Ant-Man (Scott Lang)
Ant-Man | |
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Ant-Man from the Avengers Handbook
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Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | As Scott Lang: Avengers #181 (March 1979) As Ant-Man: Marvel Premiere #47 (April 1979) |
Created by | David Michelinie John Byrne |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Scott Edward Harris Lang |
Team affiliations | Stark Industries Avengers Fantastic Four Heroes for Hire Defenders Future Foundation |
Abilities | Electronics expert Uniform grants: Size manipulation Telepathic insect communication Helmet with a retractable plexiglass face shield and a limited air supply Maintains normal-size strength in shrunken state Ability to shrink to sub-microscopic size and enter the subatomic universes |
Ant-Man (Scott Lang) is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by David Michelinie and John Byrne, Scott Lang first appeared in The Avengers #181 (March 1979) and in Marvel Premiere #47 (April 1979) as the second superhero character to use the Ant-Man name in the Marvel Universe. He is a reformed thief and an electronics expert. He was a member of the Avengers, a featured character in the FF comic series and in 2015 became the title character in the Ant-Man comic.
Scott Lang was an ex-convict and electronics expert hired by Stark International, which enabled him to steal the Ant-Man suit from Hank Pym who had long since given up the name. Lang stole the suit to help his sick daughter, which, when Pym found out, caused Pym to give the suit to Scott, allowing him to become the second Ant-Man. As Ant-Man he served as an Avenger for years, until he was killed during the Avengers Disassembled storyline. Years later he was resurrected in the Avengers: The Children's Crusade mini series. Following his resurrection, Lang was briefly the head of the Future Foundation.
Paul Rudd portrays Scott Lang in the Marvel Studios films Ant-Man and Captain America: Civil War and will reprise the role in 2018's Ant-Man and the Wasp.
Contents
Publication history
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Created by David Michelinie and John Byrne,[1] Scott Lang first appeared in The Avengers #181 (March 1979) and as the second Ant-Man in Marvel Premiere #47 (April 1979).[2]
Ant-Man appeared prominently in the 2012's FF series by Matt Fraction and Mike Allred.[3]
An ongoing series focusing on Lang, titled simply Ant-Man written by Nick Spencer and drawn by Ramon Rosanas, began in January 2015.[4] After Marvel's Secret Wars event, the series continued with the title Astonishing Ant-Man.
Fictional character biography
Early life
Scott Edward Harris Lang was born in Coral Gables, Florida.[5] A movie fanatic, he turned to burglary when his occupation as an electric engineer failed to provide him with enough excitement in life.[6] (This was later retconned with the statement that he did so because he couldn't support his family.[1]) Apprehended, Lang served his prison sentence and was paroled after four years for good behavior. In prison, he furthered his study of electronics and was soon hired by Stark International to work in its design department. Under Tony Stark's direction, he helped install a new security system in Avengers Mansion.[7]
The second Ant-Man
When his daughter Cassie became seriously ill, Scott Lang decided to return to burglary as a final resort.[8] He broke into Dr. Hank Pym's home and stole the Ant-Man suit and shrinking gas canisters.[9] Garbed as Ant-Man, Lang broke into Cross Technological Enterprises and discovered that Dr. Erica Sondheim, the only person capable of helping his daughter, was being held prisoner by Darren Cross. He rescued the doctor from Cross' clutches and was relieved when Sondheim was able to save his beloved Cassie's life. Lang had intended to return the Ant-Man suit to Pym and turn himself in for its theft but Pym, aware of the use to which Lang had put the stolen goods, offered to let him keep them, provided he only use them to uphold the law.[10]
Hero
Shortly after, Scott Lang donned the Ant-Man costume on various occasions, primarily to assist Iron Man and the Avengers. Scott came to the rescue when Iron Man was trapped in his armor in the aftermath of a system overload.[11] He also helped Yellowjacket (Hank Pym's alias at the time) attempt to rescue the Wasp captured by Dr. Parnell Solomon, and alongside the Avengers he first battled Taskmaster.[12] He then battled Odd John's mutated insects, and encountered Biotron of the Micronauts.[13] Alongside Spider-Man, he again battled Taskmaster, exploiting Taskmaster's belief that he was Pym by using his growth capsules on one of his ants as a surprise tactic.[14] As Lang, he attempted to stop the Raiders at a Dallas electronics engineers convention.[15] He then battled the malfunctioning GARD computer security system at Stark International.[16] As Lang, he aided Iron Man and Jim Rhodes against Mauler.[17] He then met the Fantastic Four, and on their behalf first journeyed to a "micro-world", and battled there alongside the Thing.[18]
