Category Archives: Movies

Cyclops and Marvel Girl: the great love story begins

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imageIs Fox Getting It Right for the Next Movie?

It took 17 years to get here, but think the X-MEN I know and love are about to have a breakout year on the big screen, and may be THE Superheroes of the coming decade. I say this after a sobering moment earlier this week. An acquaintance who knows I am an X-Men fan asked this: “Who’s your favorite X-Man?” And without hesitation I said “Cyclops.” But I was countered with, “Not Wolverine? Why Cyclops? He’s smug, possessive and a dick!”

That is not the Cyclops I know. In fact that is not the Cyclops who exists. What he is referring to is the ‘paper’ performance of James Marsden in the 2000 X-Men film and the 2002 sequel X2. I forget sometimes, the greater public does not know these characters like I do. That, however is about to be rectified.

Marvel, indeed America, owes a great debt to Fox for that 2000 film. It elevated the superhero film and was responsible for the Spider-Man (2001) and Hulk (2003) films that followed. Iron Man (2008) probably wouldn’t have launched without X-Men’s initial success. Even if did not accurately portray my heroes.

But Fox chose a ‘modern’ X-Men team, similar to the team it had broadcast for a few years as an animated series on Saturday Morning television. It was a tremendous Fox TV success. Why fix what isn’t broken.

After the end of those first three films, the X-men backed up to the 1960’s. But instead of using the original team that all fans knew and loved they created a NEW first class. Suddenly Cyclop’s younger brother was his older brother. X-Men villain Banshee was a hero instead. That film led to “Days of Future Past” which ‘re-set’ the end of X3 from years earlier. Now all options are open. That trio of films concludes next Spring with “Age of Apocalypse” that will FINALLY introduce the members of the original X-Men team that fans like me grew up with. Cyclops, Marvel Girl and Angel. Yes, Jean Grey had a superhero name when a mask covered her face.

Back to the Roots

Tye Sheridan is Cyclops
Tye Sheridan is Cyclops
Sophie Turner is Marvel Girl
Sophie Turner is Marvel Girl

To be sure, the origins of Jean Grey, Scott Summers and Warren Worthington the third will be cor-rupted for sure to fit into this twisted cine-matic version of history.

Ben Hardy is Angel
Ben Hardy is Angel

But what I am hoping will emerge Is what I know: the depth and warmth and functionality of this team.

Nicholas Houht is Beast
Nicholas Houht is Beast

In 1963, Marvel Comic created a superhero group of the world’s most unusual teens, children born with powers. Cyclops, Angel, Beast, Iceman and Angel were all trained by Professor X to use their powers for good as a team. I was a 10-year-old kid, they were kids. We grew up together.

While all the boys fell for Jean, her heart was set on the quiet reserved one who emerged as team leader: Cyclops. He initially loved her from afar believing she was out of her league and that he could hurt her with his powers. But love conquers all. And now we have the chance to see this happen before our eyes on screen. Angel too will be turned to the Archangel before his redemption by film’s end.

Pardon Me a Moment While I Flashback

imageIn 1963 I was 10. While looking through the comic book stand one day at the drug store I saw a most unusual comic book. I bought it for the cover price of 12 cents. I always tell it this way “I was a kid, they were kids, we became best of friends.” I picked up that first issue of X-Men and began a lifelong journey with them. In that first issue Jean Grey, the red-headed only female of the group was just joining what had been the all male class of Professor X as Marvel Girl. There was Hank McCoy a very agile youth with big hands and feet who called himself Beast, Bobbie Drake, Iceman, who generated ice all over his body. The wealthy Warren Worthington III had actual wings and could fly like an Angel. You’d think that would be any kid’s favorite. Not so. No, I identified with the quite, brooding, geek, team leader who always questioned his value, his skills, his decisions. Worse, he had to wear special Ruby glasses to cover his eyes otherwise terrible destructive optic beams emitted from his eyes tearing through everything in its path. A special one-piece visor made Scott Summers look like his namesake: Cyclops. Over the course of the next three years we watch him yearn for the attention of Jean, too self-conscious to tell her. She was actively pursued by the other young men, especially Warren, but she wanted something more with Scott. Finally, excruciatingly slowly, a real relationship evolved and would prove indestructible up until her death in issue 100 (11 years later). This would be a new beginning for them, as she returned in issue 101 no longer as Marvel Girl but as Phoenix, a cosmic entity rising from her own ashes. In 1982 in issue 137, Jean, who had become “Dark Phxoenix” before being redeemed, once again sacrificed herself and Scott was there with her at the end. Rising a third time in 1986 this “original” X-Men team would be resurrected as X-Factor to battle Apocalypse who tried to steal their young son Nathan, who was snatched into the future out of the clutches of Apocalypse. He would return from the future as Cable to lead the New Mutants. Today, as a grandfather, I tell the stories and adventures of my friends to my grandchildren. And Scott and Jean? They’re still out there doing what is necessary to keep the world safe.

