Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Update for 5/28/13

Updates for 5/28/13


I've gathered up a few updates here and there I'll incorporate into their respective original entries before I dive into the next (and lengthy) sequence of issues dealing with Mantis and Vision's origins.

For Avengers 24
  • Two panels from this issue were used for the Marvel Mash-Up feature in Ultimate Spider-Man issue 4.



For Avengers 42

  • This issue figures into the recent Age of Ultron story. It's the point where Wolverine and Invisible Woman travel back to kill Henry Pym. There is also an alternate cover to Age of Ultron 6 that features it.


 
 
For Avengers 64 
 
  • Barney Barton's history is then updated another time, showing that the government agent story was a ruse created by Egghead and he really was a gangster. The bright side of this is the second Baron Zemo, in a moment of respect for Hawkeye, transfers Barney's unclaimed criminal bank accounts to Clint's name, making Hawkeye currently quite wealthy.
 
Between Avengers 112 and 113
 
 
Marvel Team-Up 9 & 11
The Tomorrow War! & The Doomsday Gambit!
Written by Gerry Conway and Len Wein
Art by Ross Andru/Frank Bolle & Jim Mooney/Mike Esposito
Lettered by Charlotte Jetter & John Costanza
Colored By Stan Goldberg & Glynis Wein
 
Spider-Man, to Iron Man: "I'm not in the habit of running out on people--even armor-covered jerks like you."
 
Spider-Man: "In the immortal words of Johnny Storm--'Huh?'"
 
After an earthquake, Avengers Mansion disappears from view for a second and then returns, but it is now trapped inside a force field. Iron Man arrives at the scene and is unable to gain entry. Peter Parker sees Iron Man's attempts on television and goes to investigate as Spider-Man. A hole appears in the force field, and the heroes enter, only to find themselves in a strange extra-dimensional space. The encounter Zarrko, the Tomorrow Man, who asks for their help against someone who had invaded his time period, the 23rd century, claiming the same invader has the Avengers captive. Iron Man and Spider-Man penetrate the citadel and find the Avengers trapped in stasis chambers. The invader turns out to be Kang the Conqueror, who zaps the heroes into a paralytic state. Zarrko enters the room and covers Kang with a weapon. He tells Kang how he has seized control of the fortress while Kang was distracted and that special "Time Bomb" devices were sent back to 1973 in order turn back time for 20th-century Earth, leaving only a small depot of modern weapons that Zarrko will use to conquer all time. While Zarrko monologues, Spider-Man recovers, but Iron Man's armor does not, so Spider-Man sneaks off and finds a time portal back to the 20th century while Kang easily overpowers Zarrko after listening to his speech.
 
After foiling the plot in the 20th century with the Human Torch, Spider-Man heads to the Himalayas to enlist the scientific expertise of the Inhumans to get him back to the 23rd century. Maximus is able to engineer one of Zarrko's devices to send Spider-Man, Black Bolt, Karnak, Gorgon, and Triton to the future a few minutes before Spider-Man left. They battle through the soldiers of the future and come upon Kang as we left him at the end of issue 9. Black Bolt uses his sonic power to shatter the capsules holding the Avengers. Zarrko is captured, but Kang's armor is revealed to be an empty shell. The heroes are automatically recalled to the 20th century by the device Maximus used to send them there, and the Avengers also return home. 
  • Marvel Team-Up 10 is omitted since none of the Avengers appear in that adventure. Spider-Man and Human Torch stop the Time Bombs. The Human Torch recognizes that the technology used within them resembles something the Inhumans use to protect their city, so he sends Spider-Man there for further aid.
  • When Iron Man and Spider-Man see the Avengers trapped in a grid of stasis chambers, there is an additional empty one, presumably for Iron Man. Jarvis is also trapped in one of the chambers.
  • It's not fleshed out how Kang managed to steal the mansion and overcome all the Avengers, but Kang implies he used the same paralytic ray in his belt buckle that we see him using throughout this adventure.
  • Iron Man is left incapacitated on the floor at the end of issue 9. Though Spider-Man seemingly returns almost instantly in issue 11 due to time travel, we see Iron Man now inside one of the stasis chambers. The chambers' orientation also changes, so that the trapped characters are not in the same spots as when we saw them in issue 9.
  • Captain America and Black Panther are seen as captured in issue 9, but they are never seen in issue 11, either in the future or back in the 20th century. Apparently 12 heroes were just too much to draw that day. Jarvis is still there, though.

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Avengers 127 to 130 (including Giant-Size Avengers 1 and 2)

Avengers 127 to 130 and Giant-Size Avengers 1 and 2


He who wields a blade
must walk the tightrope with strength
or surely falter.
Hawkeye; Clint Barton
Iron Man; Tony Stark
Scarlet Witch; Wanda Maximoff
Swordsman; Jacques Duquesne
Thor; Donald Blake
Vision
Featured Allies
Crystal
Invisible Woman; Sue Richards
Mantis
Mister Fantastic; Reed Richards
Quicksilver; Pietro Maximoff
Thing; Ben Grimm
 
(In today's Avengers news, a new animated series, Avengers Assemble will have an hour-long sneak preview this Sunday, May 26, 2013, on Disney XD before its true premiere in July. Now back to 1974.)
     In 1974, Marvel introduced several books that were longer than a standard comic book, but would only be published every three months. Giant-Size Avengers was one of these series. For the first installment, Roy Thomas took back the reins as writer and put forth a story that would tie some of the heroes from the so-called Golden Age of the forties comic books into the "modern" Marvel universe. Captain America was part of both eras, but per developments in Englehart's Captain America (1968) series in the seventies, we knew that other men had taken on the mantle of Captain America while Steve Rogers was frozen in ice, and that's touched upon here, as well as the fates of some of the other heroes from that time. Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver also gained a "father" in the Whizzer, though that would later turn out to be only the first misdirection as to their parentage. It would be another nine years before we find out that their true father is Magneto, and since that's remained unchanged for the past 30 years, I guess they're sticking to it this time.
     Past Avenger Quicksilver was brought back into the storyline for a wedding adventure featuring the Fantastic Four, the Inhumans, and wedding crasher Ultron. The wedding itself was the highlight of a Fantastic Four (1961) issue, as Quicksilver's bride Crystal was a character featured more often in that series. The Avengers saga turns from Quicksilver after this for several years, and he continues to be antagonstic while Scarlet Witch insists on having a relationship with Vision.
     A star appears in the sky above Avengers Mansion and Mantis, heralding the start of the saga of the Celestial Madonna. The two story elements of a star appearing and the title of "Madonna" echo the story of Christ at first, but Mantis is far from a virginal figure. If anything, she is the opposite. It has been hinted she had been a prostitute, but since we will find out that her memories of that life are false, her true past activities are a bit murky. Still, she could be seen as a symbol of a one-woman "Madonna-whore" complex, as put forth by Sigmund Freud. When the role of Celestial Madonna is first explained by Kang, people look to the Scarlet Witch as the likely candidate instead. Strangely, Scarlet Witch's soon-to-be husband Vision and the children they will later have through roundabout circumstances prove to be far more influential to the history of Marvel Earth and the Avengers than the son that Mantis will have, so maybe everyone's first instincts were not far from the truth.
     These issues also feature the death of the Swordsman. He was never  quite accepted into the team with the full gusto most other members were. It was not his criminal past that proved to be a problem for him, but instead his own self-doubt. This mirrors some of the feelings and thoughts that the similarly non-powered Hawkeye has had over the years, but the archer faced his time on the team with full-on bravado, while Swordsman was often on the verge of a nervous breakdown because he felt unworthy of being an Avenger or even Mantis' partner. It would be easier to feel bad for the character if he was being too hard on himself, but to be fair, he did not often contribute a great deal to the team beyond being another body in a fight, bringing Mantis to the team, and ultimately saving her life. In a universe where dead characters often come back at a later time, the original Swordsman still has not been revived, except for a few later adventures where his corpse is used by another or the story specifically revolves around dead characters taking part. Even his distinction of being the trainer of Hawkeye is later modified to lessen that contribution, so the future will not be any kinder to Swordsman. So long, Jacques.

