Bakuto
Otras lecturas
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Bakuto es un ninja ficticio en Marvel Comics . El personaje, creado por Andy Diggle , Antony Johnston y Marco Checchetto, apareció por primera vez en Daredevil # 505 (abril de 2010).
Bakuto, el principal Daimyo de Sudamérica, se reunió con los otros cuatro Daimyos en el Castillo Jigoku-Chu en Japón. Mostró algunas dudas sobre Matt Murdock al frente de The Hand y se burló especialmente de la participación de White Tiger debido a que ella era una mujer. De antemano, Bakuto había matado a su maestro, Izanagi, para mostrar "[su] fuerza de voluntad", incluso yendo tan lejos como para no permitirle el seppuku .
En el presente, mientras cenan, la comida de Bakuto se pica, lo que le hace alucinar a los demonios. Matt va a ver cómo está él como Daredevil y ambos son atacados inmediatamente por ninjas que fueron enviados en secreto por los otros Daimyos. Después de derrotarlos, Matt cree que alguien está intentando quitarle la vida a Bakuto y aumenta la seguridad. A pesar de esto, Bakuto cree que Matt fue quien envió a los ninjas y comienza a conspirar para matarlo. [1] Más tarde se enfrenta a un Tigre Blanco poseído y muere en un combate con espadas. [2]
Bakuto en otros medios
- Bakuto apareció en Iron Fist , interpretado por Ramón Rodríguez . Bakuto es uno de los líderes de The Hand y es el sensei de Colleen Wing antes de los eventos de la serie. [3] Al principio, Bakuto parece ser una persona benévola, ayudando a Danny Rand en sus habilidades y mostrándole imágenes del Iron Fist anterior, pero pronto se hace evidente que desea usar a Danny para sus propios fines y, especialmente, tiene planes para el Meachums. [4] [5] Después de dispararle a Joy Meachum , él y sus hombres se llevan a Danny, pero terminan peleando con él junto con Colleen y Davos . Bakuto lucha contra Colleen con espadas, pero es apuñalado por su antiguo alumno. Colleen se niega a matar a Bakuto, por lo que Davos lo hace por ella. Luego, su cuerpo desaparece. Colleen asume que la gente de Bakuto lo tomó, pero Danny recuerda que Harold Meachum logró regresar de entre los muertos. [6]
- Bakuto reapareció en The Defenders , revivido a plena salud. Está establecido como uno de los cinco dedos de la mano, los otros son Sowande, Madame Gao, Alexandra y Murakami. Aparece por primera vez cuando aborda a Colleen, Danny y Luke mientras escoltan a Claire al Precinto 29 para la custodia protectora, pero se escapa. [7] Más tarde está presente, junto con Murakami y Madame Gao, cuando Elektra mata a Alexandra y asume el mando de la Mano. [8] Los tres Dedos expresan desdén hacia Elektra por sus acciones, pero ella no se deja intimidar, solo está interesada en cultivar la sustancia para poder tener la inmortalidad eterna. [9] No obstante, los Dedos abordan a Matt, Luke y Jessica cuando salen del recinto y regresan a Midland Circle en busca de rescatar a Danny de Elektra. Bakuto está muy cerca de acabar con Matt hasta que Colleen aparece para luchar contra él. Bakuto permanece arriba para luchar contra Colleen, Claire y Misty. Recuperando la ventaja, Colleen mata a Bakuto, pero no antes de que se las arregle para cortar parte del brazo derecho de Misty. [10]
Bravo
Brian Banner
Rebecca Banner
Banshee
Gallito
Bantam es un mutante ficticio . Creado por Jim Lee y John Byrne , el personaje apareció por primera vez en Uncanny X-Men # 282.
Bantam es un asistente de Trevor Fitzroy que usa su poder como un ancla crónica para realizar un seguimiento de los portales del tiempo de su maestro. [ volumen y número necesarios ] Cuando Fitzroy se hace cargo de una línea de tiempo futura y se renombra a sí mismo como Chronomancer, Bantam lo acompaña. [ volumen y número necesarios ] Bantam se da cuenta de que Fitzroy se había vuelto loco por sus sueños de poder, y finalmente traiciona a su maestro a la rebelión liderada por Bishop . [ volumen y número necesarios ] Bantam ayuda a levantar la puerta del torreón del Chronomancer y muere a manos de los Chronotroopers de Fitzroy. [ volumen y problema necesarios ]
Bantam mantuvo un registro de todos los portales de tiempo de Fitzroy aún en estasis. Era sensible a las emisiones de bioenergía de otros superhumanos, lo que le permitió ubicar el sitio donde se liberó la energía.
En otros medios
Bantam aparece en el episodio de dos partes de X-Men "One Man's Worth".
Barbarus
Eli Bard
Baron Blood
John Falsworth
Víctor extraño
Kenneth Crichton
Baron Brimstone
Barón Mordo
Barón Strucker
Barón Zemo
Heinrich Zemo
Helmut Zemo
Barracuda
Bombardeo
Turk Barrett
Brisa barton
Basilisco
El basilisco es el nombre de tres personajes de ficción que aparecen en los cómics estadounidenses publicados por Marvel Comics .
El primero es un supervillano que debuta en Marvel Team-Up # 16 (diciembre de 1973). [11] El segundo es un villano parecido a un lagarto que aparece por primera vez en Morbius, the Living Vampire # 5 (enero de 1993). El tercero es un mutante que aparece por primera vez en New X-Men # 135 (diciembre de 2002). Basilisk es también el nombre en clave utilizado por una versión de realidad alternativa del X-Man Cyclops en el crossover Age of X.
