Star Brand

Star Brand

Cover to Star Brand #1
Art by John Romita Jr.
Series publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
Schedule Monthly (1-7)
Bi-monthly (8-19)
Format Ongoing series
Genre Superhero
Publication date October 1986 – May 1989
Number of issues 19, 1 Annual
Main character(s) Ken Connell
Creative team
Writer(s) Jim Shooter
Roy Thomas
Cary Bates
George Caragonne
John Byrne
Bobbie Chase
Artist(s) John Romita, Jr.
Alex Saviuk
Arvell Jones
Keith Giffen
Mark Bagley
John Byrne
Geof Isherwood
Creator(s) Jim Shooter
John Romita, Jr.
Star Brand
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance Star Brand #1 (October 1986)
Created by Jim Shooter
John Romita, Jr.

The Star Brand is the name of a number of similar fictional comic book objects of power all of which exist in the multiverse created by the shared universes of Marvel Comics. Two of these Star Brands have been prominently featured in two separate series published by Marvel.

The original Star Brand is a star-shaped tattoo-like mark that first appeared in the comic book series Star Brand, published by Marvel Comics as a part of its New Universe imprint from 1986 to 1989. All of the other Star Brands are alternates of this original version.

The Star Brand gave its bearer infinite, god-like powers, limited only by the wielder's imagination (see below). After the end of the series and the New Universe imprint, the Star Brand made appearances in Marvel's main shared universe, the Marvel Universe.

The second notable Star Brand is a glowing glyph, shaped like the original Star Brand and giving identical powers. This Star Brand is featured in newuniversal, a series featuring a universe that is a reimagining of the original New Universe that began publication in 2006.

Contents

Powers and function

The most easily attainable powers of the Star Brand are flight, incredible strength, invulnerability and the ability to unleash blasts of destructive energy, up to the equivalent of a nuclear explosion in force (this last power is problematic, as the blast manifests as a sphere centered on the wielder indiscriminately destroying everything in his vicinity). In addition, the brand makes the bearer immortal, preserving him from aging and reviving and regenerating his body upon its violent death (Upon reviving, the Star Brand bearer will first take on a transitory but freakish alien shape before reverting to his normal human appearance; more than once, this has led observers to erroneously believe that the bearer is an alien masquerading as a human). The Star Brand's power also has a minor mutagenic aspect, in that those who wield it for a great number of years will grow taller and more massive. It is possible that all these "basic" abilities are the result of the infinite power of the Star Brand responding to the subconscious desires of the bearer.

The power of the Star Brand must be called up by the bearer's will (except for its preservative properties, which function subconsciously). If the bearer is frightened or disoriented, it is possible for their control to slip and leave him defenseless. Anger focuses the power, and will automatically activate it before the user can consciously do so. In time, the bearer uses the Star Brand instinctively until, if he wishes it, he has to consciously choose to turn it off.

With time, imagination and will, the bearer of the Star Brand can expand its abilities into anything he can conceive of. Early examples are learning to direct its destructive energy into controlled bolts and healing wounds of the bearer or others at will. Expanded powers have included the ability to "burn-out" the powers of other paranormals, creating objects from nothing (up to entire cities), reconstructing and redesigning the bodies of living beings, rendering inert all nuclear warheads on the planet and even time travel.

The brand itself is roughly the size of the palm of the hand and as far as has been shown is immaterial and effectively only two-dimensional. The Brand is utterly black in color and is smooth and warm to the touch. As long as it is somewhere on their skin the bearer may wield its powers. The brand can be transferred to another part of the body if the bearer wills it by skin-to-skin contact, thus the bearer can choose to place the Star Brand anywhere on his person, willing it into his hand then placing it anywhere on their body. However, this transfer involves some energy discharge, and the brand will burn off any hair it is placed over. The Star Brand and its power can be transferred to another person, but former owners are always left with a remnant of about 10% of its power, a remnant which regenerates and in time will grow to equal the original. In the series, the inaccuracy of the statement "10% of infinity" was noted, but never dealt with directly.

The Star Brand must be carried by a sentient being, otherwise its energy is spontaneously released in a massive uncontrolled explosion. The two most significant events of the New Universe, the White Event and the destruction of Pittsburgh (later dubbed the Black Event), were caused by attempts to transfer the Star Brand to inanimate objects.

There is some risk of "fallout" from massive uses of the Star Brand's power. Backlash from the Star Brand has occasionally altered nearby landscape and life.

