Ultimates
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The Ultimates | |
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Promotional art for The Ultimates 2 #1
(February 2005). Art by Bryan Hitch & Paul Neary. |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics (Ultimate Marvel) |
First appearance | The Ultimates #1 (March 2002) |
Created by | Mark Millar Bryan Hitch (based upon The Avengers by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby) |
In-story information | |
Base(s) | Triskelion Ultimates Mansion |
Member(s) | Black Widow Captain America Falcon Hawkeye Iron Man Thor |
Roster | |
See:List of Ultimates members |
The Ultimates is a group of superheroes appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The team was created by writer Mark Millar and artist Bryan Hitch, and first appeared in The Ultimates #1 (March 2002), as part of the company's Ultimate Marvel imprint. The team is a modern reimagining of the superhero team the Avengers.[1]
Contents
Publication history
The first volume of the Ultimates, written by Millar and illustrated by Hitch, was published in limited series format and ran for thirteen issues with production delays from March 2002 until April 2004. Hitch described the alternative-reality reimagining as one where, "You have to approach it as though nothing has happened before and tell the story fresh from the start.... We had to get to the core of who these people were and build outwards, so Cap [Captain America] was a soldier, Thor is either a nut case or a messiah ... Banner [the Hulk] an insecure genius, and [superspy Nick] Fury the king of cool".[2]
A second series, also by Millar and Hitch and with similar production delays,[3] was released as Ultimates 2 and ran 13 issues (Dec. 2004 - May 2007).
In a 2004 interview, Millar outlined the difference between the Ultimates and the Avengers: "The idea behind The Avengers is that the Marvel Universe's biggest players all get together and fight all the biggest supervillains they can't defeat individually, whereas Ultimates 2 is an exploration of what happens when a bunch of ordinary people are turned into super-soldiers and being groomed to fight the real-life war on terror."[1]
This was followed by the one-shot Ultimate Saga (Nov. 2007), a condensed retelling, by writers C. B. Cebulski and Mindy Owens and artist Travis Charest, of the events of Ultimates and Ultimates 2. A third series, Ultimates 3 (Dec 2007 - Sept 2008) was written by Jeph Loeb and illustrated by Joe Madureira.[4]
Mark Millar returned to the Ultimates with a series of shorter miniseries, beginning in 2009 with Ultimate Comics: Avengers, which ran from August 2009 until July 2011.[5]
Plot
The Ultimates
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General Nick Fury of S.H.I.E.L.D. establishes a strike force of government-sponsored metahumans which includes Captain America; scientist couple Henry and Janet Pym (Giant-Man and the Wasp); Bruce Banner (the Hulk) and Tony Stark (Iron Man). Together they are based at the S.H.I.E.L.D facility, the Triskelion. When Banner injects himself with the super-soldier serum and goes on a bloody rampage as the Hulk, he is eventually stopped by the other metahumans with the aid of Thor. The team then join forces with the mutants Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch and agents Hawkeye and Black Widow against the alien shape-shifters the Chitauri, who are defeated.[6]
The Ultimates 2
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A year later public opinion has turned against the team when it is discovered that Bruce Banner is in fact the Hulk and was responsible for hundreds of deaths. The team is undermined further when Thor is accused of being an escaped mental patient and is incarcerated. This is the doing of his brother Loki, who also facilitates the creation of a new team of anti-American multi-nationals called the Liberators. With the aid of the Black Widow - who betrays the team to the Liberators - the Ultimates are captured, but eventually escape and battle the Liberators to the death. With the aid of Asgardian warriors, the Ultimates defeat both Loki and the Liberators.
The Ultimates 3
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Hank Pym is under house arrest at Ultimates Mansion. One of Pym's Ultron robots drugs him and leaks a sex tape of Stark and the Black Widow to the Internet. These distract from the robot's fatal shooting of the Scarlet Witch. Magneto abducts Wanda's corpse and retreats to the Savage Land, where he is confronted by the Ultimates. Pym and Wasp discover the truth about the Ultron robot, which has adopted the identity of Yellowjacket and uses the Ultimates' DNA to create a series of android duplicates. Although the true Ultimates destroy their android counterparts and Yellowjacket, Quicksilver is apparently killed by Hawkeye. The Wasp then invites Pym to return to the Ultimates, and he accepts. The mastermind behind the robot's plot is revealed to be Doctor Doom.
