X-Men, with the team disbanded, Cyclops and Emma Frost have taken a holiday to the Savage Land, but are called to San Francisco by Archangel because a hippie ‘goddess’ (actually Martinique Jason) has placed the city, as well as Hepzibah, Warpath, Iceman and Archangel, under her control and in a 60s style illusion. Also in the title, Nightcrawler, Wolverine and Colossus are traveling through Europe, when they are captured in Russia by the Red Room and interrogated by someone who wants to know why M-Day has left America with the most mutants and Russia with none. They soon escape and confront Omega Red while in San Francisco Scott and Emma confront Mastermind. They defeat her, freeing their friends and the city, including the mayor, who offers the X-Men a new home in San Francisco. Martinique escapes however, rescued by an anonymous woman, while a headline shows that San Francisco has rejected the Fifty State Initiative in favour of the X-Men.
  • In X-Factor, the team is struggling to deal with their own losses, as Wolfsbane leaves to join X-Force. Layla Miller is trapped in the future and Jamie Madrox now bears an M tattoo over his eye. They soon run up against Arcade, who holds Mutant Town hostage while most of the populace contemplates either changing the district’s name or leaving altogether. However, an ex-Purifier named Taylor has sabotaged the district and dies, causing bombs to explode throughout Mutant Town. Valerie Cooper is also pursuing Madrox and X-Factor in order to recruit them, an offer which Jamie violently rejects. Siryn has also discovered that she is pregnant after sleeping with Jamie, and intends to give birth to the child. Rictor leaves the team over guilt due to his dealings with Taylor in Messiah Complex. 5 months later, in Detroit, a former mutant comes to the renamed XF Investigations for help, meeting with a heavily pregnant Siryn, while Jamie is found by Cooper, who says that she won’t stop until they agree.
  • In new series Young X-Men, Cyclops gathers Rockslide, Wolf Cub, Dust, Blindfold and a new character called Ink to fight the new Brotherhood of Mutants, who are apparently now consisting of former New Mutants Sunspot, Cannonball, Magma, and Danielle Moonstar. However, Cyclops may not be who he seems. Blindfold has also had a vision of the team being betrayed and killed while fighting Donald Pierce and Rockslide demands she be added to the team or he won’t join, a condition which Cyclops grudgingly accepts. After they fail in training sessions against Brotherhood simulacra, Cyclops sends them after Moonstar and Magma in small teams, each with a specific target. Magma is attacked in Los Angeles and fights back violently, while Moonstar proves superior to the young mutants despite her lack of powers. However, she is taken down by an unseen force. Ink asks Blindfold after the fight how her abilities work before knocking her unconscious. A flashback sequence shows the origin of how Ink got the tattoo that allows him to use telepathic powers. Another flashback shows Cyclops setting up the team of Wolf Cub, Ink and Rockslide to attack the Brotherhood of Mutant members Cannonball and Sunspot. As the attack commences, Cyclops is blindsided by Greymalkin who realizes that Cyclops isn’t who he says he is. Back to the members of the Young X-men, Wolf Cub deals a rather lethal blow to Sunspot who is trying to convince the team that they shouldn’t be fighting. This attack causes Cannonball to consider all three Young X-Men a threat. Back at the base, Greymalkin reveals that Cyclops is really the newly reemerged Donald Pierce.
  • In the renamed X-Men: Legacy, the Acolytes have retrieved Professor X’s body, which is being kept alive by Omega Sentinel. Exodus heals Professor Xavier’s damaged mind while Magneto arrives and clashes with his former disciples. Meanwhile Sunspot and Sebastian Shaw are clashing within the Hellfire Club over an item in Shaw’s possession. Exodus loses a battle to Xavier on the Astral Plane, who then goes his own way to repair his mind. Gambit later comes to defend him from members of the Assassin’s Guild. Together they learn the Guild’s other targets, including Juggernaut, Hazard and Shaw. Rogue is also wandering the world. It soon becomes apparent that the targets are linked by their connections to Nathan Milbury and the Black Womb Project. Sinister’s psychic essence strikes out at them and apparently takes control of Xavier’s body while Gambit and Shaw battle the assassins.
  • In a relaunch of X-Force, the new group (consisting of Wolverine, X-23, Warpath and Wolfsbane) are sent after the Purifiers by Cyclops. They soon discover that Wolfsbane’s father Reverend Craig is helping them. They have also rebuilt Bastion, who is using Magus to create a ‘Choir’ of anti-mutant leaders including Donald Pierce, Leper Queen, Cameron Hodge and the reanimated forms of William Stryker, Stephen Lang, Bolivar Trask, and Graydon Creed. Wolfsbane is wounded after being captured by the Purifiers and injected with a large dose of heroin. The team take her to Archangel and Elixir, who help her but she then savagely attacks Archangel, ripping off his wings and taking them to Craig. Using Apocalypse’s T-O virus in them, Bastion creates several metal-winged Purifiers. Archangel also grows back his metal wings and regains his blue skin. However, he proceeds to attack his teammates.
  • Meanwhile in his own title, Wolverine has also been sent after Mystique by Cyclops to punish her for her role in Messiah Complex. As he tracks her, Wolverine remembers his own history with her, ever since they met in 1921. He eventually catches her and manages to fatally wound her after a brutal battle. However, he refuses to kill her and instead leaves her a gun. She manages to survive, and return in Manifest Destiny.
  • Cable has a new title, where he is in the future trying to protect the mutant baby while he is being pursued by Bishop, who desires to kill the child to prevent his dark future from occurring. Cable has recently encountered a much older Cannonball in the future, who says that the four of them are the last remaining mutants. Cannonball defends Cable and the baby as the time-travel equipment is damaged but is killed by Bishop. However, his sacrifice has bought Cable some time to escape.
  • The Free Comic Book Day issue focuses on Pixie as she returns to her old life in Wales. However, her investigation into several missing people leads her into conflict with the N’Garai. Cyclops, Emma Frost, Beast, Colossus, Nightcrawler and Wolverine come to her aid and she is offered a place among the new X-Men team forming in San Francisco after they defeat the N’Garai demons.

In the X-Men: Divided We Stand limited series, several characters are explored, mostly those who left the X-Men:

  • Gentle returns to Wakanda but is shunned by his people, even his own mother, due to his Russian father. He finds he prefers the New X-Men’s company, even though they annoyed him and using his powers has put his life at further risk.
  • Anole, even though he’s accepted in his home town, rejects his “normal” life when he realizes that his experiences with the X-Men have left him too violent. Northstar comes to help him adjust but Anole leaves his family, punches Northstar and claims the X-Men ruined their lives by not letting them do normal teenage things.
  • Scalphunter is making a living at a diner in the desert when he is confronted by Nightcrawler, who had appeared to kill him, but decided not to as Scalphunter is merely a clone. He instead tells him to redeem himself and ask for forgiveness before God, as faith is what will stop him being soulless. Scalphunter is later seen wearing a cross, taking the advice to heart.
  • Husk is taking Cannonball back home when they stop for lunch. Cannonball deliberately gets into a bar fight with several members of the Cabot family. Questioned by his sister he replied that he needed a Danger Room. He flies off, leaving Husk behind to worry about his mental state.
  • Hellion awakens in a civilian hospital, where he was transferred. Emma Frost tells him that the X-Men are no more and so he seeks another figure to follow: Magneto. Magneto rejects his service, but tells him to be ready, as mutancy’s next war might come sooner than he thinks.
  • Beast returns to the ruined mansion, where he destroys all of the X-Men’s files on mutants around the world. He also removes all of their advanced technology. He finally takes No-Girl with him and they leave the ruins behind.
  • Magik is in her castle in Limbo and recounts that she was an impatient child and plots to get her soul back. At first she plans to use her Bloodstone Medallion but changes her mind after remembering the lives it ruined. Instead by remembering her relationships with Shadowcat and Colossus she tries to reclaim her soul through love. She teleports to the Mansion but sees it in ruins. Sad and angry, she resolves to find the missing pieces of her soul through the suffering of those that have wronged her instead.
  • Forge returns to the Eagle’s Nest, ruined after the battle between Cable and Bishop. He starts to repair the damage when Bishop returns and takes him out. When he reawakens he finds that Bishop has stolen a robotic arm and all the notes on Cable’s time travel device. He tries to rewrite the notes, but fails due to a time paradox. He instead starts to secure the Eagle’s Nest against further attack, to prevent himself from being vulnerable again.
  • Havok is on a prison planet in Shi’ar space, listening to the tortured screams of Polaris, Ch’od and Raza Longknife. Vulcan appears on a monitor and taunts him by telling him the events of Messiah Complex. He says the baby, and all of mutantkind’s hope, is lost. Havok destroys the monitor and says that if one baby can be born so can another, meaning that there is always hope.
  • Danielle Moonstar is relaxing at her home in the mountains when Surge arrives, having run all the way there. Surge tells Danielle what has happened and how she believes her actions led to Hellion’s injuries. Danielle shares her experiences as a New Mutant with Surge and reveals that things will always get better, like the dawning of a new day. Surge replies that every day has a sunset.

Issues

The following issues have been confirmed to be related to the storyline:

February 2008

  • Uncanny X-Men #495
  • X-Men: Legacy #208
  • X-Force #1
  • X-Factor #28
  • Wolverine #62

March 2008

  • Uncanny X-Men #496
  • X-Men: Legacy #209
  • Cable #1
  • X-Factor #29
  • X-Force #2
  • Wolverine #63

April 2008

  • X-Men: Divided We Stand: Book 1 (of 2)
  • Uncanny X-Men #497
  • X-Men: Legacy #210
  • X-Factor #30
  • Young X-Men #1
  • X-Force #3
  • Cable #2
  • Wolverine #64

May 2008

  • X-Men: Divided We Stand: Book 2 (of 2)
  • Uncanny X-Men #498
  • X-Men: Legacy #211, 212
  • X-Factor #31
  • Young X-Men #2
  • X-Force #4
  • Cable #3
  • Wolverine #65

June 2008

  • Uncanny X-Men #499
  • X-Men: Legacy #213
  • X-Factor #32
  • Young X-Men #3
  • Cable #4

July 2008

  • X-Men: Legacy #214
  • Young X-Men #4
  • X-Force #5
  • Cable #5

August 2008

  • Young X-Men #5
  • X-Force #6

Ultimatum (Ultimate Marvel)

Sunday, June 7th, 2009

Cover of Ultimatum #1 (Nov, 2008). Art by David Finch.

Ultimatum is a five-issue comic book story arc from Marvel Comics, which began publication in November 2008. It falls under Marvel’s Ultimate Marvel imprint & is written by Jeph Loeb and illustrated by David Finch.

Production

During Ultimatum, Ultimate Marvel titles Ultimate X-Men and Ultimate Fantastic Four will contain side stories about various characters and events that occur throughout Ultimatum. Rogue has already been confirmed to appear in a run of Ultimate X-Men during the Ultimatum event and The Thing (Ben Grimm) has been confirmed to appear in the story which runs in Ultimate Fantastic Four for this period. Elements of Ultimatum’s story were established in the Ultimates 3, Ultimate Power, and Ultimate Origins miniseries.

Loeb commented in an interview with Comic Book Resources.com that the series “will hopscotch back and forth between the two books [Ultimatum and Ultimates 3] and conclude what I would like to say is the first chapter of the Ultimate Universe. What that means and how that’s explored is the basis of our story and we’re not letting any cats out of the bag.”

In a recent interview on YouTube, artist David Finch confirmed that Loeb would be bringing much to all of the Ultimate Universe to a close. At the 2009 New York Comic Con it was then announced that the Ultimatum would in fact end the entire Ultimate Marvel Comic line. Which would then be relaunched as Ultimate Comics. With it comes many new titles that are meant to help bring in new readers.

During the Marvel Ultimate Universe panel, at the 2008 Comic-Con International in San Diego, Jeph Loeb said that Aron Coleite’s run on Ultimate X-Men would tie-in to Ultimatum, but did not indicate that this Ultimate Marvel series would end. It has since been revealed that both Ultimate X-Men and Ultimate Fantastic Four will be canceled following the events of Ultimatum.