Giant-Size Avengers Vol 1 1
Giant-Size Avengers 1
Nuklo--the Invader that Time Forgot
August, 1974
Written by Roy Thomas
Art by Rich Buckler and Dan Adkins
Lettered by Artie Simek
Colored by Petra Goldberg

The Avengers subdue a mysterious figure in their mansion who is poking around a large capsule they had recently found in a collapsed building and brought back to their headquarters. He reveals himself to be the heroic Whizzer from the 1940's, who is only known by reputation to the team. Whizzer retells the adventures of his team, the All-Winners Squad, and how he had married teammate Miss America. While he speaks, the capsule explodes, and a large humanoid, Nuklo, is let loose. Whizzer claims this is his son. Nuklo battles the team to a standstill and escapes the mansion, but he reveals himself to have the intellect of a small child. During the melee, Whizzer, far from his prime, has a heart attack, and Scarlet Witch moves to aid him. Equipment is calibrated to track Nuklo's unique energy, but three different signals appear. The team splits up to investigate and finds three different Nuklos. These are not as powerful, and the three groups of Avengers are able to herd the Nuklos back to the mansion. While this is being done, Scarlet Witch hears the rest of Whizzer's story. Both he and Miss America were irradiated during a job at a nuclear facility, which affected her pregnancy, and she gave birth to the infant Nuklo. Doctors suggested that Nuklo be placed in that capsule in order to absorb his radiation over a period of 25 years. A building was placed over it so it would remain undisturbed. Based on Whizzer's resemblance to Quicksilver and super-speed abilities, Scarlet Witch prompts him to talk about his travels to Wundagore, and he confirms that he and Miss America had a set of twins there, a boy and a girl. Miss America died in childbirth, and the distraught Whizzer became unhinged and left the area, not returning for several years. After this is told, the three Nuklos come together and reunite into a powerful whole. He defeats the entire team, but Scarlet Witch and Whizzer return from the hospital. Scarlet Witch places a hex sphere around Nuklo, and his energy becomes drained. The Avengers work to repair the capsule so that Nuklo can be returned to it and perhaps be safe in yet another 25 years.

Doctor: "...The worst of it, I'm afraid, is that, within hours, the child will begin to emit dangerous radiation. Don't ask us how. I'm...sorry. These things...happen."
  • The issue's title features the word "Invader," and the Invaders were the precursor superhero team to the All-Winners Squad. Since Whizzer and Miss America were also in the Invaders, Nuklo is like a "second-generation" Invader.
  • Nuklo was not named "Nuklo" as a baby. When Vision calls him a "nuclear nemesis," the infantile Nuklo repeats it as "Nu-klo! Nem-siss!" and he is thereafter called Nuklo. His real name is Robert Frank Jr.
  • Swordsman is not present during this adventure, but Mantis does take part.
  • The Whizzer that appears here is not the same as the those from the Squadron Sinister and Squadron Supreme. He is a Golden-Age hero that debuted in a 1941 pre-Marvel publication. He thought he gained his super-speed from being bit by a cobra and then given a transfusion of mongoose blood, but later information changed that to his being a Mutant that gained his powers during this trauma. This is his first "modern" Marvel appearance.
  • All-Winners Squad villain Isbisa is mentioned in the flashbacks. He will appear in normal continuity as an old man and is involved in the death of Whizzer in Vision and the Scarlet Witch (1982) 2. Another villain, Future Man, does not continue to appear. The name Isbisa comes from the first letters of each of the historical ages, Iron, Steel, Bronze, Ice, Stone and Atomic.
  • Whizzer fought with a Captain America in the All-Winners Squad, but it was not Steve Rogers. Both William Naslund and Jeff Mace used the identity of Captain America during that time period.
  • Although Whizzer married the heroine Miss America, she is not involved with the beauty pageant, and they both think the idea of a beauty pageant is "inane."
  • This is the first appearance of Bova, the evolved cow who was the Scarlet Witch's and Quicksilver's nursemaid when they were infants.
  • Miss America's second child is later revealed to have been stillborn. Bova only showed Whizzer the twins as a way to lessen the pain of his wife's death and also hopefully find the twins a good home away from Wundagore, but Whizzer instead fled.
  • Not only do Whizzer and Quicksilver appear similar, but Scarlet Witch has a similar appearance to Miss America. These turn out to be just coincidences.
  • Captain America says he's "not Baby Snooks." This is a reference to a radio show starring Fanny Brice as a little girl that aired from 1937 to 1951.
  • Whizzer says there were only three adventures of the All-Winners Squad. Two are referenced from All-Winners Comics 19 and 21. There was no All-Winners Comics 20. It was instead called All Teen 20 and featured totally unrelated stories. A footnote promises they'll make up a third adventure at a later date. A new adventure appeared in 2009 in a 70th-anniversary special of the All-Winners Squad.
  • Scarlet Witch assumes only she would be able to defeat Nuklo because they are siblings. Later we find out they are not actually related. So much for that theory.
  • Strangely, in Fantastic Four (1961) at this time, Mister Fantastic had placed his Mutant son Franklin Richards, who was born a supremely powerful mutant due to Invisible Woman's radiation exposure, into an artificial coma so that his abilities would not be dangerous. This parallels Nuklo's story. 
  • The issue also reprints a Human Torch story from Human Torch Comics 33 and a Wasp adventure from Tales to Astonish (1959) 58.
  • Human Torch's partner in the backup feature is the heroine Sun Girl. She does not appear in the modern Marvel continuity.
Avengers Vol 1 127

Avengers 127
Bride and Doom!
September, 1974
Written by Steve Englehart
Art by Sal Buscema and Joe Staton
Lettered by Tom Orzechowski
Colored by Steve Englehart
The Inhumans' teleporting dog Lockjaw brings Gorgon into the middle of dinner at Avengers Mansion with news of the upcoming wedding of Quicksilver to Crystal. All the Avengers are surprised by the news, but they jet off to the Hidden Land in a Quinjet. The Fantastic Four are also there for the wedding, but Quicksilver himself does not greet the team. While wedding plans are being made, the servant class of the Inhumans, the Alpha Primitives, plot with a mysterious figure. During a public exhibition, Iron Man and Medusa enter a trance and attack some Alpha Primitives. When the two are restrained, they collapse into unconsciousness. After Quicksilver rejects the relationship between Scarlet Witch and Vision again, Crystal is abducted by the giant Omega android, which had been thought to be disabled and immobile. The heroes suspect troublesome Inhuman Maximus is behind this kidnapping, but they find that Maximus has also collapsed. The Alpha Primitives are then questioned, but they become agitated and start to riot. Maximus revives, though also in a trance, and he shoots Human Torch. Swordsman blasts Maximus, but then he too collapses. A large brawl takes place, but the heroes all become immobile. The Omega android removes a mask to reveal it is Ultron in a new body.
Swordsman: "Is it me you love, or the Vision?"
Mantis: "You demand an answer, Swordsman? This one cannot even be certain of who she may be--whether Saigon street orphan or cunningly-trained priestess--or something else, as yet unknown. And you demand her feelings?"
  • This is inker Joe Staton's first issue of Avengers.
  • Yes, Steve Englehart also did the color guides for this issue.
  • Narration tells us Jarvis was born in the Bronx. He's not British, but it is later revealed that he spent some of his youth in England while flying for the Canadian Royal Air Force and picked up a British accent.
  • Although they do at times wear civilian clothes, all the Avengers are dressed in their hero costumes for dinner when the story begins.
  • The Fantastic Four are wedding guests because they are well known to the Inhumans, but Crystal also used to be in a romantic relationship with the Human Torch.
  • The giant Omega android previously was powered by the accumulated subconscious guilt of the Inhumans in repressing the Alpha Primitives, and it was defeated by their coming to terms with that guilt.
  • This is the first time Agatha Harkness appears in the series. She will become mentor to Scarlet Witch in the next issue and has an extensive history of using legitimate sorcery.
  • Black Bolt, Mister Fantastic, and Iron Man all appear here and are half of the secretive Illuminati team that is active at this time.
  • Ultron was last a threat in Avengers 68. Apparently Maximus retrieved the head of the robot and put it on Omega's body. This giant Ulton is not fully constructed of adamantium. This version of Ultron is Ultron-7.
  • The letters page has a letter from future Avengers writer Ralph Macchio.
  • The sound of Maximus zapping the Human Torch is "Foom!" You'd be mad not to join this Marvel fan club.
Fantastic Four Vol 1 150

