This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 208.54.7.171 (talk) at 15:35, 8 December 2011 (rvt - WP:OR). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Revision as of 15:35, 8 December 2011 by 208.54.7.171 (talk) (rvt - WP:OR)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff) Comics characterThanos | |
---|---|
Promotional art by Jim Starlin for Thanos #4 (March 2004) | |
Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | Iron Man #55 (Feb. 1973) |
Created by | Jim Starlin |
In-story information | |
Species | Eternal Mutant |
Place of origin | Titan |
Team affiliations | Infinity Watch Secret Defenders Annihilation Wave |
Notable aliases | The Mad Titan Avatar of Death |
Abilities | Superhuman strength, stamina, durability, longevity and intelligence Energy manipulation Telekinesis Teleportation |
Thanos is a fictional character that appears in comic books and other media published by Marvel Comics. The character first appeared in Iron Man #55 (Feb. 1973) and was created by writer-artist Jim Starlin.
Debuting in the Bronze Age of comic books, the character has featured in over three decades of Marvel continuity and a self-titled series. The character's name is a derivation of Thanatos, the personification of death and mortality in Greek mythology. One of his more prominent storylines to date—the Infinity Gauntlet series—portrayed him as a mad cosmic tyrant bent on slaying half of all sentiences existing then in Marvel's multiverse in order to appease the Marvel Universe's actual embodied personification of Death in an attempt to win its love.
Thanos has consistently recurred as a powerful villain, and has been featured across nearly Marvel's entire product line, including animated television series, arcade and video games, toys and trading cards.
Origin of the character
Writer-artist Jim Starlin originally conceived Thanos of Titan during college psychology classes. As Starlin described:
I went to college between doing U.S. military service and getting work in comics, and there was a psych class and I came up with Thanos ... and Drax the Destroyer, but I'm not sure how he fit into it, just anger management probably. So I came up to Marvel and Roy asked if I wanted to do an issue of Iron Man. I felt that this may be my only chance ever to do a character, not having the confidence that my career was going to last anything longer than a few weeks. So they got jammed into it. Thanos was a much thinner character and Roy suggested beefing him up, so he's beefed up quite a bit from his original sketches ... and later on I liked beefing him up so much that he continued to grow in size.
Although there are parallels with Jack Kirby's Darkseid, Starlin has said this was not quite the case:
Kirby had done the New Gods, which I thought was terrific. He was over at DC at the time. I came up with some things that were inspired by that. You'd think that Thanos was inspired by Darkseid, but that was not the case when I showed up. In my first Thanos drawings, if he looked like anybody, it was Metron. I had all these different gods and things I wanted to do, which became Thanos and the Titans. Roy took one look at the guy in the Metron-like chair and said : "Beef him up! If you're going to steal one of the New Gods, at least rip off Darkseid, the really good one!"
Publication history
Thanos' first appearance was in an extended storyline that spanned Iron Man #55 (Feb 1973), Captain Marvel vol 1 #25-33 (bi-monthly: Mar. 1972 - July 1974), Daredevil vol 1 #107 (Jan. 1974), and Avengers vol 1 #125 (July 1974). When he returned in Strange Tales #178-181 (Feb-Aug 1975), it began a second extended storyline that continued in Warlock #9-11 (Oct 1975 – Jan 1976), Marvel Team Up # #55 (March 1977), and the 1977 Annuals for Avengers and Marvel Two-in-One. He was also featured in a short backup story in Logan's Run #6 (June 1977) and had a small role in the Death of Captain Marvel graphic novel (April 1982).
The character next appeared in Silver Surfer vol 3 #34 (Feb 1990) and had a recurring role through issue 50 (June 1991). After starring in Thanos Quest #1-2 (Sept – Oct 1990), he played a villainous role in Infinity Gauntlet #1-6 (July – Dec 1991). During a recurring role in Warlock and the Infinity Watch #1-42 (Feb. 1992 - Aug. 1995), he made crossover appearances in Infinity War #1-6 (June 1992), Infinity Crusade #1-6 (June 1993), Silver Surfer vol 3 #86-88, Warlock Chronicles #6-8, Thor vol 1 #468-471, Secret Defenders#11-14 (Jan –Apr 1994), Cosmic Powers #1-6 (March – July 1994), and Cosmic Powers Unlimited #1 (May 1995).