Loeb also commented that Ultimates will continue as New Ultimates coming out after Ultimatum and that he and Frank Cho will be working on that series. It has also been revealed that Mark Millar, writer of The Ultimates, The Ultimates 2, and founding writer of Ultimate X-Men, will be launching an Ultimate Comics Avengers title with a rotating team of artists to include Leinel Francis Yu and Carlos Pacheco. Ultimate Spider-Man will also be relaunched after the end of the Ultimatum as Ultimate Comics Spider-Man with Brian Michael Bendis writing and art being done by David Lafuente.

A teaser promo shows a tombstone marked with 2000-2008 only with the 2008 piece broken from its place.

Plot

Premise

The first shot of the events of Ultimatum seems to have been fired in the first issue of Ultimates 3 #1, when – as is revealed in #5 – a lovesick Ultron shoots and kills the Scarlet Witch, with whom he believes he is in love, but whom he can never possess. Ultron’s rebellion and Wanda’s death lead to a series of events which end with the death of Wanda’s brother, Quicksilver – killed unintentionally by Hawkeye, who had targeted Magneto instead. Magneto, sick with grief, vows ultimate revenge on the Ultimates (”For what they have done, they must pay the ultimate price.“). Before escaping the Ultimates, Magneto is able to steal Thor’s hammer. A further twist is revealed when the destroyed remnants of Ultron are pondered over by Doctor Doom, who states it was he who arranged for all this to happen.

Ultimatum

Ultimatum begins with scenes depicting the characters of the Ultimate Universe in routine circumstances. Reed Richards is proposing to Sue Storm, Ben exercises, and Franklin Storm encourages Johnny to be mature, like his sister. Giant Man has now adopted the Yellowjacket uniform (though Hawkeye wasn’t impressed by it). Captain America convinces Tony Stark to stop drinking and be ready for what disaster awaits them. Thor is doing his usual training with Valkyrie, Peter Parker and his friends (including a resurrected Gwen Stacy) are planning what to do with their day, and Dazzler, Angel, Nightcrawler and Beast are talking about a play. Everything seems well until a series of disasters befalls a few major cities: a lightning storm suddenly appears in New York City and a tidal wave hits Manhattan. Reed Richards and Sue Storm attempt to make it back into the Baxter Building while the Thing attempts to hold off a blue whale that crashes into the building. Giant Man breaks out of Tony Stark’s mansion looking for Jan. In the flooded streets in New York City, Bruce Banner appears to have drowned only to turn into his Hulk persona. He then notices that a Watcher is in the middle of New York. Kitty Pryde helps Peter get on his Spider-Man costume and encourages him to save as many as he can. Angel rescues an unconscious Dazzler whom he believes is dead. Iron Man proceeds to rescue Captain America, stating that many people have died and that he doesn’t know where the rest of the Ultimates are. With New York City underwater and time running out, Sue Storm manages to push all the water back out of the city with a colossal force field which knocks her unconscious and leaves her on the brink of death. Reed later assumes that Namor was the one who caused the tidal wave. Namor aggressively denies any part in the destruction of New York City, his reasoning being that he would never knowingly put Sue in danger. After knocking him out, Reed wonders who it truly was. In Latveria, Doctor Doom leaves his castle to notice that everyone and everything is frozen. Professor X states that millions have died and telepathically tells Captain America, Reed Richards, Iron Man, the Thing, and Spider-Man that Magneto has arranged for all of this to happen. Magneto is then revealed to be in his floating citadel with Thor’s hammer Mjolnir.

At the time when the Ultimatum Wave slammed into New York, Aunt May was being questioned about Peter Parker’s connection with Spider-Man. Kitty Pryde is shown attempting to rescue people on the L train while Spider-Woman swings down to save Aunt May, who in turn is trying to save Detective Mary Lambow.

William Stryker’s wife and son are killed by the Ultimatum Wave. At Xavier’s school, Jean Grey tells the team that Dazzler and Nightcrawler are dead. She refuses to allow Rogue to become involved following her recent use of Banshee. Upon Toad stating that the X-Men don’t trust her, Rogue leaves the mansion. A group of survivors, incensed at Magneto’s actions, find William Stryker in Central Park and offer him the opportunity to lead an anti-mutant militia using armor plating scavenged from the remains of destroyed Sentinels. Rogue flies to Canada to find Alpha Flight member Vindicator, revealing that she knows he is actually former Weapon X watchdog John Wraith. He tells Rogue that he will help find former Weapon X agents who are working for Magneto. They find Sabretooth and Juggernaut in a pub and incapacitate them. William Stryker and his armored death squad begin hunting mutants in upstate New York; their first act of violence is against Syndicate.

Following the Ultimatum Wave attack, Franklin Storm is found dead, Sue is in a coma, and Johnny is missing. The Thing is alone at the Baxter Building while Mister Fantastic searches for him. Thing travels to Pinehead Buttes, Montana in search of Dr. Arthur Molekevic. Josie and her team lead Thing down into the caverns where Dr. Molekevic is discovered, imprisoned by the Lava Men. Thing manages to rescue him and return to the surface. Upon reaching New York, Molekevic agrees to help Susan in any way he can; after examining her, they conclude that they will have to travel into her body. Dr. Molekevic asks Thing if he has access to Pym Particles.

Hulk assists Spider-Man in freeing a New Yorker trapped beneath a car. At the Triskelion, Iron Man arrives with Captain America’s lifeless body, and convinces Carol Danvers to put Cap on life support. Hawkeye volunteers to help Hank Pym search for Jan, stating that nobody deserves to suffer the loss of a loved one. Back at the Baxter Building, Ben Grimm watches over Sue Storm, who remains comatose after saving the city. Her powers remain active but uncontrolled, and Grimm nearly falls victim to her unrestrained telekinesis. Meanwhile, Doctor Doom and Zarda confront Reed Richards, for help in stopping Magneto, which necessitates retrieving Nick Fury from the parallel universe which is home to the Squadron Supreme. Thor seeks the land of the dead to save Valkyrie and is confronted by Hela, who forces Thor to battle Hela’s army of fallen warriors to reach Valkyrie. Captain America appears, implying that he died in the Triskelion. Hawkeye and Hank Pym notices something on a flooded New York street: Blob eating the remains of the Wasp. Meanwhile at Xavier’s Institute for Gifted Children, Magneto confronts Professor X. Magneto tells him that the deaths of Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch “merely opened [his] eyes”, stating that man has been in the constant decline spreading disease, war, ecological ruin, and famine. Magneto alludes to the biblical flood, but Xavier says that Magneto is not God, and that upon captured or death he will be recalled as a monster. Enraged, Magneto snaps Xavier’s neck.

The Daily Bugle staff relocates to New Jersey where J. Jonah Jameson starts writing articles to support Spider-Man after witnessing his daring acts of heroism when the Ultimatum Wave hits. As Spider-Woman rescues Aunt May, Spider-Man persuades the Hulk to help save people from the Ultimatum Wave. After Hulk uses his power claps to douse some building fires, he and Spider-Man find the body of Daredevil. When Hulk regresses to Bruce Banner, he blames himself for the carnage that has happened. Spider-Man tells him that it wasn’t him who caused the damage which Bruce was witness to, but Banner is inconsolable. He asks Spider-Man to kill him, as he transforms back into the Hulk, who attacks Spider-Man. While Spider-Man swings over to Greenwich Village to escape, he sees that the Sanctum Sanctorum had been hit by the Ultimatum Wave; dozens of demons emerge when the Sanctum Sanctorum’s roof collapses.

General Thunderbolt Ross shows up to oversee the Thing and Dr. Molekevic’s mission. They prepare a vehicle that they will use to travel into Susan’s body. When the Awesome II vehicle is complete, Dr. Molekevic and Thing head into her body and go through various parts to get to her brain stem. When they get to the brain, Molekevic uses his laser to stimulate the appropriate section. They fight off the remaining nano-bug on their way out (at rapid speeds since the bug damaged their size-holding processor). As Susan Storm wakes up, Ben is offered a job as a test pilot for the Army. Sue discovers that the nano-bugs were created by Reed for some unknown reason. She uses this discovery to postulate that they can find Johnny if he has the same bugs in his system since they give off a microscopic signal.

William Stryker’s Sentinel units invade the X-Mansion and managed to deliver the final blow on Syndicate. At Department H, Rogue convinces Sabretooth to help out while John Wraith does the same for Juggernaut. Rogue receives contact from Psylocke that William Stryker’s goons have invaded the X-Mansion. When William Stryker’s group surround the school, Liz Allan (who had just joined the X-Men as Firestar) starts throwing fireballs at them. One of Stryker’s men fires at Liz, but Toad blocks the attack and is nearly killed. Rogue and the others arrive. One of them fires a poison dart into Juggernaut’s eye where he apparently dies in Rogue’s arms. Rogue gets angered by this and attacks William Stryker.

Mystique taunts Magneto about destroying the world for his “little girl,” and some of the mutants begin turning on Magneto for killing other mutants – seen as “turning on his own people.” Hank Pym, furious at the death of Janet, bites Blob’s head off before carrying her body back to the Triskelion. The X-Men are also mourning their dead, and Angel swears he’s going to kill Magneto for what he’s done, and when Jean tries to reach out to the professor, she tells the others that he’s dead as well. Thor officially sacrifices his life to save Valkyrie and Captain America from Hela’s realm. Meanwhile, a horde of Jamie Madrox’s dupes act as suicide bombers, attacking Ultimates headquarters as Iron Man and Carol Danvers struggle to hold them off. Eventually, Hank arrives back and realizing the direness of the situation. He sacrifices himself to destroy the clones by taking them out to the water, but not before instructing Tony to take Wasp’s dead body and find an encrypted file titled “The Jocasta Project”. Captain America wakes up not long after. He is infuriated by the death of both Hank and Janet, the woman he loves. Captain America then orders the Ultimates to hunt down all remaining heroes as they are going after Magneto.

While looking for Human Torch, Invisible Woman, Thing, and Doctor Doom find Mister Fantastic’s signal in the Squadron Supreme dimension.

Jamie Madrox’s duplicates attack the X-Mansion and Rogue uses her powers to copy his in order to fight them. Wolverine heads to the Savage Land to find Jamie Madrox. With the help of Ka-Zar, Wolverine finds Jamie and kills him.

Mary Jane gets angry that Kitty sent Spider-Man out to save people. Kitty leaves to get Spider-Man back. Spider-Man and Hulk enter the Sanctum Sanctorum and fight various demons. They then encounter Doctor Strange who has been overtaken by Nightmare. It turned out that Nightmare possessed Dr. Strange’s (dead?) body and has been responsible for the demons that have been released from Dr. Strange’s house. In the midst of the battle, Nightmare attacked Spider-Man and Hulk. Nightmare creating the hundreds of dead bodies Hulk killed as a part of his nightmare and re-created Peter’s villains/fears in the shapes of the Green Goblin, Venom, Carnage, a dead Uncle Ben, and numerous others, leaving Peter to wonder if being a hero was really worth all the death and suffering. However, upon solidifying into a young looking purple being, the Hulk attacked him in response to the nightmares. In doing so, the Hulk created an explosion with Peter, Nightmare, Kitty Pryde, and the Hulk trapped in the center of the blast.

