Because I’m always on the prowl for another topic I can
tangentially relate to the MC2, in the sights for today’s post is the
elusive target of the Spider-Man-related
Sony
movie, Kraven the Hunter. Let’s look at the Kravinoff Family Tree
from the perspective of the MC2.
*Before we dive right in, the usual rules: For the
purposes of these family trees, I accept that MC2 characters
share their published history (up to a point) with their 616/Main
Marvel Universe counterparts. I make exceptions for any retcons
implemented after the point the MC2 diverges from the 616 and
in cases where it's explicitly or implicitly different (Aunt May really
died) or when a writer later introduces a previously unheard of relative
(the Pym
family) who is never mentioned, seen or heard of in the MC2.
With the last exception, I would add them to the family tree in later updates
should they be mentioned in MC2 material at any point. And
yes, I’m totally cheating this time around but it’s my blog and I can do what I
like! Got it? Excellent! *
Spider-Man’s first ever published costumed foe, The
Chameleon was created by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko. Debuting
in Amazing Spider-Man #1, The Chameleon was a master of disguise
who used his abilities as a Soviet Spy before committing to a life of crime
after his defeat at the hands of the novice web-head. Initially depicted as
relying solely on his talents and costume changes, Chameleon would
acquire more sophisticated equipment to aid in his schemes and eventually
underwent a procedure involving a serum that allowed him to change his facial
appearance at will (Amazing Spider-Man #307).
Here’s where we get to the complicated connections of the Kravinoff
Family! Kraven
the Hunter first appeared in Amazing Spider-Man #15 by Stan
Lee and Steve Ditko, being called upon by the Chameleon to defeat
Spider-Man. Kraven’s real
name ‘Sergei Kravinoff’ was apparently first revealed in the Official
Handbook of the Marvel Universe: Deluxe Edition #7 from 1986,
though it should be noted that the initial 1983 volume of
the Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe (vol. 1) #6 gave Kraven’s real
name as ‘Sergei Kravin’ and makes what I believe is the first
reference to his Russian heritage and parents, the latter of
which are strangely absent from the Deluxe Edition’s list of
known relatives.
As noted above, the Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe (vol.1) #6 is the first mention of Sergei’s parents, named Nikolai and Anna Makarova. Just as ‘Sergei’s real name in this first Handbook would be retained aside from the surname ‘Kravin’, the names of his parents would also be reused in later stories. Sergei recalls that his family were forced to flee and abandon their high social status during the Russian Revolution, leaving his father a broken man and his mother went insane and killed herself after being interned in an asylum (Amazing Spider-Man #294).
Writer J.M. DeMatteis and artists Mike
Zeck and Bob McLeod gave the world Kraven’s definitive
depiction in the critically acclaimed 1987 story Fearful
Symmetry: Kraven’s Last Hunt published in six parts across all
three Spider-Man titles at the time in Web of
Spider-Man #31-32, Amazing Spider-Man #293-294 and Spectacular
Spider-Man #131-132. The story simultaneously elevated Kraven’s status
among Spider-Man’s rogues
gallery by having the hunter bury the hero alive and assume his identity and
remains impactful for its psychological explorations of both men, ultimately
culminating in Kraven ending his own life.
Playing a part in a plot masterminded by the now deceased Harry Osborn which involved faking the return of Peter Parker’s parents Richard and Mary Parker (who were in fact robotic simulacra), the Chameleon finds himself pursued by a relentless and enraged Spider-Man. Leading him to the Kravinoff Estate, Chameleon takes on the form of his former friend and mentor Kraven, recalling how the two boys grew up together in Russia and honed their respective skills as Sergei Kravinoff and Dmitri Smerdyakov. Breaking down, Dmitri recollects the buried truth of their shared past: Sergei had been a cruel master to the servant boy Dmitri and the Kravinoff’s had left him behind when they fled the Russian Revolution, leaving Smerdyakov to find his own way to America. Realising his adoration for Kraven stemmed from his misplaced desire to prove himself worthy of the Hunter’s respect, the Chameleon attempts to end his own life but is stopped by Spider-Man (Amazing Spider-Man #375, #389).