Scott was instrumental in helping Iron Man discover who possessed copies of his technology during the Armor Wars storyline.[19] He also aided the Avengers in infiltrating Taskmaster's henchmen-training facility, battling the Taskmaster alongside Hawkeye, and visited Henry Pym while he was in prison.[20] He encountered Rick Jones and Alpha Flight, and then battled Dire Wraiths alongside Rom and Starshine.[21] Scott was serving in an Avengers back-up team created when Baron Zemo's Masters of Evil took control of the Mansion and captured some of the current team; he even helped the Wasp defeat the Absorbing Man and Titania when they attacked a hospital in an attempt to kill a comatose Hercules.[22] He accidentally shrank Spider-Man and battled the Scarlet Beetle.[23] He also battled Dragonfly.[24]
Lang was even briefly hired by the Fantastic Four to serve as their technical consultant when Reed Richards was missing and presumed dead,[25] helping them deal with such foes as the Dark Raider[volume & issue needed] — an alternate psychotic Reed Richards who'd failed to save his world from Galactus — until Reed was recovered from the past where he'd been trapped thanks to Hyperstorm.[volume & issue needed] Also serving with the Fantastic Four at this time was Kristoff Vernard, the heir of Doctor Doom and himself a technical genius. Lang and Kristoff often clashed, the younger man being very arrogant and disparaging of Lang's abilities. He did, however. design a new Ant-Man outfit which Lang took full advantage of.[volume & issue needed] Much to Lang's annoyance, Kristoff also became close to his daughter Cassie who took a liking to him.
Lang later returned to form a temporary Fantastic Four with the Human Torch, She-Hulk and Namorita when the other three were temporarily trapped in the Negative Zone,[26] the team disbanding after the other team members returned.[volume & issue needed]
Lang played an important role in helping Mister Fantastic cure the Hulk, who was suffering from Lou Gehrig's disease; using a cure devised by Leader, Lang shrank down to microscopic size, entered Hulk's genes, and replaced the damaged genes causing the disease with healthy genes taken from the corpse of Bruce Banner's father, the energy surge released when Hulk returned to human form integrating the new genes into Hulk's system and curing of the disease.[27]
After his ex-wife Peggy Rae gained custody of their daughter, Lang accepted an offer to join the Avengers officially.[28] His personality clashed immediately with fellow Avenger Jack of Hearts. However, in Avengers vol. 3 #76, Jack helped save Cassie from a child-murderer, shortly before committing suicide by traveling into space with the murderer and exploding rather than return to the containment cells required to control his power.[29]
He also appeared in the series Alias by Brian Michael Bendis, where he dated the leading character Jessica Jones, a former costumed superhero named Jewel who left that avocation to become a private investigator.[30]
He assists her in a matter with Mattie Franklin, one of the many female heroes to take the Spider-Woman name. Assisting the duo is S.H.I.E.L.D. agent Clay Quartermain.[31] Purple Man uses his powers to make it seem as if Scott had been consumed by ants.[32]
"Death"
When Jack of Hearts reappears on the grounds of Avengers Mansion in a zombified state, Scott Lang rushes to Jack, only for Jack to blow himself up, destroying much of the mansion and seemingly killing Scott. This Jack may have been some type of "apparition" created by an insane Scarlet Witch rather than the actual Jack of Hearts, starting the crisis known as Avengers Disassembled.[33]
His daughter Cassie Lang subsequently takes the name Stature as a member of the Young Avengers, having apparently taken enough Pym particles over the years to enable Cassie to automatically grow and shrink in size whenever she wants.[34]
His Ant-Man helmet falls into Amadeus Cho's possession for a time with Cassie's blessing, choosing to focus on the insect mind-controlling abilities.[35]
Return
