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Ego the Living Planet

Ego the Living Planet
Art by John Byrne from Fantastic Four #234 (September 1981)

Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceCameo appearance: The Mighty Thor #132 (September 1966)
Full appearance: The Mighty Thor #133 (October 1966)
Created byStan Lee
Jack Kirby
In-story information
SpeciesSentient planet
Place of originBlack Galaxy
Team affiliationsNova Corps
Elders of the Universe
AbilitiesExceptional intellect
Matter manipulation
Vast psionic powers

Ego the Living Planet is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character first appeared in Thor #132 (September 1966) and was created by writer Stan Lee and artist Jack Kirby.[1]

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The character has made limited appearances in animation and đoạn phim games, while Kurt Russell portrayed the character in the live-action Marvel Cinematic Universe film Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 (2017), in which Ego claims đồ sộ be a Celestial and father of Peter Quill and Mantis. Russell also voiced alternate timeline versions of Ego in the Disney+ animated series What If...? (2021).

Publication history[edit]

Ego the Living Planet was initially introduced in The Mighty Thor #132 (September 1966), and was created by Jack Kirby.[2]

Kirby created Ego as a way of exploring his fascination with the expanse of the universe. Ego, the alien Kree, and The Colonizers immediately followed the creation of Galactus, thus establishing Marvel Comics' own "space age mythology".[3] As Kirby recalled in 1969, shortly after the character's debut, Ego's genesis came when:

I began đồ sộ experiment ...and that's how Ego came about. ... A planet that was alive; a planet that was intelligent. That was nothing new either because there had been other stories [about] live planets but that's not acceptable. ... [Y]ou would say, 'Yeah, that's wild,' but how tự you relate đồ sộ it? Why is it alive? So I felt somewhere out in the universe, the universe ... becomes denser and turns liquid—and that in this liquid, there was a giant multiple virus, and if [it] remained isolated for millions and millions of years, it would ... begin đồ sộ evolve by itself and it would begin đồ sộ think. By the time we reached it, it might be quite superior đồ sộ us—and that was Ego.[4]

The reader's first glimpse of Ego on the last page of Thor #132 is a full-page splash panel photo collage with Ego's human features superimposed on a bulbous, chaotic planetoid. Kirby had been using photo collages for several years; this image has been called "his most effective and freakish đồ sộ date."[5]

Ego returned as a protagonist in Thor #160–161 (Jan.–Feb. 1969) and made a guest appearance in #201. His origin is explored in Thor #228.

Following appearances in Fantastic Four #234–235 (Sept.–Oct. 1981) and Rom #69 (Aug. 1985), Ego had a recurring role in Silver Surfer vol. 3 #4–22 (1987–1989). The character returned in the 1991 Thor annual and issues #448–450 (June–Aug 1992).

Ego played a prominent role in the company-wide crossover storyline "Maximum Security", appearing in Avengers #35 (Dec. 2000); Maximum Security: Dangerous Planet (Oct. 2000); Iron Man #34–35 (Nov.–Dec. 2000); X-Men Unlimited #29 (Dec. 2000); Gambit #23 (Dec. 2000), and Maximum Security #1–3 (Dec. 2000 – Jan. 2001).

The character returned in Nova vol. 4 #20–30 and Astonishing Thor #1–5 (Nov 2010 – July 2011).

Ego the Living Planet also appeared in the Oni Press màu sắc Special.

Fictional character biography[edit]

1960s[edit]

Ego once told Thor that his existence was the result of a scientist merging with a planet when that planet's sun went nova.[6]

Inside the Black Galaxy, Ego's ambitions turn towards conquest. He starts absorbing space vessels and planets đồ sộ survive, and plans đồ sộ create armies of Anti-bodies đồ sộ conquer other worlds. This behavior attracted the attention of the Rigellian Colonizers, who feared that the nearby Ego would consume their homeworld. They asked the help of the Thunder God, Thor, đồ sộ defeat Ego. Accompanied by a Rigellian Recorder, Thor encountered Ego, fought his Anti-bodies, and stunned him with a powerful storm. Feeling humiliated by his defeat, Ego vowed never đồ sộ leave the Black Galaxy.[7] Several months later, a weakened Galactus invaded Ego's space and sought đồ sộ replenish his energy by consuming Ego. Thor aided Ego in battling Galactus and drove Galactus off. In gratitude, Ego allowed its surface đồ sộ become the new trang chính of the Wanderers; a group of various alien races whose planets had been the very first đồ sộ be devoured by Galactus billions of years ago.[8]

