Showing posts with label Black Panther. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Black Panther. Show all posts

Thursday 24 October 2019

Zombies in the MC2




Well, it's near the end of October and I haven't had done a single Halloween-themed post! I've been busy with work and family matters, but I'm going to try to rectify that now by talking about the shambling undead we all know and love: Zombies in the MC2!




Okay, so technically these lumbering monstrosities aren’t actually the living dead. Created by Asgardian sorceress and daughter of Loki, Sylene in Avengers Next #1 by combining her magic with stolen blood and tissue samples from past and present Avengers, these ‘magical clones’ are sent against the current Avengers team as a diversion.







If you are curious, the horde of decaying bizarro-Avengers is comprised of zombiefied versions of the following heroes: American Dream (Shannon Carter), Black Panter (T’Challa), Black Widow (Natasha Romanoff), Blue Streak (Blue Kelso), Luke Cage, Falcon (Sam Wilson), Freebooter (Brandon Cross), Hawkeye (Clint Barton), Hercules, Hulk (Bruce Banner), J2 (Zane Yama), Quicksilver (Pietro Maximoff), Scarlet Witch (Wanda Maximoff), Stinger (Cassandra Lang), Thunderstrike (Kevin Masterson), Vision, Wonder Man (Simon Williams) and Yellowjacket (Hank Pym).




While Sylene had intended for her constructs to be self-sustaining, she found they were constantly draining her ethereal energy and required her constant supervision to maintain and control. When her focus was broken by the interference of Spider-Girl, the putrid doppelgangers turned to dust almost instantly forcing Sylene to retreat, but not before her subordinates succeeded in stealing a component of Ultron and kidnapped the real Kevin Masterson.





The next three examples of Zombies in the MC2 are actually all from variant covers rather than in-story appearances. In case you missed it, the Marvel Zombies craze led to many comics titles receiving variant zombie covers and Spider-Girl was no exception. Amazing Spider-Girl #13 featured the art of Marvel Zombies cover artist Arthur Suydam for what is both a striking and disturbing rendition of Spider-Girl. Is the costume accurate? No, but I can give it a pass because it does seem to vaguely reference the cover of the character’s first appearance in What If #105.






The following year saw a new wave of zombie variant covers and once again, Spider-Girl was zombiefied on the cover of her title. This time, Amazing Spider-Girl #25 saw long-time Spider-Girl artist Pat Olliffe return teaming with inker Serge LaPointe for this alternate cover. Featuring an undead May ‘Mayday’ Parker on her bed in costume chowing down on her stuffed animals. I love this cover for its pitch-perfect concept and tone. Better still, Pat dubbed this version of Mayday with the moniker ‘Spider-Ghoul’ over on his blog.









*UPDATE* I missed this one when first publishing the post. Thanks to reader arias-98105 for bringing it to my attention.

Another year and another variant cover. This time for Web of Spider-Man (Vol. 2) #1 featured a zombie variant cover by artist Mirco Pierfederici depicting 'Spider-Ghoul' in gruesome battle with her zombiefied father, Spider-Man. The costume isn't 100% accurate again but it's still a pleasant surprise to discover something I previously had no knowledge of before today. I like find new old things, even foul-smelling undead!





That’s about it, everyone! Hope you all have a great time this Halloween and remember: Don’t eat too many brains! Until my real jobs stop turning me into a living zombie, I remain



frogoat

Sunday 13 May 2018

MC2 Family Trees Master Post

My own self-imposed rule of posting at least once a week hasn't gone to plan due to very limited free time. I'd prefer to put out something rather than nothing but with no time to spare, I figure a full list of my MC2 Family Trees would have to suffice for now. There will be more of these family trees in future, including a few updates to previous entries.

The Yama Family Tree

The Mansfield Family Tree

The Kirby Family Tree

The Hardy/Thompson Family Tree

The Xavier-Marko Family Tree

The Duran Family Tree

The DeSantos Family Tree

The Crazy/Face Family Tree

The Jameson Family Tree

The Carter Family Tree

The Masterson Family Tree

The Lang Family Tree

The Drew Family Tree

The Morgan Family Tree

The Robertson Family Tree

The Dillon Family Tree

The Logan Family Tree

The Forest Family Tree

The Wyngarde Family Tree

The Wakandan Royal Family Tree

The Lang Family Tree *Updated*

The Bryce-Jones Family Tree

The Rambeau-Freeman Family Tree

The Harkness Family Tree

The Brady Family Tree

The Lu Family Tree

That's all of the Family Trees to date. If there are any specific MC2 Family Tree's you'd like to see, please don't hesitate to ask. I'd love some feedback. Even if you think I've got something wrong, tell me!

