Miracle Man

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Miracle Man


The Miracle Man appears to withstand a punch from the Thing in Fantastic Four #3 (Mar, 1962). Art by Jack Kirby. © Marvel Comics.

Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance Fantastic Four #3 (Mar, 1962)
Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby
Characteristics
Abilities Hypnotism,
Ability to manipulate and animate matter

Miracle Man is a supervillain featured in Marvel Comics, created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby as one of the first enemies of the Fantastic Four. He was originally depicted as a stage magician with megalomaniacal desires, capable of convincing others through hypnosis that he has amazing powers. In subsequent appearances, he obtains actual, significant superpowers that allow him to mentally control and rearrange matter. In his final appearance, the Miracle Man becomes one of the many minor Marvel Comics supervillains to be killed by the Scourge of the Underworld.

Contents

[edit] Introduction

The Miracle Man is introduced in Fantastic Four #3 (Mar, 1962) as an arrogant stage magician who harbors megalomaniacal desires. The Fantastic Four attend his stage show, and the Miracle Man directly taunts them during his display of ostensibly superior powers, which includes such feats as levitation, transforming himself into mist, and enlarging himself to giant form. He goads the enraged Thing into an on-stage contest of strength, which he wins as well. Mr. Fantastic voices the fear that the team would be unable to defeat him were he to turn to crime.

The Miracle Man soon declares war on humanity and commits a jewel heist, through the aid of a giant prop monster he animates. The police call upon the Fantastic Four to stop him, but the Miracle Man bests them in a series of encounters and hypnotizes the Invisible Girl into obeying him. However, after the Human Torch blinds him with a flare of fire, he is captured easily and his mysterious powers are explained as deriving from nothing more than hypnotism.[1]

[edit] Later appearances

The Miracle Man in Fantastic Four #139 (Oct, 1973), art by John Buscema and Joe Sinnott.  © Marvel Comics
The Miracle Man in Fantastic Four #139 (Oct, 1973), art by John Buscema and Joe Sinnott. © Marvel Comics

The Miracle Man next appears as the villain in a two-issue story arc in Fantastic Four #138-139 (Sept-Oct, 1963). The Fantastic Four encounter him on a remote Indian reservation, while investigating an attack on villages of the tribesmen of Wyatt Wingfoot. They initially mock him until he demonstrates that he now has actual superpowers, including the ability to control matter and to fire blasts of energy. The Human Torch recounts their first encounter with him to new teammate Medusa,[2] in a flashback that differs significantly from the original story in Fantastic Four #3, with new art and dialogue captioned by the Torch's narration.[3] The team are depicted as having been unimpressed with the stage show until the Thing volunteers to go on stage, where he is attacked by the convincing illusions of a lion and a monster. Their later fights with the Miracle Man in that story are simplified to omit the hypnotism of the Invisible Girl, and to explain that the villain is blinded when the Human Torch destroys the animated prop monster with a single "nova flash."

The Miracle Man agrees with the Torch's version of their first encounter, and then continues to explain what has subsequently happened to him. He recounts that while in prison, he researched books on the power of "mind over matter." After being released, he explains that he sought out a mysterious band of Native Americans known as "the Silent Ones," who taught him how to mentally control matter; he had then buried his teachers in a rockslide with his newfound powers. Finished with his story, he causes the earth to open up and swallow the Fantastic Four whole in the cliffhanger at the end of issue #138.

In Fantastic Four #139, the heroes have of course survived, and the story continues with the insane Miracle Man creating his own advanced city to rule, complete with inhabitants under his control. Giant and super-strong, he fights with the Thing in hand-to-hand combat while the other heroes fight his creations. The story shifts to show American military commanders being informed by a "professor" that "some outside force" is draining the world's nuclear weapons stockpile of protons, making the weapons unstable and threatening "a worldwide nuclear explosion." Before this dire reality comes to pass, the Miracle Man suddenly vanishes in the midst of an arrogant tirade. The Silent Ones serve as a deus ex machina, appearing in the clouds to explain that because they are responsible for his madness, they took him away to "cure" him.

In Marvel Two-In-One #8, the Thing and Ghost Rider team up against the Miracle Man, who has once again overpowered the Silent Ones to escape from their otherworldly imprisonment. After Ghost Rider proves immune to his powers, and the Thing blinds him with a handful of sand, he is reclaimed by the Silent Ones. He subsequently appears in Defenders #120-122, having taken refuge in a monastery after the Silent Ones gave him amnesia. He regains his memories and powers, and steals the "Darksoul" from Daimon Hellstrom, who had travelled to the monastery on a personal quest for meaning. Now professing a desire to help others, he transports himself and the Defenders to the poverty-stricken island of Java, which he attempts to turn into a paradise. When a blind man refuses to give up his affliction, considering it a divine gift, the Miracle Man is overcome by rage and turns again to violence. Hellstrom regains control over the Darksoul and the Miracle Man loses all of his powers.

In The Thing #24, while on a mission to regain his powers and aiding the Rhino in a fight against the Thing, the Miracle Man is shot dead by the vigilante known as the Scourge of the Underworld.[4]


[edit] External links

http://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix/miraclemanff.htm

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ The story was of course illustrated to depict what the hypnotized characters were seeing as if it were "actually" happening within the story, so that the reader could still be surprised by the revelation that it was all an illusion.
  2. ^ The Inhuman Medusa serves as a temporary replacement for the Invisible Girl in Fantastic Four #132-159.
  3. ^ Notably, the flashback in Fantastic Four #138 depicts the Thing in his more familiar, hard-edged rocky form, rather than the more lumpy shape the character was actually drawn with in Fantastic Four #3.
  4. ^ The story of Scourge hunting supervillains crossed over into most Marvel titles, each of which would usually depict a single villain's unexpected execution by the mysterious Scourge without elaboration or explanation. The vigilante's main story was featured in Captain America.