Basilisco (Alces de albahaca)
Basilisco | |
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![]() El basilisco (Basil Elks), arte de Ron Wilson | |
Información de publicación | |
Editor | Comics Marvel |
Primera impresión | Marvel Team-Up # 16 (diciembre de 1973) |
Creado por | Len Wein Gil Kane |
Información en la historia | |
Alter ego | Alces de albahaca |
Afiliaciones de equipo | Sindicato criminal sin nombre de Hood |
Habilidades | Mayor fuerza, resistencia y reflejos Proyección de energía Temperatura y manipulación molecular Generación de volcanes |
Basil Elks es un pequeño ladrón que irrumpe en un museo para robar lo que cree que es una esmeralda ordinaria , pero en realidad es un artefacto extraterrestre de Kree llamado Piedra Alfa. Elks, sin embargo, calcula mal las rondas de los guardias de seguridad y es atrapado y disparado cuando alcanza un arma. La bala del guardia golpea accidentalmente y rompe la gema, provocando una explosión que transforma a Elks en un reptil humanoide: su piel se vuelve verde y escamosa y sus ojos ahora son grandes y rojos. Elks luego congela al guardia en su lugar, y al darse cuenta de que ahora tiene habilidades sobrehumanas, decide convertirse en un supervillano y se llama a sí mismo el Basilisco. Se enfrentó a Spider-Man , Mister Fantastic , Captain Marvel y Mole Man, que terminó con él siendo encarcelado en otro artefacto Kree llamado Omega Stone que terminó en lava. [12] [13]
La Piedra Omega en la que estaba encarcelado fue encontrada en un río de lava por algunos Moloides que la adoraban. [14] Después de absorber la Piedra Omega en sí mismo (aumentando así su poder a su máximo potencial) y liberarse, luchó contra la Cosa y lo derrotó hasta que llegó Spider-Man. [15] Después de escuchar el origen del basilisco, Spider-Man logra ayudar a la cosa a recuperar la conciencia y luchan contra el basilisco. Durante la pelea, el basilisco desapareció durante un derrumbe. [14]
La Esfinge sacó al Basilisco de su línea de tiempo y lo emparejó con Moonstone , Ulysses Bloodstone , el Hombre-Lobo y Gyre para competir contra el yo mayor de la Esfinge y su equipo formado por Black Bolt , Darkhawk , Mister Fantastic, Namorita y Nova . [dieciséis]
El basilisco reapareció en la historia cruzada que involucra al Azote del Inframundo , un justiciero que asesinó a numerosos supervillanos menores. Buscando represalias contra la Cosa, el personaje se abrió paso por un túnel hasta la sede de los Cuatro Fantásticos que estaba en construcción, pero fue asesinado por la Plaga del Inframundo disfrazado de trabajador de la construcción . [17]
Dead Ringer más tarde adquirió una muestra de tejido del cuerpo del basilisco y asumió su forma. [18]
Durante la historia de " Dark Reign ", el basilisco fue resucitado, junto con otros 16 criminales asesinados por la Plaga, por el maestro criminal Hood usando el poder de la entidad Dormammu . Los personajes revividos forman un escuadrón para intentar eliminar al Castigador ; el Basilisco completó la misión capturando al Castigador. [19]
Durante la historia de " Fear Itself ", el basilisco se encuentra entre los villanos que escapan de la balsa después de que Juggernaut toma la forma de Kuurth: Breaker of Stone y daña las instalaciones en gran medida. Ayuda al Hombre-Toro , al Grifo y a otro preso que se escapó en un robo a un banco. Cuando llega Hércules , reconoce que la cuarta persona con ellos es en realidad Hécate . El Basilisco se unió al Hombre-Toro y al Grifo en la lucha contra Hércules hasta que Hécate recuperó sus recuerdos. [20] Cuando un Kyknos revivido ataca a Hércules, el Basilisco y el Hombre-Toro huyen. [21] Hércules y el Grifo logran encontrar dónde se esconden el Basilisco y el Hombre-Toro y reclutan su ayuda. Los villanos se acercan a Hécate y Kyknos usando una artimaña que implica que Hércules se convierta en piedra. Hércules revive rápidamente y salva a los villanos matando a Kyknos, mientras que Hécate escapa. [22]
El Basilisco fue contratado más tarde por HYDRA, donde lo emparejaron con el Saqueador para robar el Reductor sónico de Ellsworth. Ambos son derrotados por Superior Spider-Man ( la mente del Doctor Octopus en el cuerpo de Spider-Man) y están atrapados por la policía. [23]
Basilisco (Wayne Gifford)
Basilisco | |
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Información de publicación | |
Editor | Comics Marvel |
Primera impresión | Morbius the Living Vampire # 5 (enero de 1993) |
Información en la historia | |
Alter ego | Wayne Gifford |
Habilidades | Fuerza y agilidad sobrehumanas Mirada paralizante |
Gifford es una persona disfuncional que recurre a la adoración de demonios para crear una persona alternativa, el basilisco. Con una mirada paralizante, el basilisco lucha contra el antihéroe Morbius the Living Vampire . [24]
Basilisco (Mike Columbus)
Basilisco | |
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Información de publicación | |
Editor | Comics Marvel |
Primera impresión | New X-Men # 135 (diciembre de 2002) |
Creado por | Grant Morrison Frank Quitely |
Información en la historia | |
Alter ego | Mike Columbus [25] |
Afiliaciones de equipo | Cuerpo estudiantil del Instituto Xavier Hermandad de mutantes |
Habilidades | Proyección de pulso de luz paralizante |
Basilisk es un mutante y estudiante del Instituto Xavier . Poseedor de una inteligencia limitada y perseguido en su juventud debido a su apariencia anormal (calvo, anormalmente grande y con un solo ojo), el personaje es extremadamente agresivo. Una vez que se manifiesta el poder mutante del basilisco, sufre ataques cerebrales hasta que se le da un dispositivo para ayudar a regular la habilidad.
El Basilisco se une a la Hermandad de Mutantes . Se apoderan de la ciudad de Nueva York . Mientras ve pasar a prisioneros humanos, hace una broma sobre un mal olor percibido. El líder de la Hermandad, Magneto, intenta dar un castigo, pero en su lugar mata al Basilisco.
Poderes y habilidades
Al absorber la Piedra Alfa, la versión Basil Elks del Basilisk poseía una mayor fuerza física, reflejos y resistencia. La principal arma ofensiva del basilisco eran los rayos de sus ojos, que podían ser una fuerza de conmoción (estos también podrían dirigirse al suelo para un vuelo limitado) o energía que manipulaba la temperatura (hasta los extremos de ebullición o congelación ) o moléculas. [26] Al absorber la Piedra Omega, los poderes de Basilisk aumentaron al máximo, lo que le permitió generar volcanes en todo el mundo, incluso en Savage Land y la ciudad de Nueva York. [27]
Wayne Gifford fue un humano normal hasta convertirse en el basilisco, un gran reptil humanoide. La criatura posee una fuerza y una agilidad sobrehumanas, y una mirada paralizante. La única debilidad del basilisco es su reflejo, que sirve como recordatorio de su estado anterior.
La versión de Mike Columbus del basilisco posee una cabeza demasiado carnosa desprovista de todas las características, excepto las orejas hundidas, una boca en forma de hendidura y una cuenca ocular única centrada. En este enchufe se encuentra un dispositivo similar a una cámara que permite al basilisco controlar su capacidad mutante sobrehumana para emitir un pulso de luz estroboscópica de alta frecuencia desde su cerebro. La luz paraliza a cualquier ser sensible que la ve, mientras que la duración del efecto varía según la fuerza de voluntad del espectador.
Líber
Bastión
Batroc el saltador
Hacha de batalla
Battleaxe (Anita Ehren) es un personaje ficticio del Universo Marvel Comics . Apareció por primera vez en The Thing # 33 (marzo de 1986) y fue creada por Michael Carlin y Ron Wilson .
Una luchadora de clase ilimitada , Battleaxe es una mujer enorme que lleva un hacha como su arma preferida. Derrotando a Titania en un combate de lucha libre, reclama el título de campeona de los Grapplers . Sin embargo, cuando Titania es asesinada por la Plaga del Inframundo , Battleaxe promete vengar a su ex compañera de equipo. Ella saca su agresión al Thing , luchando contra él en un combate de lucha libre. Al darse cuenta de que Battleaxe está descargando su ira contra él, la Cosa pierde la partida a propósito. [28] Más tarde se une a los Femizons de Superia y lucha contra el Capitán América . [29] También lucha contra BAD Girls, Inc. mientras está en un bar disfrazado. [30]
Más tarde, en la propia serie de la Sra. Marvel , Battleaxe lucha contra la heroína titular frente al restaurante cerrado de William Wagner. Los soldados chilenos controlados por la mente de Puppet Master atrapan a Battleaxe e intentan llevársela con ellos. La Sra. Marvel los derrota y lleva a los soldados y Battleaxe en su minicarrier. [31]
Battleaxe tiene una fuerza y durabilidad sobrehumanas. Lleva un conjunto de dos hachas que son sus armas preferidas.
