Darkhawk: Difference between revisions
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The story picks up in War of Kings: Ascension. Chris and Talon are fighting a group of Chitinauts, bug troops that serve Catastrophus, a lieutenant of [[Annihilus]], where Talon's brutal techniques horrify Chris. Later, Chris reveals that he wanted to be just like his friend [[Richard Rider|Nova]]. Talon explains to him that the [[Nova Corps]] are nothing compared to the Fraternity of Raptors, referring to themselves as "architects of fate". Eventually, after being tricked by Talon into fighting just as lethally, Chris manages to connect to the Datasong of the Null Source, which gives him visions of the true past of the Fraternity--a history of kidnappings and assassinations which lead Chris to conclude that the Fraternity is "the bad guys." At this point, Talon attacks him, purging his consciousness from the armor to reveal the persona underneath: Razor.<ref>''War of Kings: Ascension'' #1</ref> |
The story picks up in War of Kings: Ascension. Chris and Talon are fighting a group of Chitinauts, bug troops that serve Catastrophus, a lieutenant of [[Annihilus]], where Talon's brutal techniques horrify Chris. Later, Chris reveals that he wanted to be just like his friend [[Richard Rider|Nova]]. Talon explains to him that the [[Nova Corps]] are nothing compared to the Fraternity of Raptors, referring to themselves as "architects of fate". Eventually, after being tricked by Talon into fighting just as lethally, Chris manages to connect to the Datasong of the Null Source, which gives him visions of the true past of the Fraternity--a history of kidnappings and assassinations which lead Chris to conclude that the Fraternity is "the bad guys." At this point, Talon attacks him, purging his consciousness from the armor to reveal the persona underneath: Razor.<ref>''War of Kings: Ascension'' #1</ref> |
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Talon and Razor then recover the Cosmic Control Rod from Catastrophus, Talon stopping briefly to implant a suggestion in the gestating Annihilus, and proceed onward. Chris' personality is revealed not to have been wholly destroyed yet, and a vision of his father tells him that much of what he believed about the armor was false; the prior history, even [[Evilhawk]] himself, was a lie made up by his own mind, the other armor a second configuration that took control to cover earlier anger issues. Horrified, Chris' psyche breaks free of the prison it was locked in, only for Chris to find himself on a great tree adorned with thousands of amulets like his own, where he encounters gargoyle-like creatures that urge him to return to the one which he has just emerged from. Meanwhile, in the Negative Zone, Talon and Razor offer [[Blastaar]] the Cosmic Control Rod, in exchange for his assistance influencing the outcome of the War of Kings. <ref>''War of Kings: Ascension'' #2</ref> |
Talon and Razor then recover the Cosmic Control Rod from Catastrophus, Talon stopping briefly to implant a suggestion in the gestating Annihilus, and proceed onward. Chris' personality is revealed not to have been wholly destroyed yet, and a vision of his father tells him that much of what he believed about the armor was false; the prior history, even [[Evilhawk]] himself, was a lie made up by his own mind, the other armor a second configuration that took control to cover earlier anger issues. Horrified, Chris' psyche breaks free of the prison it was locked in, only for Chris to find himself on a great tree adorned with thousands of amulets like his own, where he encounters gargoyle-like creatures that urge him to return to the one which he has just emerged from. Meanwhile, in the Negative Zone, Talon and Razor offer [[Blastaar]] the Cosmic Control Rod, in exchange for his assistance influencing the outcome of the War of Kings. <ref>''War of Kings: Ascension'' #2</ref> He is later seen in Chandilar, disguised as a Shi'ar, who Rachael sees his truth form, where he shots several Shi'ars and shots and kills Lilandra.<ref>''War of Kings'' #4</ref> |
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==Powers and abilities== |
==Powers and abilities== |
Revision as of 00:35, 4 June 2009
This article describes a work or element of fiction in a primarily in-universe style. (March 2009) |
Darkhawk | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | Darkhawk #1 (March 1991) |
Created by | Tom DeFalco and Mike Manley |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Christopher "Chris" Powell |
Team affiliations | Loners New Warriors Project Pegasus Secret Defenders West Coast Avengers League of Losers |
Notable aliases | The Powell, Falconer, Edge-Man |
Abilities | Energy blasts Energy shield Flight Night vision Claw cable Accelerated healing factor Superhuman strength |
Darkhawk (Christopher Powell) is a fictional comic book superhero who first appeared in his own self-titled series, Darkhawk #1 (March 1991). He was created by writer and then Marvel editor-in-chief Tom DeFalco, and artist Mike Manley.
