Mar-Vell

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Captain Mar-Vell


Variant Cover to Civil War: The Return.
Art by Ed McGuiness.

Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance Marvel Super-Heroes #12 (1967)
Created by Stan Lee (writer)
Gene Colan (artist)
Characteristics
Alter ego Mar-Vell
Species Kree, from Hala
Affiliations Avengers
Notable aliases Captain Marvel, Dr. Walter Lawson
Abilities Superhuman strength,
Flight,
Cosmic Awareness,
Solar energy absorption & projection,
Wields Nega-Bands

Mar-Vell, better known as Captain Marvel, is a fictional character, an alien superhero in the Marvel Comics universe.

Contents

[edit] Publication history

The character of Mar-Vell was Marvel Comics' first use of the "Captain Marvel" name, primarily to ensure Marvel obtained the trademark to the title after the copyright on the original Fawcett Comics character of the same name came up for renewal. Captain Mar-Vell was created by Stan Lee and Gene Colan and first appeared in Marvel Super-Heroes #12 (December, 1967).

After another showcase feature following his first appearance, the character acquired his own title. Sales proved mediocre, and the character was revamped by Roy Thomas and Gil Kane in issue #17. The revamp did not save the series, and it was cancelled with issue #24. Thomas tied up loose plot-lines from the series in the pages of the Avengers comic book. When the book was revived in the early 1970s, plotter and artist Jim Starlin conceptually revamped the character, although Captain Marvel's appearance remained mostly unchanged. Mar-Vell became the "Protector of the Universe", appointed by the cosmic entity Eon.

However, his career was cut short when he died from cancer on Titan in the presence of the Marvel Universe's superhero community. This event is chronicled in Marvel's first large-format graphic novel, The Death of Captain Marvel.

In 2007, Mar-Vell returns in Civil War: The Return, a one-shot within Marvel's Civil War crossover event. This version of Mar-Vell is one who has been plucked out of space/time after his battle with Nitro but before he starts to show signs of his illness. Mar-Vell's return is scheduled to lead into a new Captain Marvel mini-series in 2007. [1]

[edit] Fictional character biography

[edit] Origin

Mar-Vell is a member of the Kree, a militaristic alien race that is humanoid in appearance. A captain in the Kree Imperial Militia, Mar-Vell is initially sent to Earth as a spy. After arriving, Mar-Vell takes the identity of the recently deceased Dr. Walter Lawson, a scientist starting a position at Cape Canaveral, Florida.

Mar-Vell's original Kree uniform.Captain Marvel (vol. 1) #1(May, 1968). Art by Gene Colan.
Mar-Vell's original Kree uniform.
Captain Marvel (vol. 1) #1
(May, 1968). Art by Gene Colan.

Posing as Lawson, Mar-Vell studies humanity's progress towards developing a means of space travel. After living among humans, however, Mar-Vell begins to empathize with them. He appears publicly in his Kree helmet and uniform to battle a Kree robot Sentry, ultimately defeating it. Onlookers, hearing the Sentry call him "Mar-Vell," believe him to be a new Earth-born superhuman adventurer named "Captain Marvel" and proclaim him a hero.

[edit] Bonded

Mar-Vell eventually finds himself trapped in the Negative Zone. The Kree Supreme Intelligence secretly enables Mar-Vell to telepathically contact Rick Jones, a youth who had previously been a companion to the Hulk, Captain America, and the original Avengers. Jones is lured to a hidden and abandoned Kree base on Earth, where he puts a pair of "nega-bands" around his wrists. After slamming the bands together, Mar-Vell and Jones trade places: Mar-Vell arrives on Earth while Jones, surrounded by a protective aura, is transported to the Negative Zone. As long as they wear the bands, Mar-Vell and Jones are in telepathic contact. Mar-Vell can only remain on Earth for brief periods of time; if he stays more than three hours, he and Jones switch places automatically.

This change in the concept of the character was made by writer Roy Thomas and artist Gil Kane in issue 17. Thomas has said that the intent of the change was to make the character over into a more science-fiction oriented version of Fawcett Comics' original Captain Marvel [1]. Both comics were now about a young man who became a super-hero after being guided to a hidden installation, and who could then in a flash of energy become, or change places with, an adult super-hero in a predominantly red costume.

After the initial cancellation of the comic book, Mar-Vell's life force is submerged into the body of Rick Jones at the end of the Kree-Skrull War story-line. When the comic book was revived, Jones is bombarded with a form of electromagnetic radiation by Professor Benjamin Savannah (whose name is a homage to the Fawcett Captain Marvel's principle antagonist, Thaddeus Bodog Sivana). This releases Mar-Vell from Jones' body and allows him to convert solar energy into increased strength and force bolts.