In Spider-Man #47 Howard Mackie, Tom Lyle
and Scott Hanna introduce another member of the Kravinoff Family,
when Jason Phillip Macendale aka the second major Hobgoblin treks
through the Ural Mountains of Russia to reach the ancestral ‘Kravinov
Estate’ seeking Vladimir Kravinoff, the son of Kraven the Hunter.
Macendale wants to trade Sergei’s journal for the Elixir
that granted Kraven his enhanced abilities. After a tense escalation of
hostilities, Vladimir eventually agrees, subjecting Macendale to
an experimental version of the Elixir intended to ensure the effects are
permanent. Secretly Vlad and his advisor Gregor ensure only a
minimal distilled dose of the new Elixir is administered, planning to
kill him if he survives. A quirk of his physiology allows Jason to not
only survive the process but also gain enhanced abilities, and he gratefully
hands over Kraven’s journal before making his escape. Motivated by this
turn of events, Vladimir has the Elixir modified using notes in the
journal and emerges with newfound strength and power and assumes the title of
the Grim Hunter, setting off for New York to kill Spider-Man.
However, Vladimir is eventually defeated by Spider-Man and after Gregor
steps in to protect him, the two men are webbed up for the police (Spider-Man
#47-#50).
Using his wealth to avoid criminal charges, Vladimir
quickly resumes his plan of revenge against Spider-Man, but mistakenly
targets the Scarlet Spider aka Ben
Reilly at first before tracking down the correct quarry, Peter
Parker, to his home. However, the man called Kaine
-in an effort to protect Mary
Jane- battles and slays the Grim Hunter before he can
exact his revenge (Spider-Man #53-#55, Web of Spider-Man #120-#121).
It's in Spider-Man #4 that we learn Calypso
sacrificed her own sister to gain more power. But who is her sister? A Haitian
Voodoo priestess introduced in the pages of Daredevil #243 by writer
Ann Nocenti and penciller Louis Williams, Mambo
encountered Daredevil
when she dispatched ‘The Nameless One,’ a powerful zombie bound to her
control to target one of her former followers who’d fled to New York. When Calypso
appears in Daredevil #310 she is in control of ‘The Nameless One’
and mentions that she took possession of him upon her sister’s death,
firmly establishing Mambo and Calypso as siblings. Mambo’s
full name was revealed as ‘Mambo Ezili’ in Calypso’s profile in
the All-New Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe A to Z #2. Mambo or Manbo
is the term for a female priestess in the Haitian Vodou or Voodoo
religion.
Alright, nearly there! Spectacular Spider-Man #243 by
J.M. DeMatteis and Luke Ross ends with the Chameleon aka Dimitri
Smerdyakov encountering a figure claiming to be Sergei Kravinoff.
Believing this to be a hallucination, the figure reveals to Dimitri what
his mind had buried by trauma; that Sergei was his half-brother, the
result of a union between Sergei’s father and Dimitri’s mother, a
servant named Sonya Smerdyakov. Accepting the truth, Dimitri
reclaims the name Kravinoff for himself (Spectacular Spider-Man #244).
He goes on to tell the captive Spider-Man that he was
born and raised in the heart of the African jungle twenty-one years ago,
not knowing ‘civilisation’ unlike his father hand half-brother, being taught
via tutors and never really knowing his father (Spectacular Spider-Man #252).
After breaking free of the control of Calypso’s vengeful attack
which drove Alyosha and Spider-Man to mindlessly battle to the
death, Alyosha seemingly makes peace with the Kraven’s former
lover, only to apparently murder her shortly after the webslinger departs (Spectacular
Spider-Man #253).
With all that death and trauma detailed, we have reached the
part of the Kravinoff Family Tree where I link it to the MC2 Universe…kind
of. Among the many unused ideas and concepts conceived by Ron Frenz,
shared on his own Facebook
page is ‘Gazelle Kravenoff’ aka Moonshadow,
and I quote Ron here ‘The daughter of Kraven the
Hunter and Calypso!’ We don’t have many additional
details for Gazelle’s character, and Ron himself
mentions during an interview for the podcast Make
Mine Mayday Episode 43 he didn’t even pitch the concept to Spider-Girl co-creator Tom
Defalco. What’s noteworthy is her alternative name, Moonshadow,
which is a direct reference to Kraven’s Last Hunt writer J.M.
