Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Luke Carlyle

 
Hoover's Profile: The Carlyle Group, L.P.
Contact Information
The Carlyle Group, L.P.
1001 Pennsylvania Ave. NW
Washington, DC 20004-2505
DC Tel. 202-729-5626
Fax 202-347-1818

Type: Private
On the web: http://www.carlyle.com

The Carlyle Group, with some $85 billion under management, is one of the world's largest private investment firms. Undertakings include management-led buyouts, minority equity investments, real estate, venture capital, and leveraged finance opportunities in the energy and power, consumer and retail, and technology and business services industries. Other sectors it focuses on include financial services, health care, infrastructure, aerospace and defense, automotive, transportation, telecommunications, and media. Since its founding in 1987, The Carlyle Group has made some 900 investments; it maintains offices in about 20 countries and oversees more than 60 private equity, real estate, and leveraged buyout funds.

Officers:
Managing Director and CFO: Peter H. Nachtwey
VP and Director, Communications, Asia: Dorothy Lee
Principal, Corporate Development: Thomas B. Mayrhofer

Competitors:
Blackstone Group
KKR
TPG

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Luke Carlyle
Top
Luke Carlyle
Comic image missing.svg
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance Amazing Spider-Man vol. 2 #43 (Oct 2002)
Created by J. Michael Straczynski
In-story information
Alter ego Lucas "Luke" Carlyle
Species Human
Notable aliases Carlyle Calamari
Abilities Six machine extendable steel tentacles that fire powerful jolts of energy

Luke Carlyle is a fictional character from Marvel Comics, created by J. Michael Straczynski and first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man.[1]

Contents

Fictional character biography

Luke Carlyle is a thief and con man who worked his way up the corporate ladder, eventually rising to a trusted position. When the CEO of the company he worked at discovered Luke was a fraud, Luke killed him. Lacking the time to act, and with most of the company's assets either gone or unreachable, Luke then hired Otto Octavius under the guise of helping to make him a legitimate researcher, and stole his mechanical appendages. Luke had the scientists at his company copy Octavius' cybernetic controller, something that "looked like it was made in the 1960s", into a new six-armed power suit; his company had managed to duplicate most of the tentacles, but the cybernetic interface had required a direct look at the original device. Despite his superior technology, after trashing a hotel in the resulting three-way battle, Luke was defeated by a combined effort between Octavius and Spider-Man, with Octopus cracking Luke's suit and Spider-Man filling the suit with webbing via the crack.

In other media

Video games

  • Lucas "Luke" Carlyle (also called Carlyle the Mad Bomber) appears as himself in the Spider-Man 3 video game voiced by Neil Ross. He is portrayed as a mad bomber. In the game he was a wealthy business man whose business was destroyed when J. Jonah Jameson posted stories in the Bugle that got City Hall to investigate him. Fueled with revenge, he and his hired henchman go on a bombing spree. First he blows up his own building, which Spider-Man investigate where he stops some of his henchmen and saved one woman tied to a bomb. Later on, Jameson received an anonymous call that there were bombs planted all over the subway. Peter hears this call and rushes to the subway where he disarms all the bombs. Spider-Man later finds more of Luke's henchmen planting bombs all over the city using jet packs, but he is able to stop them and the bombs. It isn't until a chemical plant is under attack that Spider-Man finally meets Carlyle, where he and his henchmen were trying to steal a tank, but they are once again stopped. Luke escapes in a helicopter but not before throwing a bomb at Spider-Man, who escapes after the entire factory caves in. The final act shows Luke attacking the Daily Bugle, planting bombs, and kidnapping Jameson, a cutscene revealing that he is a former industrialist seeking revenge on Jameson after Jameson's editorials revealed that his factories were causing mass pollution. After Spider-Man disarms all the bombs, he chases after Luke's helicopter. Luke then places a neck brace on Jameson that will explode if he gets far away from him. He then throws Jameson out of the helicopter, but is caught by Spider-Man. After chasing the helicopter, Carlyle starts flying the helicopter around a building where Carlyle fights Spider-man using the Helicopter's weapon system. Carlyle shoots missiles at Spider-Man from the helicopter. Spider-man defeated Carlyle by hotting a web at a missile that got close to him and threw it back at Luke's helicopter until it went down. When it went down, Luke and the henchmen aboard escaped using jet packs, but Carlyle then sets off explosives in their suits stating that he was "handing them their walking papers", while he escaped. The appearance of Luke in the game is slightly based on a villain called Turbo Jet who appears in Spider-Man: The New Animated Series

References

  1. ^ J. Michael Straczynski (w), John Romita, Jr. (p). Amazing Spider-Man (second series) #43-45 (Oct-Nov 2002), Marvel Comics

External links



 
 

 

Copyrights:

Hoover's Profile. ©2008 Hoover's, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Luke Carlyle" Read more