[edit] Protector of the Universe

While battling the Controller, Mar-Vell becomes buried under debris from Avengers Mansion. Before Mar-Vell can escape he is split from Rick Jones, who is left to slowly suffocate under the debris. Rick ultimately survives, but Mar-Vell is teleported to the extraterrestrial being known as Eon. Created thousands of years before to watch over the evolution of superhuman beings on Earth, Eon shows Mar-Vell the true horrors of war. Mar-Vell recognizes that his battles have been in vain, and wishes to change his warrior nature. As a result, Eon bestows upon Mar-Vell great power. Mar-Vell's already formidable reflexes and skills are sharpened. Eon gives Mar-Vell both inner peace as well as a psionic ability called "cosmic awareness", and designates him as "Protector of the Universe."

[edit] Death and beyond

Marvel Graphic Novel #1:The Death of Captain Marvel (1982). Art by Jim Starlin.
Marvel Graphic Novel #1:
The Death of Captain Marvel
(1982). Art by Jim Starlin.

During a battle with the villain Nitro, Mar-Vell is exposed to a powerful nerve gas known as "Compound 13." The gas causes Mar-Vell to collapse, but he is given the antidote to the gas and seems to recover fully. However, as would be revealed only years later, the gas is also carcinogenic and causes an incurable cancer to develop in Mar-Vell's system.

Although the nega-bands suppress the ailment for some time, the cancer mutates to an astonishing degree. Medical and scientific professionals and superheroes research the problem, but no one can find a cure. Mar-Vell spends his last days on Titan in the presence of his friends. As he slips into a coma, he finds his consciousness in an ethereal realm between life and death.

There, he meets Thanos, who engages Mar-Vell in combat so that he can die in a manner befitting a great warrior. As the battle ends, Mar-Vell, Thanos, and Death walk off into a bright light, presumably into a realm of the afterlife. Back on Titan and surrounded by his lover Elysius of Titan, Rick Jones, the Avengers, and various other friends and heroes, Mar-Vell's heart finally gives out, and his physical body dies. His grave is marked by a monument on Titan.

However, death has not been the end for the character of Mar-Vell. In issues of Silver Surfer (1987), Cosmic Powers Unlimited (1995), and Captain Marvel (vol. 4), Mar-Vell is repeatedly depicted in the afterlife.

[edit] The Return

Mar-Vell returns during Marvel's Civil War event.[2] This version of the character has been plucked out of space/time after his battle with Nitro but before he starts to show signs of his illness. Although he appears healthy, Mar-Vell is made aware that his body harbors the cancer that will one day kill him. The one-shot ends with Mar-Vell donning his Nega Bands in order to serve as the warden of the Negative Zone prison and save it from destruction.

[edit] Alternate versions

[edit] Ultimate Captain Marvel

Main article: Mahr Vehl

The character called Mahr Vehl is intended to be the Ultimate imprint version of Mar-Vell. Mahr Vehl is introduced in the Ultimate Marvel limited series, Ultimate Secret, and is a main character in Ultimate Extinction.

[edit] Captain Marvel (Amalgam Comics)

Captain Marvel was an Amalgam Comics superhero, who is a combination of DC Comics' Captain Marvel and Marvel Comics' Captain Mar-Vell.

[edit] Powers and abilities

Originally, Captain Mar-Vell had no superhuman powers, although he was somewhat stronger than a human due to his advanced Kree physiology. As a species, the Kree have developed greater strength in order to combat the heavier gravity of their home world. He was equipped with a jet belt that allowed him limited flight, and a Uni-beam weapon.

He temporarily gained the power of teleportation from an entity called Zo.

The Kree Nega-Bands converted Mar-Vell's psionic energy into strength, a high degree of imperviousness to harm, the ability to project energy blasts, and the power to fly. They also allowed Mar-Vell to exist unprotected in outer space without having to breathe.

Dr. Benjamin Savannah's radiation treatment altered Mar-Vell's genetic structure so that he could absorb solar energy and convert it to various uses, including strength. He then relied on the solar power rather than the bands for flight. After he became "cosmically aware", he would leave a glowing trail behind him while flying.

The exact nature and scope of the "cosmic awareness" granted to Mar-Vell have never been clearly defined. In later volumes of Captain Marvel involving Genis-Vell, the power of cosmic awareness is described as an almost immeasurable force that allows the user to know all that has occurred, all that will occur, and all that might occur anywhere in the universe. Without proper experience and a level of control, this sense of all-knowing can drive an individual insane (as it did with Genis-Vell).

[edit] In other media

[edit] Video Games

[edit] Toys

In December 2006, Toy Biz produced its last wave of Marvel Legends action figures with Captain Mar-Vell being one of the final figures. A variant figure of his son, Genis-Vell, was also released in this line.

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Roy Thomas interview in Daniel Herman, Gil Kane: Art and Interviews, 2002
  2. ^ Civil War: The Return, 2007.
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