Cast

Here is a list of who is featured in this storyline. Names that have been crossed out indicate that the character has died, or is presumed dead:

Heroes

  • Captain Britain – Presumed dead. Blown up by Madrox. (Ultimate X-Men #100)
  • Daredevil – Found dead by Spider-Man. Presumably killed by the Ultimatum Wave. (Ultimate Spider-Man #131)
  • Doctor Strange – Overtaken by Nightmare. (Ultimate Spider-Man #132)
  • John Wraith
  • Ka-Zar
  • Namor
  • Spider-Man
  • Spider-Woman
  • Shadowcat
  • S.H.I.E.L.D.
    • Carol Danvers
  • Ultimates
    • Captain America
    • Hulk
    • Hawkeye
    • Iron Man
    • Thor – Trapped in alternate plane of existence. (Ultimatum #3)
    • Wasp – Her body was found dead and was being eaten by Blob. (Ultimatum #2)
    • Yellowjacket – Killed by Madrox. (Ultimatum #3)
  • Ultimate Fantastic Four
    • Mister Fantastic
    • Invisible Woman
    • Human Torch
    • Thing
    • Franklin Storm – Killed by the Ultimatum Wave. (Ultimate Fantastic Four #58)
  • Ultimate X-Men
    • Angel
    • Beast – Killed by the Ultimatum Wave. (Ultimatum #1)
    • Cannonball – Killed by Madrox. (Ultimatum #3)
    • Cyclops
    • Dazzler – Killed by the Ultimatum Wave. (Ultimatum #1)
    • Emma Frost – Killed by Madrox. (Ultimatum #3)
    • Iceman
    • Jean Grey
    • Liz Allan
    • Nightcrawler – Killed by the Ultimatum Wave. (Ultimatum #1)
    • Polaris – Killed by Madrox. (Ultimatum #3)
    • Professor X – His neck was broken by Magneto. (Ultimatum #2)
    • Psylocke
    • Rogue
    • Storm
    • Sunspot- Killed by Madrox (Ultimatum #3)
    • Syndicate – His heads were blasted off by William Stryker, Jr. (Ultimate X-Men #99)
    • Toad
    • Wolverine

Villains

  • Brotherhood of Mutants
    • Magneto
    • Blob – His head was bitten off by Yellowjacket. (Ultimatum #3)
    • Detonator – Tortured and killed in the Savage Land. (Ultimatum #3)
    • Forge – Tortured and killed in the Savage Land. (Ultimatum #3)
    • Hard-Drive – Tortured and killed in the Savage Land. (Ultimatum #3)
    • Longshot – Tortured and killed in the Savage Land. (Ultimatum #3)
    • Lorelei – Killed by Wolverine. (Ultimate X-Men #100)
    • Madrox – Killed by Wolverine. (Ultimate X-Men #100)
    • Mystique
    • Sabretooth
  • Doctor Doom
  • Juggernaut – Hit in the eye by a poisonous dart shot by a Sentinel soldier. (Ultimate X-Men #99)
  • Nightmare
  • William Stryker
  • Zarda

Other Characters

  • Aunt May
  • Dr. Arthur Molekevic
  • General “Thunderbolt” Ross
  • J. Jonah Jameson
  • Robbie Robertson

Bibliography

  • Ultimatum #1-5
  • Ultimate Fantastic Four #58-60
  • Ultimate Spiderman Vol. 1 #129-133
  • Ultimate X-Men #98-100

Reception

Jesse Schedeen of IGN.com has said, “Loeb’s handling of these characters is at best misguided, and at worst completely disrespectful.”

Ultimate Origins

Sunday, June 7th, 2009

Cover to Ultimate Origins

Ultimate Origins is a comic book limited series published by Marvel Comics, released in June 2008. It falls under Marvel’s Ultimate Marvel imprint. It was written by Brian Bendis and illustrated by Butch Guice. It was intended to be a “chapter in the development of Ultimatum, a crossover event scheduled to begin in September 2008.

Jeph Loeb has stated in an interview with Comic Book Resources: “What Ultimate Origin is going to do is sort of tell us how it all began. … The Ultimate Universe isn’t very old, so this isn’t a cosmic story. You’re not going to see the birth of a planet. What you’ll see is how the superhero community was introduced into the human population. So you’ll learn the importance of things like the Super Soldier program, which has been hinted at in Ultimate Spider-Man and Ultimates 1 and 2. Now, Brian is going to connect the dots.”

Plot summary

The story opens with Spider-Man confronting a deranged Bruce Banner, who tells Spider-Man in desperation that “it’s all connected.” General Ross arrives, and despite Spider-Man’s attempts to defuse the situation, Banner transforms into the Hulk and escapes.

In 1942, at the Battle of Tenaru, an American super-soldier (a normal GI dressed in a special uniform) rallies his men in the face of a Japanese onslaught. However, the soldier is shot and killed, his blood staining the American flag. A photograph of this image is released around the world, and then-President Roosevelt demands a true super-soldier from his advisors, rather than a normal soldier wearing a special uniform.

A year later, during the invasion of Sicily, three soldiers, (American privates Fisk (the grandfather of The Kingpin) and Nicholas Fury, and Canadian soldier James Howlett), attempt to loot a house. Military police arrive to arrest them, and all three are subdued. Fisk is grazed by a bullet, while Fury and Howlett, despite the latter’s protests that he’s Canadian, are shipped off to separate unknown locations.

Fury is selected to be the next test subject for Project Rebirth, as his bloodwork most closely matches that of subject 22, the most successful of the previous test subjects. He is injected with a serum that gives him super-strength, which he uses to free himself and the other prisoners, who then escape. The scientists who were working on him let him escape, deciding that they have all the information that they need for now. Elsewhere, Howlett awakens in a tank of water inside the Weapon X complex. He escapes the complex, but is fatally shot as he nears freedom. Miraculously, Howlett’s wound heals completely and he is recaptured. Dr. Cornelius, Weapon X’s head scientist, explains that in attempting to create their own version of Captain America, Weapon X accidentally discovered a genome that, when genetically altered, grants the person carrying it various abilities based on their DNA. He calls these altered humans “mutants”, (with Howlett as “Mutant Zero”), and states that mutants will be how humanity survives.

The story then flip-flops between Captain Carol Danvers at Project Pegasus finding the artefact known as the Watcher and the events leading to the birth of Captain America. Project Pegasus is shown as a government-issued warehouse for objects with mysterious origins and, usually, mass destructive value.

Steven Rogers, with a bad limp, is recruited by Dum Dum Dugan into the Super-Soldier Program; Project Rebirth. Through many different treatments, Steven Rogers is reborn as the ultimate super-soldier and leaves his fiance Gail behind to start his life in World War II.

Later, a teenaged Erik Lehnsherr visits the Weapon X complex and sets Wolverine free, letting him know that his name is James. When Magneto’s mother tries to stop him, he murders her and proclaims that he hopes there “is a hell.” Before his mother’s death, she justifies her work with Weapon X by declaring that she only wanted to find a cure for Erik and the others.

Even later in Erik’s life, he reads a book published by Charles Xavier and is determined to meet him. Showing up in the class that Xavier teaches, they soon realize that Charles’s telepathic powers do not work on Magneto. They discuss the theories involved with having mutananity accepted and eventually relocate to the Savage Land, where Magneto’s brotherhood is waiting to be trained by the two.

Sometime later, Nick Fury is questioned by General Ross while lying in a hospital bed after seemingly being saved by Wolverine during an earlier war. General Ross feverishly questions him about his previous involvement with the mutant known as Weapon X and the nature of Nick Fury’s unique physiology. After Fury dismisses his use as the “new” Captain America, he wonders about his usefulness in other ways.

The story skips forward for the brief description of Project Rebirth 2, including Fury later becomes involed with Project Rebirth 2, which includes the involvement of Dr. Franklin Storm, Bruce Banner, Dr. Hank Pym, and Dr. Richard Parker. During this time, Dr. Storm is contracted to work with the Baxter Building project as well as Project Rebirth. Their work with the facility is helped along by the use of a vial of Fury’s blood of which, none of the scientists know the truth of where the blood came from, (except Parker who suspected it). When Banner seems to have had a breakthrough, he and Dr. Pym decide to try it on themselves, starting with Banner. The trial goes horribly wrong and Banner, now as the Hulk destroys the building and seemingly kills both Richard and Mary Parker, leaving their infant son Peter an orphan.

The sight of the infant son in his mother’s arms shocks Banner back to himself and is quickly subdued by Fury. Taking the infant in to his arms, he whispers that it is good that Peter is young, because he won’t remember a thing.

Later, Fury infiltrates the Weapon X project, and, after the shock of the environment sinks in, Fury realizes that neither man nor mutant should ever know of man’s involvement in the mutant gene. This conclusion is acted upon when he kills all of the scientists and their experiments. The only mutant to make it out alive is T’Challa, whom Fury feels a connection with due to their tragic pasts.

Charles Xavier is next seen being speared in the back as an act of retaliation by Magneto, who claims Charles tried to attack him in his own mind. Magneto speaks of the mutant race’s fate to ascend like gods over homo sapien and his belief that God willed this to be.

In the present day, the Watchers speak through Sue Storm and tell of a certain doom that awaits before picking a herald. While the Fantastic Four wonder who this could be, Rick Jones is found by his family glowing in the backyard.

Retcons

Ultimate Origins provides a soft retcon for several stories originally presented within the various Ultimate imprints.

  • Nick Fury had displayed no indication of possessing any super-normal abilities except when he got his arm back in Ultimate Power after losing it in Ultimates 2.
  • Doctor Cornelius is portrayed in Ultimate X-Men as being a middle-aged man, certainly not an adult during WW2.
  • In Ultimate X-Men, Magneto wears a helmet to protect Xavier from reading his mind. In Ultimate Origins, Xavier can’t read Magneto’s mind even when he isn’t wearing it.
  • In Ultimate Spider-Man during the Venom arc, Peter’s parents are shown to be still alive when he is five years-old.

True Believers (comics)

Sunday, June 7th, 2009

Cover art for True Believers #1.

True Believers is an American comic book limited series from Marvel Comics, written by Cary Bates, with art by Paul Gulacy.

Publication history

The series launched as a five part storyline in July 30th, 2008.

Characters

The four main team members are:

  • Payback – Mavis Trent, a S.H.I.E.L.D. data analyst who uses her position to keep the True Believers safe from the Superhuman Registration Act.

Powers – Due to being bonded with an alien symbioite, Trent is able to transform into a silver skinned energy form. Unlike the Venom alien, this one is sustained when its host is in a state of bliss.

  • Headtrip – Tayln Roark , A relationship expert with hieghtened emapathic abilities. Max Trent’s former Girlfriend and first recruit in the True believers.
  • Red Zone – Theo Bomba, Fringe Conspircist with Heightend mental abilities due to accidental fusing of skull with alien alloy.
  • Battalus – Ozzie Tanaka , Former S.H.I.E.L.D. R&D Scientist. Uses Adavanced Battle Armor developed for Urban Combat Ozzie also has A Form of BPD Borderline Personality Disorder.

Plot

The series involves a team of new characters digging into the background goings-on in the Marvel Universe. The team is led by Payback, Mavis Trent, a S.H.I.E.L.D. data analyst.

Though a miniseries, True Believers is unusual in that each issue contains a central plot that is resolved by the end. Issue 1 features the team ending an underground fight club. This club is run by rich and powerful men who pay to have women abducted, drugged and forced to fight one another.

The second issue deals with a conspiracy to frame Reed Richards, Mr. Fantastic of the Fantastic Four, for driving under the influence of alcohol. This issue also sees Payback with Reynolds’ psychiatrist Dr. Cornelius Worth discussing her feelings with her father.

The third issue reveals the origin of Payback, and begins the search for the murderer of Payback’s Father.

The fourth gives the origins of Battalus and Red Zone. and reveals there’s more to The Murder of Payback’s Father

The Fifth reveals the Truth behind The Murder of Payback’s Father.

Reception

The first issue had estimated sales of 17,151 copies, placing it at number 132 in the sales chart. Issue #2 dropped to an estimate of 12,838 (149th).