During the events of the limited series Avengers: The Children's Crusade, Iron Lad takes the Young Avengers and an amnesiac Wanda Maximoff into the past, back to the day that the events of Avengers Disassembled began. Here, despite Iron Lad's assurance that they could not interact, Scott Lang is hugged by his daughter, and to take him away from the zombified Jack of Hearts who is revealed to be the real Jack of Hearts under the control of an insane Scarlet Witch. When Jack explodes, the Scarlet Witch regains her memories and returns them to the present, including Scott (thus his death is retconned as having never actually happened, as he was merely taken from his time and brought forward).[36] Scott is proud that his daughter followed in his footsteps.[37] However, a subsequent battle ensues (regarding the fate of the Scarlet Witch) involving the Avengers, Young Avengers, X-Men, Magneto, X-Factor and Doctor Doom. In the course of the fight, Scott is seemingly killed by Doom, although he actually survives relatively unscathed; enraged, Cassie attacks but Doom kills her, much to Scott's grief.[38]
Then, Scott joins the new Defenders team composed of Doctor Strange, Silver Surfer, Namor, Red She-Hulk, Iron Fist and Black Cat.[39]
Eventually, Lang became the second Future Foundation's leader replacing Reed Richards when the Fantastic Four went on a time travel trip.[40] Still suffering from his daughter's death, he decided to aim all the Foundation's resources towards making Doctor Doom pay for his crime; in the meantime he engaged in a romantic relationship with Darla Deering, aka Ms. Thing.[41]
After a heated battle, Scott managed to exact his revenge on Doctor Doom by gradually overwhelming and defeating him, and by having him believe he had killed Valeria Richards. He also determined the true meaning of Pym Particles, and how they operate on three distinct axes determining size, strength and durability.[42]
During the AXIS storyline, a now-heroic and repentant Doctor Doom used Scarlet Witch's powers to resurrect Cassandra Lang, seeking to atone for at least one of his crimes; she turned out alive and well on Scott's doorstep.[43]
Following this, Lang moved to Miami to start a new life as well as to spend more time with his daughter.[44] Scott later established Ant-Man Security Solutions. When he was attacked by Grizzly mistaking him for Eric O'Grady unaware of the latter's death, Scott had to clearing up the misunderstanding. Afterwards, Scott offered Grizzly a job in the company.[45] When Cassie was kidnapped by Crossfire on behalf of Augustine Cross to use Cassie's Pym-particle irradiated heart could revive the very first villain Scott had fought, Scott was forced to turn to Grizzly and his fellow supervillain Machinesmith to infiltrate Cross' plant to save his daughter. With Machinesmith disabling all the security Scott was able to get into Cross Technologies and fight his way to Darren Cross, whom Dr. Sondheim was blackmailed into reviving using Cassie's heart.[46] Darren engaged in combat against Ant-Man while the hero tried to buy time for Sondheim to transplant another heart into Cassie. After Cross was forced to flee when the Pym Particles now in his body caused him to shrink down, Scott shrank down to microscopic size, and was guided by Sondheim to attack Cassie's white cells and allow her body accept the new heart's tissue. Even though the procedure was difficult, Scott was finally able to help Cassie survive the experience. When Peggy and Blake arrived, Sondheim told her that Cassie suffered an infraction and Scott took them to her. Although he saved his daughter, Scott decided to distance himself from her so that she could have a normal life.[47]
Some months ago, Ant-Man helped Giant-Man into rescuing a computer technician named Raz Malhotra from Egghead. Months later after the incident where Hank Pym and Ultron were fused together with Pym seemingly perishing as a result of the fusion, Scott received one of Pym's labs. Recalling his encounter with Raz, Scott sent Raz a present in the form of the Giant-Man suit.[48]