Publication history
Darkhawk appeared in a self-titled monthly series for 50 issues that was published by Marvel Comics from March 1991 to March 1995, and included two standalone annuals. Although created by DeFalco, most issues of the series (including the very first) credit Danny Fingeroth as writer. After his own series ended, Darkhawk co-starred or cameoed in other titles over the following years, such as New Warriors, Avengers/JLA, and Iron Man, eventually resurfacing more recently in Runaways Vol.2 #1-6, followed by Marvel Team Up Vol.3 #15 and the short-lived Loners series. Darkhawk appeared within the Secret Invasion tie-in issues of Nova (#17-18)[1] [2] and was the focus of the two-issue mini-series War of Kings: Darkhawk, written by C. B. Cebulski, Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning.[3][4] War Of Kings: Darkhawk brought closure to Chris Powell's earthbound human relationships with his family and fellow Loners team members, and serves to establish a clean slate for the sequel series, War Of Kings: Ascension, written by Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning.
Fictional character biography
Christopher Powell was born in Queens, New York. While witnessing his policeman father accept a bribe from a crime boss at an abandoned amusement park, teenager Chris Powell discovered a mysterious amulet. This amulet allowed him to switch places with a powerful android that his mind controlled. Chris vowed to use the amulet as "an edge against crime."[5] In this role, he worked with other superheroes and battled a number of costumed villains.
Darkhawk soon encountered his first supervillain, the Hobgoblin, and battled him alongside Spider-Man.[6] He next fought Savage Steel,[7] and then Portal.[8] He next battled the U-Foes alongside Captain America.[9] He battled the villain Lodestone, who attempted to remove his amulet.[10] He battled Savage Steel again, this time alongside the Punisher.[11] Darkhawk battled the cyborg Midnight, Thunderball, and the Secret Empire alongside Spider-Man, the Punisher, Night Thrasher, Nova, and Moon Knight.[12] Darkhawk then battled assassins from the Foreigner's 1400 Club.[13] He battled Tombstone, who successfully removed his amulet from his chest.[14]
Darkhawk occasionally worked with the New Warriors and was a provisional member of the West Coast Avengers. Darkhawk also battled a number of costumed villains, including the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants.
Chris discovered that the armor was stored and repaired aboard a starship in a dimension called Null Space. When he used the amulet to access the armor, his human body switched places with the armor. The Darkhawk amulet and armor were one of several commissioned by an alien crime lord named Dargin Bokk. The scientists who created the technology eventually used it to assault Bokk. After Bokk's defeat, the Darkhawk amulet was sent to Earth for safekeeping.
However, the events of the recent War of Kings: Ascension storyline cast doubts on how much of this--even the existence of Bokk himself--was real.
Later, Chris and Darkhawk were split into two separate beings, each with Chris' memories. The Darkhawk body was then transformed into a new shape when it accidentally downloaded data from the ship, later re-merging so that Chris could change back and forth between the two without teleporting to Null Space.
Excelsior/Loners
Chris later joined Excelsior, a group for former teenage superheroes who were struggling with their current lot in life called Loners, formerly known as Excelsior. Members of this group included Phil Urich (a former Green Goblin), Turbo from the New Warriors, Lightspeed from Power Pack, and Ricochet from the Slingers. The group was hired by a mysterious benefactor - later revealed to be former Avengers sidekick and Captain Marvel and Hulk partner Rick Jones - to track down the Runaways in Los Angeles.
Chris displayed trouble controlling his anger in his Darkhawk persona, leading to a short skirmish with Turbo. Dismayed with himself and admitting to his team-mates that he suffered a nervous breakdown at some point after his own series ended (caused by the nightmares he suffered because of his experiences as Darkhawk[15]), Chris decided to never turn into Darkhawk again. This decision did not last long however, as shortly thereafter the group battled the notorious Avengers villain, Ultron. Darkhawk delivered the final blow, using a darkforce blast at point blank range to blow Ultron to pieces. Following the battle and the revelation of Jones' involvement, Excelsior opted to remain together and act as a more traditional superhero team.
Recently, Excelsior has decided to become a superhero support group due to the events of the superhuman Civil War. However, their newest member Mattie Franklin has convinced Chris to use his powers, in order to help her take down the MGH dealers that moved to Los Angeles.
Secret Invasion
Deciding to register with the government, Darkhawk is assigned to the position of Security Chief at Project P.E.G.A.S.U.S.. During the Skrull invasion, he teams up with his old team-mate Nova[16] for two issues of that character's own title, but is also seen in the background of several issues thereafter.
