Mantis (Marvel Comics)
Mantis | |
---|---|
Mantis. Art by Tom Raney. | |
Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | The Avengers #112 (June 1973) |
Created by |
Steve Englehart (writer) Don Heck (artist) |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Brandt, first name unknown |
Team affiliations |
Guardians of the Galaxy Avengers West Coast Avengers |
Notable aliases | Willow, Lorelei, Mandy Celestine |
Abilities |
Grandmaster martial artist Empathy Plant manipulation Accelerated healing factor Astral projection Ability to communicate telepathically with the Cotati |
Mantis is a fictional character, a superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character is a former member of the Avengers. The character was ranked 99th in Comics Buyer's Guide's "100 Sexiest Women in Comics" list.[1]
She will make her cinematic debut in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, portrayed by Pom Klementieff.
Publication history
Mantis first appeared in The Avengers #112 (June 1973), drawn by Don Heck and created by writer Steve Englehart. The character later appeared (in slightly different name and form) in books published by other comic book companies, moving from Marvel to DC to Eclipse to Image and finally back to Marvel again.[2]
Fictional character biography
Marvel beginnings
Mantis is the half-Vietnamese, half-German daughter of Gustav Brandt—Libra—and was born in Huế, Vietnam. In her childhood, her father leaves her in Vietnam at the Temple of the alien Priests of Pama, a sect of the Kree. The Kree believe she might become the Celestial Madonna and mate with the eldest Cotati on Earth to become the mother of the Celestial Messiah, "the most important being in the universe".
She excels in her martial arts studies, but when she reaches adulthood, she is mind-wiped and sent into the world to gain life experience. She becomes a prostitute and barmaid in a Vietnamese bar, where she meets the Swordsman. She helps him regain his self-respect and follows him when the former villain attempts to rejoin the Avengers. She became an Avengers ally when the Swordsman rejoined the Avengers, and she battled the Lion God alongside them.[3]
With the Avengers, Mantis had many adventures. She battled the original Zodiac, and learned that Libra was her father and that she was raised by the Priests of Pama. She encountered the Star-Stalker,[4] battled Thanos,[5] Klaw and Solarr,[6] Nuklo,[7] and then alongside the Avengers, Fantastic Four, and Inhumans, she faced Ultron at the wedding of Quicksilver and Crystal.[8]
Mantis becomes taken with the Vision, and—although rejected by the android—neglects the Swordsman. Alongside the Scarlet Witch and Agatha Harkness, she was abducted by Kang. She was revealed as the Celestial Madonna and witnessed the death of the Swordsman at the hands of Kang, only realizing the depth of her love for the Swordsman just as he dies.[9] She then buried the Swordsman, and battled the Titanic Three.[10] She would learn the origins of the Kree-Skrull War, the Cotati, and the Priests of Pama.[11] Mantis then formally joined the Avengers and is revealed to be, indeed, the Celestial Madonna and marries a Cotati in the reanimated body of the Swordsman, leaving the Avengers and the Earth to mate with him.[12]
DC Comics: Willow
After leaving Marvel Comics, writer Steve Englehart carried Mantis' tale through three other companies before returning to Marvel.[13]
In DC Comics' Justice League of America #142, she appears as Willow. Asked where she came from, Willow replies, "This one has come from a place she must not name, to reach a place no man must know." (Mantis refers to herself as "this one"). After two issues, she leaves to go give birth.
Eclipse: Lorelei
In the Eclipse Comics series Scorpio Rose #2 (according to Englehart's website ), the character calls herself Lorelei. By this time, she has given birth to a son. What would have been issue #3, a "lost" Lorelei/Scorpio Rose story, was later published in Coyote Collection #1 from Image Comics, the character's fourth company. Lorelei is later name-dropped in Englehart's 2010 novel The Long Man (page 355, mass market paperback edition).
Marvel history resumes
After she bears her child, Sequoia,[14] she takes the name "Mandy Celestine" and lives with him for a year in Willimantic, Connecticut before handing him to his father's people and going into space with the Silver Surfer and battling the Elders of the Universe alongside the Surfer.[15] The Silver Surfer finds himself falling in love with Mantis. However, Mantis (whose body was now green and had begun to manifest new powers of invulnerability that allowed her to survive in space due to side-effects of her pregnancy) grows bitter with her life and the way she was forced to abandon her child. This comes to a head when Mantis is caught in an explosion and presumed dead by Silver Surfer. She survives, but the strain of the previous years causes her to literally split into multiple versions of herself, each representing conflicting aspects of her psyche that could no longer co-exist inside her mind.