New Ultimates
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The Ultimate Defenders, suddenly with superpowers, steal Thor's hammer from Valkyrie. Hela agrees to release Thor in exchange for a son. Loki arrives in Central park with an army of monsters.
Ultimate Comics: The Ultimates
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Writer Jonathan Hickman and artist Esad Ribić relaunched the Ultimates with a different lineup consisting of Nick Fury, Iron Man, Thor, Spider-Woman, and others.[7][8]
All-New Ultimates
Following the conclusion of the miniseries Cataclysm and under the Ultimate Marvel NOW! banner, coinciding with the Marvel Universe All-New Marvel NOW! launch, writer Michel Fiffe and artist Amilcar Pinna brought together a new team including Spider-Man (Miles Morales), the new Black Widow (Jessica Drew) (and former Spider-Woman), Kitty Pryde, Bombshell and Cloak and Dagger.[9] The book ran for 12 issues.
Other versions
Earth-616
As part of the All-New, All-Different Marvel branding, the Earth-616 version of the Ultimates make their debut where they will deal with cosmic threats before it reaches Earth.
Sales and reception
The first volume of Ultimates #1 ranked fourth among the top 300 comics sold for February 2002, based on Diamond Publisher's indexes,[10] with the next three issues ranked second,[11] second,[12] and third,[13] respectively.
Popmatters.com praised Mark Millar's writing in the opening eight issues, stating the writer "is able to walk a very fine line of keeping the story measured yet entertaining".[14] Comics Bulletin, in a review of the "Homeland Security" story arc, states the artwork is "visual magnificence" yet is concerned about the dark writing of the characters stripped of their "super-heroic nobility" and was "disheartened by the book’s tone and cynicism".[15] Shakingthrough.net gave "Homeland Security" a 4.2 out of 5.0 stating it is an "engaging read, filled with intriguing and amusing modern takes on classic Marvel characters" whilst praising Bryan Hitch's artwork by saying it is "amazing, gorgeous artwork, which continues to set the standard for cinematic photo-realism."[16]
Ultimates 2 #1 ranked second among the top 300 comics sold for December 2004,[17] with the next three issues ranked second,[18] fourth[19] and sixth,[20] respectively.
Reviewing Ultimates 2, Curledup.com praised Millar's writing of the classic heroes and the "inclusion of current-day politics" improves the storyline.[21] Comics Bulletin reviewed the final issue #13 but found it anticlimactic with the issue degenerating to a "slug fest". The artwork was praised with the reviewer stating that Bryan Hitch's "artwork has definitely been one of the main elements that will make this series memorable."[22] Denofgeek.com praised the artwork, with "Bryan Hitch doing some of the best work of his career", but was critical of Millar's writing stating it had "no substance".[23]
Ultimates 3 #1 ranked first in December 2007's Top 300 comics with preorder sales of 131,401,[24] Issue #2 ranked number seven with 105,070 preorders.[25] Issue three ranked better than its predecessor, falling at number five, but had a smaller number of preorders, totaling at 97,210.[26]
Reviewing Ultimates 3, IGN called the book a "reasonably decent experience" although the issue "falters on its own merits",[27] only to later state while reviewing the third issue that "Behind the theatrics and swagger, there's just nothing there to draw me in. These are the characters that I used to enjoy in name only, hollow shells of what they used to be."[28] Alvaro's Comic Boards' review was even harsher, remarking that Ultimates 3 "has somehow managed to entirely miss what made the Ultimates something other than alternative universe Avengers" and adding "this was the worst comic I've read all year".[29]
