Sunday, January 29, 2012

And On the Third Issue, He Arose Again...

I have talked a little bit about death and resurrection in the past.  Lightning Lad was one of the first major instances of it involving a hero in the DC universe, at least where the resurrection was not immediate.

But in the Silver Age, Marvel seemed to be the place where corpses got up and walked on a regular basis (especially villains), and so I thought I would try to catalog all of their examples.  Of course, an undertaking like this is going to require the assistance of my readers.  Although I have read virtually all of the Silver Age Marvel line, my memory's nowhere near as good as it used to be.

First up is Doctor Doom.  The Lord of Latveria apparently succumbed at the end of several of his early adventures.  For example:
Or:
And:
Let me point out here that there's actually a pretty good reason for the "death" ending; it saves the writers the necessity of explaining how the villain got out of jail.  And Doctor Doom was, in a way copying an earlier DC villain in meeting his apparent demise at the end of many of his early meetings:
And:
This last bit, with the villain falling into water, has become something of a cliche for comic writers.  It has the advantage of giving the appearance of death, combined with the uncertainty.  Plus, conveniently, it doesn't really have to be explained much in the subsequent resurrection.  See there was this pipe/cave nearby with a convenient air pocket....

Anyway, Dr Doom had more than his share of deaths in the early Marvel Age, so we'll skip over him.  The next major villain to "die" in the FF was the Puppet Master:
He returned in FF #14 and, although he apparently bit the bullet at the end of that issue, many more times as well.  One of the interesting things about that initial resurrection, though, was that Stan didn't bother to explain it.  Never mind that (as shown above), we'd seen him fall out of a skyscraper.  This would become the rule, rather than the exception.

I'm not sure if there are any other "deaths" in the Silver Age Fantastic Four, so let's move on to the Amazing Spiderman.  The only real death and resurrection I'm aware of there involves the Vulture:
The original Vulture apparently shuffles off the mortal coil shortly after that scene, although he returns in ASM #63 to battle both Spidey and Blackie Drago, his chosen successor.  I'm again not aware of any other deaths and resurrections in the Silver Age involving Spiderman, although there are some (Silvermane, for example) who died in the SA but didn't respawn until much later.

The only example of a major Marvel hero dying and not coming back for a couple of issues (a la Lightning Lad) involved Captain America.  Death here from CA #111:
Note the "falling into water" bit I mentioned earlier.  Cap's resurrection came in the first issue of his magazine that I ever bought:

I'm struggling now to think of resurrections involving other Marvel villains. About the only one that's coming to mind is the Rhino's passing from Hulk #104:
The Rhino would return along with the Leader to bedevil Bruce Banner's wedding in Hulk #124 as I covered awhile ago. Oh, the Leader, that's right, he died in Tales to Astonish #74:
And both the Leader and the Rhino appear to die at the end of Hulk #124, but we know better. The Black Widow had a couple of brushes with the Grim Reaper, as I have covered in the past. And I know the Unicorn appeared to die in Iron Man #4. Any more examples? I'm mostly interested in cases where the resurrection happened by the end of the Silver Age, simply because there are so many examples after that.

Updates: Some good suggestions in the comments section: The Mandarin's castle was hit by an ICBM in ToS #86:
But he returned with a reasonable explanation:
Multi-dimensional teleportation device. Don't leave home without it! The Mandarin also shuffled off the mortal coil in Avengers Annual #1:
And, as my anonymous commenter noted, he returned in the Hulk #107 with no particular explanation. MDTD, I suppose?

Titanium Man learned the fate of Silver medalists in the old Soviet Union:
But he returned ten issues later, this time apparently supported by the Red Chinese. The Red Skull drowned at the end of ToS #81, weighed down by a suit of golden armor:
He returned in ToS #89 with the explanation that the Cosmic Cube's power kept him alive. Hat tip to Nick Caputo on that one. The Red Skull biffed it again in ToS #91:
The explosion death was also popular, because it can be argued that we missed seeing something due to the flash. The Skull returned in Cap #101:
The Stilt Man shriveled up like Dr Doom up above in DD #8:
When the Leap-Frog asked him about his apparent death, Stilty was rather terse, replying, "You seem to have an uncanny knack for being wrong."

Another commenter pointed out that Magneto died in X-Men #53 and returned in X-Men #62; I can't find those issues at the moment to post panels.

Observations: One thing seems apparent; the villains who "die" on multiple occasions but return just as often tend to be Marvel's top antagonists; Dr Doom, the Mandarin, the Red Skull and the Leader are all on the short list of major baddies.