Until I find more time to put out something more consequential, I remain

frogoat






Thursday 11 January 2018

The Wakandan Royal Family Tree





I take it all back. The X-Men and their confusing and muddled family relationships and connections are nothing- NOTHING-compared to the insanity that is the Wakandan Royal Family Tree. So, after two weeks of painful riffling through various comics, I've managed to piece together what I consider to be a complete MC2 Family Tree. Wait....the Black Panther movie hasn't been and gone yet, has it? I haven't missed it, have I?!
Speaking of the upcoming film, it looks to be integrating more recent additions to the Black Panther's family. I often wonder if anyone stumbles upon this series of blog posts not knowing that it's tailored to the world of the MC2, and leaves muttering about absent family members and errors? Maybe I should append a notice to each one of these posts? Anyway, here goes!





First and most certainly most importantly, let's talk about T'Challa, the King of Wakanda himself. The Black Panther first appeared in the Fantastic Four #52 and has since gone on to become one of the most successful and influential characters of African descent ever to grace comics. T'Challa's father T'Chaka is introduced in the very next issue (Fantastic Four #53) where we learn he died at the hands of Ulysses Klaue aka the villainous Klaw

Black Panther (vol. 1) #7 introduces us to Bashenga, the very first Black Panther and apparently T'Challa's ancestor. You'll notice I've split the family tree this time around. This is mainly because, as you'll see, there are several relatives with unclear familiar connections to the main Royal Family. A perfect example of this would be The Black Musketeers. Also first appearing in Black Panther (vol. 7) #7 is Dr Joshua Itobo, a cousin of T'Challa who is called upon to defend Wakanda in his absence. The very next issue we are introduced to three more of T'Challa's cousins who fill out the so-called The Black Musketeers: Ishanta, Khanata and Zuni




Over in Avengers (vol. 1) #77 T'Challa talks about his uncle N'Baza who organised for him to attend the finest school in Europe and America. In Avengers (vol. 1) #87 we learn that N'Baza is the witch doctor who became the Regent of Wakanda following T'Chaka's death. It was from him that T'Challa claimed the Black Panther title. Presumably, this makes N'Baza the same witch doctor seen in Fantastic Four #53 who held a young T'Challa back when his father was murdered. N'Baza's own son, B'Tumba also first appears in Avengers (vol. 1) #87 wherein we learn he accompanied T'Challa abroad and eventually betrayed Wakanda to AIM. Curiously, the father and son are never referred to as family anywhere else.







We learn that T'Chaka had a second wife from another tribe, with whom he had a son named Jakarra, T'Challa's half-brother (Black Panther (vol. 1) #6). Jakarra was born frail and small in stature and grew up in foreign military schools, only to return and live in T'Challa's shadow. Staging a military coup, exposing himself to Vibranium which turned him into a mutated creature and rampaging through the country, Jakarra was finally defeated and killed thanks to the efforts of the aforementioned cousins and T'Challa himself before his proximity to the Vibranium mound could trigger a destructive explosion.




It's important to note that Jakarra's mother was identified as a different woman to that of T'Challa's own mother. While I'm not certain if she was ever stated to have died prior to Marvel Comics Presents #13, T'Challa is surprised to learn that Ramonda may be alive at the beginning of this story. Through the course of the twenty-five part 'Panther's Quest' story we learn that Ramonda returned to her native South Africa for the funeral of her father Lungile, only to be abducted, held captive and abused for several years by a white supremacist named Anton Pretorius(Marvel Comics Presents #37). Pretorius anonymously spread rumours and sent photo's to King T'Chaka, leading the King to conclude his wife had left him for another man. T'Chaka would thereafter rarely mention his lost wife to his son, leading T'Challa to believe his mother had died. At the story's conclusion, mother and son are reunited at last.



Oddly enough, we learn of another of T'Challa's cousin's in Daredevil #245. M'Koni (apparently taking the name 'Mary' in America) married a member of the Wakanda Flying Patrol named Wheeler, the two moved to New York and had a son named Billy. Wheeler led the family to ruin after his gambling addiction left them with no money and mobsters looking for payment. Following an encounter with both Daredevil and the Black Panther, Wheeler cleaned up his act and made a fresh start.