Following roles in Ka-Zar vol. 2, #4–10 and 1997 annual, the X-Man and Hulk 1998 annual, and the Small X-pectations one-shot, Thanos was featured heavily in Thor vol. 3, #21–25 (Mar - July 2000) and 2000 annual. The character was next used in Captain Marvel vol. 4, #17–19 (Jun - Aug. 2001), Avengers: Celestial Quest 1-8 (2001–2002), and the Infinity Abyss #1-6 (2002).
Thanos received an eponymous title in 2004 that ran for 12 issues. In 2006, he played an important role in Annihilation: Silver Surfer #1-4 and Annihilation #1-6. The character was re-introduced in Guardians of the Galaxy vol 2 #24-25 (April –May 2010) and played a major role in The Thanos Imperative: Ignition (June 2010) and The Thanos Imperative #1-6 (July – Dec 2010).
Fictional character biography
Thanos was born on Titan, a moon of Saturn, to Mentor and Sui-San. Thanos is born with the Deviant gene and as resembles the Deviants—the Eternals' cousin race—more than his own people. Although treated fairly by his race, he is mindful of his appearance and becomes distant, only keeping company with his brother Eros (Starfox). During his childhood, he becomes fascinated with nihilism and death, eventually falling in love with its embodiment, Mistress Death. As an adult, Thanos uses bionics and mysticism to become the most powerful of the Titan, and is often referred to as the Mad Titan.
The First Thanos War
Wishing to impress Mistress Death, Thanos gathers an army of villainous aliens and begins a nuclear bombardment of Titan that kills millions of his race. He then travels to Earth in search of the Cosmic Cube. Prior to landing, his vessel destroys a nearby car to prevent anyone from becoming aware of his existence. Unknown to Thanos, two of the family members in the vehicle survive—the father's spirit is preserved by the Titanian cosmic entity Chronos and is given a new form as Drax the Destroyer while the daughter is found by Thanos' father Mentor and is raised to become the heroine Moondragon. Thanos eventually locates the Cube and wills it to make him omnipotent. Captain Marvel, with the aid of Mantis and ISAAC, are able to defeat him by destroying the cube, which Thanos had left unguarded.
The Second Thanos War
Thanos later comes to the aid of Adam Warlock in a battle against the Magus. During this alliance Thanos secretly siphons off the energies of the Soul Gem that Warlock possesses. Thanos uses this energy to power a weapon capable of destroying a star. Thanos battles Earth's superheroes and is turned to stone. Thanos's spirit appears to accompany Captain Marvel's soul into the realm of Death.
The Infinity Gauntlet
A resurrected Thanos collects the Infinity Gems once again and creates the Infinity Gauntlet, which makes him omnipotent. He attempts to kill half the living things in the universe, but is defeated by Adam Warlock. Warlock reveals that Thanos has always arranged for himself to be defeated because he knows he is not worthy of ultimate power. Thanos joins Warlock in the Infinity Watch and helps him to defeat his evil and good sides, as well as to cure Thor of “Warrior Madness.”
Thanos later recruits a team of Earth-bound super-villains and puts them under the field leadership of Geatar in a mission to extract a robot containing the knowledge of a universal library. Thanos uses information from the robot to battle Tyrant, a failed creation of Galactus.
Thanos is somehow trapped in an alternate dimension and employs the aid of the brother of Ka-Zar, Parnival Plunder, in an attempted escape, but fails. Thanos attempts to use the Hulk as a physical anchor back to the Earth-616 universe but is again unsuccessful. Thanos is somehow freed and quickly comes into conflict with Thor. During their battle, Thanos decimates the planet Rigel-3.
The Infinity Abyss
Thanos then uses the heroes Thor and Genis-Vell (Captain Marvel's son) against the death god Walker, who attempts to woo Mistress Death and then destroy the entity after being rejected. Thanos then devises a plan to become the All-Father of a new race of Gods created by himself. Thanos, however, finds himself opposed by the Avengers, former member Mantis, and her son Quoi, apparently destined to be the Celestial Messiah. Thanos abandons this plan after having to unite with Mistress Death to destroy the Rot, an aberration in deep space that is apparently their offspring. Thanos once conducted extensive research on genetics, and after studying many of the universe's heroes and villains cloned them and gene-spliced his own DNA into the subjects. Although he later abandons the project, five clones survive, being versions of Professor X, Iron Man, Gladiator, Doctor Strange, and Galactus respectively. A sixth and unnamed version of Thanos also appears, and it is revealed the incarnations of Thanos encountered by Thor and Ka-Zar were his clones. The true Thanos—with the aid of Adam Warlock, Gamora, Pip the Troll, Spider-Man, Captain Marvel, and Dr. Strange—destroys the remaining clones.