The fragments arrive on Earth and one version of Mantis rejoins the West Coast Avengers team, with portions of her memories missing. (Steve Englehart intended the storyline involving Mantis and her amnesia to be his next major plotline, but editorial problems caused him to quit the series, with the plotline resolved hastily.) Mantis discovers, through the temporarily resurrected corpse of the Swordsman, that her psyche had shattered and that she needs to find her counterparts in order to restore her memories. She made her way to New York City where she encountered the Fantastic Four as they dealt with the effects of the Inferno storyline.[16] Kang pursued Mantis, not realizing she had lost her power and hoping to use her to attack the Dreaming Celestial, and in the process the Surfer was summoned to Earth.[17] With the aid of the Cotati, Kang was defeated but Mantis realized she must leave her body and join with the Cotati to raise her son.[18]
Aside from mentions by Silver Surfer, Mantis does not reappear until 1995's controversial Avengers crossover story "The Crossing". In "The Crossing", Mantis returns as the villainous bride of Kang the Conqueror with the intention of bringing death to the Avengers; her father Libra (who by now was going by the name "Moonraker" as part of Force Works); and the Cotati alien who had possessed the Swordsman's body and married/impregnated her. Her anger at her father (whom she had vivisected) and the Cotati center around their "defilement" of her and that she hates the Avengers for believing their manipulative lies.
The storyline was controversial, so much so that Kurt Busiek, in Avengers Forever limited series, retconned the Mantis who appeared in the story as being a Space Phantom brainwashed into thinking he was Mantis.
Eventually, Mantis reappears in the Steve Englehart written Avengers: Celestial Quest limited series. She returns to Earth and merges with her remaining fragmented portions of her personality (which we learn represent "freak, mother, prostitute, mystic, and Avenger") after the first four are killed by Thanos (later retroactively declared to be a clone of the real Thanos). The final Mantis merges with them to become a "complete" Mantis for the first time since her dispersion. Thus reformed, she and a group of the Avengers go into space to stop "Thanos" from killing her son, Quoi, who by this time is a rebellious teenager desperate to leave the isolation of the Cotati home-world and travel the stars. During the adventure, Mantis flirts with Vision (with the implication that she has sex with him), but ultimately ends the flirting when she realizes that he has feelings for his estranged wife Scarlet Witch, who is jealous of Mantis and Vision's friendship. Mantis also appears in the "Avengers Disassembled" storyline, although many occurrences in that storyline are illusions.
Mantis appears in the 2007 miniseries Annihilation Conquest: Star-Lord, where she is shown as a Kree prisoner who volunteers for a mission led by Peter Quill, a.k.a. Star-Lord.[19]
After the defeat of Ultron and the Phalanx, Mantis takes up residence on the Knowhere station with the rest of the Guardians of the Galaxy.[20] She has assumed the role of counselor for the group, using her knowledge of the mind to maintain a balance with all the very eclectic personalities of the group.[20]
During the Secret Invasion storyline, it was discovered that Star-Lord had Mantis use her mental powers to manipulate the members of the Guardians of the Galaxy to join the team against their will. Overhearing Mantis and Star-Lord converse about their deception, Drax shared this knowledge with the rest of the team. This caused most of the members to leave. Mantis was promoted to field status by Rocket Raccoon.
Mantis was apparently killed by the Magus, who, upon anticipating that Mantis would use her mental powers to incapacitate him, struck her and her fellow psionic Cosmo dead with a powerful blast of energy.[21] However, it was revealed that she, along with fellow Guardians Phyla-Vell, Cosmo, Gamora and Major Victory are still alive, but being held prisoner in suspended animation by the Magus.[22] She reunites with the other team of Guardians, telling Moondragon that Phyla-Vell was the first one killed by Thanos' rampage.
Mantis later rescues Peter Quill from a group of pursuing Spartax soldiers. Though she refuses to join his new incarnation of the Guardians, she helps him track down the source of mysterious "time quakes" that have been plaguing him in the wake of the Age of Ultron storyline.[23]
Powers and abilities
Mantis was trained by the Priests of Pama to become a grandmistress of the martial arts, demonstrated as fully capable of defeating opponents as skilled as Captain America (while he was distracted in fighting a dragon).[24] She could also instinctively sense weak points in an opponent and with her skills in pressure points, knocks out beings as powerful as the thunder god Thor.[24][25] She has only lost in hand to hand martial arts match to Moondragon,[26] and her father Libra.
She has attained a mastery of meditational disciplines giving her an unusual amount of control over her body, including autonomic functions like heartbeat, bleeding, and breathing, as well as awareness of pain, allowing her to more quickly heal injuries through sheer force of will, and affording almost superhuman reflexes and reactions. She also had psychic empathy, a telepathic power that allowed her to sense the emotions of others.
Mantis gained additional abilities as a result of communion with the Prime Cotati. Her empathic ability enabled her to communicate with the plant-like Cotati and with plant life. To travel in space, Mantis had the ability to separate her physical and astral forms, projecting her consciousness from her body, allowing her to travel interplanetary distances. She also had the ability to transfer her astral form to any place where plant life exists. She could form and inhabit a plant like simulacrum of her human body for herself out of the destination planet's local vegetation. Her fighting skills remained intact, and her empathic abilities were heightened to a superhuman degree and extended to the planet’s flora and biosphere. She could control the vegetation within her vicinity.
