Warheads (comics)

Warheads
Publication information
Publisher Marvel UK
Schedule Monthly
Format Ongoing series
Genre
Publication date January 1992 - May 1993
Number of issues 14
Creative team
Writer(s) Nick Vince
John Freeman
Craig Houston
Artist(s) Gary Erskine
Simon Coleby
Dave Taylor
Stuart Jennett
Charlie Adlard
Creator(s) Paul Neary
Gary Erskine

Warheads was a Marvel UK comic book series which ran for 14 issues in the early 1990s (January 1992 - May 1993) and was followed by the two-issue mini-series Warheads: Black Dawn. The stories contained in the comic were also serialised in the UK comics anthology Overkill. The Warheads were mercenaries employed by the nefarious and Faustian Mys-Tech organisation to capture advanced technology or mystical artifacts from alien worlds, time periods or other dimensions.

The book had guest appearances, such as the X-Men, Silver Surfer, Mephisto, X-Force and agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.. It features many backup 'flashback' stories.

Publication history

Paul Neary was instrumental in creating the whole Mys-Tech concept for Marvel UK, including the original Warheads outline. The characters in Warheads were first visualised by artist Gary Erskine with the first scripts for the strips provided by Nick Vince, followed by John Freeman and Craig Houston, who is now a computer games script writer whose credits include Call of Duty 3.

Unlike most of the other Marvel UK titles tied into the Mys-Tech concept, the Warheads were not enemies of Mys-Tech - instead, they were portrayed as expendable soldiers employed by a callous corporation. They did, eventually, turn against Mys-Tech, having had enough.

Other Warheads artists included Simon Coleby, Dave Taylor, Stuart Jennett and Charlie Adlard. Mark Harrison painted an unpublished spin-off, called Loose Cannons, available online,[1] about the all-female Virago Troop (Holly, Elan, Nix (who is killed and replaced with the genetically enhanced Lamia, a creation of Dr. Oonagh Mullarkey), team psychic Syster Sphynx, and team leader Bodecia "Bo" Kildare) and provided Warheads several covers for Overkill.

Fictional team biography

The Warheads find themselves in a seemingly abandoned Australian town. Liger, the leader, realizes he is on the 'downside' of a time loop, where the team has not gone to other dimensions or other planets, but back in time on Earth. A subtle memory indicates three of his team must die and Liger realizes he must allow this to preserve the time line. The town belongs to the X-Men and three of his team members do indeed die in battle with Wolverine. Liger's first step towards rebellion is taken when his bosses say the loss of three Warheads is worth the information they ultimately stole from the X-Men.

The story then focuses on Leona McBride, a rookie brought in to replace one of the dead members slain by Wolverine. Her first mission involves exploring an alien spaceship. Leona is distressed when it seems one of her newfound friends vanishes and dies but he turns up alive as Iron Man had been impersonating him. Later, the Warheads fight S.H.I.E.L.D. operatives, X-Force, the X-Men again and deal with their boss gaining vast, cosmic powers. With X-Force, it ends up being that the women of the team have to save the day, as the men (on both sides) are transforming into powerful beasts. The Warheads women are assisted by Feral who gains vast powers due to magical influence.

The troops also struggle with the bureaucratic processes of their bosses. For example, Gregory is fined for screaming during a simple nightmare.

Again and again Liger sees new recruits and troop replacements die and he is angry that they do not seemingly receive enough training. Some die -during training, which is that much more frustrating.

Gregory is recruited for a side-mission by one of his bosses in an attempt to slay Mephisto. For his effrontery, he is merged with a demon. The team would confront Mephisto again when they travel to his realm to 'rescue' the source of Misha's precognitive voices. This would turn out to be Mephisto's son Blackheart. While Gregory finds the other half of his body and slays the demon, the Troop loses Perez.

Rebellion

In the Mys-Tech Wars series, the troop is sent to a mystical copy of Earth, which was created by their bosses to gain control of the real earth. They fight the cyborg Death's Head [2] and encounter a lost little girl. In a bit of magic which saves their lives, the girl is overcome by the stress and dies. This is the last straw for the troop, who rebel with the aid of Death's Head. Ultimately the troop escapes control, having discovered a way to travel through dimensions. Unfortunately the first trip takes them to a world populated by vampires, where Leona and another member die. Though the troop escapes this world, their ultimate fate is unknown.