Thanos decides to atone for the destruction of Rigel-3, and agrees to aid a colony of Rigellians in evacuating their planet before Galactus can consume it. During the course of this mission Thanos learns Galactus is collecting the Infinity Gems in an effort to end his universal hunger. Thanos later learns Galactus is being manipulated by a cosmic threat known as Hunger, which feeds on entire universes, into freeing it. Thanos unsuccessfully battles Galactus in an effort to stop him from freeing the entity, but when Hunger emerges the two team up to defeat it.
Thanos journeys to the Kyln, an intergalactic prison. On his way there he meets Death, who for the first time in their long history speaks directly with him. She says she is worth his efforts to woo, but that he must offer her something other than death. At the Kyln he meets Star-Lord and the Shi'ar warrior Gladiator, who are both prisoners. He encounters the Beyonder, who has been rendered amnesiac by his/her choice to assume a mortal female form. Thanos battles the Beyonder and causes her mind to shut down leaving her power trapped within a comatose mortal body, which he instructs the Kyln officers to keep on life support indefinitely in order to prevent the Beyonder from once again being reborn.
Thanos then departs the Kyln in the company of Skreet, a chaos-mite he freed from the prison in a quest to seek the Fallen, a former Herald of Galactus. Thanos resurrects the ex-herald and places him under his complete mental control.
Annihilation
Main article: Annihilation (comics)During the Annihilation War Thanos allies himself with the genocidal villain Annihilus. When the Annihilation Wave destroys the Kyln, Thanos sends the Fallen to check on the status of the Beyonder, whose mortal form he finds has perished. Before the Fallen can report back to Thanos it encounters Tenebrous and Aegis—two of Galactus' ancient enemies. Thanos convinces Tenebrous and Aegis to join the Annihilation Wave in order to get revenge on Galactus, and they subsequently defeat the World Devourer and the Silver Surfer. Annihilus desires the secret of the Power Cosmic and asks Thanos to study Galactus. Once Thanos learns Annihilus' true goal is to use the Power Cosmic to destroy all life and remain the sole survivor, he decides to free Galactus. Drax the Destroyer kills Thanos before he can do so. During a climactic battle with Annihilus, Nova is near death and sees Thanos standing with Mistress Death as her apparent consort.
The Thanos Imperative
Main article: The Thanos ImperativeA cocoon protected by the Universal Church of Truth is revealed to be hiding Thanos, who has been chosen by Oblivion to be the new Avatar of Death. Resurrected before his mind could be fully formed, Thanos goes on a mindless rampage before being captured by the Guardians of the Galaxy
Thanos is the Guardians' only hope against the invading Cancerverse, and Star-Lord releases him to let him help. In the Cancerverse, only Thanos can slay the undying creatures that dwell there. Upon learning that he is unable to die, Thanos surrenders to Mar-Vell in return for granting him death. When Mar-Vell attempts to kill Thanos, Death is able to kill Mar-vell first. The Cancerverse begins to collapse, and Thanos is trapped in it with Nova (comics) and Star-Lord.
Powers and abilities
Thanos is a mutant member of the race of superhumans known as the Titanian Eternals. The character possesses abilities common to the Eternals, but in some cases far beyond any other known member of his race; acquired through a combination of his mutant Eternal heritage, bionic amplification, mysticism, and the entity Death. He has demonstrated enormous superhuman strength, stamina, and particularly durability; is able to absorb and project vast quantities of cosmic energy; is virtually ageless and immortal; does not need food, drink, or oxygen; and is capable of certain telekinesis, as well as telepathy and matter manipulation. The advanced technology within his transportation chairs includes force field projection, time travel, movement through alternate universes, space flight, and teleportation over interstellar distances. Thanos is an accomplished hand-to-hand combatant, having been trained in the art of war on Titan.