Battlestar
Batwing
Baymax
Bestia
Bonito soñador
Algarabía
Jesse Aaronson
Olisa Kabaki
Carne de vaca
Escarabajo
Abner Jenkins
Leila Davis
Joaquim Robichaux, Elizabeth Vaughn and Gary Quinn
Janice Lincoln
Hobgoblin's Beetle
Bela
Belasco
Bella Donna
Bengala
Dexter Bennett
Bereet
Berzerker
Beta Ray Bill
Beyonder
Bi-Bestia
Gran berta
Gran hombre
Frederick Foswell
Janice Foswell
Henry Pym Jr.
Rueda grande
Majadero
Hombre pájaro
Henry Hawk
Achille DiBacco
Unnamed
obispo
Bisonte
Hormiga negra
Perno negro
Caja negra
Gato negro
Cuervo negro
Enano negro
Black Dwarf | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | Cameo appearance: New Avengers #8 (September 2013) Full appearance: Infinity #1 (October 2013) |
Created by | Jonathan Hickman Jerome Opeña |
In-story information | |
Team affiliations | Black Order |
Abilities |
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Black Dwarf is a fictional supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. He is a prominent member of the Black Order, a team of aliens who work for Thanos.
Publication history
Black Dwarf first appeared in a one panel cameo in New Avengers #8 (September 2013) and was created by Jonathan Hickman and Jerome Opeña.[32] His full appearance, along with a number of the other members of the Black Order, takes place in Infinity #1 (October 2013).
Fictional character biography
Black Dwarf is a member of Thanos' Black Order where he is the powerhouse of the Mad Titan's army.[33]
When Thanos targeted Earth as the next planet he would raze during the Infinity, Black Dwarf arrived in Wakanda.[34] To his surprise, Black Dwarf found great resistance in that country and was forced to retreat. For his failure, Thanos expelled Black Dwarf from the Black Order.[35]
Thanos gave Black Dwarf one more chance to prove himself by sending him to protect The Peak and keep it from being reclaimed by the Avengers following their fight against the Builders.[36] During the fight against the Avengers, Black Dwarf was killed by Ronan the Accuser.[37]
During the "No Surrender" arc, Black Dwarf was resurrected by Challenger who reassembles the Black Order in order to go into a contest against Grandmaster's Lethal Legion.[38]
Powers and abilities
Black Dwarf has immense superhuman strength, speed, stamina, durability, endurance, and senses due to his genetics.[39] He poses a giant powerful two-bladed axe, that he can summon back at will. He previously wielded a giant mace, but the mace was destroyed by Gladiator (Kallark).[40][41]
In other media
Television
- Black Dwarf appears in Avengers Assemble, but has no dialogue.[42] He serves the Black Order under Thanos.
- Black Dwarf appears in Guardians of the Galaxy, voiced by Jesse Burch.[42]
Film
- The character, renamed Cull Obsidian, is introduced in Avengers: Infinity War,[43] voiced and motion-captured by Terry Notary.[44][45] Obsidian is present with Thanos on the Statesman when he receives the Tesseract. He is sent with Ebony Maw to New York City in an attempt to take the Time Stone from Doctor Strange, while fighting Tony Stark and Peter Parker. After being teleported to Antarctica by Wong, Obsidian jumped for the portal but Wong closed it, severing Obsidian's arm. After getting a cybernetic arm, Obsidian appears in Wakanda and participates in the battle, where he knocks James Rhodes to the ground, fights T’Challa and Steve Rogers, and sends Vision flying. Near the forest, he fights Bruce Banner (wearing Stark’s Hulkbuster armor) and manages to break off the Hulkbuster arm, but Banner attaches the arm repulsor to Obsidian's body, sending him flying toward the Wakandan force-field, leading to his death.
- In Avengers: Endgame, an alternate version of Obsidian appears, with Notary reprising the role.[46] During the final battle, Obsidian is crushed to death by Scott Lang in his Giant-Man form. After Stark uses the Infinity Stones, Obsidian’s corpse disintegrates.[47]
Video games
- Black Dwarf appeared as a mini-boss and a boss in Marvel Avengers Alliance.[48]
- Black Dwarf, as Cull Obsidian, appears as a boss and unlockable playable character in Marvel Future Fight.[49]
- Black Dwarf, as Cull Obsidian, appears as an unlockable playable character in Lego Marvel Super Heroes 2. He is available through the DLC "Marvel's Avengers: Infinity War Movie Level Pack".[50]
- Black Dwarf, as Cull Obsidian, appears as a support character in Marvel Puzzle Quest.[51]
- Black Dwarf, as Cull Obsidian, appears as an unlockable playable character in Marvel Contest of Champions. He also was featured as a mini-boss during the story event "Avengers Forever".[52]
- Black Dwarf, as Cull Obsidian, appears as a boss in Marvel Ultimate Alliance 3: The Black Order, voiced again by Jesse Burch.[42]
Zorro negro
Raul Chalmers
Dr. Robert William Paine
Black Jack Tarr
Caballero negro
Sir Percy
Nathan Garrett
Dane Whitman
Augustine du Lac
Unnamed Woman
Mamba negro
Maravilla negra
Pantera negra
T'Chaka
T'Challa
Shuri
Corredor negro
Jinete negro
Espectro negro
Cisne negro
Mutant
Yabbat Ummon Turru
Garra negra
Pascal Horta
Desmond Drew
Samuel Barone
Tarántula negra
Negro Tom Cassidy
Viuda negra
Claire Voyant
Natalia Romanova / Natasha Romanoff
Yelena Belova
Monica Chang
Tania
Blackheart
Blacklash
Mark Scarlotti
Unnamed Man
Unnamed Woman
Luz negra
Apagón
Marcus Daniels
Half-demon
Ala negro
Joseph Manfredi
Heavy Mettle
Barnell Bohusk (Beak)
Espada
Donald Blake
Further reading
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Dr. Donald "Don" Blake is the fictional doctor identity of Marvel Comics character Thor. The character, created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, first appeared in Journey into Mystery #83 (August 1962).
Donald Blake is a construct of Odin, created for the purpose of giving a weak and powerless identity for Thor. After removing his memory, Thor started his life as the crippled Don who chose to be a doctor after sympathizing with the sick. Don finds the hammer Mjolnir and transforms into the God of Thunder. Later, Don regains his memory as Thor and soon learns the whole truth from Odin.[53] The Blake identity has been used here and there before Odin opted to erase him from existence. After Thor was killed by The Serpent, Donald Blake suddenly came into existence as a separate entity fully aware that his whole life had been a lie.
Alternate versions
- In the Ultimate Marvel Universe, Donald Blake is the alternate identity of Balder.
