Showing posts with label Mainframe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mainframe. Show all posts

Saturday 3 December 2022

Coal Tiger: Son of the Black Panther

 

Having recently watched Black Panther: Wakanda Forever I felt inspired to keep writing posts in that vein. So, today let us take a look at Prince T’Chaka aka Coal Tiger, the son of the Black Panther.

 


The moniker of Coal Tiger was originally one considered during the creation of the Black Panther, and it seems Tom Defalco and Ron Frenz elected to pay tribute to Stan Lee and Jack Kirby when they introduced T’Chaka’s alias in A-Next #4. While visiting America for a trade agreement, T'Chaka was attacked by the hate group Soldiers of the Serpent. It is at this point we learn that T'Chaka has the ability to transform into a humanoid cat-like being resembling a Black Panther.

 






Alongside the Avengers original line-up, Coal Tiger rescues N’Kano (aka the Wakandan ambassador and super hero Vibraxas) and notes the new team of heroes seem more like a family. N’Kano tells T’Chaka his father would be proud. T’Chaka tells the Avengers he will tell his father about all of them and that he considers them friends.





 

T’Chaka next appears when, upon returning from an alternate reality ruled by Doctor Doom, the entire Avengers team are captured by the Red Queen aka Hope Pym and her Revengers. With Mainframe’s consciousness transmitted to another body, he recruits Earth Senty, Argo, Blacklight and Coal Tiger to rescue the Avengers (A-Next #12).



 

At some point, Coal Tiger is pulled into the massive Destiny War alongside the Avengers’ American Dream and Freebooter and the Fantastic Five’sd Kristoff Vernard (Avengers Forever #12).

 


Coal Tiger is not seen again until a large assembly of the MC2’s super heroes gather at Avengers Headquarters in preparation for battle with Seth the Serpent God of Death. Despite this, the assembled heroes end up trapped within an impenetrable barrier until Spider-Girl weakens Seth enough to free them (Spider-Girl #58).

 


Alongside fellow reserve Avengers members Spider-Girl, Blacklight and Earth Sentry, Coal Tiger was called upon to join the Avengers team due to a large number of team members being sidelined for various reasons following the events of Last Hero Standing. This line-up of Avengers is briefed about someone posing as the mutant master of magnetism; Magneto. Spider-Girl and trainee member of the X-People known as Push would ultimately apprehend the poser (Spider-Girl #92).

 



In his last appearance to date, Coal Tiger again joins a large assembly of super heroes who show up to help Spider-Girl when she is captured by the Hobgoblin aka Roderick Kingsley (Amazing Spider-Girl #15).



 

It’s a great missed opportunity that T’Chaka as the Coal Tiger never got more than a few brief appearances after his debut, as there is a huge amount of potential left unexplored and stories left untold.

 

Until I develop the ability to transform into a Wakandan werecat, I remain

 

frogoat

Wednesday 20 October 2021

Ultron in the MC2

 

I might be a little late to the party with this post, but I still wanted to put something out to cover Ultron in the MC2, especially given I missed my chance last time he made a major appearance on the big screen, so now with his return to the small screen via the Disney+ animated series What If, I'm seizing the opportunity.

 


I briefly touched on Ultron in my History of the MC2: The Avengers post but let’s take a more focused look this time. At an unknown point in the team's past prior the original team’s final mission, an Avengers team which included Captain AmericaIron Man and Thor fought Ultron Extreme, the newest model of the team's old foe. Iron Man eventually managed to erase Ultron's programming and the villain's indestructible body was sealed away ‘half a world away, in a cavern far beneath the Earth’ for over a decade (Avengers Next #2-#3).



The Avengers Compound contains an armory and ‘trophy room’ within which an inert head of an older model Ultron was kept. During Sylene’s staged attack on the Avengers Compound by ‘Zombie Avengers,’ her lackeys Warp and Ulik secretly stole this Ultron head. Sylene then used her magicks upon this Ultron ‘artifact’ so that it would guide her to the body of Ultron Extreme (Avengers Next #1-#2).


 







Still inert with its programming wiped, Sylene imbued the shell of Ultron Extreme with her magic and set it against the Avengers, while disguising herself as another ‘prime’ Ultron resembling that of the stolen head. However, when ‘Ultron Sylene’s assault module was suddenly destroyed leaving her vulnerable, she was forced to cover her deception by appearing to ‘self-destruct.’ Busy using her magic to disguise herself as the kidnapped and depowered former Avenger Kevin Masterson to enable her to enact her final plan, the Ultron Extreme body was left to collapse inert once again on the remote island atoll (Avengers Next #3).














It’s also worth mentioning that a model of statue of Ultron is on display in the Avengers Compound alongside many others representing past Avengers foes (American Dream #1). Presumably the actual head of Ultron and other villain ‘artifacts’ are kept well away from the public in the aforementioned armory or trophy room.

 


While this might be the last time we see of Ultron in the MC2, the ever-clever Stinger notes that the villain was previously only deactivated and that his programming could be copied or restored in the same way Avengers members Mainframe and the Vision have done in the past (Avengers Next #3).