Iceman who will be too young in this late 70s early 80’s story won’t be part of the team  but since the revisionist writers at Marvel want to reimagine Bobby Drake as ‘gay’ it is alright with me to leave him out of this trio of films

A Setup for the Next Three Films

What this sets up is awesome. The next trio of X-Men films will follow the original team and these characters who they are introducing will carry the films. I get so-excited just thinking about this. The possibilities seem endless. What possibilities? Where can the X-Men franchise go without Wolverine or Storm? Well, let’s look at this:


imageHow about a renewed battle with Magneto, teamed with Quicksiver, Scarlet Witch, Toad and Mastermind.

imageOr let’s drop onto the Savage Land and team with Kazar and Zabu against Mr. Sinister and Sauron.

imageOr take on the Mimic.

imageA battle with Charles Xavier’s step-brother Juggernaut.

imageOr we can do the Death of Professor X and introduce the Changeling to America.

imageAnd we can get a costume change along the way. And this is just a partial list.

imageAnd at the end of those three movies we can introduce the NEW team (2nd Banana Team to us old timers) of Wolverine, Storm, Collossus, Night Crawler among others. Our chance to do this right.

One Final Word on My Favorite X-Man

imageI always insist that my favorite X-Man is Cyclops. If I were truthful that is probably not true. A grandchild recently asked if had ever been embarrassed when I realized that I had grieved for a fictional character. In 1980 (because of editorial mismanagement of a primary character mandated by the comics code of authority) Marvel had to kill an X-man. A justified punishment for a mass murderer. Dark Phoenix, Jean Grey had to die. In issue #137 that year in a total surprise to fandom they killed Jean Grey (previously known as Marvel Girl). I had grown up with this girl. I was ten when I picked up issue #1 of X-Men off the stands. I fell in love with her by proxy because I identified with Scott Summers an outsider, self-alienated, forced into the leadership role, where he was tortured by every unsuccessful decision. Jean loved Scott, but he was a tough nut to crack because he felt he was a danger to himself and her. It was a long torturous childhood I endured falling in love with someone just out of reach. My puberty was better when Scott finally gave in to his feelings. Life was good for many years until this tragedy in 1980. I actually sent a rose in her name to 575 Madison Avenue, NY (Marvel’s corporate headquarters at the time.) I was distraught. I was never embarrassed that I felt the emotional loss of a fictional character. Not then. But I would feel much more than embarrassment later in 1986 they brought her back. (Using an
age old literary cheat – it was someone else who died while the ‘real’ Jean was tucked safely asleep elsewhere). This was done to accommodate a ‘boom’ in the industry and they wanted to reunite the original 1963-1974 team in a new title called X-Factor. To do so they needed a living Jean. I was ANGRY: very, very angry. They cheated my emotions after I buried her six years before. All that grief I endured was re-rendered as nothing more than a joke, a sly wink of the eye. If I had ever wished for her miraculous return I was overwhelmed now by an unabated anger that I had been emotionally duped, violated for a cheap marketing stunt. It took YEARS for this emotion to fade. It was one of the reasons in 1995 that I got out of comic reading/collecting/dealing. It is one of those unwritten rules of serialized fiction. Death of a beloved character is acceptable. Insulting the emotional investment or intelligence of the reader is not.