- A non-powered version of Blake appears as a resistance fighter in an alternate history line where the Nazis have won World War Two.[54]
Donald Blake in other media
- Donald Blake appeared alongside Thor as his human host in the segment "The Mighty Thor" of the animated The Marvel Super Heroes, in 1966. The episodes centered on Thor, voiced by Chris Wiggins who also voiced Donald Blake at the same time. The series saw Dr Donald Blake as Thor's human host, and whenever there's danger threatening the city' Donald would switch into Thor by striking his staff down; while maintaining his secret from everyone, and struggling to open up his true romantic feelings to his nurse co-worker Jane Foster.
- Donald Blake appeared in the 1981 Spider-Man episode "Wrath of the Sub-Mariner" voiced by Jack Angel.
- Donald Blake appears in The Incredible Hulk animated series 1996 voiced by Mark L. Taylor as the host for Thor voiced by John Rhys-Davies in the episode "Mortal Bounds". Dr Donald Blake is working in Detroit, and shown with his staff which transforms into the enchanted hammer Mjolnir' for Thor. Blake switched with Thor, brought the Hulk to Detroit so that Bruce Banner can help cure a gamma-based virus outbreak unknowingly created by The Gargoyle with help from The Abomination in his search to cure his disfigurement. Thor fights with the Hulk during the episode, and when Hulk grabs his hammer' Thor switches back to Donald Blake, suggesting he derives his power from his hammer disguised as a Staff when switched with Donald Blake.
- Donald Blake appears in The Incredible Hulk Returns played by Steve Levitt. This version is a medical student obsessed with Viking culture. He joined an archaeological expedition where he found Mjolnir and summoned Thor. Despite trying to lose the hammer it always came back to him. He serves as Thor's sidekick.
- Donald Blake makes a brief cameo in Doctor Strange: The Sorcerer Supreme 2007.
- Though Donald Blake does not appear in the film version of Thor, he is mentioned by Jane Foster as someone who was, "good with patients and bad with relationships". Thor uses his name when Erik Selvig picks him up from a S.H.I.E.L.D. facility.
Blanco
Blastaar
Siena Blaze
Calavera Ardiente
Venda
Punto ciego
Mutant
Samuel "Sam" Chung
¡Costoso!
Parpadear
felicidad
Bombardeo aéreo
Blitz is a minor character in Marvel Comics.
Jamie Zimmerman was created by Terry Kavanagh and Alex Saviuk, and first appeared in Web of Spider-Man #99 (April 1993). A female member of the New Enforcers, she possessed super-human strength and agility as well as a heavily armored costume, and Spider-Man was initially unaware of her capabilities.[55] Blitz was ultimately defeated by Spider-Man and Blood Rose.[56]
Blitz in other media
A heavily adapted version of the character named Barkley Blitz appears in the animated television series Marvel's Spider-Man, voiced by Ogie Banks.[57] The leader of a group of adrenaline junkies called the Wake Riders, this version is a fan of Adrian Toomes and initially uses the Vulture identity before later taking on the Goblin moniker. In the episode "Rise Above It All", Blitz manipulated Spider-Man to become involved in stunts while covering up the Wake Riders' heists. During a heist at Horizon High, Barkley and the Wake Riders were joined by the Vulture, but are defeated by Spider-Man and the Ultimate Spider-Man. However, Barkley and the Wake Riders are released from police custody when their publicist Gabby Flenkman fabricates a cover story that J. Jonah Jameson supports. In the four-part episode "Goblin War", Blitz joined the Goblin Nation as the Goblin King's personal enforcer, engaging in combat with Spider-Man and Harry Osborn before being defeated by Ghost-Spider.
Guerra relámpago
Blitzkrieg is a fictional character in the Marvel Universe. He was created by Mark Gruenwald, Bill Mantlo, Steven Grant, and John Romita, Jr., and first appeared in Marvel Super-Heroes: Contest of Champions #1 (June 1982).
Franz Mittelstaedt was born in Backnang, Germany. He was inspecting an electrical power plant when a stray bolt of lightning struck a faulty generator and bathed him in electricity. When he emerged from his coma weeks later, he found that he could summon lightning at will to wield as a weapon. He decided to use his powers in the name of democracy.
Later he was teleported away by the Grandmaster, along with hundreds of other heroes of Earth, so that the Grandmaster and Death could choose champions from among them. Blitzkrieg was chosen for the Grandmaster's team, fighting alongside fellow heroes Captain America, the aboriginal Talisman III, Darkstar, Captain Britain, Wolverine, Defensor, Sasquatch, Daredevil, Peregrine, She-Hulk, and the Thing. When the Grandmaster's team won the contest, the heroes were returned to Earth.
Blitzkrieg later joined the German superhero team Schutz Heiliggruppe, along with Hauptmann Deutschland and Zeitgeist. The team intended to arrest the Red Skull for his World War II war crimes, assaulting Arnim Zola's castle and fighting and defeating the Skeleton Crew.
Blitzkrieg later traveled to Buenos Aires to investigate the deaths of a number of South American superheroes, including his former ally Defensor. Blitzkrieg was confronted by his teammate Zeitgeist, who turned out to be the serial killer Everyman. Everyman killed Blitzkrieg, adding him to his long list of murdered superheroes, but Blitzkrieg was later avenged by Hauptmann Deutschland, now known as Vormund, who killed Everyman.
Blitzkrieg possessed the ability to summon lightning mentally, at up to 15,000,000 volts. He can manipulate all forms of electrical energy, using them to allow him to fly, create electrical energy shields and cages, and electrical tornadoes. He is also immune to electricity, and can sense electrical transmissions and track them to their source.
Tormenta de nieve
Gregor Shapanka
Donald Gill
Randy Macklin
Gota
Éxito de taquilla
Michael Baer
Man-Brute
The Man-Brute first appeared in Captain America #121 (January 1970), and was created by Stan Lee and Gene Colan. The character subsequently appears as Blockbuster in Omega the Unknown #7 (March 1977), and #9 (July 1977), in which he is killed.
The man originally known as the Man-Brute was an ex-convict whose strength was boosted by a factor of twelve by Professor Silas X. Cragg. Cragg was an enemy of Captain America from the World War II era who had developed a variant of the Super Soldier Serum which he used to empower the Man-Brute. Cragg sent the Man-Brute to attack Captain America at a charity event, but when the Man-Brute ran into his own estranged son he became upset at what he had become. Man-Brute attacked Cragg, who backed into a high voltage machine and was electrocuted.[58]
Renaming himself Blockbuster, he sought to acquire wealth for his son Robert, to give him a better life and keep him from becoming a criminal like himself. He robbed a bank, leading to conflict with the NYPD and then Omega the Unknown. Omega felt empathy for Blockbuster and his son, and let the man escape with the money. After Blockbuster robbed a diamond store, the owner offered a thousand dollar reward to which Omega responded. After struggling with Omega a few times, Blockbuster was incinerated by the second Foolkiller.[59]
Blockbuster possessed superhuman strength, durability, endurance, etc. He was an experienced street fighter, although he did not demonstrate any advanced fighting skills.
Fantasma Rubio
Hermanos de sangre
Hacha de sangre
Bloodhawk
Sed de sangre
Grito de sangre
Matanza
Piedra de sangre de Cullen
Elsa Bloodstone
Ulises Bloodstone
Golpe de sangre
Araña de sangre
The Blood Spider (Michael Bingham) is a fictional supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. He first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man #367 (October 1992), created by writer David Michelinie and artist Jerry Bingham.