1970s[edit]

The Rigellian Tana Nile took a sample of Ego's khuông, in the hope that this could be used đồ sộ fertilize sterile worlds being considered for habitation.[9] However, this act drives Ego insane, and it soon gives in đồ sộ its primordial urges and absorbs the Wanderers, which causes Thor đồ sộ side with a returning Galactus. Assisted by ally, Hercules and Galactus's herald, Firelord, Thor holds Ego off until Galactus attaches a massive starship engine đồ sộ Ego's south pole, which drives the planet constantly through space and thereby prevents it from being a threat đồ sộ other planets and populated sections of the universe.[10]

1980s[edit]

Years later, Ego gains control of the engine and tracks Galactus đồ sộ Earth, seeking vengeance. Unable đồ sộ locate him, Ego attacks Earth. He causes massive destruction, which is later undone by a reality-altering mutant. The Fantastic Four attempted đồ sộ defeat Ego by removing the power cell from one of the attached propulsion engines, which the Thing attempts đồ sộ throw into Ego's "brain". In response, an angered Ego attempts đồ sộ counter with his remaining engines but, with one engine now deactivated, the other propels the now-out-of-control planet into the Sun, its gravitational pull breaking apart Ego's substance.[11]

Ego, however, slowly reforms from a few surviving particles and repairs the propulsion unit. Ego then digests a number of Dire Wraiths đồ sộ replenish its energy reserves, and battles the Space Knight Rom.[12]

Ego later joins the Elders of the Universe in a plan đồ sộ destroy Galactus. Ego is sidelined before the confrontation when he is defeated by the Silver Surfer.[13] Ego subsequently captures the Silver Surfer and attempts đồ sộ consume his energies.[14]

1990s[edit]

Ego attacks a Korbinite fleet and fights the hero Beta Ray Bill. Ego reveals đồ sộ Bill that Galactus's propulsion unit is driving Ego mad, and the fleet subsequently destroys the propulsion unit.[15] A sentient bio-verse, initially described as "Super-Ego", then begins đồ sộ consume Ego, but Ego eventually escapes.[16]

2000s[edit]

Driven mad by the Supreme Intelligence, Ego lashes out at other planets, destroying them while trying đồ sộ 'awaken' others lượt thích itself, until it is defeated in a battle with Professor X, the Silver Surfer and Cadre K.[17] Ego is subsequently captured and sent đồ sộ Earth as an "infant" in spore khuông.[18] As Ego grows, it begins đồ sộ consume the Earth, with the Supreme Intelligence intending đồ sộ allow it đồ sộ grow sánh that the Kree can take control of Ego and use it as a weapon against the rest of the universe. Quasar absorbs it đồ sộ prevent this.[19]

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When Quasar dies during the Annihilation war,[20] Ego was released back into the Universe, only đồ sộ be approached by the Worldmind đồ sộ join the new Nova Corps.[21] Ego supplants Worldmind and brainwashes the Corps. Nova manages đồ sộ defeat Ego and không lấy phí Worldmind by lobotomizing the Living Planet.[22] When Ego resurfaces his personality on his body toàn thân, Nova stargates Mindless Ones into Ego's brain, causing pain đồ sộ the Living Planet and forcing him đồ sộ stargate away.[23]

2010s[edit]