New Universe Star Brand

Back story

The defining event of the New Universe, the White Event, was a result of one user's attempt to place the Star Brand on an inanimate object (an asteroid) in order to rid himself of the power. The brand, unchecked by a higher intelligence, released a huge amount of energy in a single blast. This energy bombarded Earth, mutating a portion of the population and endowing them with various paranormal traits or abilities. This phenomenon set the stage for all the New Universe titles.

Wielders

There were four men who wielded the power of the Star Brand during the course of the original series run:

Creators

Writers

Art

Collections

Reintroduction

Following the dissolution of the New Universe imprint, Mark Gruenwald, the writer of the New Universe title DP7, who still retained a great fondness for the New Universe, decided to use the Star Brand and other New Universe characters some years later when he was the writer for Quasar. He later used them in the Starblast limited series and crossover which ended when The Stranger used the Starbrand to move the Earth of the New Universe into orbit around his labworld.

Wielders

During this period there were five individuals who wielded the Star Brand:

Cameo appearances

The Star Brand appeared briefly in Gambit #19, published in August 2000. Writer Fabian Nicieza asked illustrators Yannick Paquette and Sean Parsons to include Star Brand as one of the characters glimpsed in a page that showed a variety of Marvel's alternate realities.

newuniversal - Star Brand

Writer Warren Ellis re-imagined the New Universe and has since named it newuniversal, portraying Kenneth Connell as the Star Brand, originally from Optima Down, Oklahoma. The origin of the Star Brand is central to the entire New Universe re-imagining. The Star Brand was supposedly artificially created by a long-dead alien race as a tool that confers amazing powers to its wielder.[1] The purpose of the Star Brand glyph (tattoo) is to help the transition of a world through the inevitable paradigm shift caused when it comes into contact with a web of strange matter, called "newuniversal structure", wherein normal physical laws operate differently. Specifically, the newuniversal web causes normal humans to become superhumans, or paranormals.

Ken represents an average man whose life is drastically changed, which is one of the major themes in newuniversal. Ken’s life is a relatively normal one where the most dangerous thing about it is that the city’s sheriff hates him because he is dating his daughter, Madeline Felix. After a night out drinking Kenneth and Madeline fall asleep on a hillside. In the early hours of March 1, 2006, while they sleep, the White Event takes place, granting him the Star Brand glyph. Ken wakes to find Madeline dead beside him, burned to death when the White Event granted him the star brand. The energies were so strong that a symbol of the Star Brand had been scorched into the hillside around them, with Kenneth at its center.[2] The events of the following few hours push him over the edge as they move far too quickly for him to handle.

Ken spends the next two weeks in a deep depression, coming to terms with his new powers and supposed responsibilities. Believing that Madeline’s death was caused by the fact that he was asleep and therefore unable to consciously control the energies of the Star Brand (not limiting the Star Brand with conscious control), he decides to ”wake up” and deal with it.

The re-imagined newuniversal has only just begun, as such the powers and abilities of the Star Brand have yet to be fully explained.

Other versions

Exiles

Alternate versions of Ken Connell and the Star Brand appear in Exiles during that series' "Worlds Tour" story-arc. The issues depicting this story are #72 - 74, January through March of 2006.

This story is set in a slightly different version of the New Universe (designated as Earth-15731), prior to the Pitt. It sees the Exiles join forces with D.P.7 and Ken Connell to prevent an alternate version of Proteus from taking control of Connell's body and the Star Brand itself.

Avengers Forever

In 1998 - 1999 miniseries Avengers Forever, a version of Ken Connell appeared briefly as one of the Alternate Avengers fighting in The Destiny War.

Untold Tales of the New Universe

Untold Tales of the New Universe: Star Brand (2006) briefly mentions three more alternate versions that have been investigated by Arden and her fellow Lateral Shifters:

The three Star Brand marks are also pictured - each one looks distinctly different (and none of them resemble the New Universe version).

Legends

In issue number five of the DC Comics limited series Legends (March-1987), Guy Gardner battles a villain called "Sunspot", who is a parody of both Ken Connell and original Star Brand creator Jim Shooter (who modeled many aspects of the Connell character on himself). At one point Sunspot exclaims "I wield the ultimate power...the power to create a New Universe..." Issued around the time of the failure of the New Universe line and Shooter's departure from Marvel, the scene in Legends depicts Shooter/Connell/Sunspot accidentally shooting off his own foot.

References

  1. ^ Warren Ellis (w), Salvador Larroca (a). "Mathematics" newuniversal 3 (2007), Marvel Comics
  2. ^ Warren Ellis (w), Salvador Larroca (a). "Enter" newuniversal 1 (2007), Marvel Comics

External links