By now Marvel Studios’ The Fantastic Four:
First Steps has been in cinema for a while, and I want to finish my
quartet of posts delving into the MC2 Universe’s own founding
members of the Fantastic Four …. or the Fantastic Five,
as they became in this world. For today, let’s look at the big brain of
the Fantastic Four, the most flexible and elastic Reed Richards aka Mister
Fantastic in the MC2.
All four core members of Marvel’s First Family debuted
in Stan Lee and Jack Kirby’s 1961 title Fantastic
Four #1, launching the very Marvel Universe itself as we
know it today by depicting the fateful space launch which gave this famous four
their powers.
Unlike Johnny
Storm and Benjamin
Grimm, or even Susan
Richards, Reed’s first MC2 appearance is less straightforward.
There is a cameo of the team in What If #105 which includes a shot of the
H.E.R.B.I.E.-like
Big Brain robot which Reed pilots remotely from the Negative
Zone. Big Brain makes his full debut in Spider-Girl #3 but we
don’t physically glimpse Richards himself until Fantastic Five Vol. 1
#1 where we see Reed in flashbacks, before the dénouement of
the issue reveals his hand…
Approximately five
or so years prior to the events of Fantastic Five Vol. 1 #1,
the Fantastic Four prepared to battle Hyperstorm,
a cosmically powered warlord from an alternate future who had built a doomsday
weapon in the Negative Zone (Fantastic Five Vol. 1 #4, Spider-Girl
#87). Franklin engaged Hyperstorm in a 'mind-war'
on every plane of existence which ultimately left Hyperstorm comatose
and apparently stripped Franklin of much of his god-like power
(Fantastic Five Vol. 1 #4).
Unfortunately, the doomsday device had already begun
to tear a hole in the fabric of reality. When Reed Richards was
forced to overload the device to stop it, Susan Richards attempted
to shield him from the radiation with her force field. Caught in the blast
radius, half of Reed's body was left in a melted and deformed
state. With the reality rip still widening, Susan used her
powers to hold the tear in place, with the strain leaving her in a coma and she
was placed in suspended animation.
In the wake of the tragedy, The Fantastistation was
built in the Negative Zone around the tear in reality. This
allowed Reed to keep Sue company while she
remained in suspended animation as he worked to slowly repair the hole in the
fabric of reality (Fantastic Five Vol. 1 #4, Spider-Girl #87).
Over the next few months, while the Fantastic Four remained in
seclusion, rumours and speculation spread about the fate of Susan
Richards despite the team never releasing details to the public. Reed developed
the Big
Brain robot to allow him to remain on the team by remotely
controlling it from the Negative Zone (Fantastic Five Vol.
1 #1).
It's not until Spider-Girl #87 that things
change, with the cosmically empowered Apox the
Omega Skrull heading into the Negative Zone to
exact revenge on members of the Fantastic Five. During the
battle, Reed Richards conceives a method to utilize Apox’s power
cosmic to seal the tear in reality and in doing so, heal himself and
allow Susan to awaken from her coma (Spider-Girl #88).
Finally, a happy ending for the Fantastic Family.
While the couple do get some alone time on a vacation to another
galaxy, it wouldn’t be long before they were drawn back into another universe-ending
threat, this time orchestrated by devourer of worlds Galactus. But that’s
a story for another time.
Until I find a way to stretch myself even thinner to reach my
goals, I remain
frogoat
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