Fantastic Four 150
Ultron-7: He'll Rule the World!
September, 1974
Written by Gerry Conway
Art by Rich Buckler and Joe Sinnott
Lettered by John Costanza
Colored by Linda Lessmann
 
Ultron-7 gloats over the paralyzed bodies of the assembled Fantastic Four, Avengers, and Inhumans. He is so confident that he frees them from their paralysis to see what fruitless actions they will take. Thing attacks him, but it has no effect. Rather than join Thing in further assault, the other heroes try to figure out a plan. Ultron-7 readily reveals to them how Maximus found his robot brain, brought it to Attilan, and attached it to Omega's body. Ultron-7 nearly immediately got rid of Maxiumus and pursued his own schemes to destroy the heroes. He launches a psychic attack to dissolve the psyches of the all his opponents and leave them brainless. This wakes up the comatose Franklin Richards, who returns the mental assault with more force and totally deactivates Ultron-7's robot brain. After this defeat, we see several of the guests preparing for the wedding and speaking of their own romances. Everyone gathers for the ceremony, and Crystal and Quicksilver are wed. They are teleported away by Lockjaw to their honeymoon while the guests look on.
 
Narration: "There are probably a thousand things we could say at a moment like this...but we won't say any of them. We like to think...the moment says it all."
  • Although Quicksilver appears on the cover in his green uniform, he wears a silver one in the issue and during his wedding. The rest of the superheroes wear their hero uniforms rather than dress in formal wear.
  • Thing calls Ultron-7 "jaundice jaws." Jaundice usually refers to a yellow pigmentation, which Ultron does not have.
  • Franklin's powers are described by narration as being enough "to consume an entire planet." Later, he uses the power to create an entire new universe, one that temporarily serves as home to the Avengers, Fantastic Four, and others for over a year of publication.
  • Thing says the wedding pageantry resembles a Rose Bowl Parade. The Rose Bowl Parade started in 1890 in Pasadena as a New Year's Day parade and features floats decorated with only flowers and other natural ornamentation such as fruit and grains. It grew in popularity and has been seen on television around in world in over 200 countries.
  • Both Quicksilver and Crystal do not have one line of dialogue in the issue that contains their wedding.
Avengers Vol 1 128
Avengers 128
Bewitched, Bothered, and Dead!
October, 1974
Written by Steve Englehart
Art by Sal Buscema and Joe Staton
Lettered by Tom Orzechowski
Colored by Steve Englehart
The Avengers and Fantastic Four return from the wedding and are attacked by lightning on the roof of Avengers Mansion. The Fantastic Four's nanny, Agatha Harkness, dispels the mystic attack and tells everyone that she is the target. She also announces that she plans to tutor the Scarlet Witch in the ways of true magic, and Wanda agrees to this arrangement. Shortly, Harkness places the Scarlet Witch's room inside a mystic barrier so they can begin uninterrupted training. The evil wizard Necrodamus, the source of the lightning storm, reveals himself inside the barrier and attempts to steal Harkness' soul. Harkness and her housecat familiar Ebony battle Necrodamus, but they both seem to be defeated. In another part of the mansion, Mantis rejects Swordsman, which sends him into a rage. Iron Man and Thor show up and restrain him while Mantis calmly goes to seek out Vision. Scarlet Witch fights the much stronger Necrodamus and is exhausted by casting three hexes in quick succession. Ebony awakens, and his eyes start to glow, giving the Scarlet Witch an energy boost that allows her to cast another hex. The hex shatters Necrodamus enchanted box, freeing all his trapped souls and whisking him away to parts unknown. Harkness reveals she was not truly hurt and was letting the Scarlet Witch find new reserves of power. Outside the mystic barrier, Vision rejects Mantis' advances and makes clear his commitment to Wanda. Outside, bystanders and then the Avengers are startled by the appearance of both a bright star above the mansion and Kang the Conqueror.
Mister Fantastic: "The next time one of us gets married, I hope it's a nice, quiet ceremony at City Hall!"
Thor: "Farewell, Mr. and Mrs. Richards! I expect any such time to be far distant, thank Odin!"
Scarlet Witch: "If they let you in the theater to see 'The Exorcist,' you already know how beds can be dangerous..."
  • The story title is a nod to the song Bewitched, Bothered, and Bewildered from the 1940 Broadway musical Pal Joey.
  • This is the last time Englehart does the color guides. He says on his website that he would have liked to do more, but he was just too busy once Giant-Size Avengers was added to the schedule. It is also his last coloring credit on any title.
  • This issue debuts an introductory banner on the first page. Its original text reads: "And there came a day, a day unlike any other, when Earth's mightiest heroes and heroines found themselves united against a common threat. On that day, the Avengers were born--to fight the foes no single super hero could withstand! Through the years, their roster has prospered, changing many times, but their glory has never been denied! Heed the call, then--for now, the Avenger Assemble! Stan Lee presents: The Mighty Avengers!" (sic)
  • A bolt of lightning causes a "Foom!" sound effect.
  • Thor, as God of Thunder, tries to stop the lightning storm, but cannot because of its unnatural origin.
  • Agatha Harkness claims she can stop taking care of the now-healed Franklin Richards since she deems him "no longer a threat."
  • Harkness moves into Avengers Mansion temporarily. Her usual house on Whisper Hill was currently, um, missing.
  • Harkness' cat Ebony just shows up the Mansion, knowing that she moved there since he is her familiar.
  • Necrodamus had appeared before as a Defenders villain.
  • Scarlet Witch seems to think three hexes is the limit of her power, but she manages a fourth after being charged by energies from Ebony.