Blood Spider is a mercenary trained by Taskmaster under contract by the Red Skull to create a team of mercenaries who would be capable of defeating Spider-Man. The trio were patterned after the superheroes Captain America, Hawkeye and Spider-Man, and the characters were called Death-Shield, Jagged Bow and Blood Spider.[volume & issue needed]
Solo joined the fray on the side of the wall-crawler and helps to defeat the three villains and thwart Red Skull's machinations who was using the mercenaries to guard private files sought by Spider-Man in reference to his parents.[volume & issue needed]
Years later, Blood Spider appears with Death-Shield and Jagged Bow among the criminals vying for the multi-million dollar bounty that was placed on Agent Venom's head by Lord Ogre. The trio's attempt on Agent Venom's life is interrupted by competing mercenaries Constrictor and Lord Deathstrike.[60]
Crime Master, with the help of Blood Spider, Death-Shield and Jagged Bow, later tries to steal a damaged Rigellian Recorder from Deadpool and the Mercs for Money.[61]
Of the trio, Blood Spider was the only character who displayed any superhuman abilities. He was able to shatter a solid concrete wall with a very powerful move, indicating he possessed some degree of superhuman strength. He was not as powerful as Spider-Man, and not nearly as fast. He carried a back pack and wrist devices capable of shooting webbing similar to that of Spider-Man, but much weaker. An ordinary human in peak physical condition, such as Solo, was able to tear through it, which would not have been possible with Spider-Man's webbing. Blood Spider's costume has several design elements that Bagley would later incorporate into the redesign of Ben Reilly's Spider-Man costume. The most prominent of the traits is the use of a larger, symmetrical spider emblem on the front and back, the legs of which meet on the shoulders.
Blood Spider in other media
- A variation of Blood Spider appears in the Ultimate Spider-Man animated television series, voiced by Benjamin Diskin.[62] This version is an alternate universe counterpart of Spider-Man from a universe where vampires led by the Lizard King have taken over most of Earth. In "Return to the Spider-Verse" [Part 1], he teams up with Spider-Man and Kid Arachnid to search for the Siege Perilous' shards and free the humans, including his teammates, from Lizard King's control. While the Spider-Men proceed to cure all those infected and defeat Lizard King, Blood Spider is attacked by Wolf Spider, who steals the shard they found. Blood Spider returns in "Return to the Spider-Verse" [Part 4], having been taken captive by Wolf Spider so the villain could drain his essence alongside other Spider doppelgangers. After being saved by Spider-Man, Blood Spider returns to his dimension.
- Blood Spider appears as a playable character in the mobile video game Spider-Man Unlimited.
- A variation of Blood Spider appears in Spider-Man: Hostile Takeover, a prequel novel to the 2018 video game Spider-Man. He is recruited off the streets to undergo experiments in a lab run by Norman Osborn, which exacerbate his preexisting mental health issues. Afterwards, he comes to believe that he is the real Spider-Man and that Peter Parker is an imposter. Under his own Spider-Man persona, he shows no interest in protecting and saving lives, stating he is the true Spider-Man as he is willing to kill whereas Peter will not. This disregard for human life causes the public to turn against Spider-Man, though a large number of people believe they are two separate people due to subtle, but obvious differences in their appearance. Eventually, Peter is able to draw the imposter into a public confrontation and prove his innocence. Subsequently, Blood Spider is defeated and incarcerated.[63]
Bloodwraith
Bloodwraith (Sean Dolan) is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe. He was created by Mark Gruenwald, Dann Thomas, Roy Thomas and Tony DeZuniga, and first appeared in Black Knight #2 (July 1990).
Bloodwraith is the murderous enemy of Black Knight and the Avengers. While Sean Dolan was known as Bloodwraith, Bloodwraith is made up of the souls of those the Ebony Blade has slain. He is an expert swordsman compelled to take lives, especially innocent lives. The blade is indestructible and able to cut through almost any material. The blade was forged from a meteorite and Merlin's magic. The blade can trap dead souls and absorb or deflect all kinds of energies and mystical power. Bloodwraith can sense the ebony blade and control it like a telekinetic. If separated, Bloodwraith can teleport to the Ebony Blade or teleport the blade to himself. Bloodwraith rides a winged horse named Valinor.
Sean Dolan was an amateur swordsman with no special abilities. When Sean drew the ebony blade, he found himself overwhelmed and controlled by all the souls of those the sword had slain, and became the Bloodwraith. The Bloodwraith was dark black in color and appeared in costume. The sword constantly craved new blood to add, and those it slew found their souls locked in an eternal battle of good vs. evil in a dimension inside the sword. Bloodwraith rides his winged horse, Valinor, and is an expert swordsman. He can control the ebony blade rather like a telekinetic. When separated from the blade, he can sense its presence and instantaneously teleport to its location. The ebony blade could slice through anything and, previously, would curse its wielder with petrification if its wielder used the blade to draw blood. When he wielded Proctor's sword, the Bloodwraith and Valinor appeared much more skeletal and could channel powerful blasts through the sword. When powered by the Slorenian souls, Bloodwraith became composed of an energy unknown to man, and both he and the sword grew to gigantic size.
Hoja azul
The Blue Blade (real name Roy Chambers[64]) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by an unknown writer and unknown artist,[65] his only appearance was in USA Comics #5 (cover-dated Summer 1942), published by Marvel forerunner Timely Comics during the period known as the Golden Age of Comic Books.
After the 1940s the character disappeared into obscurity until 2007, when he reappeared in the limited series The Twelve.[66]
Resplandor azul
Blue Blaze (real name Spencer Keen) is a superhero granted enhanced strength, dense skin, increased endurance and an increased life span by a mysterious blue energy source, and appeared in Mystic Comics #1-4.
Diamante azul
Águila azul
Maravilla azul
Escudo azul
Blue Streak / Bluestreak
Don Thomas
Jonathan Swift
Blue Kelso
Carl Brock
First appearance | Amazing Spider-Man #375 (March 1993) |
---|---|
Created by | David Michelinie, Mark Bagley |
Species | Human |
Further reading
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Carl Brock is a character in Marvel Comics. He was created by David Michelinie, Mark Bagley and first appeared in Amazing Spider-Man #375. He is Eddie Brock's father.