 




Until I learn how to restore myself from some lines of code, I remain

 

frogoat

 

 

Saturday 4 September 2021

Missed MC2 Costumes

 

It’s been a long time since I did a MC2 Costumes post. For anyone unfamiliar, I’ve so far detailed every variant costume (or robotic shell) worn by Bluestreak, J2, Freebooter, Mainframe and American Dream. While I’m not going to hit you with a full-blown new entry in this occasional series today, I did want to do a sort of update to cover some of the costumes I’ve missed from passed entries.

 

This first one I found while rereading J2 #11 for my recent posts covering Howard the Duck in the MC2 and Shang-Chi in the MC2. I genuinely don’t know how I missed it the first time, but here’s Zane Yama in his own standard looking martial arts training uniform or ‘gi’ after realizing he should have some fight training for when he isn’t a nearly indestructible behemoth of a boy as J2.

 


Next up is a very minor one I missed for American Dream: Shannon’s standard costume as it appeared in the American Dream mini-series (with wings on the helmet) sans her iconic gloves and disk launchers. I figured for completeness’s sake I’d include it here (American Dream #2).



 

Finally, while it’s not actually seen in the issue proper, from the Ron Frenz drawn cover of American Dream #4 we have a depiction of Shannon transformed into one of Silikong’scrystal creatures’ which were alternatively referred to as ‘crystal soldiers,’’crytal slaves’ or simply ‘crystal monsters’. The cover is a reference to the Red Queen and Silikong’s plan to turn American Dream into crystalline form to ‘publicise’ his elicit army building process.

 


That’s all I have for today. I may find time in the future to return to this series but I’m not sure when due to time constraints. If you think I’ve missed any more costumes or ‘looks’ let me know in a comment.

 

Until I develop my own line of super hero attire, I remain

 

frogoat

Tuesday 30 June 2020

Mainframe's Robotic Shells

Usually I title this series ‘(Character)’s Costumes’ but given the subject of this latest entry, it didn’t seem to apply, nor did I think ‘Mainframe’s Body’ sounded appropriate, especially given what we worked out last time for A-Next Ages. So, this upload we’ll look at all of the program’s appearances in an effort to cover all variants of Mainframe’s Robot Shells.


Mainframe’s iconic and rarely changed armoured exterior first debuted in A-Next #1, where the character notably proposed the founding of the new Avengers team alongside Thunderstrike, J2 and Stinger after Jubilee, Jolt and Speedball bowed out of full-time membership. Here’s what co-creator and artist extraordinaire Ron Frenz had to say about the design of Mainframe on episode 744 of Adam Chapman’s Comic Shenanigan’s podcast:


 ‘Design wise- I mentioned this in one of our last letter columns in A-Next- when I was originally designing A-Next, there’s a guy I went to art school with, he’s one of my oldest, dearest friends who is terrific at design. He actually did a few jobs for Marvel in the late 80’s or early 90’s. His name is Rich Yanizeski and I think he has a terrific outside-the-box design sense where he’ll try a little bit of everything. He of course, being a separate entity has a separate pool to draw from of inspiration and designs he’s seen and things like that. So usually when I’m called upon to design new characters, I will actually ask Yan if he’d be willing and able to step in and pitch some stuff to me. Quite often the final design ends up being some amalgamation of what Rich pitched to me and my own ideas and tailoring them to the specifics of what we know about the story or the character at that point.
Mainframe was one of those characters. We went through a couple of different designs, the early designs still had red and yellow in them and everything. I’ll be perfectly honest with you, what occurred to me about what I like about black and gold is that I’m from Pittsburgh and that’s the colour of all of our sports teams. When I put it on paper it looked really good so we were fine with that. I do remember being at a convention one time when Jim Shooter was doing a slide presentation about Iron Man’s new armour and everybody in the crowd was just crazy about the idea of Iron Man’s armour being black and silver. I never understood it. That’s basically what they ended up using for War Machine. But I never understood it because it’s a four-colour medium at the time, it’s a full colour medium now. Why would you do that?
 But, like I said, with my own affinity for black and gold I went ahead and gave it a shot and I liked what it looked like. I probably wouldn’t have liked it as much if not for the red eyes because I think the red eyes kind of pop and hold everything together. It always frustrated me when the eyes didn’t get colour red because I always considered that a part of the design. He was very much a cross between what was going on in the Iron Man book at the time, meaning he was a cross between Iron Man and War Machine because I liked the bulk of War Machine. I had gotten the chance to draw War Machine in an issue of Thunderstrike and I liked the weightier feel of War Machine. That’s what I was kind of trying to do more with the forearms and through the shoulders and everything of Mainframe.’

The earliest chronological appearance of Mainframe is a flashback in Spider-Girl #95, which seems to depicts Tony Stark building the first of Mainframe’s robot shells. Unless I’m mistaken this first model doesn’t appear to deviate from the standard Mainframe armoured shell.

I’m not really sure if this one counts but here is what I believe is the computer Mainframe’s consciousness dwelt in before being activated, as depicted in A-Next #1.