Thanos possesses superhuman intellect (he considers his mind his greatest weapon) and has knowledge of Celestial and other alien technology. Thanos is a genius in virtually all known fields of advanced science and has created technology far exceeding contemporary Earth science. He is also a master strategist and sometimes utilizes a space vessel called Sanctuary II as a base of operations.
Other versions
Ultimate
The Ultimate Marvel imprint title Ultimate Fantastic Four features an alternate universe version of Thanos who is the ruler of Acheron, a vast empire consisting of thousands of worlds that exist in another plane of existence. His son is Ronan the Accuser, and is in possession of a Cosmic Cube.
Earth X
In the alternate universe limited series Earth X, Thanos dwells in the Realm of the Dead with the entity Death.
Marvel: The End
When an ancient Egyptian pharaoh stumbles upon a source of cosmic power tied into the dawn and end of time and subsequently returns to Earth centuries later, Thanos recruits the Defenders to seek out the source of the pharaoh's power and eventually wrests control of it from him. Thanos uses the power to fix any damage done by the pharaoh (which had included the deaths of most of Earth's major hero teams such as the X-Men, Avengers and Fantastic Four) and then once again gives up his physical form to take control of the universe. Adam Warlock convinces Thanos to voluntarily relinquish the power, but as a result of its origins with the dawn and end of time, Thanos emerges having experienced the entire history of the universe and claims he will no longer seek universal conquest.
Marvel Zombies
Thanos features in the limited series Marvel Zombies 2, set in the alternate universe of Earth-2149. Having been "zombified", the character is killed by the cosmic-powered Hulk after an altercation over food.
What If?
In an alternate version of the Infinity Gauntlet storyline featured in the title What If?, where Thanos was only opposed by the New Fantastic Four consisting of Spider-Man, Wolverine, Hulk and Iron Man (the last replacing Ghost Rider after he was one of Thanos's victims), Thanos was tricked by Wolverine into letting his guard down long enough for Wolverine to cut off Thanos's arm. Spider-Man then used the Gauntlet to undo Thanos's actions.
Marvel/DC crossover
In Green Lantern VS Silver Surfer, Thanos, discovering a rift into the DC Universe- created by the destruction of Oa-, attempts to trick Green Lantern Kyle Rayner into helping him harness Oa's power so that he can use it to unmake existence and be united with Death. However, his efforts are interrupted by Hal Jordan- currently possessed by Parallax- and the Silver Surfer, he and Parallax briefly clashing- Parallax's own powers further enhanced after a donation of energy from the Surfer- before Kyle is able to siphon off their power and transfer it into the Surfer.
In the sequel, DC vs. Marvel, Thanos clashes with Darkseid, his DC counterpart, in a prolonged battle, before the fight is interrupted by Thor, Captain Marvel, Wonder Woman, Storm, Green Lantern, and the Silver Surfer.
Amalgam
When the clashing DC and Marvel universes merged into the Amalgam Comics Universe, Thanos merged with Darkseid to become Thanoseid.
In other media
Television
- Thanos features in the animated television series Silver Surfer voiced by Gary Krawford. Owing to the Fox's broadcast standards, Thanos is depicted as a worshipper of a female personification of chaos rather than death.
- Thanos is featured in The Super Hero Squad Show voiced by Steven Blum in Season One and by Jim Cummings in Season Two. In "If This Be My Thanos," he appears before Doctor Doom offering the Infinity Gems if he can help him obtain a specific item from the Baxter Building. He alongside Doctor Doom, MODOK, Abomination, and Trapster attack the Baxter Building while the Super Hero Squad and the Fantastic Four were busy fighting the Skrulls. When the Super Hero Squad and the Fantastic Four returned to help Falcon and H.E.R.B.I.E., the Skrull ship arrived and started to beam up Thanos. It turned out that the Thanos that Doctor Doom was helping was actually a Skrull Con-Man in disguise. In "This Al Dente Earth," the real Thanos was seen when Iron Man was thrown on the window sill of his spaceship and then wiped off. Thanos has been confirmed to be the primary villain in Season Two as he will seek the six Infinity Gems in order to prove his superiority to Nebula and gain supremacy over the universe. In the two-part episode "Another Order of Evil," he finds the Infinity Gauntlet when Captain Marvel arrives on his way to a peace conference between the Kree and the Skrull. Thanos ends up using the Soul Gem to suck Captain Marvel into it. He then plots to use the Soul Gem to cause the Kree and the Skrull to fight each other. He then tried to do the same to the Super Hero Squad only to be stopped by Scarlet Witch (who also manages to free Captain Marvel from the Soul Gem). In the episode "World War Witch," Thanos obtains the Time Gem and tries to send the Space Helicarrier to another time only for Scarlet Witch to end up sent to the World War II era. In the episode "Fate of Destiny", Thanos finally obtained all of the Infinity Stones, but soon after, he lost the Infinity Gauntlet to the Silver Surfer (who was corrupted by the Infinity Sword) and became trapped in the Soul Stone with Adam Warlock, whom he had imprisoned once before. The two appear in the rest of the season in cameos as a "sitcom duo" laying in a bunk bed with Thanos talking about starting a chicken farm and expressing his love of chickens before finally being freed in the episode "The Final Battle," where they go ahead with the farm idea.