Ego learns he was one of two sentient bodies created by the Stranger for a science experiment, and that his brother Alter-Ego has been held in captivity by the Collector since birth. While Ego seeks a similar entity đồ sộ itself, the Stranger has arranged for Alter-Ego đồ sộ hate Ego, intending đồ sộ learn through their battle if freedom or captivity breeds a stronger will. Alter-Ego is wounded and loses mass when Ego is forced đồ sộ attack it in self-defense, but Thor intervenes before Ego can strike a killing blow. The remaining fragments of Alter-Ego become a moon of Ego, and the two begin đồ sộ travel together as a family.[24]

When Ego is infested by large insect-like creatures he hires Rocket Raccoon đồ sộ eradicate them.[25]

Galactus, changed into the Life-Bringer by the Ultimates, encounters Ego after regaining his strength after a battle with the new universal construct Lagos. Ego attacks Galactus as he journeys đồ sộ his inner brain at the center of the planet, however loses control of his constructs, which realize that Galactus is not a threat. Ego then reveals that before his creation by the Stranger, his consciousness was that of a man named Egros, similar đồ sộ Galactus' former self Galan. After formally meeting one another and putting aside their past animosities, Galactus uses his Life-Bringer abilities đồ sộ khuông a body toàn thân for the rest of Ego, who now calls himself Ego-Prime. Ego-Prime then joins Eternity Watch, a group Galactus has put together đồ sộ khuyễn mãi giảm giá with the First Firmament, the first iteration of all that is, who had chained Eternity.[26] Ego-Prime participated in the final battle against the First Firmament's forces. Following the First Firmament's defeat, Ego returned đồ sộ his normal antics, detaching his new body toàn thân and returning đồ sộ his planetoid khuông.[27]

2020s[edit]

Ego later allowed a Skrullian cult named the Brethren of the Forgotten Flame đồ sộ take shelter in its surface and displaced itself đồ sộ a specific location in the Galactic Rim sánh they could follow a prophetic ritual that required them đồ sộ observe a constellation comprising the brightest stars in three separate Skrullian constellations. The sudden appearance of Ego in the Galactic Rim prompted an investigation by a survey team which was killed by the Skulls which in turns prompted the Guardians of the Galaxy đồ sộ investigate and stumbled into the cult.[28]

The team quickly found out the cult was committing a mass sacrifice, which encased the Living Planet in a dark shell. Once Ego finally hatched from the shell it was possessed by the ruler of the Dark Dimension and the cult's object of worship, the dread Dormammu.[29]

Powers and abilities[edit]

The living planet named Ego has been called a "bioverse". Every part of its substance, including the atmosphere itself, is alive as much as it is controlled by the consciousness of Ego. It often transforms its surface đồ sộ appear as a giant face đồ sộ address powerful beings and can shape its terrain đồ sộ suit the circumstances, displaying plant-like growth, manipulating weather, generating earthquakes, volcanoes, geysers, and canyons. It can transform its surface into a dead world or a beautiful paradise đồ sộ lure unwitting space travelers đồ sộ its surface and has various internal features similar đồ sộ a biological lifeform, lượt thích large tunnels that have been compared đồ sộ arteries and its consciousness is inside a giant, brain-like organ deep below its surface. To defend itself, it extrudes tentacles that reach out into space and produce vast numbers of Antibodies: non-sentient humanoid warriors that it mentally commands. Ego can also create a protective shield of solid clouds đồ sộ defend from space attacks, raise its internal temperature đồ sộ burn life forms inside, has digestive organs đồ sộ absorb living beings, and an immune system that lets him release the previously mentioned Antibodies đồ sộ attack intruders.[30] It can also control its own radiation and magnetic fields đồ sộ fool scanners or attract ships.

Ego can generate vast psionic energies that rival a hungered Galactus at their peak. It can project energy blasts đồ sộ obliterate starships or planets,[31] read minds and scan their biological structure,[32] and communicate đồ sộ sentient beings using telepathy. If its energy reserves are greatly reduced, Ego can restore them by devouring planets, tapping into stars, or digesting large numbers of living beings. Its psionic abilities are also how it controls its biosphere.