Avengers Vol 1 129

Avengers 129
Bid Tomorrow Goodbye!
November, 1974
Written by Steve Englehart
Art by Sal Buscema and Joe Staton
Lettered by Tom Orzechowski
Colored by Bill Mantlo

Kang's automators, the Macrobots, easily defeat the Avengers. While they are down, he reveals that the star overhead signals the coming of an influential woman called the Celestial Madonna. His historical records are incomplete, but he believes that if he mates with her, their child  and he himself by proxy will have great power. He believes one of the women present, either Mantis, Scarlet Witch, or Agatha Harkness is the Celestial Madonna, and he moves to kidnap them all, as well as Thor, Iron Man, and Vision. Kang leaves Swordsman behind, as he has no use for the powerless Avenger. Within moments, the abandoned Swordsman receives a mental message from Agatha Harkness that tells him where Kang is keeping the captives. Despite his doubts, Swordman pilots a Quinjet to Egypt, where he is shot down by the local air force. Kang monitors these events, but feels secure in his fortress against such a weak foe. Swordsman manages to find a hidden entrance to the pyramid and is about to be slain by an vampire from inside it when the Egyptian army arrives, distracting the vampire and allowing Swordsman to continue deeper into the pyramid. Kang reveals another part of his plan, to place the three male Avengers captives into Macrobot shells which will kill world leaders and throw the planet into chaos. Swordsman overhears this and is about to shoot Kang with his sword's weaponry when Rama-Tut steps from the shadows and stops Swordsman.

Kang: "Her mate, the records say, will be the most powerful man on Earth, though they give him no name--but I, Kang the First, will be he! Father to the child--and through him, ruler of the heavens!"

Swordsman: "Ha! Die, by Crom!"
  • The Vision on the cover seems to be blasting Kang from his hand. Typically he does so from his eyes, not his hands, but that would be difficult with his own hand covering his eyes as in this drawing, I suppose.
  • The introductory banner on page one is fixed to read "Avengers assemble!" rather than "Avenger Assemble!"
  • On his website, Steve Englehart calls the story contained in this issue and its companion Giant-Size Avengers 2 one of his all-time favorities.
  • This is Bill Mantlo's first issue of Avengers and second coloring assignment overall. He would only do color guides for a small number of books, but he would go on to become a longtime Marvel writer around this same time, including a handful of later Avengers issues.
  • "Foom!" is the sound effect when Thor is thrown into Swordsman and later when Swordsman's Quinjet is shot by missiles.
  • Kang uses Macrobots as his shock troops here. They are upgraded Stimuloids, which appeared in Avengers 69. Now they return physical force toward their attacker rather than absorb it. Despite these models being more advanced, it's the original Stimuloid, the Growing Man, that will later reappear most often in the Marvel Universe. Perhaps this is because all the Macrobots are destroyed and Kang had no more.
  • Kang calls the star the Dawn Star and states it is the reason for his continued interest in the 20th Century.
  • These historical records Kang mentions have so far proven to be false. Mantis will mate with an unnamed Prime Cotati, which explains why no name is given to him, as even we don't find out his name. Except for fathering a child with Mantis, the Prime Cotati has not been seen to influence Earth events to a great degree.
  • Kang uses the pyramid of Rama-Tut as his base in the present. It appears to be the Pyramid of Khufu in Egypt.
  • A panel showing a shaft of sunlight striking a sarcophagus is explained in Giant-Size Avengers 2 as what causes Rama-Tut to revive at the end of this issue. Rama-Tut knew Swordsman would open the tunnel and revive him from his own memories as Kang.
  • Kang claims that he created the vampire Amenhotep through forcing him to drink nectar of the undead. He does resemble the Charniputra vampire offshoot later elaborated on in 2010.
  • This month also marks the first appearance of future Avenger Wolverine in Incredible Hulk (1962) 180.
Giant-Size Avengers Vol 1 2
    Giant-Size Avengers 2
    A Blast from the Past!
    November, 1974
    Written by Steve Englehart
    Art by Dave Cockum
    Lettered by Tom Orzechowski
    Colored by Bill Mantlo

    Hawkeye hears the news about the star over Avengers Mansion and the battle there, and he goes to investigate. Jarvis is the only one to greet him, but soon Swordsman and Rama-Tut show up as well. Despite knowing of Rama-Tut as a villain, Hawkeye goes along with a plan to move against Kang. The first Macrobot, containing Vision, attacks the United Nations, and Swordsman and Hawkeye, along with a disguised Rama-Tut, teleport there. The heroes are overmatched until Rama-Tut tells them Vision is inside. Hawkeye obscures the head of Macrobot with goop, hoping that it will cease absorbing solar energy for the Vision to operate inside. The plan works, the Macrobot collapses, and Vision is freed. The second Macrobot, with Iron Man inside, attacks China, but Rama-Tut teleports his allies there as well. Vision attempts to solidfy inside the Macrobot, but encounters a force field inside it that repels even his low-density form. He instead shoves his cape into the Macrobot shell and wills it to fully solidfy, destroying the Macrobot and leaving Iron Man mostly unharmed. Kang's Time Sphere appears, and the third Macrobot, carrying Thor, attacks. Vision frees the hostage women, and they also join in the battle. Scarlet Witch uses a hex to call down a meteorite from space that disables the Macrobot. Kang blasts the stranger among the Avengers, revealing Rama-Tut. When these two contact each other, everyone see scenes from past and future in their minds, and Mantis is revealed as the true Celestial Madonna. Kang can't believe that he would sabotage his own plans, and Rama-Tut prompts Kang to accept how things will turn out. Kang doesn't and fires a beam at Mantis to destroy her. Swordsman leaps in front of the attack and takes the full brunt of the blast. A struggle between Rama-Tut and Kang activates the Time Sphere, sending the the men from the future elsewhere and leaving the Avengers to watch Swordsman perish from his wounds.
    Swordsman: "Now, we are--Avengers!"
    Hawkeye, thinking: "Yeah. Two of 'em...the weakest two, next to the Wasp!"