A T-shirt I made, capturing a moment from X-Factor #6
A T-shirt I made, capturing a moment from X-Factor #6

So truth be told, I guess Scott really isn’t my favorite X-Man. I’ve always loved another.

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Rick Jones: the Most Important Marvel Hero You’ve Never Heard

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imageRick Jones? Who’s Rick Jones? Before I get to the most important Marvel character you’ve never heard, indulge me a moment, please.

I often play this game. If I could have been someone else who would it be. Like literary figures, or historical ones or fantasy characters. Among the historical I’d like to imagine that I would be an Apostle like Paul. Living miraculously through storms and ship wrecks, venomous snake bites and stonings all the while teaching others great spiritual truths and wisdom. But then, realistically I would probably be Peter. From the moment he saw Jesus he challenged him, “Yeah, yeah. I’m a great fisherman and have been out all night without finding anything, and you say you can take me out and just fill the boat! Well let’s go, let me show you that you’re wrong!” (Gary Stuber paraphrasing). You saw how that worked out. When Jesus told Peter he would have to go into Jerusalem and be taken captive and killed, Peter insisted on stopping him so that Jesus had to say, “Satan get behind me!” to him. At the last supper he bragged, “everyone else might betray you but I won’t!” Liar, liar, pants on fire. Hours later in the garden, Jesus would have to take a sword out of his hand and heal the ear Peter cut off. Even after the resurrection, Peter went back to fishing and Christ would have to shame him, “Peter if you love me, feed my sheep.” Not once, not twice but three times. Yeah, I’d be Peter, brash, impulsive, in need of correction, hard-headed and full of pride. Though I’d want to be Paul.

If I were a superhero I would have to be a Marvel Superhero. No Superman, Batman or other DC hero for me. And even more I would want to be an X-Man. From the day in 1963 when I picked up X-Men #1 off the stands of my local drugstore as a ten year old, I WAS Scott Summers also known as Cyclops. I identified with the quiet loner, unsure of his ability to lead, silently in love with Jean Grey.

But, realistically, I’d probably be Rick Jones. Rick Jones was partner to some of Marvels greatest heroes. Partner. He probably created the Avengers, was the key figure in the Kree-Skrull War, was an Avenger, spent more time in the Negative Zone than either Warlock or Annillius, and managed to kill the Abomination with his bare hands, stopped the Red Hulk and presently is living the life as a normal human with his wife. He has been all over the universe, every Marvel hero knows his name and yet there are not now, nor ever will be any Rick Jones Halloween masks. In fact, it is my allegment that the Marvel Cinematic Universe is CONSPIRING to keep him out of existence.

imageLet me introduce you to Richard Millhouse “Rick” Jones. Rick first appeared in Hulk #1 in 1962. Dr. Robert Bruce Banner while conducting a Gamma-Radiation Bomb experiment in the Southwestern desert, first saw him from the bunker in his field glasses. He told the techs to hold up the countdown and rushed out to the desert where he threw the teen into a hole and took the full brunt of the radiation explosion. It wasn’t held up.

imageIn gratitude, the teenage orphan Rick hung with the doctor watching him transform for the first time into the hulk (who was grey for the first two issues before becoming green).

imageThe young sidekick stuck with him, guiding him out of trouble and exercising limited control.

imageOnce hulk came out of control Rick formed the Teen Brigade, a team of ham-radio operators that tracked the Hulks movements.

imageIn fact, it was Rick’s ham radio alerts that were picked up simultaneously by Iron Man, Thor, Antman and Wasp that united them in a battle against the hulk that led to them becoming the Avengers.

imageA few years later, Rick Jones would become an Avenger, and partner to Captain America, wearing Bucky’s original costume and playing partner throughout the 60’s and 70’s.

imageThat is until a cosmic encounter with Captain Marvel made him cosmically entangled with the Kree entity. While he spent part time as Rick Jones on earth, he alternately exchanged places with Captain Marvel trapped in the Negative Zone. They shared consciousness in the same place, while their bodies were universes apart.

imageThis cosmic exchange put Captain Marvel on earth and Rick Jones into the Negative Zone. They lived this way, alternately switching back and forth for years until ultimately separated.

imageThis however was an event that also briefly gave Rick his own super-powers as well as bringing a decisive end to the long-running Kree-Scrull war.

imageRick became human and normal once again. Until he was thrust into another cosmic war between the Dire Wraiths and Rom the Space Knight. He met his love along this route. After a brief stint as a super-powered hero he once again became human.

