Artie Maddicks

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Artie Maddicks

Art by Chris Bachalo
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance X-Factor vol. 1 #2 (March 1986)
Created by Bob Layton and Jackson Guice
In story information
Alter ego Arthur "Artie" Maddicks
Species Human Mutant
Team affiliations Generation X, Daydreamers, X-Factor, X-Terminators, New Mutants
Abilities Depowered, formerly:
Ability to telepathically project images,
Telepathy

Arthur "Artie" Maddicks is a fictional comic book character in Marvel Comics' shared universe, the Marvel Universe. He first appeared in X-Factor vol. 1 #2 (March 1986).

Contents

[edit] Publication history

Maddicks has appeared as a supporting character in both the first series of X-Factor and in Generation X. He has a more active role in the Daydreamers and X-Terminators.

[edit] Fictional character biography

Artie was raised by his father, Dr. Carl Maddicks, until his eleventh birthday, when he gained his powers. Artie mutated into a lumpy pink form with no nose and large round eyes. Furthermore, the speech center of his brain was altered, rendering him mute. Desperate, Dr. Maddicks forced Dr. Hank McCoy to help him make a cure. McCoy was used as Dr. Maddicks' guinea pig, while Artie watched. X-Factor came to save McCoy and ended up saving Artie as well. Brand Corporation security guards (whom Dr. Maddicks worried would kill his son) arrived as he fired a gun at them. The guards fire back, killing him.

Afterwards, Artie became the ward of X-Factor. As a part of X-Factor's group of youthful pupils, the "X-Terminators", he first met his friend Leech, a Morlock boy with green skin who possesses the ability to negate other mutants' superhuman abilities. He also befriends several other young mutants, such as Boom-Boom, Rictor, Rusty and Skids.

For a time, Artie and the personnel of X-Factor live aboard Ship, a massive artificial intelligence with a spacecraft body that dwarfs all skyscrapers. When Ship is overtaken by a booby trap implanted by its old master Apocalypse, it manages to bring Artie deep inside itself, to its own computer brain. Artie manages to translate that there is a bomb attached to the brain. X-Factor, working with the kids, manages to defuse the bomb and it explodes harmlessly far above the island of Manhattan.

[edit] St. Simons

Some time later, X-Factor splits their wards between two boarding schools that were about a mile apart. Artie's school, St. Simons recognizes that he, Leech and the tech-manipulating child Taki are mutants, and more importantly, best friends and were fully willing to work around this. When the events of Inferno began, N'Astirh's demon hordes first went after Artie and Leech, as they were powerful children. It was determined the two were too old but the demon kept them on hand anyway. The other members of the X-Terminators, joined by Taki, leave their new living situations to help rescue him. Artie is forced to witness at least two murders of innocent humans guards before he is rescued.

Artie, Leech and Taki move back to St. Simons for a while, where they foil a mutant kidnapping plot by a group of murderous humans. [1]

[edit] Generation X

Gene Nation disrupts the school with another kidnapping scheme, this time successful. After Leech is rescued from Gene Nation by Generation X, he and Artie came to live at the Massachusetts Academy, the home of the teenage mutant team. There they soon met Franklin Richards (recently "orphaned" after the Onslaught incident) who rounded out the trio of "The Daydreamers." They also met Howard the Duck and his two female companions, Beverly Switzler and Tana Nile. When Black Tom Cassidy attacks the school, an extension of his plant form personally attacks the children in the area called the Danger Grotto. Howard, at great personal risk, managed to distract Tom while Artie and the others make a break for it. Tom is seemingly destroyed in an explosion that sets fire to the entire grotto. Man-Thing arrives and took the entire group away, into several adventures. When Franklin's family return from an alternate universe (of his own creation—see Onslaught saga and the Heroes Reborn storylines for more details), Artie and Leech return to the Academy, where they start to take more active roles. They are given image inducers to hide their appearances, and frequently used them to wreak playful havoc.

After Generation X suffers the death of Synch due to terrorist activity, it was decided that the younger members of the team, including the M Twins, Leech, Artie, and the vacant but functional form of Penance, would go to live in Monaco with M's father.

Recently during a mission, the New Avengers[2] viewed a screen of de-powered mutants. Artie was on that screen with other mutants de-powered after the House of M event.

[edit] Powers

He is a young mutant with bright pink skin and a lumpy, misshapen skull who possesses the ability to project telepathic holograms of his thoughts. Usually he uses his power to communicate, because he is mute. However, he can make large-scale holograms as a means of defense. Artie can also tap into and project images of the thoughts of other people, at times on the scale of a city's population. He can also use this limited form of telepathy to mind-lock people and prevent them from acting.

[edit] In other media

[edit] Film

  • A boy named Artie appears in a nonspeaking role in the 2nd X-Men film, X2, played by Bryce Hodgson; however, he has a single line of dialogue in a deleted scene from X2. This character is never clearly identified as Artie Maddicks. His appearance is normal aside from a blue, forked tongue, and he does not demonstrate any powers in the film. Hodgson reprised the role in X-Men: The Last Stand.
  • The name "Maddicks, Artie" also appears in X2 on a list of names Mystique scrolls through on William Stryker's computer while looking for Magneto's file.

[edit] Bibliography

  • Daydreamers #1-3
  • Generation X #5-7, 13-14, 18-20, 22-22, 35-39, 44-45, 47, 51-52, 57, 59-60
  • Generation X 1995
  • Generation X Holiday Special
  • Incredible Hulk 1997
  • Marvel Fanfare vol. 1 #50
  • New Mutants vol. 1 #72-74
  • New Mutants Annual vol. 1 #7
  • Thor vol. 1 #374
  • X-Factor vol. 1 #2-13, 15-18, 20-23, 27-33, 40
  • X-Factor Annual #2-3
  • X-Force Annual vol. 1 #1
  • X-Man 1996
  • X-Men Unlimited vol. 1 #14
  • X-Terminators #1-4

[edit] References

  1. ^ "X-Force Annual" #1
  2. ^ New Avengers #18

[edit] External links