Erik Josten

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Atlas


Atlas, from the cover of New Thunderbolts #12
Art by Tom Grummett.

Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance Avengers vol. 1 #21 (Oct 1965) (as Power Man)
Spectacular Spider-Man vol. 1 #49 (1980) (as Smuggler)
Iron Man Annual #7 (as Goliath)
Incredible Hulk vol. 2 #449 (Jan 1997) (as Atlas)
Created by Stan Lee, Jack Kirby
Characteristics
Alter ego Erik Josten
Affiliations Thunderbolts
Lethal Legion
Masters of Evil
Notable aliases Power Man, Smuggler, Goliath.
Abilities Mass and size manipulation,
Superhuman strength
This article is about the Marvel Comics character Atlas. For the comic book series by Dylan Horrocks see Atlas (comic series), for companies of that name, see Atlas Comics (1950s) or Atlas/Seaboard Comics.

Atlas (Erik Josten), formerly Power Man, Smuggler and Goliath, is a fictional character, a former supervillain in the Marvel Comics universe and member of the Thunderbolts.

Contents

[edit] Fictional character biography

Erik Josten was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He was originally a mercenary who was convinced by the Enchantress to undergo the same 'ionic-ray' treatment (from a machine invented by Baron Zemo) as Wonder Man, making Josten super-strong. Taking the name Power Man, he became the Enchantress's partner for a while, but later struck out on his own. He became a professional supervillain, joining such teams as the Lethal Legion and the Masters of Evil.

Eventually, Josten met Luke Cage, a hero who for a brief time had assumed the name Power Man. The two fought; Cage won.

Josten's powers were greatly reduced when Count Nefaria stole them (along those of the his other superhuman underlings.) His strength fading, he changed his costume and became a smuggler, taking the unimaginative name the Smuggler.

Later, he gained the ability to grow to giant size from the criminal Doctor Karl Malus, who used a sample of Henry Pym's growth serum. He then took on the name Goliath, a name used previously by superheroes (see Goliath, Black Goliath) and again changed his costume.

Josten joined a new version of the Masters of Evil, founded by the second Baron Zemo. During his time with this group, Josten was one of the villains who invaded Avengers Mansion and beat Hercules severely . When Zemo decided to disguise the Masters as a superhero team called The Thunderbolts, Josten created the original identity (and costume) of Atlas. However, like most of the Thunderbolts, Atlas began to enjoy public admiration, and eventually reformed to become a genuine superhero, even after the Thunderbolts' criminal past was publicly revealed. After absorbing the energy from one of Nefaria's weapons, an "ionic bomb", Josten mutated into an "ionic energy creature" similar to what Wonder Man had become. In this form, he came to inhabit the body of Dallas Riordan, a woman he loved.

When they were separated, Dallas took the ionic energy, leaving Josten powerless, a situation which lasted until Fixer gave him a new dose of Pym particles. This lasted until the end of the Avengers/Thunderbolts limited series, when Erik asked Henry Pym to remove the particles from his system.

However, he regained the ability to change his size, by reclaiming the ionic energy from Dallas, leaving her a paraplegic again.[1]

Altered again by the Wellspring, during a battle against the Grandmaster in which he had to surrender his powers temporarirly to Zemo, he was left stuck in a giant form, too heavy even to move and communicate. However he was able to send back some ionic energy to Dallas, restoring her legs.

[edit] Civil War/The Initiative

Erik has been identified as one of the 142 registered superheroes who appear on the cover of the comic book Avengers: The Initiative #1. [2]

[edit] Footnotes

[edit] External links