War of Kings
Darkhawk is involved with the War of Kings Event in a four-issue series written by Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning called War Of Kings: Ascension.[17] With the Loners series ending with low sales and unlikely to be followed with a sequel series, series writer CB Cebulski was assigned to write a two-issue War of Kings: Darkhawk series, with Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning co-scripting the second issue to ensure it tied into their own 'Ascension' series.[18][19] A second Darkhawk armor appears near the Powell family home, and the unknown occupant of the armor forces Chris to transform to his own armored form shortly before an explosion rocks the immediate area. Chris' family survives the blast, but his mother is critically injured. The new Darkhawk introduces himself as "Talon" and claims to be part of "The Fraternity of Raptors", an order created as "the curators of history, and the custodians of the future," of which he and Chris are the last two members. He also explains that Chris' anger issues are a direct result of the amulet not being designed to work with humans. Talon offers to assist Chris with the amulet, and after some deliberation he opts to do so; the two then retreat to the Negative Zone.
The story picks up in War of Kings: Ascension. Chris and Talon are fighting a group of Chitinauts, bug troops that serve Catastrophus, a lieutenant of Annihilus, where Talon's brutal techniques horrify Chris. Later, Chris reveals that he wanted to be just like his friend Nova. Talon explains to him that the Nova Corps are nothing compared to the Fraternity of Raptors, referring to themselves as "architects of fate". Eventually, after being tricked by Talon into fighting just as lethally, Chris manages to connect to the Datasong of the Null Source, which gives him visions of the true past of the Fraternity--a history of kidnappings and assassinations which lead Chris to conclude that the Fraternity is "the bad guys." At this point, Talon attacks him, purging his consciousness from the armor to reveal the persona underneath: Razor.[20]
Talon and Razor then recover the Cosmic Control Rod from Catastrophus, Talon stopping briefly to implant a suggestion in the gestating Annihilus, and proceed onward. Chris' personality is revealed not to have been wholly destroyed yet, and a vision of his father tells him that much of what he believed about the armor was false; the prior history, even Evilhawk himself, was a lie made up by his own mind, the other armor a second configuration that took control to cover earlier anger issues. Horrified, Chris' psyche breaks free of the prison it was locked in, only for Chris to find himself on a great tree adorned with thousands of amulets like his own, where he encounters gargoyle-like creatures that urge him to return to the one which he has just emerged from. Meanwhile, in the Negative Zone, Talon and Razor offer Blastaar the Cosmic Control Rod, in exchange for his assistance influencing the outcome of the War of Kings. [21] He is later seen in Chandilar, disguised as a Shi'ar, who Rachael sees his truth form, where he shots several Shi'ars and shots and kills Lilandra.[22]
Powers and abilities
The Darkhawk body has enhanced physical abilities, including strength, agility and reflexes, powered by the extraterrestrial amulet he wears. The retractable glider wings under his arms allow him to glide on air currents, and he can also fly at speeds that let him fly from New York to California in only a matter of hours. Even major injuries to his Darkhawk body can be repaired by switching back to his human form; his Darkhawk body teleports back to its holding space on the Darkhawk ship in Null Space, where it can be repaired almost instantly. As the Darkhawk body is no longer separate from Chris and does not teleport to Null Space when not in use, it is questionable whether it can be repaired as quickly as it once was.
Darkhawk can project energy from the amulet in his chest as a focal point, either as concussive force blasts, or as a circular energy shield; (Chris referred to his force blasts as "darkforce blasts," until he encountered the actual Darkforce Dimension in New Warriors). Darkhawk also has telescopic and infra-red vision, and a grappling hook claw-cable on his right arm shaped like a claw.
In his human form, Chris Powell has no superhuman abilities, though he has taken some karate and kendo classes.
For a time, Darkhawk was upgraded to a new body design, which gave him greatly enhanced powers. His amulet could project force bubbles in various shapes and he could combine his force fields and force blasts into a giant, hawk-shaped construct around his body. He could fire heat beams from his eyes, be healed by generating an energy pod around his body, and had a single extendable claw on each wrist. He could also mentally communicate with the Darkhawk ship, and could teleport weapons from the ship when he was on Earth. At one point, he was outfitted with additional body armor on top of his android body.
In this body, he was separated from Chris Powell, and also retained Chris' memories. The two were later merged into one being in the final issue of the Darkhawk series, so that Chris could turn into Darkhawk on command. The Darkhawk android body no longer existed and the two separate entities became one.
At some point after the cancellation of his own series, Darkhawk reverted to his original form under unrevealed circumstances, although he can still summon his second armored form.
His appearance in War of Kings is somewhat more reminiscent of his second costume, and he demonstrates a heretofore unrealized ability to reconfigure the armor into a second form equipped with heavier artillery, and with bulkier body armor.
Darkhawk has two major weaknesses though. If the continuity is basing itself on his first costume, then if his amulet is separated from his body in Darkhawk mode then he will perish after the energy housed in his android form is completely released. His second weakness is that his body is capable of being hacked by technological means. These flaws were exposed during Darkhawk's first and second major story arcs, their penultimate issues being #25 and #50.