During the "Last Days" part of the Secret Wars storyline, Ant-Man recovers an unnamed Asgardian artifact from Slug which he won from Mary Morgan in a game of contact bridge. Ant-Man delivers the goods to Mary Morgan where he learns that she is Miss Patriot. Mary Morgan revealed that Valhalla Villas is a retirement home for Golden Age heroes and villains where they live out their days in blissful remembrance. Mary Morgan then assembles the residents of Valhalla Villas like Golden Girl, Doctor Fear, Thunderer, Leopard Girl, Human Top, Sun Girl, American Ace, Flash Foster, and Wax Master. Using the Asgardian artifact, Mary Morgan rejuvenated the Valhalla Villa residents as Miami sees the unexpected resurgence of characters from the Golden Age. Mary decides to remain elderly since the past was too much to bear the first and only time. Scott then visits his ex-wife Peggy Rae in an attempt to see his daughter Cassandra Lang. Peggy puts Scott in his place due to him making no effort to visit her since she was in the hospital. Peggy also tells Scott that Cassandra is at a school excursion to Atlanta. While drinking at a nightclub, Ant-Man encounters Janice Lincoln and tries to take her down, only to get blasted. Janice states to Ant-Man that he should party like there is no tomorrow since it is the last night on Earth. Ant-Man takes in Janice's suggestions as they both hit the dance floor. He wakes up the next morning with Janice in his bed as the final parts of the Incursion occur.[49]
As part of the All-New, All-Different Marvel event, Ant-Man becomes a target of Whirlwind when Power Broker offers a demonstration of the Hench App to Darren Cross. When Cross was unable to pay #12,000,000.00 to Power Broker, Whirlwind received orders to not attack Ant-Man.[50] Ant-Man later helped Darla Deering when she was attacked by the second Magician (the son of the original Magician) when he was hired by a publicist named Marlena Howard through the Hench App to pretend to have a grudge against her.[51]
Powers and abilities
Using a gaseous form of "Pym particles" kept in a compartment in his belt, Ant-Man had the power to shrink himself (and other people and objects along with himself) to the size of an ant and return to normal. Over time, he has acquired the ability to change size at will, seemingly without the need for the gas.[volume & issue needed] His cybernetic helmet allows rudimentary telepathic communication with insects, and is equipped with sound amplification equipment allowing normal-sized humans to hear him. The helmet also has a retractable plexiglass face shield and a limited air supply. Lang retained his normal strength in ant size.
Scott Lang can also shrink to sub-microscopic size, and thereby enter the countless "subatomic universes".
He has advanced training and expertise in electronics, having earned an electronics technician certificate, plus additional advanced electronics training he received while in prison. At times, Lang even made his own modifications to the Ant-Man equipment, such as installing the Pym gas dispenser in his helmet rather than leaving it on his belt,[11] or mounting an electric disruptor into his helmet for offensive purposes.[11]
Other versions
Avengers Fairy Tales
Scott Lang is seen in the "Alice in Wonderland" issue of Avengers Fairy Tales, where he is the Caterpillar as a representation of Cassie's dead father.[volume & issue needed]
House of M
In House of M, Scott Lang is depicted dating Jessica Jones.[volume & issue needed]
MC2
In the MC2 universe, Scott Lang had retired from being Ant-Man, and was developing new technology that would give the powers of Ant-Man and the Wasp to a human (his daughter took the tech and became Stinger). Later, when Mainframe was severely damaged, Scott came out of retirement with the Ant-Man armor designed by Doctor Doom (Kistoff Vernard), and shrank to microscopic size to repair him from the inside. He realized that he still enjoyed being a hero, and stayed "un-retired" and joined A-Next.[volume & issue needed]
The Thunder Guard, a group of Nazi Avengers from an alternate universe who fought A-Next, included a mentally highly unstable version of Scott called "Pincer" who had killed that universe's version of Cassie.[52]
Ultimate Marvel
The Ultimate Marvel version of the character is David "Dave" Scotty, one of the Giant-Men that was utilized on the Ultimates' Reserves.[53] During a legion of vampires' attack, he was among those that guard the S.H.I.E.L.D. Triskelion. After vampires attack and bit him multiple times, Scotty turned into a vampire. In the ensuing battle, Dave gets killed by a fellow Giant-Man.[54]
The actual Ultimate version of Scott Lang is the second major version of Giant-Man. He appears as a member of the New Ultimates during a massive showdown between the Ultimates and the Avengers. Lang later helps both teams defeat Gregory Stark's forces in North Korea.[55]
Marvel Zombies
Scott Lang is seen with Nick Fury; he attempted to fight the zombies, but he is overwhelmed and turned, last seen screaming.[volume & issue needed] He is later seen as a zombie.[volume & issue needed] He is destroyed by the Power Cosmic Zombies again.[volume & issue needed]
What If?