True Believers has received mixed reviews. For instance, Broken Frontier was less impressed, feeling it didn’t live up to expectations suggesting “it is rather disappointing given what one might have hoped for” and that the “tone established by the writing crosses over to the art as well: it shows some nice potential, but fails to realize it fully”. However, they also feel that all hope isn’t lost and if “Bates and Gulacy really put their minds to it and are willing to push the limits of what they can do with this concept, it just might turn into something very special indeed. Keep an eye out for future issues” Comic Book Resources agrees and suggests that the story “is an original and timely concept, but the weak execution doesn’t carry it well. Bates’ craft seems to be a little rusty at best, and feels more than a little outdated at times” and that problems with the art partly come from script problems as “any artist would struggle to fit 15 panels on one page and still maintain a good flow.” Comics Bulletin is largely positive and concludes that “overall this issue presents an interesting if somewhat vague introduction to the characters” with the only downside being the colouring “Beredo does an estimable job but the technique seems so common that it fails to add anything”. They stop just shy of awarding full marks to the second issue, largely because the reviewer feels “a certain detachment from the principal character,” but the minor niggles about the art in the first issue have been addressed and they declare that they are “prepared to ratchet up my praise for Rain Beredo’s colours, too”. The online comic book reviewer for Scifipulse.net, Nicholas Yanes, is equally positive, writing that “this is a title that everyone should have on their pull list.”

Trinity (comic book)

Sunday, June 7th, 2009

Cover of Trinity #1 (Jun 4, 2008). Art by Carlos Pacheco.

Trinity is the title of an American weekly comic book limited series published by DC Comics that debuted during the first week of June, 2008.

Conception and production

Promotional artwork for the series featuring the focal characters, by Mark Bagley.

Busiek first pitched the idea in 2006 to Dan DiDio following the announcement of 52. His initial pitch involved a 12-page weekly book in which the first 7 pages were focused on an ongoing story with Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman, and the remaining 5 pages were used to promote the rest of the line. The book was planned to follow up 52, however it wound up being pushed back a year, and developing into a full 22-page book with two stories, and the promotional idea being dropped.

The series was the “mystery project” which had been mentioned by Kurt Busiek previously and was his reason for leaving Aquaman. Like 52, also by DC Comics, the series will last for 52 issues and will be self-contained. There will, however, be repercussions that are felt throughout the lead heroes’ solo ongoing titles and vice versa.

One of the differences between Trinity and earlier weekly comics is that it features two stories: the first, a 12-page lead story by Busiek and Mark Bagley, and the second, a 10-page backup by Busiek and Fabian Nicieza while Tom Derenick, Scott McDaniel, Mike Norton and others, work on the art. The book marks Bagley’s DC debut, after leaving a long tenure at Marvel Comics which included 110 consecutive issues of Ultimate Spider-Man.

Story

The story begins with Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman all experiencing the same dream. The dream is of someone screaming to be let out. After determining that none of the other heroes are having them, they reason that someone is attacking them directly. They start to hear the voice in the waking world too.

At the same time, a mysterious man calling himself Enigma approaches Morgaine Le Fey, and tells her that the three heroes are a “trinity”, keystones to the power of the universe itself (the keystone to the multiverse is the New Earth universe, this universe’s keystone is Earth, and Earth’s keystones are the Trinity), and convinces her in joining him in taking their places, through a mystic ritual.. To this end, they enlist Despero as an ally (as three are required to take the power of the Trinity, with Enigma seizing Batman’s place, Morgaine taking Wonder Woman’s, and Despero usurping Superman’s), and send out several agents, such the Dreambound, countless Gotham City criminals and the inhuman Howlers, to steal items connected to the heroes (including objects that could not conceivably be stolen, such as the Joker’s laughter) and countless relics related to Egyptian tarot, mark the heroes with mystic runes, obtain the Cosmic Egg containing Krona, and abduct the mystic Tarot, who recently was revealed to have a connection to a power known as the “Worldsoul”. Jose Delgado, Gangbuster, teams up with the Justice League of America to find Tarot, as he was guarding her when she was taken and feels he should help in her rescue.

Morgaine realizes why each third of the Trinity holds his or her share of the power: Batman is the pinnacle of human achievements, physical and mental; Superman is the ultimate freedom fighter, with an absolute will; and Wonder Woman’s message inspires all around her to do what is right to the end. She is also seen using Tarot’s abilities with the cards to foresee the future to engineer her plans more strictly.

The Trinity take note of these strange occurrences and investigate, along with the Justice League, Justice Society of America and Gangbuster. Meanwhile, they are occupied fighting an alien creature, Konvikt, who, after being nearly beaten by Green Lantern John Stewart, gets cocky when Stewart falls into a seizure and generates massive guns to attack him, by means unrelated to his ring, muttering in binary data. Stewart later relapses and again resumes speaking in binary and generating blades when explaining the origins of the Cosmic Egg and Krona to the new Firestorm. The machinery keeping watch on the Egg is broken, the Dark Trinity (Enigma, Morgaine, Despero), by means of Despero, having seized it as means of fueling the creation of the Dreambound from dreaming people from around the world, and a massive reality-warping spell, using Lois Lane’s notebook, Lex Luthor’s blood, the space shuttle Superman saved in his first public appearance, Jim Gordon’s pipe, the Joker’s laughter, cement from Crime Alley, Etta Candy’s security card, the magic clay used to animate Wonder Woman and Maxwell Lord’s skull as focusing points.

The JLA then departs to the antimatter universe, where they confront their counterparts, the Crime Syndicate of Amerika, in releasing countless prisoners they have taken from many worlds. The Trinity by then is starting to feel the ritual’s effects, and each member starts acting like another one. John Stewart’s powers are revealed to come from a Qwardian superweapon he absorbed, the Void Hound, and that is trying to escape containment by indirectly harming Stewart, as it slowly gains more power above him and his ring. While the JLA is successful in containing the CSA, the antimatter Earth falls into chaos, and they leave before the situation worsens.

Their search takes them to Le Fey’s castle, where the ritual is beginning, and attempt to stop the evil trio. However, the presence of the Trinity was actually what was required to complete the spell, and with it complete, the world is changed. In this new world, Batman, Superman and Wonder Woman never existed, and the Justice Society International patrols the world, with a ban in place on all non-licensed heroes. The inhabitants of Earth have only fleeting memories of how the world once was. The only one spared from the change was Firestorm, who was in Negative Space at the time, investigating the theft of the Cosmic Egg. Even Tarot and Gangbuster, who had managed to escape from the villain’s headquarters, are affected and seek help from Alfred Pennyworth, who is now a retired OSS agent who makes a living as an archeologist in the mountains surrounding the castle.

Firestorm then seeks John Stewart, who has to hide his status as a Green Lantern from the general populace, as the JSI have placed a ban on all Green Lanterns from Earth. Suddenly, the Void Hound again strikes and Stewart flees Earth. Meanwhile, Firestorm is targeted by the JSI and forcefully separated into Jason Rusch and Gehenna. Pennyworth gives Gangbuster and Tarot a scroll to be handed over to Hawkman, the leader of the JSI. The history of the scroll shows it was forged in Nth metal by Prince Khufu, one of Hawkman’s previous incarnations. When handed over and inspected by Hawkman, Jay Garrick and Alan Scott of the JSI, the scroll imbues them with renewed vitality and reveals to them that time was warped by the powers of the spell, and they set out to make things right, starting by fusing together Jason and Gehenna.

The villains come out of the ritual with power close to that of gods, only to discover that Despero had been replaced at the last part of the ritual by a disguised Kanjar Ro. Also, a new Trinity has been formed in the alternate world, consisting of Black Adam as a stand-in for Wonder Woman, Tomorrow Woman filling in Superman’s role, and Green Arrow now becoming Gotham’s protector, and later due to a ripple in reality the role was turned over from Green Arrow and Speedy to Ragman and Tatters. As all of this takes place, Krona has escaped the Cosmic Egg and seeks the aid of the Controllers to contact the consciousness of the Universe itself (probably stemming from his earlier experience with it in the JLA/Avengers crossover, when he managed to briefly contain her to force the secrets of creation out of her), but is betrayed and instead destroys their laboratory planet when the Controllers attempt to restrain him and drain his energies for study. Upon doing this, he hears the planet’s consciousness, “freed”. Krona then leaves to do the same for as many planets as he can.

However, his is not the only case: reality seems to be unstable and some special people keep seeing visions of either how reality is supposed to be, or alternate worlds continually overlapping (all of this due to Kanjar Ro’s substitution of Despero, in a bid to seize the power promised to him). Tomorrow Woman starts acting strangely and evaporates or duplicates, bus stations keep changing to airports, train stations, spaceports or wild west saloons. Tarot goes to Opal City, where her cards show she will be helped. There, she finds Charity O’Dare, a fellow tarot mystic, and is instructed on the power of the Worldsoul-a bond linking a woman to the living spirit of Earth. She realizes she needs to help fix the situation or she will die along with Earth. Morgaine and Enigma, bickering about their usage of power, agree to find Despero and complete the ritual. As a replacement for the Cosmic Egg’s power, Morgaine finds a new source of energy for her incantation-the souls of every woman who has ever held the Worldsoul bond.

Konvikt gets lost after receiving power from Graak, a tiny alien who accompanied him, and, acting upon the knowledge of that he killed an innocent civilian during his first confrontation with the Justice League, attempts to reach to the killed man’s family to offer himself as a willing slave as penance. However, in the restructured world, the man never died. This leaves Konvikt at a loss, given how he has remained unaffected by Morgaine’s spell. He then remembers how he ended up in his situation: he was an employee for a powerful man in his world, and had been falling in love with the man’s daughter. However, the girl was killed, and Konvikt was blamed. He was sentenced to exile, before he was even allowed to attempt to atone; the ship that led him to Earth was his exile pod, having malfunctioned during its journey; Graak is revealed as his former lawyer. Enigma appears, offering a position in the new order and the possibility to reshape reality so the man he killed in the former timeline remains living or dead, or changing his timeline altogether. Konvikt takes the chance to replace Despero as a stand-in for Superman and accepts Enigma’s offer, remaking the Dark Trinity.

Alfred realizes as well he is part of a larger group, one needed to bring back the true Trinity. He gathers Richie Grayson, an embittered mobster, Lois Lane, an aggressive shock reporter, Tom Tresser, outlaw and vigilante extraordinaire, and Kara In-Ze, Interceptor of the JSI, and tells them the group was better people in another world, relating himself and Grayson to the world’s greatest detective, Lois and Interceptor to the world’s mightiest hero, and Tresser to a great warrior. All agree to hear him out and find the last member of the cabal, Donna Troy, now living as a librarian in Virginia.

As all of this happens, the Dreambound awaken inside a JSI prison, and recreate their fallen teammate, Sun-Chained-in-Ink, from the Tattooed Man. As he, the Trans-Volitional Man, the Swashbuckler and Primat escape, they are again recruited by Enigma and Morgaine, along with most of the detainees at the JSI prison. In space, the Void Hound takes control of Stewart’s ring and opens a black hole leading to Earth, as Kanjar Ro is captured by Despero, to be punished for his bid of power. In exchange for leniency, he offers Despero the location of the captured CSA to add to his army. Despero then starts marshaling his forces through the black hole Stewart left.

Alfred and the others he’s gathered go to the Happy Harbor cave in which the JLA was first based. They perform a ritual of their own, which allows them to recover the memories of the vanished Earth. They are then transported to a different world. Below them is a town of aliens in a Middle Ages civilization. They witness the judgment of a thief in which a Sunlord, a Truthlord and a Nightlord decide the fate of the thief. When Alfred and the group turn around they see the mountain face surrounding the village has been carved with giant likenesses of Batman, Wonder Woman, and Superman. The group starts moving and joins the town on a pilgrimage. Every night during the course of the pilgrimage a different part of a story is told; it turn out the world they appeared in is the world contained within the Cosmic Egg. The Pilgrims tell the story of what life was like with Krona as their god. After several generation of following Krona’s every order (a brutal, relentless pursuit of knowledge including cruel wars) they were abandoned by him when he was released. The people of the planet were all about to kill themselves, when Batman, Wonder Woman, and Superman all arrived. The three of them all helped the planet rebuild itself in Krona’s wake, teaching them about beauty, hope, justice, mercy, etc. Meanwhile, Tomorrow Woman has revived herself by sheer willpower and saved Metropolis, but in exchange releases dangerous, immensely powerful world-shattering rifts all through Earth.