Other versions
House of M
Darkhawk appears as a member of Wolfpack.[23]
U.S. War Machine
In the mini-series U.S. War Machine, set in an alternate universe, Darkhawk was a psychopathic android, which could only be controlled by running a virtual reality program. The program, a "fiction" within that universe, played out the events where Darkhawk had been a member of the West Coast Avengers within normal Marvel continuity. The program itself also appeared in the final pages of US War Machine 2.0 in which Tony Stark's damaged body is placed inside the Darkhawk program in order to keep him alive.
Marvel Team-Up: League of Losers
Darkhawk features in an arc of Robert Kirkman's Marvel Team-Up (vol. 3), featuring a group of C-list heroes dubbed "The League of Losers". A group of heroes including Darkhawk, Dagger, Araña, Gravity, X-23, Speedball, Sleepwalker and Terror (although Araña dies along the way) go to the future to prevent the villain Chronok from stealing Reed Richards' time machine, Chronok having come to the present and already having killed all of Marvel's major heroes.
It's revealed that Chronok is from the same time period as Kirkman's Mutant 2099; the group stays with him and his mentor Reed Richards to wait for Chronok. The team defeats Chronok, but at the end of the story, Richards reveals they can't go back to their present, due to time-travel and alternate timelines. The group decides to stay in the future, satisfied with the impact they made, however unnoticed. Mutant 2099 suggests reforming the Avengers or the "Fantastic Nine". Effectively trapped in the future, Chris begins a romantic relationship with Dagger. This team makes a cameo in Deadpool/GLI Summer Fun Spectacular (2007) at the end of the issue.
Note that due to the Marvel Universe's method for resolving time travel paradoxes, this story occurred in an alternate universe.
Over the course of this adventure, Chris acts as the core of the "League", serving as their leader and training the mostly novice heroes for their encounter with Chronok. Reed Richards remarks that while he had never thought of Darkhawk as leader material in the past, he is impressed by Chris' efforts.
During the various battles with Chronok and his army, Chris did not appear prone to irrational violence or uncontrollable anger while in his Darkhawk form, as he had during Excelsior's encounter with the Runaways.
In other media
Television
Darkhawk made two brief cameos in the Fantastic Four cartoon. In the episode, "To Battle the Living Planet" he is seen with other New Warriors helping civilians. In "Doomsday" he is shown flying with Justice.
Video games
In the Ultimate Spider-Man video game, Spider-Man can be heard mocking the Human Torch during one of their races, stating "Darkhawk is faster than you!"
Bibliography
- Darkhawk #1-50 (March, 1991 — April, 1995)
- Darkhawk Annual #1-3 (1992 — 1994)
- Amazing Spider-Man #353-354, 357-358 (1991-1992)
- The Secret Defenders #1-3
- Spider-Man: Friends and Enemies #1-4 (1995)
- Sleepwalker #17
- New Warriors (vol. 1) #14, 22-25, 33-34, 47-51
- New Warriors Annual (vol. 1) #3
- Iron Man Annual (vol. 1) #13
- Avengers (vol. 3) #1-4, 501-503
- Avengers West Coast #93-95
- Avengers West Coast Annual #7
- Runaways (vol. 2) #1-4, #6
- Marvel Team-Up (2005 series) #15-18, 25
- Loners (2007 mini-series) #1-6
- Deadpool/GLI Summer Fun Spectacular (2007 one-shot, League of Losers)
- Marvel Holiday Special (2007 one-shot)
- Nova (vol. 4) #17-#19
- War of Kings: Darkhawk #1 and #2 (February 2009 and March 2009)
Notes
- ^ FAN EXPO: Darkhawk Returns in "Nova", Comic Book Resources, August 23, 2008
- ^ Quantum Leap: DnA Talk "Nova", Comic Book Resources, September 25, 2008
- ^ FIRST LOOK: Darkhawk Swoops into February, Marvel.com, November 14, 2008
- ^ C.B. Cebulski Talks “War of Kings: Darkhawk”, Comic Book Resources, January 15, 2009
- ^ Darkhawk #1
- ^ Darkhawk #2-3
- ^ Darkhawk #4
- ^ Darkhawk #5
- ^ Darkhawk #6
- ^ Darkhawk #8
- ^ Darkhawk #9
- ^ Amazing Spider-Man #353-358
- ^ Darkhawk #10
- ^ Darkhawk #11
- ^ Runaways Vol.2 #1-3
- ^ Nova #17-18
- ^ [1]
- ^ [2]
- ^ [3]
- ^ War of Kings: Ascension #1
- ^ War of Kings: Ascension #2
- ^ War of Kings #4
- ^ House of M: Avengers #3
References
- Darkhawk at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
External links
- Darkhawk at the Marvel Universe
- Comprehensive Darkhawk Timeline is an ongoing attempt to document the history of Chris Powell/Darkhawk.