Video games
- Thanos appears as the main antagonist in Marvel Super Heroes and War of the Gems, but he is playable in Marvel vs. Capcom 2: New Age of Heroes.
- Thanos is briefly mentioned in the future part of Marvel: Ultimate Alliance. When it comes to freeing Odin from his dark magic machine confinement in Castle Doom, Uatu mentions that Thanos will seek to conquer Earth in the near future. If Odin is freed, his intervention will prevent Thanos from enslaving Earth in the near future. If not, the Earth will pay a heavy price if Odin will refuse to help Thor fight Thanos, as Thanos will end up enslaving Earth, taking centuries for it to be liberated from his tyranny.
- Thanos is the main antagonist in Marvel Super Hero Squad: The Infinity Gauntlet.
Toys
- Toy Biz; Diamond Select Toys; Bowen Designs and Eaglemoss have also released mini-busts and statues of the character.
- Thanos is the 4th special figurine in The Classic Marvel Figurine Collection.
- Thanos is included as a collectible figure from the board game Heroscape featured in the Marvel crossover set.
- Thanos has had two figures made for the Heroclix miniatures game, the first in the Infinity Challenge set, the second in the Supernova set.
- Hasbro has came out with a Thanos in the Mighty Muggs line as an exclusive.
- Hasbro added a Thanos figure to its Marvel Super Hero Squad line in Fall 2010.
- Hasbro once again released a Thanos figure, this time in the Marvel Universe Line in Fall 2010.
Collected editions
A number of the stories featuring Thanos have been collected into trade paperbacks:
- The Life of Captain Marvel (collects Iron Man #55, Captain Marvel #25-34, and Marvel Feature #12, 1991, ISBN 087135635X)
- Essential Avengers: Volume 6 (includes Captain Marvel #33 and The Avengers #125 and 135, 576 pages, February 2008, ISBN 0-7851-3058-6)
- The Greatest Battles of the Avengers (includes Avengers Annual #7, 156 pages, December 1993, ISBN 0871359812)
- Essential Marvel Two-in-One: Volume 2 (includes Marvel Two-in-One Annual #2, 568 pages, July 2007, ISBN 0-7851-2698-8)
- Marvel Masterworks Warlock: Volume 2 (includes Warlock (vol. 1) #9-11, 15, Avengers Annual #7 and Marvel Two-in-One Annual #2, hardcover, 320 pages, June 2009, ISBN 0-7851-3511-1)
- Silver Surfer: Rebirth Of Thanos (collects Silver Surfer #34-38, The Thanos Quest miniseries, and "The Final Flower!" from Logan's Run #6, 224 pages, softcover, April 2006, ISBN 0-7851-2046-7, hardcover, August 2010, ISBN 0-7851-4478-1)
- Infinity Gauntlet (collects Infinity Gauntlet limited series, 256 pages, March 2000, ISBN 0871359448, December 2004, ISBN 0-7851-0892-0, July 2006, ISBN 0-7851-2349-0, hardcover, August 2010, ISBN 0-7851-4549-4)
- Infinity War (collects Infinity War limited series, Warlock and the Infinity Watch #7-10, and Marvel Comics Presents #108-111, 400 pages, April 2006, ISBN 0-7851-2105-6)
- Infinity Crusade:
- Volume 1 (collects Infinity Crusade #1-3, Warlock Chronicles #1-3, and Warlock and the Infinity Watch #18-19, 248 pages, December 2008, ISBN 0-7851-3127-2)