Additionally, Ego is exceptionally intelligent, although as its name suggests, it harbors an extreme superiority complex and can be emotional if thwarted. For a while, Ego was propelled through space via the engine Galactus implanted on its south pole, but eventually gained control of it through its vast mental powers, allowing it đồ sộ travel through hyperspace at enormous speeds. However, the device was later removed[33] and mastered how đồ sộ travel at warp speeds without it.

Other versions[edit]

Amalgam Comics[edit]

In the Amalgam Comics published jointly by Marvel Comics and DC Comics, Oa the Living Planet, an amalgamation version of Ego and DC's Planet Oa, was featured under the Amalgam Comics imprint in Iron Lantern #1, where he is the source of power for the Green Lantern Corps.[34] Another version of Ego in the Amalgam universe appeared in Thorion of the New Asgods as Ego-Mass, an amalgamation of Ego and the Source Wall.

Exiles[edit]

Ego appears in Exiles #53 (December 2004). Set in the universe of Earth-4162, Ego implants the Seeds of Awareness in the Earth in an attempt đồ sộ create another living planet. The Fantastic Four of this universe, along with the Exiles, are able đồ sộ convince the now sentient Earth đồ sộ oppose Ego. Blink kills Ego by teleporting a mining drill into the Living Planet's brain.[35]

Marvel Adventures[edit]

Ego appears in Marvel Adventures: The Avengers #12 (June 2007), a series created for younger readers. In this story, Ego causes natural disasters on Earth when he arrives đồ sộ woo Giant Girl.

Marvel Zombies 2[edit]

In Marvel Zombies 2, Ego is one of the last few survivors of a reality-spanning zombie rampage. However, he is found and eaten.[36]

King Thor[edit]

When Galactus the World Butcher was bonded đồ sộ All-Black the Necrosword, Ego arrived and suddenly the Necrosword left Galactus and bonded đồ sộ Ego, becoming Ego the Necroplanet and with its power he ate Galactus whole. And while eating Cosmic Sharks, he was approached by an Asgardian worm who challenged Ego đồ sộ fight, but Ego quickly laughed out loud of the fact that a worm thought that it could defeat him, but then Ego got completely destroyed by the worm after the worm (King Loki in disguise) whispered word of madness for the ensuing millennia.[37]

In other media[edit]

Television[edit]

  • Ego the Living Planet appears in the Fantastic Four episode "To Battle the Living Planet", voiced by Kay E. Kuter.[citation needed]
  • Ego the Living Planet appears in Silver Surfer, voiced by Roy Lewis.[citation needed]
  • Ego the Living Planet makes a cameo in The Super Hero Squad Show episode "World War Witch!".[citation needed]
  • Ego the Living Planet appears in Hulk and the Agents of S.M.A.S.H., voiced by Kevin Michael Richardson.[38] This version is controlled by Little Ego, a smaller version of its outer self that requires connection đồ sộ it đồ sộ survive. If anyone else takes control of the host planet, it will assume the controller's head's appearance.

Marvel Cinematic Universe[edit]

Kurt Russell as Ego in the 2017 film Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2

Ego appears in truyền thông media mix in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, portrayed by Kurt Russell.[39] This version is Peter Quill's and Mantis's biological father and claims đồ sộ be a Celestial. Additionally, he came into existence millions of years ago and learned đồ sộ use his cosmic powers đồ sộ manipulate matter and khuông an entire planet around himself as well as utilize many resources and a humanoid avatar đồ sộ interact with other sentient beings. However, he became bored of immortality and disappointed with a universe full of inferior life and sets out đồ sộ remake the universe in his image via seedlings planted on various worlds.

  • In the live-action film Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, Ego finds his son, explains his plan, and reveals he requires the power of another Celestial đồ sộ activate the seedlings. To achieve this, Ego mated with various species until a suitable offspring was conceived đồ sộ help put his plan into action. Quill was the only offspring đồ sộ share enough of Ego's power đồ sộ facilitate. However, Quill rebels against Ego after learning that Ego had killed his mother. In the over, Quill and the Guardians of the Galaxy destroy Ego and foil his plan.
  • Alternate timeline versions of Ego appear in the Disney+ animated series What If...?.
    • In the episode, "What If... T'Challa Became a Star-Lord?",[citation needed] a variant of Ego visits Peter Quill and introduces himself. Subsequently in the episode, "What If... the Watcher Broke His Oath?",[citation needed] Ego begins đồ sộ drain Quill's cosmic powers and terraform the universe, but is foiled by Star-Lord T'Challa.
    • In the episode, "What If... Ultron Won?",[citation needed] another variant of Ego is killed by Ultron during his chiến dịch of destruction throughout the universe.

