Master Mind Excello
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Master Mind Excello | |
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Publication information | |
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Publisher | Timely Comics Marvel Comics |
First appearance | Mystic Comics #2 (April 1940) |
In story information | |
Alter ego | Earl Everett |
Team affiliations | The Twelve |
Abilities | Superhuman strength and telepathy |
Master Mind Excello (Earl Everett[1]) is an American comic book character owned by Marvel Comics who exists in that company's Marvel Universe. His only appearance was in USA Comics #5, published in the 1940s by Marvel's forerunner, Timely Comics, during a period that is known as the Golden Age of Comic Books.
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[edit] Fictional character biography
Master Mind Excello is a short lived golden age of comics character, whose only known appearances were in issues #2 and 3 of Mystic Comics, published by Timely Comics in 1940.
Master Mind Excello, whose real name is "Earl Everett" is a precognitive with great mental powers and physically honed to perfection who uses his powers to help the US Naval Intelligence Department. He makes use of his assets sensing spies on the European battlefield, to catch them, and thwart a gang of railway saboteurs. [2] [3]
He then fades into obscurity, disappearing to be never mentioned again until the limited series The Twelve.
[edit] The Twelve
His ultimate fate was revealed in the twelve-issue miniseries The Twelve. [4] Sent along with Captain America and the Invaders to help the Allies' efforts in the Battle of Berlin, he gets captured by Nazi SS researchers. Held in stasis with ten other fellow heroes and the deactivated robot Elektro, he is scheduled to be shipped to a secret lab to gain insight on American mystery men. The surrender of Germany, and the collapse of the cave in which the heroes are held, meant that Excello was never smuggled away, and was left to sleep for sixty years. [5] Awakened in modern times, Excello now finds his sensory powers overburdened by the noise and broadcast communications of the modern world, and unable to see the future. He taps into his Swiss bank account, which has ballooned with decades' worth of interest, and moves away from his fellow heroes to a quieter mansion with lead-lined walls in upstate New York. [6]
[edit] Notes
- ^ The Twelve #1
- ^ A Guide To Marvel's Golden Age Characters profile for Everett, Jess Nevins
- ^ International Catalogue of Superheroes profile for Everett
- ^ Mystery Men's Dozen: Brevoort Talks "The Twelve", July 26, 2007, Comic Book Resources
- ^ The Twelve #1
- ^ The Twelve #4
[edit] References
- Master Mind Excello (Golden Age) at the Comic Book DB