    Swordsman: "I tried...to be worthy of you...of the Avengers...but...like Kang...I was doomed... from the beginning...I'm...a failure...I'm just...one of those people...who doesn't...count." (dies)
    Mantis: "Darling!"
    Iron Man: "Every Avenger counts, Swordsman. Every one."
    Vision: "Sleep well, Avenger. Rest...in peace."
  • Although Captain America is on the cover, he does not take part in this issue. He had given up his Captain America identity. Just before this adventure, Hawkeye convinced him to continue being a superhero, and Steve Rogers will adopt the Nomad identity next month.
  • The previously seen Rama-Tut was a younger version of Kang, but this story's is an older version of Kang that has settled down after his conquering days and had "retired" to ancient Egypt on a second trip through time. He destroyed his Time Sphere so he could not return, except by waiting in suspended animation for 5,000 years. He claims to be about 77 years of age. (On a side note, his beloved Ravonna had not been revived during his life as Kang.)
  • Rama-Tut claims, in hindsight, that this attempt as Kang to mate with then destroy the Celestial Madonna was the most fruitless of all his pursuits.
  • Kang's targets are the leaders of China and Russia, but in the United States, he targets the Secretary of State instead of the President.
  • When told about the Celestial Madonna, both Scarlet Witch and Mantis believe the Madonna will be the Scarlet Witch.
  • There is a FOOM! when Swordsman and Hawkeye strike the face of a Macrobot and a second FOOM! when Scarlet Witch's hex calls forth lava from the ground. Swordsman never got a chance to join the club, poor sap.
  • Vision suffers another claustrophia attack when he is encased inside a Macrobot, more foreshadowing of his Human Torch history.
  • The sound effect for a tar-like splash from Hawkeye's arrow is "Ploog!" Artist Mike Ploog was currently pencilling the swamp monster series Man-Thing for Marvel, so you could see why his name might be associated with sticky goop.
  • Vision does not typically need to be in sunlight to function, as he stores energy in his jewel for later use. He collapses almost immediately when cut off from the sun here, probably because of the Macrobot's power needs, not his own.
  • When Kang's first Macrobot is defeated, we are treated to a panel of Kang screaming. Apparently they still swear in the far future, as it simply says, "[expletives deleted]".
  • Before she gets her memories back, Mantis exclaims "Hala!" This is the home planet of the Kree, and was probably picked up from her time with the Priests of Pama.
  • Narration likens Swordsman's last charge as being "like a wild-eyed King Kull." Kull was another barbarian character created by Robert E. Howard, the creator of Conan. Kull had his own Marvel series as well. His adventures took place about 20,000 years before the modern Marvel age and had been written by Avengers editor Roy Thomas.
  • Narration calls Rama-Tut and Kang "time-lords." The British television series Doctor Who features a race of Time Lords. Marvel published Doctor Who comics, and his universe was given the Marvel designation of universe 5556, but it is only very tenuously connected to the Marvel Universe, as are many other outside properties.
Avengers Vol 1 130
Avengers 130
The Reality Problem!
December, 1974
Written by Steve Englehart
Art by Sal Buscema and Joe Staton
Lettered by Joe Rosen
Colored by Bill Mantlo
At an Avengers meeting, Mantis announces that she will be leaving to bury Swordsman back in Vietnam. Most of the team agree to accompany her and honor Swordsman as well. She selects the gardens around the temple of the Priests of Pama for a burial site. They hear a disturbance outside the temple grounds and find Radioactive Man, Titanium Man, and Crimson Dynamo in pursuit of a man, who they say is a murderer that killed his wife. After they execute him for this crime on the spot, the Avengers move to attack, but the so-called Titanic Three explain that since this is a communist sector, they have authority as allies of the Viet Cong and it is the Avengers who are the "villains" here. An enraged Iron Man moves to attack them anyway, but Thor briefly battles Iron Man to calm him down, and the Avengers leave the scene. They decide to investigate Mantis' past in the streets of Saigon, but she finds that her memories of her life there must be false, as they cannot be corraborated by anyone they question. The Vietnamese villain the Slasher sees the Avengers roaming around and assumes they are there to arrest him for a jewelry robbery he had just committed. He persuades the Titanic Three the Avengers are after him, so the four villains attack the American team together. Since Saigon is not part of the communist sector, the Avengers don't back down. Vision's solar beam to the Slasher reveals stolen diamonds on his person. When the Titanic Three see that the Slasher truly is a thief, they end the battle and leave.
Narration: "The Swordsman was a loser to the last moment of his life, but he tried the level best he could. And isn't that all anyone can do?"
Hawkeye, thinking: "Goodbye, Sword. We were two of a kind, I always thought...but somehow, I always got the breaks--and you never did."
Vision: "But isn't that always the way, Thor? Whenever a war is fought, it is never the people who must fight it--who have any reason to bring it about."
  • During the funeral service and interment, no coffin is visible, so we must assume Swordsman was buried without one.
  • Scarlet Witch does not go with the team to Vietnam. She stays at the mansion for further training from Agatha Harkness.
  • Vision plans to stay out of action because of the recent times he keeps freezing in battle, but the team convince him to stay with them in case he truly needs further help.
  • Hawkeye is mentioned to be officially back on the membership roster at the start of the issue.
  • This is the Slasher's first appearance. He is also called "Buzzsaw" once in the narration, but Slasher is more prevalent. He won't be seen again until 1993, where he then goes by the name Razorblade and is part of group of villains working for the terrorist Viper in Captain America 419. He still has that crazy razor suit.
  • Radioactive Man hasn't been seen since Avengers 83.
  • Titanium Man and Crimson Dynamo are longtime Iron Man villains, but this is their first stint in Avengers. Iron Man is enraged at them because his former girlfriend Janice Cord was killed during a battle he had with both of them in Iron Man (1968) 22. This is actually the third Crimson Dynamo, Alex Nevsky, but it is still the first Titanium Man, Boris Bullski.
  • Since Mantis seems to be connected to the Kree, Vision suggests they contact Captain Marvel, but he cannot be reached.
  • A blast arrow to Radioactive Man's face produces the "Foom!" sound effect.
  • During the battle, a robed figure intervenes briefly, staggering the Crimson Dynamo. This is later revealed to be Mantis' father, Libra, who was tracking her movements.

Saturday, May 4, 2013

Avengers 120 to 126

Avengers 120 to 126


Zodiac returns.
A confused Mantis finds Dad.
Vision is harangued.

Black Panther, T'Challa
Captain America; Steve Rogers
Iron Man; Tony Stark
Thor; Don Blake
Scarlet Witch; Wanda Maximoff
Swordsman; Jacques Duquesne
Vision

Featured Ally
Mantis

        Steve Englehart started out this section of issues with a Zodiac mini-epic, revealing more about that organization and its ties to the Avengers team. The death of a former member was shown to not matter to the Zodiac, as they would recruit another crime lord to take over any available spots. Their scheme was still on a grand scale, as they planned to terrorize the city by killing every Gemini and showing no one should dare cross them. The Avengers managed to foil this plan, but more importantly to the series, Libra revealed his identity as Mantis' father, beginning the team's long journey into discovering both her past and her destiny as the Celestial Madonna, a story that would take almost another year to reach its conclusion.
        We also began to see how Mantis was causing some cracks in the team. Swordsman began to become jealous of the relationship between Vision and Mantis, even though it was based on mutual admiration of their abilities and minds and Vision was committed to Scarlet Witch. Wanda also picked up on this rapport and was not pleased, becoming frosty towards both of them. And she had been so happy that Mantis, another woman, would be hanging around the team just a few issues ago. This had been part of Englehart's plan from the beginning, as he envisioned Mantis as a former prostitute who would cause strife with her sexuality among the male members of the team. This was toned down a bit, and she was instead a "bar girl," since comics were still seen as a children's medium at this time. I begin to feel bad for Vision, who just wants to complete the mission they're on, but keeps getting verbally attacked by his teammates because of the tension.
       Although I did not feature them here, as I don't have the stories available to me, the Avengers also were a large part of the Captain Marvel (1968) series during these months and came into conflict with Thanos. He has no face-to-face encounters with the Avengers in this series, but it's the start of setting up his rivalry with them for decades to come. Mantis is a focal point of that Captain Marvel story towards the end, being instrumental in Thanos' defeat. That and the ties to the interstellar Kree showcased in issue 124 were certainly showing that she was destined to have a grand part in the history of universe outside of just Earth. And she still isn't a member of the team!
      This sequence of issues ends with both Captain America and Black Panther leaving the team to deal with their own personal troubles that had been ongoing in their own series. This was probably a good thing, since the series will focus heavily on Vision and Mantis for quite some time. Plus it leaves some room in the roster for good ol' Hawkeye to come back soon.
Avengers Vol 1 120
Avengers 120
Death-Stars of the Zodiac!
February, 1974
Written by Steve Englehart
Art by Bob Brown and Don Heck
Lettered by Art Simek
Colored by George Roussos