Meanwhile, villains from all over the DC universe are being gathered by Morgaine. The Space Ranger tries to spy on what’s going on for the JSI, but is discovered and has to abandon his mission. Luckily the Atom, who was hiding out on Space Ranger’s clothes, is able to drop off before Space Ranger leaves, and acts as the spy instead. When asked why so many villains are being gathered, Morgaine and Enigma reveal that their first plan to rebuild the earth the way they wanted it didn’t work, so now they are gathering villains that would fit into the Major Arcana so they can bring their own order to this new world. When Hawkman hears this he realizes what he has to do. Without realizing it he’s started to figure out what heroes would fit into the Major Arcana as well. He thought it was just an obsession, and never finished it, but now knows it was to counteract Enigma and Morgaine’s plans. Unfortunately, he is having a hard time figuring out the rest of the Major Arcana. Charity offers to help him figure it out.

Morgaine’s plans consist in sealing the major world-shifting rifts to drain their power; the team who first reaches the rifts and seals them leaves with the acquired power. The JSI loses the first rift to Lady Shiva, Zoom and Polaris in London, but as Charity proves she can sense the readings Tarot is doing for the Dark Trinity, the Tomorrow Woman, Flash and Green Arrow manage to drain the energy of the following rift in Brazil. Meanwhile, the Friends (Alfred’s group) hear a story from the Pilgrims as to how Atmahn, the Night Judge (the god-like form of Batman within the Egg) once rescued a child whose family had been killed, empowering him to fight back criminals, giving him the name of Rabat of the Golden Wing. However, those who had rejected the order the Judge brought had formed the Laughing Chaos, and it beat Rabat to death. The Friends realize it is a retelling of Jason Todd’s death at the Joker’s hands.

The Twelve (comics)

Saturday, June 6th, 2009

Promotion art for The Twelve #1<br />
by Kaare Andrews.

The Twelve is an American comic book limited series from Marvel Comics, which the company announced in July 2007 would run twelve issues beginning spring 2008, with the creative team of writer J. Michael Straczynski and artist Chris Weston. The series stars 12 obscure characters from Marvel’s earliest incarnation as Timely Comics from the 1940s period historians and fans call the Golden Age of Comic Books.

Publication history

According to Universaldork.com, on January 11, 2009, fans of the Marvel comic The Twelve, which started publishing in 2007, received some disappointing news from Joe Quesada:

THE TWELVE has momentarily become a casualty of the success of its creative team. First J. Michael Straczynski became one of the most sought after writers in Hollywood following the release and success of the film he wrote, CHANGELING.Then, Chris Weston signed on to do conceptual art and storyboarding for a completely separate film project at around the same time! So for the moment, while they stick pick away at it, THE TWELVE is on hold until such time as Joe and Chris free up from their incredibly hectic schedules. “

The Twelve #9 has been cancelled and will be re-solicited at a later date.

Plot synopsis

As related by the Phantom Reporter: During the World War II Battle of Berlin in 1945, a dozen of the many superheroes and masked crimefighters of that era are ambushed by Nazis in the basement of an SS building, where the heroes are gassed and placed into cryogenic suspension for later experimentation, but the building is air bombed soon after and anyone aware of their situation is killed. In the present day, construction workers find this bunker, and the Twelve, as they become known, are revived. Put into the care of the U.S. military, they are housed together in a mansion where they receive counselling and support, are gradually made to understand that decades have passed, and are offered a role as heroes in the 21st century.

The Twelve adjust in various ways: The Blue Blade becomes a celebrity; the Phantom Reporter starts a column for the Daily Bugle, Dynamic Man allies himself with the FBI and other law-enforcement agencies and throws himself into heroics; the Black Widow reconnects as the “instrument of vengeance” of an unknown party and begins going on missions; and Rockman bemoans being cut off from an underground kingdom that may or may not exist. On ballistics evidence, police arrest the Laughing Mask for a 1940s murder. In addition, the daughter of the creator of the robot Electro reclaims possession of the robot.

In framing story set “much later”, the Phantom Reporter, gun in hand, stands over the body of the Blue Blade, regretting the man’s death.

Membership

The Twelve are:

  1. The Blue Blade
  2. The Black Widow (not the modern character of that name)
  3. Captain Wonder
  4. Dynamic Man
  5. Electro
  6. The Fiery Mask
  7. The Laughing Mask
  8. Master Mind Excello
  9. Mister E
  10. The Phantom Reporter
  11. Rockman
  12. The Witness

Collected editions

The series is being collected into two volumes:

  • Volume 1 (collects The Twelve #1-6, 144 pages, hardcover, October 2008, ISBN 0-7851-3372-0)

The Authority

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

The Authority, as featured on the cover for the

The Authority is a superhero comic book published by DC Comics under the Wildstorm imprint. It was created by Warren Ellis and Bryan Hitch, and follows the adventures of the Authority, a superhero team mainly composed of Ellis-created characters taken from Stormwatch – a title Ellis had previously written.

It is notable for its intense graphic violence, grand scale and visual flair, often described as “widescreen” comics, and the uncompromising attitudes of its characters.

Core roster

The founding members of the Authority are

  • Jenny Sparks, the Spirit of the Twentieth Century, the group’s founder and original leader
  • Apollo, “the Sun God”
  • Midnighter, “Night’s Bringer of War”
  • Jeroen Thorndike, the Doctor (initially thought to be the second Doctor, he was subsequently shown to be the latest in a long line)
  • Angela Spica, the second Engineer
  • Jack Hawksmoor, “King of Cities”, leader of the Authority 2000-2005, and
  • Shen Li-Min, a.k.a. Swift.

Following the “Outer Dark” story arc (see below), Jenny Sparks is replaced with

  • Jenny Quantum, the Spirit of the Twenty-First Century, Authority leader 2005 to present.

After “The Eternal Return” (again, see below), new members of the Authority are

  • Rose Tattoo and
  • Habib ben Hassan, Thorndike’s successor as Doctor.

The Authority’s base of operations is the Carrier, a gigantic interdimensional “shiftship” existing everywhere on Earth at the same time and capable of moving through every imaginable plane of existence. Usually referred to as a female, the Carrier is in fact sentient and could be considered an additional member of the team.

Storylines

Main article: List of The Authority story arcs

Publication history

Volume 1

Ellis/ Hitch Era

In 1999, Warren Ellis and Bryan Hitch introduced readers to the Authority, a team of superheroes who promised to get the job done by whatever means necessary. They were: Jenny Sparks, the Spirit of the 20th Century; Jack Hawksmoor, the king of cities; Swift, a Tibetan woman with wings and sharp talons; Apollo, a bio-engineered gay Superman pastiche; The Midnighter, a Batman pastiche who was the lover of Apollo and possessed the ability to foresee his opponents’ moves in combat; The Engineer, a scientist who replaced her blood with nine pints of nano-technology; and the Doctor, a Dutch junkie with the combined powers of hundreds of shamans who had come before him.

The Ellis/Hitch run of The Authority lasted 12 issues, divided in three story-arcs: The Circle, Shiftships, and The Outer Dark. They showed an increasingly dangerous enemy: an international terrorist (previously seen in Stormwatch), an invasion from an alternative Earth, and “God,” the hostile alien creator of the Solar system, with corresponding high scale violence and property destruction. The usage of a narrative tool called decompression, taken mainly from manga and novel in American super-hero comic-books, was distinctive: big, panoramic panels were used to examine action in deep detail, with a slower rhythm and lighter plotting per issue.

The run was hugely successful with readers, providing a form of large scale superhero action which was (at the time) not common in comics. Ellis never obviously delved into the politics of his characters; he left that to the reader to decide. This was soon to change after Ellis and Hitch finished their run on the series.

Millar/Quitely Era

Cover to #19. Art by Frank Quitely
Cover featuring Swift.

Replacing Ellis and Hitch were Mark Millar and the pseudonymous Frank Quitely. The Millar/Quitely run kept the widescreen narrative and violence of its predecessor, and added an irreverent and somehow revolutionary attitude to the characters, who fought social injustice and, if needed, the status quo, not minding crossing some lines to pursue their own agenda of making a finer world. This interesting and polemic analysis of the role of the super-hero in society was extremely popular with fans and critics alike.

During Millar’s run, the Authority, now under Jack Hawksmoor’s leadership following Jenny Sparks’ death at the end of the 20th Century, faced such foes as a thinly-veiled Marvel Universe, the Earth itself, and the US government, who had grown tired of the Authority’s interference with the activities of the world’s governments, and replaced them with a duplicate team of superheroes backed by the G7 group of nations. Also, Jenny Sparks’ successor, Jenny Quantum, was adopted by a now-married Apollo and Midnighter, and the Doctor overcame his drug addiction after feeling guilty for not being around for one of the Authority’s biggest challenges after suffering an overdose of heroin.

This run proved to be highly controversial and led into the title suffering from censorship by DC. The first instance of this censorship was a removal of a kiss between Apollo and Midnighter due to DC’s concern that it would lead to negative media reports. The matter would come to a head after the events of the September 11 attacks during Millar’s final story arc, “Brave New World”. This happened in issue #22, which proved to be Quitely’s last issue as artist. Issue #23 was delayed after the 9/11 attacks, and a one-shot special (written and drawn by Bryan Hitch) entitled The Authority: Widescreen was cancelled outright due to concerns about the violence in that issue.

To allow Quitely’s replacement to catch up, a four issue fill-in storyline called “Transfer Of Power” written by Tom Peyer, was published featuring the G7 Authority team. The final Millar arc began with issue #27, and it was in this issue where the most serious censorship of story and art would occur in the series. Scenes of necrophilia, violence set in New York, and scenes of the Authority’s members being humiliated and degraded were changed from what was originally drawn by Quitely’s replacement, Art Adams..

Also altered were panels clearly showing George W. Bush being portrayed as a cowardly figure. This was felt to be unpatriotic after 9/11 hence the editing of the panels, replacing Bush with a fictional president (seemingly President Merkin Muffley from Stanley Kubrick’s film Dr. Strangelove). Further editing occurred in issue 28 which caused this issue to be delayed. These delays in shipping were now affecting the titles sales, causing them to drop.Millar’s final issue was drawn by Gary Erskine after Adams had left the title, unhappy with how his art had been censored.

Volume 2

The series was subsequently restarted, and was written by Robbie Morrison with art by Dwayne Turner (except for the single issue “Behemoth”, which featured art by Tan Eng Huat, and “Street Life”, which was pencilled by Whilce Portacio). This incarnation of the series lasted for 15 issues (numbered 0 to 14), and prior to issue 10, the series was part of the Coup d’état crossover that included The Authority, Stormwatch: Team Achilles, Sleeper, and Wildcats v3.0. This crossover revolved around the Authority taking over the United States of America.

Revolution

The series was again restarted in October 2004 under the title The Authority: Revolution. This series was written by Ed Brubaker with art by Dustin Nguyen and Richard Friend. It focuses on the troubles the Authority faces as the rulers of America.

Volume 3

Morrison/ Ha Era

Promotional image by Gene Ha.

In February 2006, it was announced that Grant Morrison would write The Authority Volume 3, with art by Gene Ha. The series was to be published bimonthly, beginning in October 2006. Morrison has “cited Warren Ellis’s original run as an approach he wants to return to, saying his new approach will allow the team to be effectual again”.

Morrison and Ha’s first issue was released in December 2006. It followed a family man named Ken in his search for a downed submarine. The sub apparently encountered something massive and unexpected in the depths of the ocean that caused it to be destroyed. Careful readers will notice one of the Authority’s “doors” appeared just before the interior of the sub ignited. Indeed, when Ken finds the ship, many of the crew are missing. The issue ends as Ken and his search party encounter the Authority’s carrier, 50 miles long, lying on the ocean floor. Notably, no members of the Authority appear in this first issue.

The second issue eventually was out five months afterwards, and dealt with the Authority’s reaction to crash-landing on an Earth far less developed than their own. Ken meets The Authority but begins to question their methodology.