DeMatteis’ creator-owned series of the same name, itself a reference
to the song by singer/songwriter Cat Stevens. Talk about fearful
symmetry!
While obviously Gazelle hasn’t appeared in print
anywhere, I do have a few notes to contribute. Gazelle’s billing as the
daughter of Kraven the Hunter and Calypso brings up the question
of the character’s age. As a rule of thumb, the MC2’s present day is
roughly 15-16 years in-universe ahead of the Marvel Comics
published in 1998, but Sergei died some time prior to that, about
an estimated three years earlier from the perspective of the characters. This
would suggest that Moonshadow would have to have been conceived prior to
this, making her at minimum 17-18 years old if she were to appear in the
MC2. However, there is the alternative possibility that Calypso either
didn’t die (again) or didn’t stay dead and the parental ‘Kraven the
Hunter’ in question was Alyosha instead, making Gazelle
younger, though that itself presents very unsavoury issues…
Finally, you may have noticed that Gazelle’s surname
is spelled ‘Kravenoff’. While this may seem inconsistent, it is somewhat
in keeping with the history of the Kraven clan’s surname in publication.
As noted above, the Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe (vol. 1) #6
initially established ‘Kravin’, and the profile notes a British
journalist misspelled his name as ‘Kraven’. Next, the Official
Handbook of the Marvel Universe: Deluxe Edition #7 gave us ‘Kravinoff’.
The following year in the seminal ‘Kraven’s Last Hunt’, Sergei’s
surname is spelt ‘Kravinov’ in his internal monologue and ‘Kravinoff’
on his tombstone. Notably, when we meet Vladimir in Russia, his ancestral
home is referred to as the ‘Kravinov Estate’ and again ‘Kravinoff’
is used interchangeably. We have a good explanation in Sergei’s profile
from Spider-Man: Grim Hunt – The Kraven Saga: clarifying his real name
as ‘Sergei Kravinoff (originally spelled “Kravinov”
using Russian alphabet)’ and mentioning he anglicised his name to ‘Kraven’
during his travels. This nicely combines many of the variations of Sergei’s
surname and allows us to add ‘Kravenoff’ to the list
without further concern.
Bonus fact: Many of the Kravinoff Family,
particularly those handled by J.M. DeMatteis share names with characters
created by Russian author Fyodor Dostoyevsky. On his own blog
DeMatteis admits to being a fan, having read and being influenced by Crime
and Punishment and The Brothers Karamozov in high school. The latter
novel, for example, includes characters named Dmitri, Alyosha and
the surname Smerdyakov along with a manservant named Gregory.
I have omitted a few characters from this MC2 Family
Tree for reasons I’ll elaborate on separately. Here they are for the
sake of completeness:
- Nedrocci ‘Ned’ Tannengarden from the infamous Spider-Man: Get Kraven mini-series first appeared in 2002, past our cut-off point so he is not included in this MC2-centric Family Tree. Thank God.
- Ana Kravinoff, the third in the family to assume the title Kraven the Hunter, didn’t appear until 2008, after the infamous continuity crushing One More Day and is thus omitted.
- The same is true of Ana’s mother Sasha Kravinoff, who being Sergei’s wife would also have been the mother of his legitimate son Vladimir. Curiously, she was listed as dead in his handbook profiles prior to her debut.
- Similarly, Sasha’s unidentified siblings and parents, Aleksandra Nikolaevna and Mikhail Aleksei Nikolaevich, who debuted in 2010.
- The decades-spanning flashback team-up
mini-series X-Men/Spider-Man introduced Xraven, an enhanced clone
created by Mr. Sinister with the powers of the original X-Men
- After being unwillingly revived by Sasha and left unable to die, Sergei eventually has the High Evolutionary produce 87 clones and all but one died, leaving ‘The Last Son of Kraven’ to kill and essentially replace his father.
I think after all that generational trauma, mental illness
and death, I’ll have to do something lighter next time! A massive thank you to arias-98105,
the dedicated and hard-working folks who have produced the various Official
Handbooks of the Marvel Universe and the contributors over on the Marvel Appendix. Marvel,
please let Moonshadow reach the comic page someday, preferably when you
let Defalco and Frenz write Spider-Girl again. And see if J.M.
DeMatteis wants to join in!
Until the Kravinoff Family goes to therapy, I remain
frogoat
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