In "What If Iron Man Lost the Armor Wars", Lang is captured while spying on Justin Hammer, and taken prisoner along with Cassie. When Hammer is later assassinated and his knowledge over the Iron Man armor claimed by A.I.M., Scott and Cassie are taken hostage by them as well, but are eventually freed by Stark clad in the Firepower armor.[56]
In other media
Television
- Scott Lang makes his animated debut in The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes, voiced by Crispin Freeman.[57] This version's backstory as a criminal to help his daughter and gets caught mostly remains the same. He first appears in the episode "To Steal an Ant-Man" where he steals the Ant-Man suit to steal what he owed William Cross. Scott met to pay off Cross, however, William thought that Scott was Ant-Man all along and alters the deal. When Hank Pym, Luke Cage and Iron Fist help, Lang gets his daughter to safety and then defeats Cross. Despite being willing to turn himself in, Scott is deemed worthy by Pym to be the new Ant-Man and is possibly offered a spot on the Heroes for Hire. Ant-Man later makes a non-voiced appearance in the finale "Avengers Assemble" as one of the reserve Avengers that helps take down Galactus's Heralds.
- Ant-Man appears in Avengers Assemble, voiced by Grant George. In the first season, he first appears as a minor character with Hank Pym's science-oriented background.[58] In the second season, the character is officially revealed to be Scott Lang with his own AI J.O.E.Y. (voiced by Roger Craig Smith) and he joins the Avengers during a massive battle with Ultron and plays a central role against the Squadron Supreme and Thanos.[59] Prior to season three, Scott went solo.
- Ant-Man appears in Ultimate Spider-Man: Web-Warriors, voiced again by Grant George. He is a guest teacher at the Triskelion's S.H.I.E.L.D. Academy where he demonstrates his powers by knocking down Spider-Man during a demonstration. When Nick Fury is taken over by Doctor Octopus's nanobots to get free from the Triskelion's brig, he, Spider-Man and Power Man shrink down to remove the Octobots from Fury's body while the others pursue Doctor Octopus. While fighting their way though various nanobots (modeled after the Beetle, the Lizard and the Green Goblin), Ant-Man, Spider-Man and Power Man make their way to the heart to get to Fury's brain. As Ant-Man and Power Man are left busy fighting the nanobots (where some combined into one robot), Spider-Man learns from Fury's conscious that Doctor Octopus has set the Triskelion's reactor to meltdown. Once the nanobots are destroyed, the reactor overload is averted and Doctor Octopus is defeated, Spider-Man and Ant-Man visit Fury in the Triskelion's infirmary where Ant-Man admitted that Spider-Man's recklessness stopped Doctor Octopus's plot.[60]
- Ant-Man appears in the television special Lego Marvel Super Heroes: Avengers Reassembled, voiced again by Grant George.[61]
- Ant-Man appears along with the Hulk in a Coke Mini commercial that premiered during Super Bowl 50, with Paul Rudd providing the voice of Ant-Man.[62]
Film
- Paul Rudd portrays Scott Lang in the 2015 Marvel Studios film Ant-Man, directed by Peyton Reed and written by Edgar Wright, Joe Cornish, Adam McKay and Rudd, based on a story by Wright and Cornish.[63] This version depicts Lang as the successor of Hank Pym as Ant-Man as well as an apprentice of Hank Pym.
- Rudd reprises the role in the film Captain America: Civil War (2016).[64] In the film, Lang is recruited by Captain America and fights alongside the Avengers against the Sokovia Accords. In that battle, Lang proves surprisingly formidable such as when he shrinks and enters Iron Man's armor to damage it internally before Stark realizes the intrusion. Eventually, he provides a distraction for Captain America and Winter Soldier to escape in the Quinjet to Siberia by increasing in size, becoming Giant-Man. After the battle, Lang is arrested and placed in The Raft. At the end of the film, Captain America breaks Lang and the others out of The Raft.