In September 2007, Gene Ha was quoted at Newsarama as saying that he did not believe his run with Morrison would continue. “…I don’t think The Authority #3 by Grant Morrison and Gene Ha is ever coming out. Grant is busy redesigning the DC Universe and I’ve moved onto new projects. Most importantly, it seems that editor Scott Dunbier has been forced out of Wildstorm. There is no #3 script, there may never be a #3 script.”

Scott Peterson announced at Wondercon 2008 that he had talked to Morrison two weeks ago about The Authority, and there is “very serious progress” and it should start shipping again toward the end of this year. When asked to comment upon his inability to complete further issues of the Authority, Morrison has said that ‘”Authority was just a disaster.” He said that they were doing it and running late when 52 started, but when he saw the reviews to first issue, “I said fuck it.” ‘

On the 19th April 2008, Wildstorm has released further information on the upcoming completion of Morrison’s run, announcing the Keith Giffen will complete Grant Morrison’s scripts. Unfortunately, although he will be completing the full twelve issue run, he ran into an immediate problem: “I stepped into a book that was in the midst of a type of storyline that is probably my least favorite in comics. And that is, heroes come to our earth” However, according to Giffen, this is only the first short arc of the longer story:

The story that Grant started wraps up in two more issues, then it moves into another adventure.

This book is about the Authority having trouble with the Carrier and they’re trying to find their way home. It’s almost like the Odyssey, in a way, as trying to find your way home and going through various adventures. And this is what Grant had planned. This is in keeping with the basic structure that he told me over the phone. But then, I’ll put in my point of view.

Volume 4

Abnett/Lanning/Colby Era

Main article: World’s End (comics)

It has been announced that in the new World’s End status quo, Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning will be take over the writing duties, accompanied by artist Simon Coleby. Senior Wildstorm editor Ben Abernathy has also stated that four issues have already been completed by the new team – “I can say honestly, based on the four issues of script and art that are already in-the-can, people will NOT be disappointed!”

Although Abnett and Lanning have signed an exclusive contract with Marvel, it allows them to finish existing projects, which includes their fifteen issue run on The Authority.

Miniseries, specials, and crossovers

Authority Annual 2000

This annual written by Joe Casey and penciled by Cully Hammer depicts the Authority dealing with a number of the undead as part of the Devil’s Night crossover running throughout several Wildstorm titles at the time. Collected in The Authority: Earth Inferno and Other Stories.

Jenny Sparks: The Secret History of the Authority (2000-2001)

This five-issue miniseries written by Mark Millar and penciled by John McCrea recalls Jenny Sparks’s first meetings with her future teammates. She also encounters notable historical and fictional characters such as Hitler and Rumpole.

Ruling the World (2000)

This was a crossover with Ellis’ other creation, Planetary, written by Ellis, and illustrated by Phil Jimenez and Andy Lanning.

It was particularly notable in that despite being a crossover title the two teams (Planetary and the Authority) never actually meet during the course of the story, thus avoiding the usual crossover schtick of “characters fight each other over some misunderstanding, only to later team up against the real enemy”, a well worn format that most crossovers seem to follow. However, it did not completely avoid this schtick as Planetary fought a version of the Authority from an alternate universe.

It was published first in prestige format and later collected in the Planetary: Crossing Worlds graphic novel.

Wildstorm Summer Special (2001)

A short anthology containing three stories of characters from the Wildstorm universe and includes the following: a Jack Hawksmoor story by Warren Ellis and Cully Hammer; a story about the Engineer’s sex life by Paul Jenkins and Georges Jeanty; a short story regarding the Wildcats member Zealot and; a series of artists’ pin ups depicting various characters from the Authority and Wildcats. Collected in The Authority: Earth Inferno and Other Stories.

Kev Saga

The Authority: Kev (2002)

This single issue story written by Garth Ennis and penciled by Glenn Fabry introduced Kev Hawkins, a Special Air Services corporal turned unwilling assassin (due to a pesky affair when a tiger ate a cabinet minister under his protection). In the story, he is called in by the British government to remove the Authority. Supplied with an alien-created gun and ammunition, Kev manages to do this rather easily. He soon discovers to his horror that the British government wasn’t behind his orders, but rather an alien with designs on Earth who masqueraded as his superior. Kev must convince the Carrier to rewind time and return the Authority to life so they can save Earth. The Authority decide to let Kev off, but Kev still gets beat up by Apollo and Midnighter for making a homophobic remark.

Continuity Note: This story is clearly placed before Volume 1’s Earth Inferno and Transfer of Power storylines (where the American government has the post-Jenny Sparks Authority neutralized by Seth and replaced with the G7-appointed Authority), as Kev’s “boss” comments on her order to eliminate the Authority: “We assumed the Americans would do something about them, but Washington seems to be dragging its heels.” Additionally, as evidenced by Jenny Sparks’ absence (as well as no mention or appearance of Baby Jenny Quantum) we can presume this story takes place early in the period between Volume 1’s Outer Dark [Issue # 12 being the last live appearance of Jenny Sparks] and the early period of The Nativity [Issue # 13 being the introduction of Jenny Quantum] storylines.

The Authority: More Kev (2004)

Ennis and Fabry re-teamed for this four-issue miniseries in which transdimensional aliens called the Rakulai threaten Earth in their search for their #1 archcriminal, Slippery B’eeef the Galactic Thief. Years ago he flew to Earth and masqueraded as a British cabinet minister, the same one that was eaten by a tiger. This, while under Kev’s protection. Apollo and Midnighter must team up with their favorite homophobic SAS agent to find B’eeef’s remains, since the Rakulai can regrow themselves from a single cell.

Continuity Note: Again, Jenny Quantum makes no appearance in this story, even in team scenes aboard the Carrier, so it may be presumed that More Kev takes place, like Kev before it, in the same period of media exposure and activity the Authority experienced after Jenny Sparks’ death and Jenny Quantum is introduced. The Midnighter’s quote of it being “a couple of years” since his first encounter with Kev indicates that the Authority had been active for at least that long between Outer Dark and The Nativity. Additionally, Kev’s boss comments “… while the Americans have adopted a typically confrontational attitude in their handling of the Authority, we at M.I.5 prefer a more circumspect approach…” which wouldn’t have been the case post-Brave New World, as the UK took part in the replacement G7 Authority. On the other hand, a caption in issue #2 places the story in 2004, which would make Jenny Quantum (born on the cusp of the popular millennium) four years old at the telling. In addition, the boss’ comment could have been in reference to Seth’s actions in Brave New World, downplaying the UK’s involvement.

The Authority: The Magnificent Kevin (2005-2006)

In this five-issue miniseries, written by Garth Ennis and illustrated by Carlos Ezquerra, (with covers by Glenn Fabry), Kev is again allied with the Authority. After all of the Authority except for Midnighter are neutralized by a bizarre intruder, Kev is sent to pick him up. Kev tells about how he entered the British S.A.S., and he and Midnighter uncover underground dealings by the British military to create their own superhumans. At long last, Kev gets his chance to redeem himself and escape the pall hanging over his career — but at a cost.

Continuity Note: As with the previous Kev stories, Jenny Sparks and Jenny Quantum are notably absent, placing it the same post-Sparks/ pre-Quantum period shown in the early pages of The Nativity. There is a mention of a German-speaking Pope in the second part of the story, a possible reference to Benedict, who was ordained in 2005, but whether this should be viewed as a topical reference from the publishing year of the issue or a key continuity event in the story is subjective. Though in Authority continuity, Pope John Paul had been slain in a hurricane, to be replaced by a black man.

A Man Called Kev (2006-2007)

Garth Ennis and Carlos Ezquerra return for the fourth installment of Kev’s adventures. No member of the Authority actually appears in this miniseries, in which Kev encounters his old tiger-sheltering friend Danny Redburn and deals with trouble from his own past.

The Authority: Scorched Earth (2003)

This single issue story was written by Robbie Morrison and illustrated by Frazer Irving, and published (and presumed to take place directly) between Volumes 2 and 3. The Earth’s Sun is suffering a major, potentially cataclysmic, upheaval. Its temperature is rising at an impossible rate and enormous solar flares are erupting from the photosphere, sending fireballs directly to Earth. The Authority finds out that Winter, the former field commander of Stormwatch Prime and an old friend of Hawksmoor’s, is behind it. After he piloted SkyWatch into the sun, his energy absorbing powers made him become one with it. Trapped in eternal agony and enraged by the cruelty on Earth, Winter wanted to destroy it. The Authority are forced to cage him inside the sun.

The Authority: Human on the Inside (2004)

This single issue story was written by John Ridley and illustrated by Ben Oliver, and set between Volume 1’s Brave New World and Volume 2’s Reality Incorporated, published in hardcover and softcover. A story of vengeance and despair, showing the Authority manipulated by various enemies, such as the father of Rush (one of the G7 superhumans who replaced the Authority) and “The One Who Has Lost All Hope”. Jackson King, formerly Battalion of StormWatch, leads the Authority briefly after Jack Hawksmoor is wounded in battle. They are able to overcome their human faults (Apollo and Midnighter’s insecurity about their relationship, the Doctor’s drug addiction, the Engineer’s fears of whether or not she is human, etc.) and stop the future itself from being destroyed.

The Authority/Lobo

The Authority/ Lobo: Jingle Hell (2004)

This single issue book was written by Keith Giffen (story), and Alan Grant (dialogue), and illustrated by Simon Bisley. Set during Christmas early in the Volume 2 era, as Baby Jenny Quantum is of toddler age, walking and talking. Baby Jenny Quantum, left to her own devices on Christmas Eve, comes across a Lobo comic book in an unexplored area of the Carrier. In the book. Lobo is shown killing Santa Claus. Upset, her imagination runs loose and she accidentally brings Lobo to the Wildstorm universe, where he proceeds to hunt down the Authority at the behest of the parasites living in “God’s” corpse (from Volume 1’s Outer Dark storyline, now floating in orbit around Jupiter). The parasites offer God’s fresh organs (valuable at the Intergalactic Organ Gambling tables) as payment to Lobo.

The Authority/ Lobo: Spring Break Massacre (2005)

Giffen, Grant, and Bisley re-team for this single-issue story, presumably set during the Volume 2 era, for the same reasons mentioned above.

Wildstorm Winter Special (2005)

A short anthology containing four stories about characters from the Wildstorm universe and includes the following: a story about the Wildcats member Zealot; an adventure of Midnighter and Apollo’s written by Tom Peyer and Cary Nord; a story about Wildstorm hero Deathblow and; a story depicting Jack Hawksmoor by Will Pfeifer and Scott Iwahashi.

The Authority: Prime (2007 – 2008)

In July 2007, it was announced that Christos Gage and Darick Robertson would do an intended story arc as a miniseries instead. This is because of scheduling problems with the current Morrison/Ha run on the title.

The Authority: Prime is a six-issue miniseries, as the intended arc would have spanned issues #6 to #11 of The Authority. It will feature the renewed Stormwatch Prime, who along with the Authority investigate a recently-discovered secret bunker that once belonged to Henry Bendix.

The Secret History of The Authority: Jack Hawksmoor (2008)

A six-issue miniseries shedding light on the life of Jack Hawksmoor before he joined Stormwatch and The Authority, featuring art by Fiona Staples, covers by Cully Hamner, and written by Mike Costa.

Collected editions

The entire run of The Authority (vol. 1) is collected in four trade paperbacks:

  • Relentless (collects # 1-8, ISBN 1-56389-661-3)
  • Under New Management (collects # 9-16, ISBN 1-56389-756-3)
  • Earth Inferno and Other Stories (collects # 17-20, the Annual 2000 and the Summer Special)
  • Transfer of Power (collects # 22-29)

The Authority #21 is collected in The Monarchy: Bullets Over Babylon trade, since it was the starting point for The Monarchy series.