While I won’t note every time Mainframe loses a robotic shell in battle, I would like to point out the first time this occurs from A-Next #3, where Sub-Mariner and the Hulk tear it in two. It would appear this is traumatic event is the first ever occasion in which Mainframe’s physical body had been compromised beyond repair. Mainframe seems pretty nonchalant about the event, or at least is playing it down by referring to it as only a ‘lifeless shell’.




This ‘lifeless shell’ is also seen in J2 #3 in a story depicting these same events. However, here Mainframe seems to have red-coloured ‘ear’ interiors. Yeah, I’m not sure what you’d call those things. 




Speaking of those robotic bodies, after expending all available manufactured shells we get a glimpse of Mainframe’s true self beneath both the exterior and core module. Better still, we get to witness the construction of a brand-new Mainframe robot shell (A-Next #8).







At the conclusion of the A-Next series, we see a slightly different design for Mainframe with A-Next #12 which carries over into other MC2 titles beginning within the pages of Spider-Girl #13. Artist Ron Frenz gives us a slightly different robotic shell design for Mainframe.  *Thanks to Ron Frenz for the correction*




Notably, the wrist areas are slimmer and have a visibly segmented design to them. In addition to this we get what I believe is the first of many, many future colouring mistakes on the lower leg or ‘greaves’ of Mainframe’s armoured exterior with Spider-Girl #13. Areas of the 'phase 2' gauntlets also alternate in colour between yellow and black on different pages



This black miscolouring on the lower legs of Mainframe’s various shells is seen in several future comics including Spider-Girl #31, 38, 46, 59, 71 and 81. The miscolouring occurs so frequently, I’m tempted to say it’s more than the correct colouring of Mainframe’s robot shell! Maybe it really is a different design?




Another apparent colouring error that is seen in both Spider-Girl #25 and Spider-Girl #31: Mainframe’s centre chest piece appears to be black and in the latter example, so are the raised shoulder pieces or ‘pauldrons.’



For what I believe is the first time, Mainframe’s wrist devices are shown to hold weaponry in Last Hero Standing #1. In the past, we’d seen other uses for these including interfacing with high tech equipment and plugging directly into the internet, but I don’t think he’d seen this particular function before. As the Last Hero Standing mini-series is pencilled by Pat Olliffe, the wrist devices are again of a slimmer design. Combining this slimmer design with the correct colouring on the lower legs, we actually get a unique look again, all be it one that was probably intended to be seen since Spider-Girl #13! This design returns under Mainframe co-creator Ron Frenz in later issues of Spider-Girl.

The Last Planet Standing mini-series again gives us more examples of the miscoloured black booted lower legs on Mainframe’s shell. But the cover to Last Hero Standing #1 seems to offer a different boot design entirely, inked darker and without the segmented sections we’ve always seen, miscoloured or otherwise, up to this point.

We actually get a few alternate designs for Mainframe in the Last Planet Standing mini-series. Here’s Mainframe soaking up extra electricity from the power grid from Last Planet Standing # 3.
This isn’t technically a new look so much as a sort of power up, but in the very next issue we get this upgrade which absolutely is a brand-new design (Last Planet Standing #4).



This is device that we see Mainframe piloting was designed by Reed Richards and modified on the fly with input from Tony Stark in an attempt to help defeat Galactus by multiplying Mainframe’s powers by a ‘a few hundred thousand times.’ While the upgrade allows Mainframe to pierce Galactus’ barrier, the robot shell is soon destroyed (Last Planet Standing #4).
 
Awakening aboard the orbiting satellite that houses and manufactures all the robotic bodies, Mainframe activates all of the available backup bodies, piloting them all at once as an assault force to counter Galactus’ Punisher robots (Last Planet Standing #4).


We get the natural extension and progression of this idea in Avengers Next #5 when Mainframe uses the orbiting satellite itself as a weapon against the Asgardian sorceress Sylene, piloting it on a collision course with her volcanic island base. This naturally eliminated Mainframe’s ability to replicate, at least for the time being.



Another notable design change appears only in Spider-Girl: The End where we see that Mainframe exists again as a computer program of some kind aiding an aged Stinger to develop humanity’s last hope, The Mulligan, a time travel platform. Perhaps in this possible timeline, Mainframe’s satellite was never rebuilt? It's a nice nod back to Mainframe's first appearance.


Finally, from the MC2 story in the Secret Wars Spider-Island mini-series, we get a cameo appearance by Mainframe, this time as only a hologram. For whatever reason, Mainframe is not a member of the Avengers team at this point (Spider-Island #1).

Due to Mainframe’s unique nature, I had to stretch the definition and parameters for this one! I hope it was comprehensive, but if you think I’ve missed anything let me know. I would love to see Mainframe begin to develop new body designs in the future. The use of all the robot backups at once has to be a highlight for the character, and certainly a personal favourite moment of awesome.

Until I manage to rebuild an entire satellite with enough materials to produce hundreds of duplicate robotic bodies, I remain

frogoat