Revolutionary War

In 2014's Revolutionary War miniseries, it was established that Mys-Tech had been finally defeated years ago: the organisation had tried to buy off Mephisto by sending all of Britain to Hell, and Liger's rebel Warheads went into the infernal realm to shut down the portal. They were betrayed by Gregory and forced to remain in Hell to succeed, and Kether Troop forced Liger back to Earth. He spent the next few years as a traumatised, homeless alcoholic separated from his gun Clementine.[3]

When it seemed like Mys-Tech were turning, S.H.I.E.L.D.'s European Division head Keller brought Liger back in from the cold and tasked him to dig up in intelligence.[4] Keller turned out to be possessed by Mys-Tech's old Psycho-Wraith Prime and Liger had been brought just to find Warhead's old Master Key, so the Key could be forced to open a portal for Mephisto's armies; Psycho-Wraith Prime taunted Liger that S.H.I.E.L.D. simply hadn't cared enough to bring him back before or find his lost troop.[5] However, the wounded Liger was able to help free some of Prime's captured superheroes and helped gun down Mephisto's general Killpower, saving the world. Afterwards, he disappeared with the now-cured Keller on a trip to Hell to find Kether Troop.[6]

Warheads Kether Troop

Colonel Tigon Liger

The comic focused on the Kether Troop led by Colonel Tigon Liger whose most notable feature was prominent facial scarring, from being slashed by Wolverine. He carried very large semi-intelligent gun named Clementine that while helpful to the troop, sometimes endangered them when Liger's orders were unclear. The creators of Warheads named Colonel Liger after two hybrid animals; a tigon is a crossbreed between a male tiger and a female lion crossbreed, a liger being its reverse.

Other members

The membership varied over the course of the series, with frequent inclusion of trainee characters, new recruits, or "loaner" members from other Troops, who usually died in the course of action (like redshirts on Star Trek). In rough sequential order, the Kether Troop included:

Issue 1:

Issue 3:

Issue 6:

Issue 9:

Issue 12:

Issue 13:

Other series:

Other Warheads troops

The following is a list of other Warheads Troops employed by Mys-Tech and mentioned in Warheads, Overkill or other Marvel titles:

The names of the Warheads troops are a direct reference to the names of the 10 Sephiroth emanations of God in the Kabbalah. We can tell it is a direct reference as the Warheads were originally depicted as entering wormholes on a model of the cabalistic Tree of Life, and they entered the wormhole where the Sephiroth Kether is situated. Significantly "Kether" is the Sephiroth at the top of the tree of life and "Kether" means "crown". "Kether" also is the Sephiroth closest to God and represents ultimate goodness. The Kether Troop eventually showed their goodness by turning on the evil Mys-Tech organisation. The Ubu Troop is not named after a Sephiroth.

Headquarters

The Warheads base of operations was Mys-Tech's subterranean headquarters deep beneath the Museum of Pagan Antiquities, Canary Wharf, London, England and they travelled to other planets, time periods, locations or dimensions by means of unstable wormholes opened by Mys-Tech's techno-wizards.

Notes

  1. Loose Cannons
  2. Death's Head II #5-6 (April–May 1993)
  3. Revolutionary War: Warheads by Andy Lanning, Alan Cowsill and Gary Erskine(2014)
  4. Revolutionary War: Alpha by Andy Lanning, Alan Cowsill and Rich Elson (2014)
  5. Revolutionary War: Warheads by Andy Lanning, Alan Cowsill and Gary Erskine(2014)
  6. Revolutionary War: Omega by Andy Lanning, Alan Cowsill and Rich Elson (2014)

References

  • Warheads at the Appendix to the Handbook of the Marvel Universe
  • Warheads at the Unofficial Handbook of Marvel Comics Creators
  • Warheads at the Comic Book DB
  • Warheads at the Comic Book DB
  • Warheads at the International Catalogue of Superheroes
  • Warheads at the Big Comic Book DataBase