2011's Ultimate Comics: The Ultimates received highly positive reactions upon its debut. Chad Nevett from Comic Book Resources wrote that "the comic is exciting and sets up a large story that, right now, seems like it could easily end with the destruction of the team. A first issue that starts with its foot on the gas is exactly what’s called for",[30] while IGN gave the first issue 8/10.[31]
Collected editions
Hardcover
The Ultimates | (ISBN 0-7851-1082-8) | collects Ultimates #1-13 |
The Ultimates 2 | (ISBN 978-0-7851-2138-1) | collects Ultimates 2 #1-13, Ultimates Annual #1, and Ultimates 2 #1 Variant Sketch Edition |
The Ultimates 3 | (ISBN 0-7851-3037-3) | collects Ultimates 3 #1-5 |
The Ultimates Omnibus | (ISBN 0-7851-3780-7) | collects Ultimates #1-13, Ultimates 2 #1-13, Ultimates Annual #1, and Ultimates 2 #1 Variant Sketch Edition |
Paperback
The Ultimates Vol. 1: Super-Human | (ISBN 0-7851-0960-9) | collects Ultimates #1-6 |
The Ultimates Vol. 2: Homeland Security | (ISBN 0-7851-1078-X) | collects Ultimates #7-13 |
The Ultimates 2 Vol. 1: Gods and Monsters | (ISBN 0-7851-1093-3) | collects Ultimates 2 #1-6 |
The Ultimates 2 Vol. 2: Grand Theft America | (ISBN 0-7851-1790-3) | collects Ultimates 2 #7-13 |
The Ultimate Annuals Vol. 1 | (ISBN 0-7851-2035-1) | includes Ultimates 2 Annual #1 |
The Ultimate Annuals Vol. 2 | (ISBN 0-7851-2371-7) | includes Ultimates 2 Annual #2 |
The Ultimates 3: Who Killed the Scarlet Witch? | (ISBN 0-7851-2269-9) | collects Ultimates 3 #1-5 |
The Ultimates: Ultimate Collection | (ISBN 0-7851-4387-4) | collects Ultimates #1-13 |
The Ultimates 2: Ultimate Collection | (ISBN 0-7851-4916-3) | collects Ultimates 2 #1-13 |
In other media
Marvel Cinematic Universe
Aspects of both the Ultimates and the Marvel-616 Avengers were utilized for the look and storyline of the 2012 live action film Marvel's The Avengers.[32] The Triskelion is later mentioned by Agent Jemma Simmons in the 2013 Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. episode "The Hub" and makes an appearance in the 2014 film Captain America: The Winter Soldier as S.H.I.E.L.D.'s Washington D.C. headquarters. It is destroyed in that film by a disabled Helicarrier.[citation needed] This is later referenced by Victoria Hand in the Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. episode "Turn, Turn, Turn". Actor Aaron Taylor-Johnson (Quicksilver) indicated that aspects of the 2015 film Avengers: Age of Ultron were also inspired by aspects of Ultimate Comics.[33]
Animation
- The Ultimates have been the basis for the animated films Ultimate Avengers and Ultimate Avengers 2.
- The Ultimates appear in Avengers: Ultron Revolution. In the episode "The Ultimates", they are robot duplicates of the Avengers created by Ultron to further his plans to replace humanity with robots.
Video games
In the video game Ultimate Spider-Man, a number of posters depicting The Triskelion are seen announcing a movie called The Ultimates, some of which include reference a sequel by the inclusion of a number 2.
Novels
Two novels based on the Ultimates have been released:
Tomorrow Men | (ISBN 1-4165-1065-6) | Michael Jan Friedman |
The Ultimates: Against All Enemies | (ISBN 1-4165-1071-0) | Alexander C. Irvine |
See also
- The Ultimates (comic book)
- The Ultimates 2
- List of Ultimates members
- Ultimate Nick Fury
- Tomorrow Men
- Avengers (comics)
References
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- ↑ McMillan, Graeme. "Ultimate planning.", Newsarama, June 26, 2006
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ The Ultimates #1-13 (March 2002-April 2004)
- ↑ Manning, Shaun. "Marvel Announces "Ultimate Comics: Ultimates", Comic Book Resources, May 2, 2011
- ↑ Kaye, Edward. "Marvel Announces Jonathan Hickman on Ultimate Comics: Ultimates in August!", Hypergeek, May 3, 2011
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- ↑ The Ultimates #1. Comic Book Resources. Retrieved on 2011-09-28.
- ↑ Ultimate Comics: Ultimates #1 Review. IGN. Retrieved on 2011-09-28.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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External links
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