- Rudd will reprise his role as Ant-Man in the upcoming Ant-Man and the Wasp (2018).[65]
Video games
- The Scott Lang version of Ant-Man appears on Marvel Heroes, voiced by Grant George.[66]
- The Scott Lang version of Ant-Man appears as a playable character in Marvel: Avengers Alliance.[67]
- The Scott Lang version of Ant-Man appears in Marvel Contest of Champions,[68] and Marvel: Future Fight.[69]
- The Scott Lang version of Ant-Man is a playable character in Disney Infinity 3.0.[70]
- The Scott Lang incarnation of Ant-Man appears as a playable character in Lego Marvel's Avengers.[citation needed]
- The Scott Lang version of Ant-Man is playable in the mobile game Marvel Avengers Academy, voiced by Toby Turner.[71]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Rivera 2015.
- ↑ Lovette 2015.
- ↑ Beard 2012.
- ↑ Beard 2014.
- ↑ "Ant-Man" n.d..
- ↑ Marvel Premiere #47 (April 1979); Avengers #195 (May 1980)
- ↑ Avengers #181
- ↑ Marvel Premiere #47
- ↑ Enk 2014.
- ↑ Marvel Premiere #47-48
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 11.2 Iron Man #133
- ↑ Avengers #195-196
- ↑ Micronauts Vol. 1 #19-20
- ↑ Marvel Team-Up #103
- ↑ Iron Man #145
- ↑ Iron Man #151
- ↑ Iron Man #156
- ↑ Marvel Two-in-One #87
- ↑ Iron Man #225
- ↑ Avengers #223-224
- ↑ Rom #58-59
- ↑ Avengers #275-277
- ↑ Amazing Spider-Man Annual #24
- ↑ Iron Man Annual #12
- ↑ Fantastic Four #384
- ↑ Fantastic Four vol. 3 #43
- ↑ Paul Jenkins and Sean McKeever (w), Joe Bennett (p), Tom Palmer (i). "Spiral Staircase (Part Three)" Incredible Hulk v3, 32 (), Marvel Comics
- ↑ Avengers vol. 3 #62
- ↑ Avengers vol. 3 #76
- ↑ Alias #13-28
- ↑ Alias #16 (Jan. 2003)
- ↑ Alias #27
- ↑ Avengers #500
- ↑ Young Avengers #2
- ↑ Mighty Avengers #25
- ↑ Avengers: The Children's Crusade #5
- ↑ Avengers: The Children's Crusade #6
- ↑ Avengers: The Children's Crusade #7
- ↑ Defenders vol 4 #10 (September 2012)
- ↑ FF #1 (November 2012)
- ↑ FF Vol. 2
- ↑ FF (vol 2) #16
- ↑ Avengers World #16
- ↑ Ant-Man vol. 2 #1
- ↑ Ant-Man vol. 2 #2
- ↑ Ant-Man vol. 2 #3-4
- ↑ Ant-Man vol. 2 #5
- ↑ Ant-Man Annual Vol. 2 #1
- ↑ Ant-Man: Last Days #1
- ↑ Astonishing Ant-Man #1
- ↑ Astonishing Ant-Man #2
- ↑ A-Next #10
- ↑ Ultimates Annual
- ↑ Ultimate Comics: Avengers
- ↑ Ultimate Comics: Avengers vs. New Ultimates
- ↑ What If? vol. 2 #8
- ↑ Jackson 2015.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ "Ultimate Spider-Man: Web Warriors" n.d..
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lawrence 2015.
- ↑ "Marvel Studios Begins Production" 2015.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ "Grant George" n.d..
- ↑ Morse 2015.
- ↑ Chabala 2015.
- ↑ Cavanaugh 2015.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Citations
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External links
- Ant-Man (Scott Lang) at Marvel.com
- Marvel Directory: Ant Man II
- Articles using small message boxes
- Articles with unsourced statements from September 2009
- Articles with unsourced statements from October 2013
- Articles with unsourced statements from April 2009
- Articles with unsourced statements from March 2013
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles with unsourced statements from December 2015
- Comics characters introduced in 1979
- Characters created by David Michelinie
- Characters created by John Byrne
- Fictional characters from Florida
- Fictional characters who can change size
- Marvel Comics superheroes