Update II: Diablo took a dirt nap thanks to his android, the Dragon Man, in FF #35:
He returned in Avengers #41, with the explanation that he owed his survival to alchemy.

13 comments:

  1. Anonymous1:26 PM

    The Mandarin was apparently blown up with his own ICBM in Tales of Suspense #86. He returned in Avengers King Size Special #1 (aka Avengers Annual #1) less than a year later. There was little or no explanation offered. The Living Laser said something like "I thought you were killed in a nuclear blast in Red China," and the answer was something like, "You fool, it would take more than a measly ten-megaton warhead to kill the supreme evil genius!"

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  2. Anonymous2:57 PM

    Iron Maiden was apparently killed in T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents #4. She showed up in #7, and explained that she had "escaped through a secret tunnel before the explosion." That was in the 1960's. I heard that DC's 2010 revival/reboot killed off most of the original characters.









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  3. Anonymous7:08 PM

    Titanium Man was abandoned by a Soviet submarine and appeared to drown at sea in Suspense #83. He returned in #93, considerably the worse for wear.

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  4. Anonymous8:02 PM

    Magneto fell into the sea (actually, he was pushed by his disgruntled flunky, Toad) in Avengers #53. We could argue all day about whether his next resurrection was in the Silver Age or later; his next appearance, AFAIK, was as Creator of the Savage Land Mutates in X-Men #62 (1969).

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  5. Anonymous10:07 PM

    The Red Skull tried to steal a US nuclear submarine and was supposedly blown up when its self destruct mechanism was activated in Tales of Suspense #90 or #91. He was back in Captain America #103 (1968).

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  6. The Red Skull also "died" in Suspense # 81 when he plunged into the ocean to retrive the Cosmic Cube. Unfortunately he had a suit of heavy armor on and apparently drowned. He reappeared in TOS # 88 in the appropriately titled "Back from the Dead!" it was explained how he escaped from his watery grave (I believe he was able to get out of his armor and swim to the surface).

    You're right that Dr.Doom was killed off in the early FF because Stan wanted a way for him not to go to jail at the end of each story. Later on it was established that Doom was the monarch of Latveria and had diplomatic immunity, which was a good excuse to circumvent the Comics Code.

    http://nick-caputo.blogspot.com/

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  7. Anonymous1:52 PM

    DC's villains usually were captured alive and would return after escaping (or getting paroled) from prison. Notable exceptions were Amalak and the Parasite. The former was apparently blown up in his spacecraft in Superman #190 but returned in #195. He had escaped in a time warp. The Parasite was blown up after absorbing more energy than his body could contain in Action #340 but somehow survived and came back in #361.

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  8. Anonymous3:30 PM

    Stilt Man was hit with a shrink ray in Daredevil #8 and appeared to shrink out of existence (like Dr. Doom in Fantastic Four #10 and Brainiac in Superman #338). He returned in Daredevil #26, IIRC. The explanation was that the effect of the ray wore off.

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  9. Anonymous1:51 PM

    The first Avengers annual (1967) ended with a melee aboard the Mandarin's space station. A hole got punched in the hull and he was sucked out into space. AFAIK, his next appearance was in Hulk # 108 (1968). I don't know how (or if) they explained his survival.

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  10. Anonymous2:53 PM

    My late grandmother watched daytime soap operas, and said they had certain cliches and conventions. One was that if a character appeared to die but the body was not found (e.g. fell into the ocean), then that character would be back. Also, if the body was not positively identified (e.g. burned beyond recognition), then the dead person would turn out to be an impostor and the original character would come back. Even an identifiable corpse might turn out to be an identical twin. Sound familiar?

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  11. Anonymous3:14 PM

    I don't think they explained the first Vulture's resurrection until well after the Bronze Age.

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  12. Anonymous5:12 PM

    Avengers #53 (in which Magneto appeared to drown) was reprinted in Marvel Triple Action #46 in the late 1970's and in Avengers #350 in 1992. X-Men #62 was reprinted in X-Men Classics #3 in 1983-84 and in X-Men Visionaries TPB vol. #2 in 1996.

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  13. Anonymous6:19 PM

    In Fantastic Four #57, Doctor Doom stole the Silver Surfer's flying surfboard. In FF #60, Reed Richards tricked him into flying into outer space. When Doom flew into the energy barrier (that Galactus had created to exile the Surfer to Earth), he was apparently disintegrated. He returned in Daredevil #36-37.

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