Carl was a businessman who lacked any form of emotion, until he met his love Jamie. They soon married and decided to have a family, however, Jamie died when giving birth to their son Eddie. This caused Carl to be cold and unloving towards Eddie, generally ignoring and only giving his son half-hearted compliments. Eddie tried everything to gain his father's affection but it was never enough. Things only became worst after Eddie (as a teenager) got drunk and accidentally ran over a neighbor's young son while driving with friends to which Carl went near bankrupt when he used most of his money to cover the incident, causing his resentment towards his son to increase.[67] When journalist Eddie was fired due to the Sin-Eater hoax, Carl ultimately disowned Eddie.[68]
After Eddie bonded with the Venom symbiote and turned into an anti-hero, Spider-Man tried to question Carl about Eddie (first as Peter Parker and then as Spider-Man) but Carl refused to give any information.[69]
After Anne Weying was bonded to the Venom symbiote,[70] and had gotten mysteriously pregnant with Eddie's child, Anne left the boy Dylan at Carl whom he raised as his own son. Despite providing Dylan with a degree of love, Carl was abusive to and (in some cases) even injuring his grandson.[71]
When Eddie with the brain dead Venom symbiote arrived to his father, Carl didn't attempt to help his son and ordered Dylan to go inside home as the agents of Maker's Project Oversight recaptured Eddie.[72] Eddie came back and again tried to seek amends with his father, but Carl angrily told Eddie to leave as he didn't consider Eddie as his son.[73] Dylan thought that Eddie was his older brother and went to Eddie in order to get to know but when Eddie got "sick", Dylan sent Eddie to the hospital. However, Carl arrived and forced Dylan to get in the car. When Dylan tried to argue as Dylan saw Eddie as a great person, Carl was about to lash out, but the Venom symbiote in its humanoid form (being separated from Eddie) confronted Carl inside their minds and after a heart-breaking discussion, the Venom symbiote left Carl in the desert all alone.[71]
- Other versions
The character's Ultimate Marvel version is Edward Brock Sr., an expert in bio-engineering. He was a close friend with Richard Parker, with the two working together on Project Venom under the employment of Bolivar Trask.[74] He along with Richard and his wife died from the plane crash orchestrated by Bolivar in order to gain full ownership of the project.[75] However, unbeknownst to Bolivar, Edward had kept a portion of the Venom suit hidden for his son to inherit.[76]
In Marvel Mangaverse, Shinji is May Parker's first husband and father of Venom. When the Shadow-Clan came to claim May's sister, they shot multiple poisonous arrows, killing Shinji, but with his son surviving.[77]
In Venom: Beyond, on Earth-1051 after Eddie Brock wen through with his suicide, Carl attended his sons funeral from a distance in his car with a depressed look on his face, while Anne Weying was the only one to attended in person.
- In other media
Eddie Brock Sr. appears in the Ultimate Spider-Man video game, with his story similar to the comic book. The only difference is that, while on the plane, Eddie tested the Venom suit by wearing, however, soon lost control and caused the plane to crash, killing both himself and Richard.
Eddie Brock Sr. is mentioned in Spider-Man Shattered Dimensions.
Bob, agente de HYDRA
Elias Bogan
Tornillo
Ahura Boltagon
Ahura is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character is usually depicted as a member of the Inhumans species. Ahura was created by Ann Nocenti and Bret Blevins and first makes an appearance in Marvel Graphic Novel: The Inhumans (1988). Ahura was created to be the son of Black Bolt and Medusa. He was banished to a prison since he shared his uncle's, Maximus The Mad, mental instability. Medusa freed him and allowed him to join the Future Foundation, but then Black Bolt allowed Ahura to be taken into the past by Kang the Conqueror.[78] Black Bolt returns him[79] and he becomes the new CEO of Ennilux Corporation.[80] Ahura took a fleet of Ennilux zeppelins to help the Inhumans in their clash with the X-Men, and provided them with a device to destroy the Terrigen cloud.[81] In an alternate timeline, Ahura becomes the new Kang.[82]
Bomblast
Bomba
Bombshell is a name used by several fictional characters appearing in Marvel comics: Wendy Conrad, as well as a mother/daughter criminal team called the "Bombshells" (Lori Baumgartner and Lana Baumgartner)
Rompe huesos
Alexander Bont
Boom-Boom
Bumerang
Bor
Further reading
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Bor Burison is an Asgardian in the Marvel Universe. The character, created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby and named for Borr from Norse mythology, first appeared in Journey into Mystery #97 (October 1963).
Bor, son of Buri, became the ruler of Asgard where under his rule he created the universe. He eventually married the giantess Bestla and had four sons with her named Cul, Vili, Ve and Odin. Out of all of his sons, Bor paid special attention to Odin, whom he groomed to become the next king. However, Bor was angered by Odin's decision to create humans which he was unable to reverse. Nevertheless, Bor strongly sided with Odin and the two went into battle against the Frost Giants. Bor went up against one giant, who was actually a time traveling Loki in disguise, and battled him, but was killed.[83]
Loki would impersonate Bor's ghost to get Odin to defeat Laufey and adopt the boy that would become Loki. Loki resurrected Bor in modern day, but affected his mind making him think that monsters were everywhere. He encountered his grandson Thor and the two fought in a destructive battle that involved the Dark Avengers. Bor was killed by Thor who only found out about his identity afterwards by Loki and Balder.[84] Hela later brings Bor back to life to lift Mjolnir. When he was unable to, Hela reduces him to dust. She then uses him to battle Thor once again.[85]
Bor once again returns to halt the wedding between Asgardian Sigurd and Valkyrie Dísir, causing much ire with the two as well as Danielle Moonstar, Hela, and Loki.[86]
Bor in other media
Bor appears in the 2013 live-action movie Thor: The Dark World, portrayed by Tony Curran. He appears in a flashback depicting the Asgardians' battle against the Dark Elf forces of Malekith the Accursed five thousand years ago.
Bova
Melissa Bowen
Further reading
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Melissa Bowen is the mother of Tandy Bowen (the superhero known as Dagger) in Marvel Comics. The character, created by Bill Mantlo and Rick Leonardi, first appeared in Cloak and Dagger #4 (January 1984). The character, a wealthy socialite, was depicted as being very emotionally distant from Tandy.[87] When Tandy runs away, Melissa is irritated at her daughter due to the cost of hiring people to search for her.[88]
Melissa Bowen in other media
Melissa Bowen appears in the Freeform series Marvel's Cloak & Dagger, played by Andrea Roth.[89] After the car accident that killed Nathan Bowen on the night with the Roxxon Gulf Platform collapsed, Melissa struggled to make ends meet while dealing with the fact that Roxxon repossessed some of Nathan's stuff from her home upon her husband's death and posthumously firing with the help of her lawyer boyfriend Greg Pressfield. While she still loves her daughter, Melissa has since become an alcoholic and a drug pusher and has been working low paying jobs that she keeps getting fired from.[90] Despite her many flaws, she does show genuine concern for her daughter.[91] She further ends up in a relationship with her lawyer, but she breaks up with Greg. She immediately regrets this, but Greg is murdered by an female hitwoman posing as a water jug delivery person.[92] Melissa and Tandy celebrate the anniversary of Nathan's death. Tandy and Tyrone later access Melissa's memory where it was shown that Nathan once slapped Melissa for spilling coffee on paperwork; this led to Tandy taking up Peter Scarborough's offer to pay to get Melissa out of the trailer park.[93] The female hitperson that killed Greg confronts Melissa at her home working under Scarsborough's orders by the time Tandy visits her mother. The hitperson gives Tandy until the count of three to come out before she shoots Melissa.[94] Thanks to a tactic by Tandy, her mother is saved from the hitwoman and left to confront Scarsborough. Following the Terrors crisis, Melissa is cleaning up her house as Tandy comes home showing her a newspaper stating that Roxxon was responsible for the incident.[95] Tandy and Melissa have improved their relationship where they attend a women's support group.[96] Tandy later finds alcohol, pills, and Chinese food on Melissa's counter where Tandy figures out that her mother has relapsed.[97] Melissa is later seen among the women enthralled by Andre Deschaine.[98] Melissa appears inside the Loa Dimension watching Andre's performance. After being hit by Tandy's light attack, she, Mikayla Bell, and Mina Hess hold Andre as Tyrone and Tandy finish Andre off. Melissa is later seen seeing Tandy off when her daughter leaves New Orleans.[99]
Caja
Roger Bochs
Madison Jeffries
Jamie Braddock
Isaiah Bradley
Fuga de cerebros
Brainchild
Marca Abigail
Ellen Brandt
Further reading
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Ellen Brandt is a supporting character of the Man-Thing (Ted Sallis) in Marvel Comics. The character, created by Roy Thomas, Gerry Conway and Gray Morrow, first appeared in Savage Tales #1 (May 1971).