Taurus, revealed as Cornelius Van Lunt, frees Gemini from prison to fill all the slots in the Zodiac organization. Gemini, in his identity as police officer Damian Link, goes to Avengers Mansion, claiming to be a police liason with official business. Swordsman catches him looking at secret plans and moves to capture him, but Swordsman's recent wounds overwhelm him when he springs into action. His sword does slash out and reveal the Gemini outfit under the police uniform, so the other Avengers capture him. Mantis takes Swordsman to rest. Taurus is watching events from afar, and he and the rest of the Zodiac attack to rescue Gemini. Taurus' new star-blazer weapon is powerful enough to take out Thor, and the rest of the Avengers are also defeated. Mantis returns from her task and disarms Taurus briefly, but she is overwhelmed by the full force of the Zodiac. The Zodiac leaves a message for the Avengers about their plans to kill every Gemini in the city with their large-scale star-blazer weapon. The Avengers deduce that the weapon must be at high altitude and find the Zodiac atop the World Trade Center. Their initial attack disables the star-blazer's ability to affect the city, but it is still able to shoot Mantis at close range and leave her teetering over the edge of the building. Taurus demands the Zodiac be allowed to escape, or he will blast her again, sending her to her death.
Iron Man: "I'm told the last time Zodiac dropped by, they talked about wanting the world to witness our defeat.
Mantis: "Then--they deliberately ignored an opportunity to kill us?" 
  • Steve Englehart had more than a passing interest in the actual zodiac. According to a later Bullpen Bulletins page, he prepared horoscopes professionally.
  • One member of the Zodiac, Gemini, had appeared in his own adventure in Astonishing Tales (1970) 8 and then in issue 17 of that series in a Ka-Zar story.
  • In a change of leadership, Taurus is now the new head of the Zodiac organization.
  • The positions of Scorpio and Aries have been filled by new people since the team's last appearance. The previous Aries, Marcus Lassiter, died at the end of Avengers 82 and has been replaced by Grover Raymond. Scorpio is no longer Jake Fury, but Jacques LaPoint.
  • Aries appears as a white man on the cover, but he is a black man in the interior story. They were probably using the previous Aries' color guide on the cover.
  • Captain America appears on the cover, but not in the issue itself. At the time of the story, he was in jail for the murder of villain the Tumbler, which he was framed for in his own series. Gemini uses these events as a cover for why he is visiting the Avengers at the mansion.
  • Cornelius Van Lunt changes his speech when dressed as Taurus by "roughing up his talking."
  • The narration reminds us that the World Trade Center is now the tallest building in the world. It didn't last long. The Sears Tower beat it out in 1974 by being 82 feet taller.
  • The proper definition of "decimate" is to reduce a number of things by exactly 10%. Since the plot will kill roughly 1/12 of the population, narration says it will "duodecimate" the city.
  • The Zodiac's power source of "stellar energy" is radiation from stars, but it's unknown how it would in any way be superior to simple solar energy, except in its appeal to a team based on star symbology.
  • Mantis is affected by the star-blazer weapon even though she isn't a Gemini, because she feels everyone's pain due to her empathy. The Avengers determined that none of their members were Geminis before attacking the star-blazer, just in case.
  • This story precedes the Star Blazers cartoon by several years, and the term "Death-Stars" in the issue title also precedes its use in Star Wars.
Avengers Vol 1 121

    Avengers 121
    Houses Divided Cannot Stand!
    March, 1974
    Written by Steve Englehart
    Art by John Buscema and Don Heck
    Lettered by John Costanza
    Colored by Petra Goldberg
    Vision bluffs that the Avengers don't care what happens to Mantis, as she is not a member, simply a hanger-on. Scarlet Witch uses the distraction to hex the weapon, destroying it. Battle is rejoined between the teams, and Captain America arrives on the scene to help the Avengers. Aries does throw Mantis over the side of the building anyway. Vision slows her fall, but the structure of the building is damaged during the rescue, and the Avengers must turn their efforts to stopping the building from collapsing. The Zodiac pile into their ship and escape to plot their next move. Mantis is taken to recover from her injuries, and Swordsman, also recovering, tells the team about how he met Mantis. At the Zodiac's hideout, Aries and Taurus confront each other, but Taurus overpowers the new Aries. The disgruntled Aries recruits Pisces, Cancer, Scorpio, Sagittarius, Leo, and Aquarius to overthrow Taurus. Libra is present, but he decides to remain neutral. For financing, Aries calls Cornelius Van Lunt, not realizing he is speaking to Taurus out of costume. Van Lunt sets a meeting at a warehouse in New Jersey. While on patrol, Thor spies the Zodiac craft going to the meeting and summons the rest of the Avengers. They attack the meeting, and Van Lunt slips away. Over a television, he reveals himself as Taurus and activates mechanisms that transform the warehouse into a rocket ship and send it into the sky with the renegade Zodiac and Avengers aboard.
    Cornelius Van Lunt: "Yes, you deluded fools! The aging financier you thought would bankroll your revolt--is Taurus!"
  • Scarlet Witch hexing the Star Slayer causes a "Foom!" sound effect, as does the Zodiac member Cancer slamming against the floor. Join yet?
  • Mantis heals herself by putting herself in a trance. Martial arts are awesome in comics, eh?
  • The team allows Captain America to go prove he was framed, even though he had just escaped from jail. In Captain America's own book this month, Iron Man visits Falcon and tells Falcon to bring Captain America in before the Avengers are forced to get further involved. That scene seems to take place after this issue.
  • Black Panther returns to the team after the battle. He had just met with Falcon in Captain America also, but before this issue. Black Panther constructed the first set of wings Falcon uses to fly.
  • Swordman was working for a crimelord, Monsieur Khruul in Vietnam when he met Mantis. She helped him recover after he was shot in the course of his job and helped him sober up. This is Khruul's first appearance, and he will later appear as an antagonist.
  • The Bullpen Bulletins mentions Steve Englehart's move to San Francisco. He will later set his Ultraverse series, Night Man and The Strangers, in San Francisco.
  • If you arrange the initials of all the renegade Zodiac members, you could get AP CLASS or also ASS CLAP.
  • Avengers Vol 1 122
    Avengers 122
    Trapped in Outer Space!
    April, 1974
    Written by Steve Englehart
    Art by Bob Brown and Mike Esposito
    Lettered by John Costanza
    Colored by George Roussos