A back-up story in Fantastic Four Unlimited #1 gives us a story about T'Chaka's father and mother, Chanda and Nanali. The story is told through a book left by N'Baza to T'Challa and claims that Chanda befriended by Fritz Klaue, (identified as the father of Ulysses Klaue) a Nazi officer who crashed in Wakanda during a mission. After being nursed back to health, Fritz -obsessed with the Vibranium mound- convinced some of the Wakandans to worship the Panther Totem as God in contradiction to their prior beliefs. When Chanda refused, Fritz killed Nanali. Nearly dead, Chanda escaped only to return rejuvenated by eating of the heart-shaped herbs and having killed a Black Panther which offered itself to him, driving out Klaue and restoring the status quo of his people. Annoyingly, this story makes the claim that Chanda was the first Black Panther despite the previous story about Bashenga over a decade prior.



There aren't any new additions to the Wakandan Royal Family Tree until the publication of Black Panther (vol. 3) #1, cover dated November 1998. As the MC2 first appeared several months prior in What If #105 (cover dated February 1998) any stories and characters published after this point should be considered non-canon unless otherwise referenced within MC2 comics. For completeness sake I will give a brief account of later additions and changes to the Royal Family.



The aforementioned Black Panther (vol. 3) #1 retcons Ramonda as T'Challa's step-mother and states that his biological mother was a woman named N'Yami who died giving birth to T'Challa.



Hunter aka White Wolf was a Caucasian boy adopted by T'Chaka after his parents died in a plane crash in Wakanda (Black Panther (vol. 3) #4). After T'Challa was born, he grew jealous and resentful of his sibling.


Azzuri the Wise was implied and later official retconned as the father of T'Chaka, fighting against and alongside Captain America during WWII (Black Panther (vol. 4) #1, Black Panther/Captain America: Flags of Our Fathers #1).


A previously unseen daughter of Ramonda and T'Chaka, Shuri was first introduced in Black Panther (vol. 4) #2. She later took up the mantle of the Black Panther, becoming the first female ever to do so.


Also first appearing in Black Panther (vol. 4) #2, S'Yan is the previously unseen brother of T'Chaka. Upon T'Chaka's death, S'Yan takes up the mantle of Black Panther as King of Wakanda until his nephew claimed the throne through trial of combat.


Again in Black Panther (vol. 4) #2 we are introduced to T'Shan who is the son of S'Yan and was jealous of his cousin T'Challa.


T'Challa also marries the X-Man Storm aka Ororo Monroe in Black Panther (vol. 4) #18. As is often the case in modern comics, the two later separate.


Kwezi Dzana is identified as a nephew of T'Challa's in Ms. Marvel (vol. 4) #16.








As you can probably tell, many of these new characters fill much the same roles as previously established characters, and in some cases actually supplant the earlier characters. You could simplify this by splitting the Wakandan Royal Family history into two separate canons....as I've done here. But for different reasons.



Now, onto the MC2 proper! First appearing in A-Next #4, T'Chaka aka Coal Tiger is the son of T'Challa, King of Wakanda. While visiting America for a trade agreement, T'Chaka was attacked and briefly kidnapped by the hate group Soldiers of the Serpent. It's at this point we learn that T'Chaka has the ability to transform into a humanoid cat-like being resembling a Black Panther.



It's also in this issue that T'Chaka refers to N'Kano ( aka the Wakandan hero Vibraxas) as his uncle. I was unsure if this was a term of endearment or an actual familial connection, as non had been established prior. Additionally, I can't determine on which side of the family he might fall without further information. As such, I've omitted him from this family tree for now.



Next time I won't pick such a complicated family to delve into for this MC2 Family Tree series. Until then, I remain




frogoat

Saturday 30 April 2016

Captain America: Civil War Movie Review



Being, as I am, an Australian and not an American (nor a Briton, for that matter) has given me the fortunate opportunity to watch the new Marvel film before many others. Hopefully that doesn't come across elitist because really, I'm just stoked that I got to see it so soon. My partner in life and I suited up appropriately, too. I in her Captain America shirt. She in mine. Don't read into that statement too much. Anywho, shall I give you a review? Warning: Potential Spoilers Ahead!