Ellen Brandt grew up in a loveless, emotionless household which she had hoped to escape.[100] She met her husband Ted Sallis and she ran away to elope with him. The two visited a fortune teller for fun who informed them that tragedy would befall them.[101] Ted soon began working for S.H.I.E.L.D. and became lost in his work, causing Ellen to see him as cold as her father. She joined A.I.M. and plotted against her husband. When she revealed her true colors to Ted, she chased him into a swamp where he gave himself an untested super-soldier formula and crashed into the swamp, becoming Man-Thing. Ellen was frightened of his appearance and thus his abilities burned half her face.[102][103]
In other media
- Ellen Brandt appeared in The Super Hero Squad Show animated series episode "This Man-Thing, This Monster", voiced by Nina Dobrev. In her version, Ellen is Jack Russell's girlfriend and both were attacked by Dracula's Living Mummies, after Iron Man arrives by falling from the sky, but Ellen is kidnapped by a Mummie. Jack teams up with Iron Man and Man-Thing and to rescue Ellen. After Dracula is defeated by Iron Man, Ellen reveals that Dracula did experiments on her and turned her into a vampire, Jack creates the Supernatural Hero Squad, and Ellen joins the team.
- The character was adapted for the Marvel Cinematic Universe film Iron Man 3, portrayed by Stéphanie Szostak.[104] In the film, Brandt is a war veteran who lost her arm in battle before A.I.M. founder Aldrich Killian injects her with the Extremis virus, which grants enhanced regenerative capabilities. She and Eric Savin attack Tony Stark, but Stark is able to cause an explosion that sends Brandt flying into a set of power lines, fatally electrocuting her.
Betty Brant
Puente GW
Amor de azufre
Britania
Britannia is a member of the new UK marvel superhero team The Union. It has been released that Britannia is the leader of The Union, however Britannia's powers have not yet been released to the public. [105]
Broo
First appearance | Astonishing X-Men #40[106] (2004) |
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Species | Brood mutant |
Further reading
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Broo is a fictional character from Marvel Comics. He is a mutant from the Brood extraterrestrial race, but unlike his feral brethren he is intelligent and compassionate. Broo was born in the lab on a S.W.O.R.D. orbital research station called Pandora's Box.[107] He joined the X-Men as a student in Wolverine & the X-Men #1.
He has been the object of bullying because of his odd behavior; however he does not seem to understand teasing and even takes it as a compliment. He has developed a relationship with Idie,[108] and was at the top in his class behind Quentin Quire.
Kid Omega, who wanted to prove himself to Broo, Idie and Kid Gladiator who told him they never heard of him, reasoned with Krakoa who then joined Wolverine's X-Men.[109]
After discovering a robot placed there by the Hellfire Club in order to manipulate Oya, Kade Kilgore and Max Frankenstein tell Broo about their plans, but he is shot and left for dead before he can tell anyone else.[110] Beast saves his life with assistance by Brand, Peter Parker, Reed Richards and Tony Stark.[111] Broo was treated and put into a coma, and once he awoke, he had reverted to his feral brood instincts and acted like that of an animal.[112] He spent some time as an unwilling student in Kade Killgore's Hellfire Academy mutant school.[113] Idie comes with him for supervision, and Quentin Quire comes to rescue them both.[114] Quire advances the theory that Idie has fallen in love with Broo pre-trauma.[volume & issue needed]
Broo was often seen attacking fellow students and support staff at Killgore's school, random, brutal violence being fully supported and encouraged by the teachers.[volume & issue needed] He was kidnapped by the genocidal alien Xanto Starblood, who was going to teach Broo the hard sciences and feed him unique beings.[volume & issue needed] While on Xanto's ship, Broo bit a Bamf and was healed, restoring his self-aware, intelligent, and compassionate self, and the staff returned him to the school.[115]
During the Battle of the Atom, Broo babysat Shogo Lee.[116]
Broo later appears as a member of the Agents of Wakanda.[117]
Broo is a Brood mutant because he can feel compassion and has high intelligence. Like the rest of the Brood, Broo has several powers, including enhanced strength, enhanced speed, enhanced agility, ability to breathe in space, and insect wings that allow him to fly. His increased intelligence has resulted in funding for his beloved school; Broo has developed a line of pastries that cause the consumer to lose weight.[118]
Hermano Tode
Hermano vudú
Hermanos Grimm
Jake and William Dolly
Percy and Barton Grimes
Matón
Brutacus
Bruto
Hank McCoy
Reed Richards
Bucky
James Buchanan Barnes
Fred Davis
Jack Monroe
Rick Jones
Lemar Hoskins
Rikki Barnes
Julia Winters
Paul Budiansky
Bicho
Excavadora
Henry Camp
Marci Camp
Bala
Bullet/Buck Cashman is a character in Marvel Comics. He first appeared in Daredevil #250 (January 1988) created by Ann Nocenti and John Romita Jr.
Bullet is an agent to the United States government who performs covert activities of an unrevealed nature and who has the highest level security clearance such an agent can hold. He is in charge of his young son Lance, who was obsessed with an imminent World War III - however, Bullet was rarely at home, leaving his son alone; indeed, Bullet's permanent address is different to Lance's, although Lance frequently lies to alibi his father. Lance's mother Gloria rarely accepts her responsibilities to stay with Lance, much to Bullet's chagrin.
Bullet was assigned by a United States Army general on behalf of Wilson Fisk, the Kingpin of Crime, to participate in a scheme against the environmental protection organization, Save the Planet. Bullet was to allow another man to bomb the organization's headquarter in terrorist fashion, and then to arrest the supposed terrorist himself. The saboteur would then be released through legal maneuvering.
However, Matthew Murdock, who is secretly the costumed crimefighter Daredevil, captured the saboteur himself. (Murdock was not in his costumed identity at the time.) Murdock then encountered Bullet, who said he would see to it that the saboteur went to jail. Through his superhuman senses, Murdock realized that Bullet was lying, and Murdock and Bullet fought each other, but Murdock finally lets Bullet take the saboteur into custody.
Soon after Bullet killed a man in toxic waste, framing the environmentalists for the murder. Murdock, as Daredevil, accused Bullet of committing the murder, and the two fought. (Bullet realized that Daredevil was the man who fought him previously but does not know Daredevil's true identity.) When the police arrived at the scene, Bullet confessed to the murder and was taken into custody but after Bullet made a single phone call, all charges against him were dropped and he was released.