He got married and wrote a best seller about his life as a sidekick, partner, Avenger and cosmic entity.

imageLife was good if not boring. In an incident that got him injected with the super-soldier formula he ended up like the monster the Abomination (only blue) aS A-Bomb and ended up killing the out-of-control Abomination. Afterword he brought down the Red Hulk before he was “cured” with a dose that turned him human again.

That could be the subject for the next book if he wants to write it. For now he is living the simple life again as a normal married man. No super-villains, no aliens, no cosmos, no superheroes. Still, no Rick Jones Halloween masks or merchandise either. Worse. No one will be playing him anytime soon in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. There he is the most important person who doesn’t now or will probably never exist. Yep, that would probably be me.

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Alternative History: Disney Wolf Brings Nation to its Knees

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Disney Resorts the Largest Christian Ministry in America

Disney as a Christian ministry? Millions of American families every year flock to the Christian themed Disney vacation playgrounds of California, Florida, Missouri and the recently opened Buffalo, New York resorts. Looking back on the 50 years of Disney resort history that started with a mouse, probably wouldn’t have gotten where it was without a wolf.

Disney Characters: Beloved or Scary

While Mickey Mouse was Disney’s first big screen hero, and while children will always love Minnie, Donald, Clarence, Clarabell, Pluto and others, it was Snow White that thrust Disney into the movie making business. Pinnoccio, Dumbo, Sleeping Beauty showed American movie makers that children’s animated stories could reach adults with romance and adventure equal to any live action movie. Perhaps Walt was taking a tip from Cecil B. Demile when in 1958 he began production on what was to become the turning point in Disney history: Little Red Riding Hood. Everyone knows this story. And we know it’s villain. We saw him years earlier in Disney’s Silly Symphonies ‘Three Little Pigs.’ As a child he terrified me, that Big Bad Wolf. Who knew he would transform the American culture?

Little Red Riding Hood (1959); Disney’s Greatest Movie

Disney always takes liberty with their stories. I mean, do we really want to see a Brothers Grimm version of Cinderella? Dark and gruesome. (I must confess a little desire to see crows eat the eyes out of the wicked stepsisters). Disney is a master at taking gruesome material and making it G-Rated material. More than that. With its heart-touching drama, swelling, inspiring music and eye blasting color and art, Disney movies are emotionally transforming. And this was never more so apparent than in The Little Red Riding Hood movie released in 1959 and winning Disney an unprecedented 8 Academy Awards for a single movie, beating Ben Hur for Best Picture. And winning over audiences as the best Christian movie, ever.

As Only Disney Could

Yes, typically Disney, we had our plethora of new talking forest animals who did their best behind the scenes to protect the naive and innocent Mary from falling prey to the evil wicked Big Bad Wolf. Biblically themed throughout the movie, the animals weren’t the only ones quoting scripture. Grandma did a tremendous job holding her own in an argument with the wolf using the bible as both a sword in the literary sense and as a literal one too.

Beginning of a Revolution

But it was the final scene that is remembered most fondly by those who love Disney movies. After a hopeful expectation that the woodcutter would rescue Mary and her animal partners, when the woodcutter was accidentally dispatched, we lost all hope. Disney is a master at this too. Emotionally on edge we watched an evil, hungry monster approach her. Our fear was real. Then, calmly, Mary turns, down on her knees in prayer, soft and earnest. She is joined by her friends. Maybe because she forgave him, maybe, because we in the audience were praying too. Maybe, just because Disney is master at this as well, we saw the monster transform. We saw him confront his own mental image, his wickedness, and melt into regret. There were no dry eyes in the darkness as we watched a former monster get down on his knees as Mary helped him become a child of God. We left the theatre that day not only happy and complete, but transformed ourselves.