During her confrontations with a powerful Thanos clone, she displayed superhuman strength, a talent to simultaneously inhabit multiple simulacra, and the ability to project strong blasts of energy, but has not been seen using these powers since.[27]
As of her appearance in Annihilation Conquest: Star-Lord, Mantis also appears to have gained telepathic and precognitive abilities, and apparently now labors under a constant awareness of future events. The source of these new powers is as yet unclear. Other powers displayed or referred to during the series were pyrokinesis, mid-range mentat training, and invisibility to the Phalanx.
Other versions
Heroes Reborn
In the Heroes Reborn reality, the alternate version of Mantis is the woman Kang the Conqueror loves, and Kang's motive to attack the 20th Century and the Avengers is to show that he is worthy of her love. Mantis recognizes her love for Kang after he is killed by Loki, who kills her shortly after.[28]
House of M
In this reality, Mantis is a member of Shang-Chi's Dragons criminal organization, alongside, Swordsman, Zaran, and Machete.[29] Mantis is arrested after the Dragons are ambushed by the Kingpin's assassins. She and Shang-Chi are two of the three survivors of the group.[30]
In other media
Television
- Mantis appears in the Guardians of the Galaxy episode "Don't Stop Believin'", voiced by Jennifer Hale.[31] The Guardians of the Galaxy members Gamora, Drax the Destroyer, Rocket Raccoon, and Groot encounter Mantis where she takes them through the tunnels beneath the Spartaxian Royal Palace in order to save Star-Lord. They go through various obstacles where Mantis tells them to believe. After the group frees Star-Lord, they end up in the throne room where the Cosmic Seed energy is even after a fight with the robots there and a brief fight with Emperor J'son. When Mantis claims that J'son is a tyrant, she tries to attack him only to be subdued by the Guardians of the Galaxy. While being remanded to the dungeon, Mantis still claims that J'son is a tyrant and that they will eventually believe that fact.
Film
- In October 2015, Pom Klementieff was cast as Mantis for Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2.[32] This was confirmed by director James Gunn in February 2016.[33]
Video games
- Mantis is a playable character in Guardians of the Galaxy: The Universal Weapon.
- Mantis is a playable character in Lego Marvel's Avengers, voiced by Ali Hillis.
References
- ↑ Frankenhoff, Brent (2011). Comics Buyer's Guide Presents: 100 Sexiest Women in Comics. Krause Publications. p. 61. ISBN 1-4402-2988-0.
- ↑ "Comic Book Urban Legends Revealed #16! - Page 3 of 3 – Comics Should Be Good @ CBR". Comics Should Be Good @ CBR.
- ↑ Avengers #114
- ↑ Avengers #120-124
- ↑ Avengers #125 Captain Marvel #33
- ↑ Avengers #126
- ↑ Giant-Size Avengers #1
- ↑ Avengers #127; Fantastic Four #150
- ↑ Avengers #129; Giant-Size Avengers #2
- ↑ Avengers #130-132; Giant-Size Avengers #3
- ↑ Avengers #133-135
- ↑ Giant-Size Avengers #4
- ↑ "DOING COMICS THE STAINLESS STEVE ENGLEHART WAY:". angelfire.com.
- ↑ Quoi at the Appendix to the Handbook of the Marvel Universe
- ↑ Silver Surfer Vol. 3 #4-5
- ↑ Fantastic Four 324
- ↑ Fantastic Four 323
- ↑ Fantastic Four 325
- ↑ Annihilation: Conquest – Starlord #1
- 1 2 Guardians of the Galaxy #1
- ↑ Guardians of the Galaxy Issue #19, December 2009
- ↑ Guardians of the Galaxy #22
- ↑ Guardians of the Galaxy (Vol. 3) #5 (July 2013)
- 1 2 The Avengers V. I # 114
- ↑ The Avengers V. I # 123
- ↑ Fantastic Four Annual Vol. 1, #25 (October 1992)
- ↑ Avengers: Celestial Quest #1-8 (2001)
- ↑ Avengers Vol. 2 #2-8
- ↑ House of M: Avengers #2
- ↑ House of M: Avengers #4
- ↑ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lY2R7D_T6XI
- ↑ Lincoln, Ross (October 29, 2015). "'Compton's Neil Brown Jr. Signs On For 'Sand Castle'; Pom Klementieff Joins 'Guardians Of The Galaxy 2'". Deadline.com. Archived from the original on October 29, 2015. Retrieved October 29, 2015.
- ↑ James Gunn [JamesGunn] (17 February 2016). ". @PomKlementieff is playing Mantis. As for the rest, you'll have to wait." (Tweet). Retrieved 17 February 2016 – via Twitter.
External links
- Mantis at the Marvel Universe wiki