Video games[edit]

  • Ego the Living Planet appears in Lego Marvel Super Heroes.[40]
  • Ego the Living Planet appears in Lego Marvel Super Heroes 2,[41] with the MCU version being a playable character via the Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 DLC.[citation needed] While the heroes are planning đồ sộ bring Knowhere đồ sộ Chronopolis, Kang the Conqueror interferes by creating a portal for Ego đồ sộ come through. However, Ego seeks đồ sộ make Kang and the heroes pay for their insolence and incompetence respectively. Eventually, the portal that brought Ego đồ sộ Chronopolis is closed, stopping the living planet.

Music[edit]

American stoner metal band Monster Magnet recorded a tuy vậy dedicated đồ sộ the character called "Ego, the Living Planet" on the album Dopes đồ sộ Infinity.[citation needed]

Reception[edit]

In his 1972 book Outlaws of America, author Roger Lewis argues that Ego the Living Planet reflected risks đồ sộ civilization, humans and planet Earth that people were contemplating in the 1960s, when he was initially conceived.[42]

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The 2007 storyline "Ego the Loving Planet", which ran in Marvel Adventures: The Avengers #12, featuring Ego in a main capacity, and was praised by Ray Tate of ComicsBulletin for its simultaneous inventiveness and logical sense.[43]

In August 2009, Time listed Ego as one of the "Top 10 Oddest Marvel Characters".[44]

In the năm ngoái book Marvel Comics in the 1960s, Pierre Comtois stated that, "With the creation of Ego [Lee and Kirby], unbelievably, managed đồ sộ equal if not top their introduction of Galactus only a few months before. Not just a living planet, but a living "bio-verse", Ego presents the reader with a menace sánh gigantic, sánh incalculable that it dwarfed even a character with the power of a god."[45]

See also[edit]

  • Mogo
  • Boltzmann brain
  • Gaia (Foundation universe)

References[edit]