The series was also collected in oversized slipcased hardcovers with extras:

  • The Absolute Authority Vol. 1 (collects # 1-12)
  • The Absolute Authority Vol. 2 (collects # 13-20, 22, & 27-29)

Three volumes collect The Authority (vol. 2):

  • Harsh Realities (collects Vol 2 # 0-5)
  • Fractured Worlds (collects Vol 2 # 6-14)
  • Coup d’état (collects the Coup d’état crossover)

The Revolution series has been collected in two trade paperbacks:

  • The Authority: Revolution Book 1 (collects # 1-6)
  • The Authority: Revolution Book 2 (collects # 7-12)

The issues from The Authority (vol. 4) are being collected:

  • The Authority: World’s End (136 pages, August 2009, ISBN 1401223621)

So far the Kev stories have been collected into three trade paperbacks:

  • The Authority: Kev (collects Kev # 1 and More Kev # 1-4)
  • The Authority: The Magnificent Kevin (collects The Magnificent Kevin # 1-5)
  • The Authority: A Man Called Kev: Volume 3 (Collecting the hit 5-issue miniseries! After murdering his boss in a nasty government scheme, Kev Hawkins has been banished from the United Kingdom under pain of death. What does the world hold for a man with little life experience or job training beyond wetworks and assassination? 112 pages)

The Lobo stories were collected in:

  • Lobo/Authority: Holiday Hell (Wildstorm, 160 pages, August 2006, ISBN 1-4012-0992-0):
    • “The Lobo Paramilitary Christmas Special” (1991)
    • “Jingle Hell” (2004)
    • “Spring Break Massacre” (2005)
    • “Two Dangerous Ideas” (starring Apollo & Midnighter, by Tom Peyer and Cary Nord, in Wildstorm Winter Special, 2005)
    • “A Small World After all” (starring Jack Hawksmoor, by Will Pfeifer and Scott Iwahashi, in Wildstorm Winter Special, 2005)

Other members of the Authority

The Nativity

  • Dr. Krigstein briefly joined the Authority at the end of The Nativity but was thrown out when the Authority was displaced during Brave New World and Transfer of Power. The Carrier still holds some of Krigstein’s odd “experiments” and tech in his former quarters.

Transfer of Power

During the Peyer-written story arc Transfer of Power, the members of the Authority were temporarily replaced with analogues who had roughly the same powers. Their names were references to and/or parodies of the original characters’ names. Unlike the original Authority, this group was intentionally selected by a council which sought to have heroes representing the G7 nations. During this story arc, the original members were believed dead or incapacitated in some fashion.

  • The Colonel, a British ex-footballer who was the de facto leader of the Authority. He had abilities similar to Jenny Sparks’, although apparently limited to producing electric shocks. He behaved like the classic football hooligan, and incorporated many of the more negative aspects of British working class stereotypes. He was also quite demoralizing (and incompetent) as the group leader as he would insult every member of the team on a regular basis.
  • Street, Jack Hawksmoor’s black gangster analogue. His powers were somewhat different, in that he could cause the city to manifest stone-based avatars to fight. He was American and willfully ignorant.
  • Rush, like Swift, had wings, the origin of which was later explained, in the graphic novel “Human on the Inside”, to be the result of posthuman surgery at the behest of her father, Dr. Ledbedder. She was selected to represent Canada, and her name is an obvious reference to the popular rock band of the same name (see Rush), as she is also known as “Canada’s premiere singer-songwriter”. The character herself claimed she was a lesbian.
  • Teuton, Apollo’s analogue. He was German, more than a touch insane, prone to weeping, and more than a little bi-curious. He made continual strides to explore this with Last Call. It was hinted that he may have been a clone.
  • Last Call, The Midnighter’s analogue, was a reactionary homophobe as a result of everyone just assuming that he must be gay as well, but his homophobia saves the team on one occasion to disprove that. He was from Italy and was an F-1 driver before receiving his upgrades.
  • The Surgeon, given control over the Doctor’s powers, was never fully accepted by the collective consciousness of the previous Doctors, nor did he want to be. He was French and a 21st century alchemist.
  • Machine, was given the nanotechnology extracted from the Engineer’s body (while Angela Spica’s blood was temporarily replaced with that of a heroin addict), which was billed as “the finest of Japanese picotechnology”. She was Japanese.
  • Chaplain Action, self-proclaimed “He-Man of the Cloth,” a superpowered religious figure affiliated with the team at The Colonel’s behest in order to give the Authority a more pious, morally-grounded image as a PR stunt. The ruse backfires, however, as Chaplain Action takes his job much more seriously than anticipated. He demonstrates superhuman strength, as well as an invulnerability to The Colonel’s electrical powers (to which he responds, “Nothing shocks me, Colonel.”).

Human on the Inside

  • Jackson King, previously known as Battalion and the third Weatherman. A powerful telekinetic, he led the team for a short time at the behest of the American government during the graphic novel Human on the Inside while Jack Hawksmoor was crippled. When Hawksmoor was healed, King left the team.
  • Danny Chan, a seemingly Asian martial artist. In reality, he was a cybernetic spy sent by the U.S. Government to infiltrate the Authority and destroy them from within during Human on the Inside. He kissed the Engineer and then Midnighter, trying to create trouble inside the team. When he was discovered by the Engineer, she immediately destroyed him in a rage.

The Authoriteens

Appearing in Gen¹³, the “Authoriteens” are a teenaged version of the Authority’s 2007 roster, from an alternate universe without grown-ups and where many of the Wildstorm characters are children or teenagers.

  • Kid Apollo. A teenage Apollo, every bit as powerful as his namesake although quicker to use violent force, he defeated Caitlin Fairchild, who is believed the strongest teenager in the Wildstorm Universe. He’s “somewhat overprotective of Daybreaker”, but his teammates cannot figure out why. He’s killed by Grunge, forced to use his powers to mimic the suicide booth the Authoriteens were about to use on his teammates. His death causes the return of the whole team into their dimension, a source of grieving for Daybreaker and a mental breakdown in Grunge.
  • Daybreaker. A teenage Midnighter. He is slang spewing, mischievous, brash and slightly immature. Despite having the same enhancement of his grown-up counterpart, Daybreaker (apparently called “Denny”) is very easily distracted, which means his ability to calculate thousands of outcomes for a fight is somewhat lacking.
  • The Contractor. A teenaged Engineer, she appears very proud of her cybernetic enhancement. Due to her younger age, she doesn’t share the “nude” look with the Engineer, appearing instead as wearing a darker metal swimsuit on her metal-looking body.
  • The Intern. A teenage Doctor, as a trainee he doesn’t have full Doctor powers but is aware of the Multiverse, and able to traverse safely through “The Gutters”, his version of “The Bleed”. He was able to take Rainmaker and Freefall into Gutters and trap them there.
  • Nestling. A teenage Swift, she’s feisty and cheery. Daybreaker refers to her as “inda-kay ampy-tray”, as Nestling claims to be unable to let a boy go away without at least a kiss.
  • Jack Hatfield. As Jack Hawksmoor is the King of Cities, Jack Hatfield is the spirit of the small town. Dressed as a farm-boy, and speaking with stereotypical southern inflections, Jack draws his powers from the country towns.

Awards

The series won the Squiddy Award for Best Character Team in 1999 and 2000.

Analogues

  • Steven Grant created an analogue of the Authority in Marvel’s X-Man series made up of Nicola Zeitgeist (Jenny Sparks), City Dweller (Jack Hawksmoor), Nightfighter (Midnighter), Technocrat (Engineer II), Thor (Apollo), Whitebird (Swift), and Professor X (The Doctor). This team operated out of the Foldcastle capable of teleporting them anywhere. (X-Man #71-72)
  • Action Comics #775, written by Joe Kelly with art by Doug Mahnke, featured an analogue of the Authority called the Elite. The Elite come into conflict with Superman over their use of extreme and often fatal methods against supervillains and are ultimately taken down by Superman. Part of this involved Superman faking fatal methods against the team, stunning and confusing them.

Secret Six (comics)

Monday, June 1st, 2009

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The Secret Six is the name of three distinct, fictional comic book teams in the DC Comics universe, plus an alternate universe’s fourth team. Each team has had six members, led by a mysterious figure named Mockingbird whom the characters assume to be one of the six themselves.

This comic book team is unrelated to either the 1931 gangster movie The Secret Six or the real-life covert group of radical abolitionists who assisted American Civil War-era revolutionary John Brown.

Publication history

Original Secret Six

The Secret Six first appeared during the Silver Age of comic books in the initial team’s seven-issue title, Secret Six (May 1968 – May 1969).

Unusually, the premiere issue’s story began on the cover, and continued on the interior’s page one. This strike team of covert operatives consisted of August Durant, Lili de Neuve, Carlo di Rienzi, Tiger Force, Crimson Dawn, and King Savage.

Created by writer E. Nelson Bridwell and artist Frank Springer, the ongoing series ceased publication with the identity of Mockingbird unrevealed. The first two issues were reprinted in The Brave and the Bold #117 & 120, (March & July 1975).

Secret Six revived

The revived Secret Six, in Action Comics Weekly #612 (Aug. 9, 1988), cover art by Paul Gulacy.

Writer Martin Pasko and artist Dan Spiegle introduced an updated version of the team as an eight-page feature in the omnibus title Action Comics Weekly #601 (May 24, 1988).

They revealed Mockingbird as Durant, who now reunited the team after five years while also assembling a new team consisting of Mitch Hoberman, Ladonna Jameal, Tony Mantegna, Luke McKendrick, Vic Sommers, and Dr. Maria Verdugo. The following issue saw the entire first team, including Durant, die. The feature ran through Action Comics Weekly #612 (Aug. 9, 1988), with DiRienzi succeeding Durant as Mockingbird.

A second arc of this team, by writer Pasko and original Silver Age artist Springer, ran in Action Comics Weekly #619-630 (Sept. 27 – Dec. 13, 1988). DiRienzi died, and his son Rafael disappeared amid intimations that he may be the successor Mockingbird.

Villainous Secret Six

The next version of the team, introduced in Villains United #1 (July 2005), consists of the pre-existing DC characters Catman, Deadshot, and Cheshire, and the newly created Ragdoll, Scandal Savage, and Parademon. Another member, Fiddler, is killed by Deadshot on order of Mockingbird. Later Parademon is killed and Cheshire betrays the group to the Society, only to be shot by the Society’s Deathstroke, who doesn’t trust her for being a traitor (Cheshire eventually turns up alive and plotting revenge). The Mockingbird for this version of the team is eventually revealed to be Lex Luthor.

In the 2006 Secret Six limited series, (written by Gail Simone with art by Brad Walker and Jimmy Palmiotti), Knockout, who was revealed as a mole infiltrating the Secret Society of Villains in Villains United, has officially joined the group to be with her lover, Scandal. At the end of issue #1, Catman asks the Mad Hatter be the sixth member of the group. While Catman meets with the Mad Hatter, Doctor Psycho orchestrates a series of attacks designed to wipe out the Six. Hatter is literally kicked off the team by Ragdoll, who says that one eccentric fop in the group is enough. His replacement is Harley Quinn, who later quits.

In Birds of Prey issues #104-106, the Secret Six face off against Oracle’s Birds of Prey in Russia for the soul of Tora (Ice). They have since disbanded after Harley Quinn quit the team. Subsequently, in Birds of Prey #109, Knockout was attacked and killed by the same assassin who had been stalking the New Gods and killing them off, one by one. Earlier in the issue, Knockout comments in passing that Catman was going soft and Deadshot returned to the Suicide Squad. Harley Quinn is reformed in Countdown #43. Scandal Savage, Rag Doll and Catman were later seen in Salvation Run.

