Stranger (comics)

Not to be confused with the Phantom Stranger, a DC comics character sometimes also called simply the Stranger.
The Stranger

The Silver Surfer confronts the Stranger on the cover of reprint title Fantasy Masterpieces #5 (Apr. 1980). Art by John Buscema.
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance Uncanny X-Men #11 (May 1965)
Created by Stan Lee
Jack Kirby
In-story information
Abilities Immortality
Power cosmic

The Stranger is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.

Publication history

The Stranger first appeared in X-Men #11 (May 1965) and was created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby.

Fictional character biography

The character is a cosmic entity and principally a scientist and surveyor of worlds, first visiting Earth out of curiosity. After an encounter with the X-Men and Brotherhood of Evil Mutants, who first think he is a powerful mutant,[1] the entity departs, taking the supervillain Magneto and his servant Toad off-world for further study after encasing them in special cocoons. The same title depicts Magneto's escape and return to Earth using a spaceship he repairs when the Stranger leaves the planet (leaving Toad behind). However, the Stranger recaptures the villain after Professor X telepathically alerts the Stranger.[2]

The Stranger reappears in the title Tales to Astonish, becoming convinced that mankind is dangerous and sets out to destroy the Earth using the creature known as the Hulk, allowing a better race of humanity to take over. He transports to Earth a machine that increases his mental power over the Hulk. The character is dissuaded from this course of action by the Hulk's alter-ego, Bruce Banner. However he takes the supervillain Abomination into space with him, thinking him truly evil.[3] In the title the Silver Surfer, the Stranger again attempts to destroy the Earth, on this occasion using a powerful "Null-Life" bomb. After a battle with the Silver Surfer and learning that a human scientist sacrificed himself to defuse the bomb, the Stranger retreats.[4]

In the title Fantastic Four the Stranger aids the superhero team against the entity the Overmind,[5] and in Thor watches as the Thunder God battles the character's servant of the time, the Abomination.[6] The title Avengers features a story in which the Toad impersonates the Stranger and battles the superhero team the Avengers.[7] The true Stranger encounters the Kree warrior Captain Marvel in the title of the same name,[8] and in Marvel Team-Up encounters the hero Spider-Man when trying to obtain the Soul Gem from Adam Warlock.[9]

The Stranger also appears in the self-titled Champions and aids the group to contain the reactivated Null-Life bomb left on Earth[10] and in a Marvel Two-In-One Annual enlists the aid of the Thing and the Hulk to fight against the threat of the Olympian god Pluto.[11]

The character reappears in the third volume of the Silver Surfer, where the entity known as the Living Tribunal reveals the fourth side of its head to be a void and claims that it could have represented the face of the cosmic entity the Stranger.[12]

The Stranger also joins the Avengers in battle against the space pirate Nebula, who has acquired the "Infinity Union", a device that allows the user to absorb all forms of ambient energy, and who seeks to acquire more by repeatedly destroying and recreating the universe.[13]

In the title Quasar, cosmic beings known as the Watchers approach the Stranger for aid in halting a lethal information virus, with the hero Quasar taking advantage of the distraction to free many of the specimens on the Stranger's "Labworld".[14]

In the limited series "Infinity Gauntlet," the Stranger appears among the gathering of cosmic entities opposing the Titan Thanos, and attacks the latter teamed with Epoch and Galactus.[15]

In the limited series Starblast the Stranger is instrumental in merging the New Universe into the Marvel Universe.[16] He next appears in a retold flashback story in Professor Xavier and the X-Men;[17] and outside of continuity in Marvel Adventures.[18]

In the limited series X-Men Forever, the character is revealed to have subtly manipulated and accelerated the evolution of human mutants for a long time, in a plot to harness their potential to gain control of all higher cosmic entities.[19]

He next appears in Marvel Universe: The End, again among the beings opposing Thanos.[20]

The Stranger prominently features in the limited series Beyond!, posing as the Beyonder wherein he captures several heroes and villains and forces them into battle for the purpose of study.[21]

Powers and abilities

The Stranger possesses the ability to channel and manipulate cosmic power on a scale comparable to that of Galactus and the Celestials,[22] with feats including levitation; force field creation; size shifting and molecular manipulation of matter;[23] light speed space travel; intangibility and energy projection[24] and assembling a planet from segments of inhabited worlds from across the universe.[25] The entity also possesses a "laboratory" world, where items are stored, and beings of interest, referred to as specimens, are kept prisoner for study.

In other media

Television

References

  1. X-Men #11 (May 1965)
  2. X-Men #18 (Dec. 1965)
  3. Tales To Astonish #89 (April 1967)
  4. Silver Surfer #5 (April 1969)
  5. Fantastic Four #113–116 (Aug.–Nov. 1971)
  6. Thor #178 (July 1970)
  7. Avengers #137–138 (July–Aug. 1975)
  8. Captain Marvel #42 (Jan. 1976)
  9. Marvel Team-Up #55 (March 1977)
  10. Champions #12–13 (March & May 1977)
  11. Marvel Two-In-One Annual #5 (Jan. 1980)
  12. Silver Surfer vol. 3, #31 (Dec. 1989)
  13. Avengers #317–318 (May–June 1990)
  14. Quasar #14–16 (Sep.–Nov. 1990)
  15. Infinity Gauntlet #1-6 (July-Dec. 1991)
  16. Starblast #1–4 (Jan.–April 1994)
  17. Professor Xavier and the X-Men #15 (Jan. 1997)
  18. Marvel Adventures #5 (Aug. 1997)
  19. X-Men Forever #1-6 (2001)
  20. Marvel Universe: The End #4–6 (June–Aug. 2003):Marvel Universe: The End #1–6 (March–Aug. 2003)
  21. Beyond! #6 (Feb. 2007): Beyond #1–6 (Sep. 2006 – Feb. 2007)
  22. Thanos Annual #1 (2014)
  23. X-Men #11 (May 1965)
  24. Silver Surfer #5 (Aug. 1969)
  25. Beyond #1–6 (Sep. 2006 – Feb. 2007)
  26. The Super Hero Squad Show: Three New Baddies
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