  1. ^ DeFalco, Tom; Sanderson, Peter; Brevoort, Tom; Teitelbaum, Michael; Wallace, Daniel; Darling, Andrew; Forbeck, Matt; Cowsill, Alan; Bray, Adam (2019). The Marvel Encyclopedia. DK Publishing. p. 121. ISBN 978-1-4654-7890-0.
  2. ^ Brevoort, Tom; DeFalco, Tom; Manning, Matthew K.; Sanderson, Peter; Wiacek, Win (2017). Marvel Year By Year: A Visual History. DK Publishing. p. 118. ISBN 978-1465455505.
  3. ^ Gartland, Mike. "A Failure đồ sộ Communicate: Part Two". Jack Kirby Collector (22). Reprinted in Morrow, John, ed. (2006). The Collected Jack Kirby Collector, Volume 5. TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 196. ISBN 1-893905-57-8.
  4. ^ "'There is Something Stupid in Violence as Violence'". No. 30–31. Jack Kirby interview, The Nostalgia Journal (interview conducted early 1969). November 1976. Reprinted in Milo, George, ed. (2002). The Comics Journal Library, Volume One: Jack Kirby. Fantagraphics Books. p. 7. ISBN 1-56097-466-4.
  5. ^ Wells, John (2014). American Comic Book Chronicles: 1965-1969. TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 91. ISBN 978-1605490557.
  6. ^ Thor #228. Marvel Comics.
  7. ^ Thor #132–133 (Sept.–Oct. 1966). Marvel Comics.
  8. ^ Thor #160–161 (Jan.–Feb. 1969). Marvel Comics.
  9. ^ Thor #201. Marvel Comics.
  10. ^ Thor #227–228 (Sept.–Oct. 1977). Marvel Comics.
  11. ^ Fantastic Four #234–235 (Sept.–Oct. 1981). Marvel Comics.
  12. ^ Rom #69 (Aug. 1985). Marvel Comics.
  13. ^ Silver Surfer vol. 3 #4 (Oct. 1987). Marvel Comics.
  14. ^ Silver Surfer vol. 3 #22 (Apr. 1989). Marvel Comics.
  15. ^ Thor Annual #16 (1991). Marvel Comics.
  16. ^ Thor #448–450 (June–Aug. 1992). Marvel Comics.
  17. ^ Maximum Security: Dangerous Planet (Oct. 2000). Marvel Comics.
  18. ^ Iron Man #34–35 (Nov.–Dec. 2000). Marvel Comics.
  19. ^ Maximum Security #1–3 (Dec. 2000 – Feb. 2001). Marvel Comics.
  20. ^ Annihilation: Nova #4 (2006). Marvel Comics.
  21. ^ Nova #20. Marvel Comics.
  22. ^ Nova #23–25. Marvel Comics.
  23. ^ Nova #29–30. Marvel Comics.
  24. ^ Astonishing Thor #1–5 (Nov. 2010 – July 2011). Marvel Comics.
  25. ^ Young, Skottie (w) Parker, Jake (a). Rocket Raccoon vol. 2 #6, Marvel Comics.
  26. ^ The Ultimates 2 #8
  27. ^ The Ultimates 2 #100
  28. ^ Guardians of the Galaxy vol. 6 #14
  29. ^ Guardians of the Galaxy #15
  30. ^ Flubb, J.A. "The Great Kirby Science Fiction Concepts". Jack Kirby Collector (15): 4–9. Reprinted in Morrow, John, ed. (1999). The Collected Jack Kirby Collector, Volume 3. TwoMorrows Publishing. pp. 132–133. ISBN 1-893905-02-0.
  31. ^ Maximum Security #1. Marvel Comics.
  32. ^ Thor #133. Marvel Comics.
  33. ^ Fantastic Four #234–235 (Sept–Oct 1981). Marvel Comics.
  34. ^ Oa the Living Planet at The Appendix đồ sộ the Handbook of the Marvel Universe
  35. ^ Exiles #53 (Dec 2004). Marvel Comics.
  36. ^ Marvel Zombies 2 #1 (December 2007). Marvel Comics.
  37. ^ Thor (vol. 4)
  38. ^ "Ego the Living Planet Voice – Mighty Thor franchise | Behind The Voice Actors". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved December 23, 2019. Check mark indicates role has been confirmed using screenshots of closing credits and other reliable sources.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  39. ^ Martston, George (July 23, 2016). "STAR-LORD's FATHER Revealed ... James Gunn Explains in Detail". Newsarama. Archived from the original on May 14, 2017.
  40. ^ "Lego Marvel Super Heroes preview and interview – from Iron Man đồ sộ Squirrel Girl". Metro. September 11, 2013.
  41. ^ Marnell, Blair (May 27, 2017), "Lego Marvel Super Heroes 2 Trailer Introduces Kang and a Crazy Lineup of Heroes Archived 2017-12-28 at the Wayback Machine," Nerdist News. Retrieved June 7, 2017
  42. ^ Roger Lewis (1972). Outlaws of America. Penguin.
  43. ^ Tate, Ray (2007-04-21). "Marvel Adventures #12 Review". Comics Bulletin. Archived from the original on 2009-10-01. Retrieved 2009-01-20.
  44. ^ "Top 10 Oddest Marvel Characters". Time. August 31, 2009.
  45. ^ Comtois, Pierre (2015). Marvel Comics in the 1960s: An Issue By Issue Field Guide đồ sộ a Pop Culture Phenomenon. TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 140. ISBN 978-1-60549-016-8.

External links[edit]

  • Ego the Living Planet at Marvel.com
  • Ego the Living Planet at Marvel Comics Database Project