Since then, Bullet joined criminals recruited by the assassin Typhoid in an attack on Daredevil that nearly killed the crimefighter. [119]
Daredevil decided to get revenge on Bullet; to do so, he tracked Bullet's son and helped him against some bullies, earning Lance's trust. Lance then invited Daredevil to his home and convinced him to not fight Bullet. Bullet entered unannounced and, misunderstanding the scene to believe that Daredevil was threatening Lance, attacked Daredevil. Lance stopped their fight to explain it all. Bullet admitted that he liked Daredevil, having attacked him only because he had been hired to do so. Daredevil decided that tracking Bullet had been useless and left. [120]
Diana
Baluarte
Nathaniel Bumpo
Sonny Burch
Further reading
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Sonny Burch is a minor character in Marvel Comics. The character, created by writer John Jackson Miller and artist Jorge Lucas, first appeared in Iron Man Vol. 3 #73 (December 2003).
As chairman of Cross Technological Enterprises, Burch acquires Iron Man's technology patents to be sold to various companies in an attempt to improve his own political position.[121][122] However, he had neither the knowledge nor care to fully understand that even Iron Man's outdated technology is too sophisticated for adapting; examples of Burch's incompetence include a submarine where Iron Man and Captain America save the military personnel,[121] a missile defense system for the U.S. Government,[123] and Oscorp's imperfect battlesuits and military drones.[121][124] When technological mistakes threaten his cargo plane carrying Iron Man's armors (which were salvaged after blackmailing Carl Walker[125]) to crash into Washington, D.C., Burch (facing utter ruin) takes a gun and commits suicide.[126] Fortunately, Iron Man saves the personnel within Burch's cargo plane.[127]
Sonny Burch in other media
A heavily adapted version of Sonny Burch appeared in the Marvel Cinematic Universe film Ant-Man and the Wasp (2018), portrayed by Walton Goggins.[128] This version is a black market criminal who trades and sells to big businesses; he has henchmen (consisting of Uzman, Anitolov, Knox and FBI agent Stoltz) and is the owner of a restaurant (presumably as a front). Sonny attempts to buy Hank Pym's quantum technology, but gets turned down by Hope van Dyne. Sonny's men subsequently battle the Wasp and Ant-Man. He later manages to get information out of Scott Lang's friends (Luis, Kurt and Dave) via his "truth serum" concoction. Burch and his men fight Ant-Man and the Wasp (who are also fighting Ava Starr) in a three-way battle for the miniaturized technology. Sonny attempts to escape via boat, but is stopped by Giant-Man. Burch and his men catch up to Luis, but are tasered by Kurt and Dave. Luis injects Burch and his men with his own "truth serum" out of revenge, forcing confessions to various crimes to federal agents led by Jimmy Woo; Sonny even confesses to his restaurant's health code violations.
Ladrón
Quemador
Noah Burstein
Noah Burstein is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character, created by Archie Goodwin and George Tuska, first appeared in Hero for Hire #1 (June 1972).
Noah Burstein is a scientist who worked on recreating the super soldier serum that created Captain America, and in the process created Warhawk. Years later, Burstein would hire Luke Cage to capture Warhawk.[129] He landed a job at Seagate Prison experimenting on inmates one of them being Carl Lucas. He left Lucas in a "Electro-Biochemical System" when racist guard, Billy Bob Rackham, came to sabotage the experiment only for it to increase Lucas' strength and durability.[130] He later gets a job at the Storefront Clinic with Claire Temple as his assistant. He reunites with Lucas, who had changed his name to Luke Cage, and asks him to rescue Claire when she is kidnapped by Willis Stryker who now went by Diamondback.[131]
Burstein and Claire are later kidnapped by John McIver, who demanded that a similar treatment be done to him as was done to Luke Cage, becoming Bushmaster. He and Claire are later rescued by Cage.[132] At one point Bushmaster returns to force Burstein to work for him even kidnapping his wife, Emma, as leverage. Both he and his wife are saved by Iron Fist this time. He would continue to be kidnapped by criminals only for Luke Cage and Iron Fist to come and rescue him.
Noah Burstein in other media
Noah Burstein was a recurring character in Luke Cage, portrayed by Michael Kostroff.[133] He fulfills the same purpose as his comic book incarnation. After Luke Cage escapes from Seagate, Burstein goes into hiding, living in a farmhouse with all of the experimental equipment he was able to salvage. Claire takes Luke to see him after Diamondback shoots him with a Judas bullet.[134] He removes the pieces of the bullets only to reveal that he plans on using the information gleaned from him to improve on his experiments. He even so far as to tell him that Reva Connors, who was his assistant at the time, was also in on the plans. Enraged by the deception, Luke destroys his equipment before he and Claire leave. However, Burstein is able to retrieve some of the information from his files.[135] In the season 1 finale, Burstein is seen in Diamondback's hospital room following his defeat, though his intended plans for Diamondback are unknown.[136]
Campesino australiano
Bushmaster
Bushwacker
Bola de mantequilla
Vivian Dolan's
Emery Schaub
Emery Schaub is a superhero in the Marvel Comics universe. The character, created by Christos N. Gage and Steve Uy, first appeared in Avengers: The Initiative #13 (2008).
An invulnerable overweight fry cook, Schaub is recruited to the Initiative program and given the codename Butterball. Despite Schaub's invulnerability, his lack of physical strength, skill, and wits make him an inappropriate candidate for the superhero program.[137]
When Norman Osborn takes control of the Initiative, Schaub is part of Henry Peter Gyrich's Shadow Initiative assembled to retake control of Negative Zone Prison Alpha from the forces of Blastaar.[138] In spite of heavy losses, the team completes their mission.[139] Schaub has subsequently been referred to as a hero by Norman Osborn and used as an everyman figure for propaganda purposes by H.A.M.M.E.R., Osborn's military arm.[140] During the Siege on Asgard, Butterball helps the Avengers Resistance.[141] Later, Butterball is a founding member of a new superteam in North Carolina.[142] He later joins the Avengers Academy.[143]
Emery Schaub in other media
Butterball appears in Lego Marvel's Avengers, voiced by Patrick Seitz.
Mariposa
Zumbido
Byrrah
Referencias
Text in this article was copied from Buck Cashman (Earth-616) at the Marvel Database, which is released under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 (Unported) (CC-BY-SA 3.0) license.
- ^ Daredevil #505-506
- ^ Daredevil #507
- ^ Blackburn, Farren (director); Ian Stokes (writer) (March 17, 2017). "Felling Tree with Roots". Marvel's Iron Fist. Season 1. Episode 7. Netflix.
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- ^ Chow, Deborah (director); Ian Stokes (writer) (March 17, 2017). "Lead Horse Back to Stable". Marvel's Iron Fist. Season 1. Episode 11. Netflix.
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- ^ Briesewitz, Uta (director); Lauren Schmidt Hissrich & Douglas Petrie & Marco Ramirez (writer) (August 18, 2017). "Take Shelter". Marvel's The Defenders. Season 1. Episode 5. Netflix.
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