Wolf Replaces Mouse as Iconic Figure

Not only did the movie break attendance records in 1959, but it generated 18-theatrical shorts featuring, ‘The Good Wolf.’ And 8-theatrical shorts featuring the ‘Gospel Animals.’ The success of the picture had a lot of cultural fallout, the least of which was America’s need for Christian vacation resorts. Disney transformed its California Park from a mouse theme park to a Christian themed park. How can we forget the iconic statue of the humble wolf on his knees at the foot of the cross. Demand created more theme parks in Orlando, Florida; Branson Missouri and Buffalo, New York as well as 5 international parks overseas (but then I don’t have to tell you Disney’s history)

Spiritual Fruit of the ’60’s

What I would like to bring to your remembrance what it did for America. Not only did Disney start doing more movies from great Biblical stories. And even help create the first Christian educational channel for cable, but other movie studios and networks picked up the trend. In fact, good family entertainment was a staple of the 1950’s. Disney influenced that trend to continue well into the sixties and seventies, during a time when there was potential for great turmoil and spiritual corruption. Can you imagine what the 60’s and 70’s would have been like without the great Christian revival initiated by Disney?

What 1960-1970’s Could Have Looked Like: A Scary Picture for America

Let me paint you a scary picture. After the close of World War I when America was recovering from its wounds. Americans began to question the existence of God. Prosperity, mobility, humanism, needs of greedy men generated an era known as the ‘Roaring Twenties.’ We can easily see where America would be in the 60’s and ’70’s without the Evangelistic Revolution. What would America have looked like in this alternate version of history: anti-tradition rebellion, an increase of sexual abandon leading to a generation of fatherless children, a pervasive need for selfishness. abandonment of Christian ideals: parenthood, charity, responsibility. Perhaps a willingness to kill unwanted fatherless children (which would be a financial ruin to a selfish nation) or terminate the physically or mentally ill, or aged. Or like the return of the twenties: a proliferation of drugs and alcohol. Aren’t you glad that did not happen? Can you imagine what an America today would be like if we lived through an era like that?

A Grateful, Thankful Nation Should Thank Disney

Next Sunday when you take your family to church you might want to thank God for a wolf that kept Christianity alive and vibrant in your nation. The majority in this nation are faithful and still live by principals erected upon the foundation of America. And we continue as a nation of faith, families, prosperity, with goodness in its heroes, its media and its news. We exist as a nation that still upholds Christian ideas as our platform and maybe this began when we watched a bad wolf become a good wolf and knew if that could happen to the most wicked thing we knew, it could happen to America.

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The New Wolverine Role Could be the Ultimate Marvel Cinematic Movie Prize

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The Beginning of the End?

imageHugh Jackman has played Marvel’s Wolverine for eighteen years  since Logan came out in 2017. He appeared briefly in X-Men: Apocalypse in a story set in the early 70’s before he got his admantium skeleton or was officially part of the team. “Logan” was his last contracted movie with Fox Studios.

Old Men and Retirement

imageLogan was to be based on “Old Man Logan” which is in the future in a post-apocalyptic world (not created by Apocalypse, by the way) where superheroes are outlawed and super villains have divided up the country. At the end of the 6-part story Old Man Logan is coaxed out of retirement as a hero and picks up the Wolverine mantle again. To many other Marvel characters not licensed by Fox made this story impossible. That was Jackman’s last appearance as Wolverine. He says he is ready to move on.

Is he? Wolverine was his first Hollywood role and has been good for him. If he’s ready for “something else” what do you call the nearly two other movies per year since that he has been doing? He’s done everything from sci-fi, to drama, to romance, to Broadway musical turned movie. What “something else” is there to do in Hollywood? Direct? Produce? Retire? Maybe, like Logan, he will have a change of heart  Or . . .