    The Avengers and renegade Zodiac members are trapped in orbit. Thor throws Mjolnir through the force field surrounding the warehouse rocket, but it doesn't have enough force to do so on the return trip to his hand afterward. Without his hammer, he reverts to his Don Blake persona just as he takes cover under a handy tarp. The Zodiac members attack, but after a skirmish, an unsteady truce is made so they can all return to Earth. At the headquarters of Taurus, the loyal Zodiac members meet. When Libra and Gemini are alone, Libra turns on Gemini and knocks him out. He enlists the "good" twin to take Gemini's place, and Libra steals Taurus' ship. In space, Iron Man passes through a Scarlet Witch hex placed on the force field, and he is able to exit. He attempts to get Thor's hammer back, but when he begins to push the warehouse back into the atmosphere, the hammer's enchantment pins Iron Man, and the whole structure starts to burn up in reentry. Libra shows up with the Star-Cruiser and manages to get everyone back to Earth. The Avengers and rebel Zodiac members move to take on Taurus' loyal group, but Taurus persuades the rebels to return to the team and take down the Avengers together. Even at nearly full strength, the Zodiac are unable to win the battle. When Thor questions Libra, Libra expresses regret for saving them from space. He claims he only did so because he is Mantis' father, and he thought she was in space with the rest of the team.
    Vision: "Men so devoid of logic are incredible to me--yet experience has shown me many such!"
  • The page that the Avengers are bursting from on the cover is not from this issue.
  • Taurus' trap captures 5 Avengers and 7 rebel Zodiac members, making it an even dozen.
  • It's seems that Tony Stark does still know about Thor's Don Blake identity, even after the Doctor Strange mind-wipe spell in issue 118.
  • Black Panther states "Houses divided against themselves cannot stand." He's paraphrasing the title of the previous issue.
  • When Libra is slammed into a wall, he makes the "Foom!" sound.
  • Iron Man is able to move Thor's hammer in space, but once they reach atmosphere, it pushes him and the entire warehouse back to Earth. On a recent Big Bang Theory episode, "The Bakersfield Expedition," Penny and Bernadette had a debate about Thor's hammer and wondered if it could be moved in space by someone other than Thor. Here's an answer!
  • Swordsman begins to become jealous of Vision's appeal to Mantis. When Mantis recovers, she first calls for Vision, even though it's Swordsman who's present.
  • During the last battle, Scarlet Witch forgoes using her power and gives Virgo an overhead double-handed Captain-Kirk-style smash to the head.
  • Vision freezes up when attempting to go into water, another clue about Vision's forgotten past as the Human Torch. He simply thinks his computer brain is malfunctioning.
  • The letters page features a complimentary letter from Rick Hoberg. He would go on to work as an artist with Steve Englehart on The Strangers in 1993.
Avengers Vol 1 123
Avengers 123
Vengeance in Viet Nam! or -- an Origin for Mantis!
May, 1974
Written by Steve Englehart
Art by Bob Brown and Don Heck
Lettered by John Costanza
Colored by Petra Goldberg
The team disbelieves Libra's admission that he is Mantis' father. They don't even believe he is truly blind, but his damaged eye sockets convince them of the latter. Libra tells the story of how he had been a German mercenary in French-occupied Vietnam. There, he met Mantis' mother Lua, and they were married. Lua's brother was the crime boss, Monsieur Khruul, who was unhappy with the marriage and tried to kill both of them. While the couple was on the run, Mantis was born. During an attack on the fugitives, a fire killed Lua and blinded Libra. Libra and baby Mantis took shelter with the Priests of Pama and stayed there for many years while they both trained in martial arts. Mantis, thinking this story to be lies, moves to attack Libra and battles through most of the Avengers. Libra restrains her with a powerful use of leverage, pinning her to the ground. The team then discovers that Swordsman has stolen a Quinjet and plans to get revenge on Khruul. With his head start, Swordsman manages to battle through some of Khruul's warriors before the rest of the team can follow him, but he is still wounded and outnumbered, so he is captured. By the time the Avengers arrive, Swordsman has been tortured to find out the story of Mantis and the Priests of Pama, and Khruul has gone to destroy the priests for helping Libra and Mantis all those years ago. Libra leads them to the temple, where the Avengers defeat Khruul's warriors, but tragically, all the Priests have been slaughtered. The team finds Khruul lying near death on an altar. The death of the Priests has allowed the Star Stalker to come to Earth, and it lurks nearby.
Iron Man: "Being an Avenger is like living in a madhouse!"
  • This issue starts the new pricing of 25 cents for 18 pages. That equates to $1.18 in 2013.
  • Thor claims Mantis is the "newest Avenger" on the cover, but she is not yet a member and won't be for some time. (Unless he's referring to the absent Swordsman by association.)
  • This is the first appearance of the Priests of Pama. They are not much used past this storyline, showing up in a Fantastic Four written by Englehart and recently during Marvel's Annihilation event. Pama is the name of the star system they are from, not a deity or religion.
  • The Avengers are stuck without a Quinjet when Swordsman steals one and a second one had been left in New Jersey. During the Avengers/Defenders War, they had several smaller versions of the Quinjet they fail to use here.
  • This is the first appearance of the Star Stalker.
  • This issue shows Iron Man understands some Vietnamese. The original Iron Man origin story and kidnapping took place there, so we know he spent some time there.
  • It may seem odd that Khruul is able to find the temple within a mere hour just from Swordsman's secondhand retelling of Libra's story, which mentioned nothing of where the temple was. Since Khruul knows where the fire happened that killed his sister and has presumably searched that area before in years past, we must presume this was the last piece of information he needed for the temple's location to become clear to him.
  • This month is also the first appearance of future Avenger Iron Fist in Marvel Premiere 15.


Avengers Vol 1 124
Avengers 124
Beware the Star-Stalker!
June, 1974
Written by Steve Englehart
Art by John Buscema and Dave Cockrum
Lettered by John Costanza
Colored by George Roussos

The Avengers wonder what Khruul meant by the name of the Star Stalker. Mantis feels a spiritual chill, and the creature appears. It is able to withstand all the Avengers' attacks and tells them it is invincible. It relates how in centuries past, it was only defeated by the Kree Priests of Pama. It survived, but when the Priests scattered to most of the inhabited worlds to serve as guardians against the Star Stalker, it feared facing them again and avoided any of those planets. The Priests on Earth had kept the secret of defeating the Star Stalker, but Khruul's men killed them all, leaving the Earth vulnerable. Having no fear, the Star Stalker spins a cocoon around itself, threatening that it will emerge and devour the Earth's energy. Libra believes that Mantis has been taught the secret, but she cannot remember it. Black Panther deduces that the Star Blaster used by the Zodiac may be of use, so he has it delivered to Vietnam by SHIELD and convinces Taurus over the phone to share its secrets in the interests of Earth. Despite this preparation, the Star Blaster does not defeat the Star Stalker in his new form. All the Avengers fall in battle except Mantis. She directs a recovering Vision to use his solar rays on the Stalker, which turns out to be the key to its defeat, as it is killed by the rays.
Black Panther: "Well, what then? Some 'monster of the hidden temple'?'"
Vision: "Your skepticism ill befits a man who stands next to an android and a god, T'Challa."
Mantis: "This one is not what even she thinks she is--and that makes her very, very afraid."
  • The Star Stalker exclaims, "Quantu!" in what must be an alien language, though I'm not sure what that means.
  • The original Priests of Pama were sentenced to exile because of their pacifist teachings being deemed dangerous to the Kree mainstream's warlike tendencies. Their prison had no sunlight, vegetation, or minerals. However, they were encouraged to later leave their prison planet as long as they left Kree space, so it was a lax, if harsh imprisonment.
  • The Kree leader, the Supreme Intelligence, was told long ago about the Star Stalker and presumably its weakness, but it ignored the Priests due to their outcast status.
  • Upon coming out of its cocoon, the Star Stalker undergoes "pure ionic combustion." It's unknown whether this process is similar to that undergone by Wonder Man in his years-long hibernation and subsequent transfer into his ionically energized forms.
  • Originally the Star Blaster was calibrated to kill only people born under one sign of the Zodiac. Since the Zodiac is based on Earth's calendar and constellations, it's unknown how or if it would affect an alien such as the Star Stalker born in another galaxy. It doesn't work here.
  • Mantis claims she used logic to figure out the Star Stalker's weakness. She saw how it waited for night to exit the temple. She recalled how it attacked the Priests on a planet without sunlight. She also points to its ignorance of Galactus as implying its isolation, including that as part of the puzzle, but that seems tenuous. Since her full memories do eventually surface, she may have been helped in her reasoning by actually knowing the secret subconsciously.
  • The Priests' secret to defeating the Star Stalker was to focus their body's energy to bring magma to the surface of the Earth, which would weaken the Star Stalker.
  • Although it is against Avengers rules to kill their enemies, the death of the Star Stalker does not seem to bother any of the team.

