| "Acts of Vengeance" | |||
|---|---|---|---|
Promotional image for the Acts of Vengeance series (Avengers #311 (Dec. 1989) - The Amazing Spider-Man #329 (Feb. 1990) |
|||
| Publisher | Marvel Comics | ||
| Publication date | December 1989 – February 1990 | ||
| Genre | Crossover | ||
|
|||
| Main character(s) | Avengers Fantastic Four Loki Spider-Man Graviton West Coast Avengers X-Men |
||
| Collected editions | |||
| Acts Of Vengeance Omnibus HC | ISBN 978-0-7851-4464-9 | ||
"Acts of Vengeance" is a comic book crossover storyline that ran through several titles published by Marvel Comics from December 1989 to February 1990.
|
Contents
|
This company-wide fall crossover was centered on the Avengers and Fantastic Four after three consecutive fall crossovers were built around the X-Men and related mutant teams. Promotional materials teased the idea of a wide array of super-villains facing heroes they had never met (or at least were villains that weren't part of the heroes' regular gallery).
The core titles of the crossover include Avengers;[1] Avengers Spotlight;[2] Avengers West Coast;[3] Captain America;[4] Iron Man;[5] Quasar;[6] Thor;[7] and Fantastic Four.[8] Major tie-ins included The Amazing Spider-Man[9] among other Spider-Man titles, and Uncanny X-Men.[10] An epilogue features in Cloak and Dagger;[11] Web Of Spider-Man[12] and in an Avengers Annual.[13] A humorous parody with the character the Impossible Man features in the title Silver Surfer.[14]
A stranger (the Asgardian god Loki in disguise) coerces a group of master supervillains to join forces in a conspiracy to destroy the superhero team the Avengers. Loki does this to strike back at his adopted brother Thor, and is also bitter that he inadvertently caused the formation of the Avengers.[15] The supervillain team consists of Doctor Doom, Kingpin, Magneto, Mandarin, Red Skull, and the Wizard. Loki also attempts to recruit characters Apocalypse, Cobra, and Mad Thinker, but they all decline. Loki also approaches Namor the Sub-Mariner, but he rejects the offer stating he is not a villain anymor.
To assist the master villains, Loki engineers a jailbreak at the holding facility the Vault. The lesser villains are then directed against heroes (mainly the Avengers & Spider-Man) who have never fought them before, the theory being that the unfamiliarity will act in the villains' favor.
While they did manage to give many of the heroes unusual fits, the plan eventually fails as the master villains fail to cooperate and bicker with each other especially Magneto (who is a mutant and a Jewish Holocaust survivor), and Red Skull (whose Nazi beliefs, in Marvel continuity, include a prejudice against mutants), with Magneto attacking Red Skull and imprisoning him in a buried crypt. The supervillain pawns are defeated by the heroes. A frustrated Loki reveals himself and imprisons the Kingpin, Mandarin and Wizard, while Doctor Doom is revealed to have been using a Doombot (Magneto is not present). The Avengers track the group and defeat the villains, with Thor forcing Loki to flee back to their native home of Asgard.[16]
Loki commits one last act of villainy and creates the robot Tri-Sentinel to destroy New York City. The robot is stopped by the hero Spider-Man (who at the time possessed the powers of Captain Universe).[17]
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)