A Bigger Plan

I think Hugh Jackman, and it is my hope that this is part of a plan to get something bigger, is a smarter man who has no intention of giving up his first truly great role. He expressed interest a few years ago about Wolverine taking on Iron Man. And for years in Hollywood this was impossible. Marvel Studios owned rights to Iron Man and the Avengers. 20th Century Fox Studios owned the right to Wolverine and the X-Men and NEVER the twain shall meet. Fox would never consent to giving up an ounce of its blockbuster making superhero, not even for a cameo in the Marvel films.

A Bigger Prize

imageSo, hell froze over. A shrewd Disney negotiator made an agreement with Fox and the world changed. Something once thought impossible, is now only years from materializing: X-Men and Avengers sharing the screen. A win-win for the studios, a win-win for fans, a win-win for Jackman who could indeed reprise that role. For OMG the unthinkable: the Canadian wilderness battle of the century against Wendego and the Incredible Hulk! A very shrewd negotiator could get this dream done.

All Is Not Lost

But let’s say, just for argument sake, it’s not the beginning of the world’s greatest bluff but that Jackman really does want to retire. Is Wolverine done too? Why? I know the PERFECT actor to take on the role of the berzerker Canadian.

Jackman
Jackman

Continue reading The New Wolverine Role Could be the Ultimate Marvel Cinematic Movie Prize

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Marvel’s Sub-Mariner Under the Sea Movie Adventure? Don’t Hold Your Breath!

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1968

Alpha and Omega: First and Last

Is Marvel crazy? Have they overlooked one of their oldest, most popular characters among all those they have introduced into the MCU movie universe? Where is Namor also known as Sub-Mariner? Technically, Namor might be the FIRST Marvel Comics hero. In his appearance in Marvel Comics #1 in 1939, the comic that ushered in the Marvel Universe, the Bill Everett story and art was actually a reprint from Motion Pictures Funnies Weekly. It was a black and white newsprint throw away comic given free with the admission to the movie theater. This original predates Marvel Comics #1 by six months. Yet, Namor has moved to the back of the line. The LAST story to be told. IF his story EVER gets told.

April 1939
April 1939
Nov. 1939
Nov. 1939

Misunderstood Rebel WITH a Causel

Namor’s story, these days might actually appeal to liberals. He was a half-breed, shunned initially by both races, the son of a deep ocean native warrior princess, who had to fight his way to the throne. There he fought climate, pollution, ocean animal killers, modern weapons of war and his every heroic deed was mischaracterized as evil. So what’s the hold up getting him to the big screen? Corporate greed? Capitolism? Conservative’s agenda. Something more dramatic. He’s owned by two different Hollywood Studios. As one of the characters “shopped out” during Marvel’s bankruptcy 1999 B.D. (Before Disney) Marvel sold the movie rights of X-Men to Fox, the Fantastic Four to Columbia/Sony, and Hulk and Namor to Universal. Now Namor the half-bred human and Atlantean Merman is truly got half his body at Universal Studios and half at Marvel Studios. Just enough rights are owned by both to keep Namor off the screen for many more years.

Namor took on the Axis powers on the sea, sometimes all by himself.
Namor took on the Axis powers on the sea, sometimes all by himself.
Namor returns to the comics after an 18 year hiatus, this time as a villain.
Namor returns to the comics after an 18 year hiatus, this time as a villain.