DC launched a new Secret Six series in September 2008, reuniting Catman, Deadshot, Scandal, and Ragdoll, and adding Bane (hinted at by Simone months earlier as “an A-list Batman villain”) and an original character named Jeannette, who appeared in the third issue. The Six have been hired to retrieve Tarantula from Alcatraz Island, and find a card which she stole from Junior, a mysterious villain who supposedly runs the entire West Coast mob. This Junior has practically the entire villain community at her beck and call, all afraid of her, even those in Arkham Asylum. The six later learn that the card in question was made by Neron, and says “Get Out Of Hell Free.” Soon, the Six are attacked by a small army of super-villains, all wanting to recover the card and collect the reward of $20 million for each of the six, under the orders of Junior, who captures and tortures Bane, whose strong principles and moral convictions, paired with his fatherly fondness of Scandal keep him from betraying his new team. It is later revealed that Junior is in fact Ragdoll’s sister and daughter of the first Ragdoll. She has the ghastly appearance of an old clown, with sliced skin and eyes stitched wide open to give the appearance of a clown. The Six escape, and head for Gotham, with Deadshot seemingly betraying them and leaving with Tarantula. The Six manage to catch up to Deadshot, only to be attacked by Junior and the Supervillains, and the Mad Hatter, who is revealed to be the one who hired them, simply so they would be killed. Tarantula sacrifices herself by pulling herself and Junior in front of the Supervillains’ combined attack, seemingly destroying the card along with them. However, it is later shown that Scandal is now in possession of it.

Other versions

Tangent comics

A version of the Secret Six appeared in DC’s alternate-universe imprint Tangent Comics, in the one-shot Secret Six #1 (Dec. 1997), by writer Chuck Dixon and artist Tom Grummett. This team consists of the Atom (Adam Thompson), the Flash, the Joker, the Spectre (Taylor Pike), Plastic Man (Gunther Ganz), and Manhunter. The group also appear in the Tangent: Superman’s Reign series (2008).

Collected editions

The stories have been collected into trade paperbacks:

  • Villains United (collects 6-issue limited series, 144 pages, January 2006, ISBN 140120838X)
  • Secret Six:
    • Six Degrees of Devastation (collects 6-issue limited series, 144 pages, March 2008, ISBN 140121231X)
    • Unhinged (collects Secret Six #1-6, 144 pages, August 2009, ISBN 1401223273
  • Birds of Prey: Dead of Winter (collects Birds of Prey #104-108, 128 pages, March 2008, ISBN 140121231X)

Secret Invasion

Monday, June 1st, 2009

Variant cover art to Secret Invasion #1 (Apr. 2008)<br />
Art by Steve McNiven.

Secret Invasion is a comic book limited series and crossover storyline published in comic books from Marvel Comics from April through December 2008. The story focuses on a subversive, long-term alien invasion of Earth by an alien race, the Skrulls. A race capable of shapeshifting, the Skrulls have secretly replaced many Marvel heroes with Skrull impostors over a period of years, prior to the overt invasion. Marvel’s promotional tagline for the event was “Who do you trust?

Production and marketing

Writer Brian Michael Bendis revealed in interviews that the motivation for the invasion is the destruction of the Skrull Empire in the Annihilation storyline (Nov. 2005 – May 2007). The alien Skrulls believe Earth “is religiously and rightfully theirs.” Bendis also states there were hints as to the Skrull plot placed as early as New Avengers #1 (Jan. 2005) and the Secret War (Feb. 2004 – Dec. 2005) storyline, and that the limited series will be that story’s final end, “and it’s a hell of an end.

As of November 2007 several ongoing titles and mini-series were branded as tie-ins to the main Secret Invasion storyline, bearing the tagline: Secret Invasion: The Infiltration. In addition to the core story, the Avengers titles provide additional plot material and act as a link between titles. Other Marvel titles also featured variant covers with the characters depicted as Skrulls. Bendis stated that the series would not deal with the origins of the invasion, bur rather “if there’s a character on the team who’s a Skrull, we will rewind from when they got on that team, or from before they got on that team, so when they are infiltrated, how they became who they became and the effects of their actions from their ‘point of view’ is shown.

The Marvel website featured two online-exclusive e-comics for the event, titled Secret Invasion Prologue (a seven page comic that reveals the replacement of a previously unknown Skrull agent) and Secret Invasion: Home Invasion (a MySpace video blog featuring a young teenager named Kinsey Walden and her fears regarding her brother’s strange behavior, supported by comic pages by writer Ivan Brandon and artist Nick Postic.

Plot synopsis

After the Kree-Skrull War a group of Earth’s superheroes – Iron Man; Mister Fantastic; Namor; Black Bolt; Professor Charles Xavier and Doctor Strange – band together as a group called the Illuminati to secretly confront the Skrulls. The characters attack the Skrull Empire, and warn that any further invasion attempts of Earth would mean further reprisals. The characters, however, are captured and intensely studied before escaping.

An eventual successor to the Skrull throne, Princess Veranke, claims that a prophecy foretold the annihilation of the homeworld. The current Emperor, Dorrek, exiles the character to a prison world for inciting religious extremism. After the destruction of the Skrull Throneworld by the cosmic entity Galactus, Veranke becomes Empress by lineage, and the character guides an invasion of Earth, armed with the knowledge of superhumans gained from the Illuminati. The Skrulls capture several superhumans and infiltrate Earth’s defenses, with Vernake herself posing as heroine Spider-Woman. Veranke, however, is inconvenienced when there is a breakout of supervillains at the prison the Raft, which forces the character to join the team the New Avengers.

The Skrulls also skirmish with the Earth’s heroes several times prior to the invasion. The leader of the ninja group the Hand – Elektra – is revealed to be a Skrull after dying in battle with the New Avengers; posing as agents of spy organization S.H.I.E.L.D. the Skrulls attempt to mine the metal vibranium in the Savage Land and battle the New Avengers before being killed; and the Illuminati battle an impostor posing as Black Bolt and two new Super-Skrulls, possessing all-new powers.

The Skrull invasion intends to tactically destabilize the superhuman community through numerous strikes on opposition targets, including simultaneous strikes which include: disabling the S.H.I.E.L.D. Command Helicarrier; a breakout at the Raft, setting free a multitude of villains; transporting the Baxter Building, headquarters of superhero team the Fantastic Four, to the Negative Zone; and laying siege to Thunderbolt Mountain, headquarters of the Thunderbolts. The Avengers are attacked by Skrulls posing as heroes in the Savage Land, and Reed Richards is wounded by a Skrull posing as Henry Pym, seconds after determining a way to identify the shape shifters.

After desperate battles between Earth’s heroes and the Skrulls in Manhattan and the Savage Land, Mr. Fantastic manages to develop a device that can detect the aliens. Criminal kingpin the Hood aids the heroes, deciding that “no more Earth is bad for business.” Veranke regroups with her forces in New York, and a final battle against the combined Avengers, now aided by Nick Fury and his new Commandos, the Thunder God Thor, Daredevil, Howard the Duck, the Young Avengers, and the Thunderbolts.

In a final battle Veranke is wounded by the Avenger Hawkeye, and then killed by villain Norman Osborn. A Skrull activates a booby trap placed on heroine the Wasp, although the blast in contained by Thor at the cost of her life. The last remnants of the Skrull armada is destroyed, with Iron Man locating the missing heroes. S.H.I.E.L.D. is dissolved by executive order of the President of the United States, while a last Skrull, posing as Avengers’ butler Edwin Jarvis, flees with the child of hero Luke Cage. The character Norman Osborn forms a new version of the Avengers, calling the team the Dark Avengers.

Reception

Issue #1 was well received for its strong introduction to the story, good pacing and “slick” art although some concerns were raised over Bendis’ dialogue. Sales estimates suggested that around 250,200 copies were sold, more than twice as much as the second highest seller. The Secret Invasion: The Infiltration collected volume also topped the trade paperback chart, with an estimated 7,247 sales. The second issue kept the top slot, with estimated sales dropping to 200,344.

Tie-in issues

Secret Invasion: The Infiltration

The following issues were released with the The Infiltration banner prior to the launch of the Secret Invasion series:

  • Avengers: The Initiative Annual #1
  • New Avengers #38-39
  • New Avengers: Illuminati #5
  • Captain Marvel (vol. 7) #3-5
  • Mighty Avengers #7
  • Ms. Marvel (vol. 2) #25-27

Secret Invasion

The following issues tie into the Secret Invasion mini-series:

  • Avengers: The Initiative #14-19
  • Black Panther (vol. 4) #39-41
  • Captain Britain and MI: 13 #1-4
  • Deadpool (vol. 4) #1-3
  • Guardians of the Galaxy (vol. 2) #4-6
  • Incredible Hercules #117-120
  • Iron Man: Director of S.H.I.E.L.D. #33-35
  • Marvel Spotlight: Secret Invasion Saga #1
  • The Mighty Avengers #12-20
  • Ms. Marvel (vol. 2) #28-30
  • The New Avengers #40-47
  • New Avengers: Illuminati #1-4
  • New Warriors (vol. 4) #14-15
  • Nova (vol. 4) #16-18
  • Punisher War Journal #24-25
  • Secret Invasion: Amazing Spider-Man #1-3
  • Secret Invasion: Aftermath Beta Ray Bill: The Green of Eden #1
  • Secret Invasion: Dark Reign #1
  • Secret Invasion: Fantastic Four #1-3
  • Secret Invasion: Front Line #1-5
  • Secret Invasion: Inhumans #1-4
  • Secret Invasion: Requiem #1
  • Secret Invasion: Runaways/Young Avengers #1-3
  • Secret Invasion: Thor #1-3
  • Secret Invasion: Who Do You Trust? one-shot
  • Secret Invasion: X-Men #1-4
  • She-Hulk (vol. 2) #31-33
  • Skrulls! one-shot
  • Thunderbolts #122-125
  • X-Factor (vol. 3) #32-34

Collected editions

The stories are being collected into volumes:

  • Secret Invasion: The Infiltration ISBN 0-7851-3231-7
  • Secret Invasion ISBN 0-7851-3297-X
  • Secret Invasion: Front Line ISBN 0-7851-3377-1
  • Secret Invasion: Who Do You Trust? ISBN 0-7851-3409-3

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  • Secret Invasion: Amazing Spider-Man ISBN 0-7851-3270-8
  • Avengers: The Initiative vol. 3: Secret Invasion ISBN 0-7851-3150-7
  • Black Panther: Secret Invasion ISBN 0-7851-3397-6
  • Captain Britain and MI13 vol. 1: Secret Invasion ISBN 0-7851-3344-5
  • Captain Marvel: Secret Invasion ISBN 0-7851-3303-8
  • Deadpool vol. 1: Secret Invasion ISBN 0-7851-3273-2
  • Secret Invasion: Fantastic Four ISBN 0-7851-3247-3
  • Incredible Hercules: Secret Invasion ISBN 0-7851-3333-X
  • Secret Invasion: Inhumans ISBN 0-7851-3248-1
  • Mighty Avengers:
    • Vol. 3: Secret Invasion, Book 1 ISBN 0-7851-3009-8
    • Vol. 4: Secret Invasion, Book 2 ISBN 0-7851-3649-5
  • Ms Marvel vol. 5: Secret Invasion ISBN 0-7851-3019-5
  • New Avengers:
    • Vol. 8: Secret Invasion, Book 1 ISBN 0-7851-2946-4
    • Vol. 9: Secret Invasion, Book 2 ISBN 0-7851-2948-0
  • Punisher War Journal vol. 5: Secret Invasion ISBN 0-7851-3148-5
  • Secret Invasion: Runaways/Young Avengers ISBN 0-7851-3266-X
  • Secret Invasion: Thor ISBN 0-7851-3426-3
  • Thunderbolts vol. 3: Secret Invasion ISBN 0-7851-2394-6
  • Secret Invasion: War Machine ISBN 0-7851-3455-7
  • X-Factor vol. 6: Secret Invasion ISBN 0-7851-2865-4
  • Secret Invasion: X-Men ISBN 0-7851-3343-7
  • She Hulk Vol.8: Secret Invasion

Merchandising

Marvel Heroclix released a Secret Invasion-themed booster set based on the storyline, with unprecedented cooperation from Marvel Comics. The set included characters who were released with the same sculpt, but could either be a Skrull or the character they were duplicating. The infiltrators included Captain Marvel, Dum-Dum Dugan, Yellowjacket, Elektra, and Ms Marvel. Spider-Woman and Invisible Woman were released as chase figures in their Skrull-only personality. Also included in the set were the Super Skrull Illuminati, Super Skrull X-Men and Super Skrull Avengers. On the Heroclix roster poster, the infiltrators were redacted with a graphic listing them as a suspected Skrull.