  • This Star Stalker's name is later revealed to be Varanus. He has a son, Biawak, who will also take on the Star Stalker name. They are supposedly mutants of the Vorm race of extraterrestials.
  • Varanus will not appear again until Avengers 353 as part of a Legion of the Unliving, a group of dead foes.
Avengers Vol 1 125
Avengers 125
The Power of Babel!
July, 1974
Written by Steve Englehart
Art by John Buscema and Dave Cockrum
Lettered by Tom Orzechowski
Colored by Petra Goldberg
Libra is taken into custody in New York, leaving Mantis confused and unable to reconcile her memories with what she has been told. Rick Jones' girlfriend Lou-Ann Savannah shows up at the mansion to get the Avengers help and collapses. After some other adventures are summarized, an observatory notices a massive space fleet approaching Earth, which the Avengers know has been sent by Thanos. They head into space to battle the fleet. They notice a sector of space that is obscured behind a globe of darkness, and one team of Avengers splits off to investigate it. Vision, Scarlet Witch, Swordsman, and Mantis enter the field of darkness using a hex sphere to penetrate it. They discover a lone ship and enter it. After fighting through the alien defenders, they discover the ship is a huge machine that is being used by the fleet to translate everyone's language. Once it is destroyed, the many alien races that make up the fleet are unable to understand each other and start to fight amongst themselves, crippling the fleet. The Avengers return home, but Thanos himself is lurking atop the mansion.
Swordsman: "You tell me you admire Mantis' mind--but we both know what you really mean, don't we?"
Vision: "I won't even dignify that with a reply, Avenger.
Mantis: "What is he saying, Vision? Have you praised this one to him, also?"
Vision: "Enough! This is no time to divide our concentration! We have a mission to complete--a war to win!"
  • The letters page notes that Dave Cockrum has been inking from rough breakdowns, rather than the usual finished pencil art lately.
  • Captain America returns to the team this issue after clearing his name and learning about government corruption in his own series. Also, although his memory of it has been removed, it's likely he has also just gone through the events of the Avengers Forever series and just finished traveling through time and returning.
  • In the middle of this issue, one page tells the story of the Avengers' involvement in Captain Marvel 27, 28, 31 and 32, which is said to take place over two days. The rest of the issue takes place between Captain Marvel 32 and 33.
  • The Avengers continue to use the Zodiac's Star Cruiser, this time for the space battle.
  • Thanos' fleet is made up of many alien races, including the Aakon and Skrull.
  • The sound of Thor's hammer punching through a spacecraft's hull is "Foom!" They will take your membership order from space.
  • Thor demands the fleet leave the quadrant. A "quadrant" is a quarter of a circle or one of the four parts of a Cartesian graph. I'm not sure how Marvel space is divided into four or if Thor even knows it himself. (What with his "Nine Worlds" upbringing.)
  • An alien makes an oath to "Yggthion on high." Yggthion was a character in the science-fiction play Warp!, which debuted in 1971. It was directed by Stuart Gordon, who would go on to direct several H.P. Lovecraft films, including Re-Animator. The play also featured actor Keith Szarabajka, who would do voice-over work for several Marvel video games and cartoons, including as Ronan the Accuser in Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes. The play moved to Broadway in 1973, and the art director there was former Avengers artist Neal Adams.
  • Another alien oath is "Tuareg." On Earth, these are a tribe of Berber peoples who live in North Africa.
  • When debris is falling on Earth, a scene shows people in front of a theater marquee that probably says the film Deep Throat is playing there. A man's arm in the foreground blocks part of the lettering, so it could also be Deer Throat or Deep Thrombosis or something less likely. It's also possible it is Deep Throat Part II, which was released in February of 1974 and had only an R rating and could be showing in a mainstream theater.
  • Captain Marvel 27 features the same scenes with Lou-Ann arriving at Avengers Mansion and Captain Marvel seeking her out. That issue was published in July of 1973, a full year before this issue. That's why keeping track of continuity can be hard, people!
  • Captain Marvel 33 explains that this whole space adventure was a ruse to get the Avengers off Earth. Thanos used the Cosmic Cube to move Earth slightly into a different space-time so that when the Avengers returned, they could not interact with him and stop his plan. Mantis, with her full-body control, was able to partially counteract that effect and appear as an image to advise Captain Marvel. Even with the power of a Cosmic Cube, Thanos is defeated in Captain Marvel 33, and the story is not picked up again in this series.


Avengers Vol 1 126
    Avengers 126
    All the Sounds and Sights of Death!
    August, 1974
    Written by Steve Englehart
    Art by Bob Brown and Dave Cockrum
    Lettered by John Costanza
    Colored by Petra Goldberg
    Ambassador Pershing of Rudyarda comes to the Avengers Mansion for help. He claims that the staff of his embassy has received death threats and a gardener there has been murdered. Despite Black Panther's enmity with Rudyarda, the Avengers agree to investigate. Black Panther, Vision, Scarlet Witch, Mantis, and Swordsman leave the mansion. Captain America, Thor, and Iron Man are in conference when they feel an explosion outside. When they go out to investigate, the Avengers and Pershing are trapped in a globe of sound, and the villains Solarr and Klaw are menacing them. Klaw turns out to be merely a projection of sound. He demands he be made Dictator of Wakanda, or Solarr will start to burn the trapped hostages with his heat powers. Pershing is attacked by Solarr to show the seriousness of the threat, but Scarlet Witch focuses her power to revive him. The Avengers on the outside of the globe are advised by Black Panther that Klaw's power limits his projections to a 20-block radius, so they search for Klaw, but are unable to find him. At the news of this failure, Black Panther figures out that "Ambassador Pershing" is really Klaw in disguise. He evades both villains' blasts and destroys the portable power source that Klaw had hidden in his briefcase, ending the threat. He then announces he must take a leave of absence to turn to his affairs back in Wakanda.
    Scarlet Witch: "You do feel emotions--you've felt them with me--so why not again, with Mantis? Isn't she your type?"
    Vision: "Wanda, emotion is still a rare thing for me, and love is the rarest of all. I have hardly experienced enough to 'type' women."
    Scarlet Witch: "But maybe you'd like to! That is something human males do--and you do wish you were human!"
  • Artist Dave Cockrum apparently put himself as a bystander in the foreground of the double-page splash that shows the Avengers and the villains.
  • Iron Man's armor has a nose starting with this issue. It's the Mark IV armor upgrade. He'll be using it in Avengers until issue 149.
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  • Solaar only had an appearance in Captain America before this issue. He was created by Englehart in that series. After a few turns as a villain, he will be killed while in custody in Power Man and Iron Fist (1978) 113.
  • Scarlet Witch has a framed picture of Vision in her room. It's signed "To Wanda" in cursive.
  • Captain America is thinking of quitting being Captain America during this issue. He does just that in his own series this very month. Although he does not announce it here, he also leaves the Avengers team before next issue.
  • Black Panther says, "By the First Lion," as an oath.
  • Rudyarda is one of the seven countries that border Wakanda. Its government believes in white supremacy and has jailed Black Panther before in Fantastic Four (1961) 119. To be fair, it also jailed Klaw, who is now red, but was a white man.
  • Black Panther activates a "blue summons," which alerts half the team only.
  • Narration tells the fans that they can come up with how Klaw and Solarr got together for this team-up. Letter writer Chuck Mabry's version was chosen. He said Klaw read about Solarr's battle with Captain America while in prison and had an accomplice see to Solarr's release. Solarr then in turn freed Klaw from his prison, and they teamed up. Since the recent revelation of the Intelligencia super-villain team, it might be safe to assume they are the "accomplice" mentioned in this fan-made tale. The Intelligencia did verbally single out Klaw as someone they helped on many occasions. 
  • Scarlet Witch has not used her hex power to heal someone before. Since Klaw was only feigning injury, she didn't here either.
  • The letters page has a letter from Ralph Macchio, future Avengers editor.
  • Klaw uses his power to create objects to create red panthers, possibly a nod to his arch-foe Black Panther.
  • The sound of Klaw's sonic blast into the ground is "Foom!" Soon after, Black Panther's fist to Klaw's face makes the unlikely sound of "Socko!"