Hero to Villain: There and Back Again

Sub-Mariner (pronounced “sub-MAH-rain-er”) has had a roller-coaster career of good guy, bad guy, good guy again. After all what do you expect from a social outcast? The love child between a human sea captain and the beautiful (and blue) royal warrior princess mermaid people who are the remnant of the lost city of Atlantis. Namor gets his Caucasian color and handsome rugged features from his human father and his pointy ears, gills and winged ankles (they look like wings but are actually webbed flippers propelling him faster in the water) from his mother, Fen. Raised by her in the depths of the ocean in the kingdom of Atlantis, he was groomed for the throne, but literally lost it. Being raised in the great depths of the ocean under such water pressure gives him great super strength when standing on the surface, where he can breathe air, due to his dual biological nature. During World War Two, Namor watched surface men attack one another sinking great ships, airplanes and submarines (different pronunciation) into his ocean home, including bombs, radioactive material, garbage and various human pollutants. Kind of ticks a guy off. Fortunately, he teamed his wrath against the axis powers aiding Captain America, Whizzer, The Android Human Torch and others to battle the Germans and Japanese with the All-Winners Squad. That alliance ended with the war. By 1954 all of Marvel’s superhero comics had faded into oblivion. Marvel’s first hero was also the first to lose his own title. Then, in 1962 in the beginning of what was later to be known as the Silver Age of Comics, Namor was the first of the WWII heroes to be revived. Marvel and DC comics were in the beginning of a great revival of superheroes. DC had a bit of luck bringing back the Golden Age Flash, so Marvel was eager to see how fans would react to their old heroes. Marvel had introduced their first title in November 1961: The Fantastic Four. It was a hit. So in the fourth issue of that series in early 1962 Namor re-emerged, and this time as an opponent.

Golden Hero; Silver Age Villain

imageTo explain away 18 years of Namor’s dormant activity the Stan Lee and Jack Kirby story made him a transient living in men’s shelters in New York, living on the streets. He had grown a full mane of dark hair covering his pointy ears, and a long beard and mustache. He had no memory of who he was. That is until a meddling Human Tourch thought he recognized him from a stack of old comic books he was reading. Johnny Storm burned off Namor’s beard and hair exposing him for who he was. A defensive battle began and being close to the docks they ended up in the water where Namor’s gill’s drew in sea water and his mind cleared. Namor’s first act was to search for his kingdom. Finding it destroyed and his people missing, he declared war on all surface dwellers. Soon, Namor was in a full on battle with all four of the FF. they drove him back into the ocean. Not before Namor was smitten with the beauty of the invisible girl, Sue Storm.

Reed and Sue would argue a number of times over her crush on the handsome Atlantean.
Reed and Sue would argue a number of times over her crush on the handsome Atlantean.

imageA half dozen times over the course of the next thirty issues and their first double-size annual, Namor would battle the Fantastic Four as a villain. Sometimes teaming up with their arch enemy Doctor Doom. He teamed with Hulk against the Avengers in Avengers #3, and in the very next issue, brooding over the defeat he encounters some native Eskimos worshiping a figure frozen in ice. Cursing the ignorant surface dwellers for worshiping idols, he throws the block into the North Atlantic where it drifts down to New York where the Avengers thaw out the second WWII hero, Captain America. He even was approached by Magneto recruiting mutants for his brotherhood in X-Men #6 where Charles Xavier proved he was a hybrid rather than a mutant and thus had no skin in the game.  Namor would be a villain in the Marvel Universe until 1965 when he would be redeemed.

Prince Once More

imageIn 1965 after a long run of Ant-Man turned Giantman in Marvel’s Tales to Astonish, Marvel retired Hank Pym from his own series, kicking him back to the pages of Avengers where he would remain a regular. In his place, Marvel gave Namor his own series, sharing half the book with the Incredible Hulk beginning with Tales to Astonish #70. There they would remain until 1968 when Marvel broke the book into its own independent comics and the Submariner after 23 years would have his own title again. (That is why two #1 issues exist. One in the Golden Age and one in the Silver.) during this tumultuous time Namor for at least a third time had to defend his throne from the evil (and bigoted Krang and/or Attuma) and rescue his blue beauty Lady Dorma from their clutches. No longer a villain nor disrespected, the Prince of Atlantis took his rightful place on the throne, protecting his own from all villains, circumstances and would be enemies of the ocean (Polluters, whale killers and bad guys beware).

Lost with Atlantis

Now perhaps, you can see why Namor appears to be lost in limbo. Sony currently holds rights to the Fantastic Four so his Silver Age roots are out of the mix. Marvel owns Captain America and have left the All-Winners Squad out of its history so his days as a WWII hero are out, as well as his “thawing” of Cap in the modern age. Continue reading Marvel’s Sub-Mariner Under the Sea Movie Adventure? Don’t Hold Your Breath!

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