- Volume 2 (collects Infinity Crusade #4-6, Warlock Chronicles #4-5, and Warlock and the Infinity Watch #20-22, 248 pages, February 2009, ISBN 0-7851-3128-0)
- Infinity Abyss (collects Infinity Abyss limited series, 176 pages, 2003, ISBN 0-7851-0985-4)
- Thanos: The End (collects Marvel: The End limited series, 160 pages, May 2004, ISBN 0-7851-1116-6)
- Thanos:
- Epiphany (collects Thanos #1-6, 144 pages, June 2004, ISBN 0-7851-1355-X)
- Samaritan (collects Thanos #7-12, 144 pages, October 2004, ISBN 0-7851-1540-4)
- Annihilation:
- Volume 1 (collects Drax the Destroyer miniseries, "Annihilation: Prologue" one-shot and Annihilation: Nova miniseries, 256 pages, hardcover, March 2007, ISBN 0-7851-2511-6, softcover, October 2007, ISBN 0-7851-2901-4)
- Volume 2 (collects Annihilation: Ronan miniseries, Annihilation: Silver Surfer miniseries and Annihilation: Super-Skrull miniseries, 320 pages, hardcover, May 2007, ISBN 0-7851-2512-4, softcover, November 2007, ISBN 0-7851-2902-2)
- Volume 3 (collects "Annihilation: The Nova Corps Files" one-shot/handbook, Annihilation limited series and Annihilation: Heralds Of Galactus miniseries, 304 pages, hardcover, July 2007, ISBN 0-7851-2513-2, softcover, December 2007, ISBN 0-7851-2903-0)
Footnotes
- Cronin, Brian (June 24, 2010). "Comic Book Legends Revealed #266". Comics Should Be Good. Comic Book Resources. Retrieved June 24, 2010.
- ^ Avengers Annual #7 (1977)
- Silver Surfer vol. 3, #67 (July 1992)
- ’’Captain Marvel’’ vol 1 #30
- Captain Marvel #33 (July 1974)
- Strange Tales #178–181 (Feb. - Aug 1975) + Warlock #9 -11 (Oct. 1975 - Jan. 1976)
- Avengers Annual #7 + Marvel Two-In-One Annual #2 (1977)
- Death of Captain Marvel Graphic Novel
- Silver Surfer vol. 3, #34 (Feb. 1990)
- ’’The Thanos Quest (1990)
- ’’The Infinity Gauntlet’’ #1 (July 1991)
- ’’The Infinity Gauntlet’’ #6 (Dec 1991)
- ’’The Infinity War’’ #1-6 (1992)
- ‘’The Infinity Crusade’’ #1-6 (1993)
- Thor' #470 & 471 (Jan. - Feb 1994); Silver Surfer vol. 3, #88 (Jan. 1994); Warlock Chronicles #8 (Feb. 1994) and Warlock and the Infinity Watch #25 (Feb. 1994)
- ’’Secret Defenders’’ #11-14
- Cosmic Powers #1–6 (1994)
- Ka-Zar vol. 2, #4–10 + Annual 1997
- X-Man and Hulk Annual 1998
- Thor vol. 2, #21–25 (Mar. - July)
- Thor Annual 2000
- Captain Marvel vol. 2, #17–19 (Jun - Aug. 2001)
- Avengers: Celestial Quest #1–8 (2001–2002)
- The Infinity Abyss # 1–6 (2002)
- Thanos 1-6
- Thanos 7-9
- Thanos 10-12
- Annihilation #4 (2006)
- Annihilation #6 (2007)
- Guardians of the Galaxy vol. 2 #24
- Guardians of the Galaxy vol. 2 #25
- Thanos Imperative #1
- Thanos Imperative #5
- Thanos Imperative #6
- Ultimate Fantastic Four #35 (Dec. 2006)
- Ultimate Fantastic Four #42 (May 2007)
- Earth X #0 - #12, X (March 1999 - June 2000)
- "Marvel : The End" 1-6
- Marvel Zombies 2 #1 (Dec. 2007 - April 2008)
- What If?: New Fantastic Four #1
- "Interview with Larry Brody". Marvelite.prohosting.com. Retrieved 2011-03-15.
External links
- Thanos at Marvel.com
- Thanos at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
- Thanos--The Mad Titan
- Thanos at the Marvel Directory
Avengers | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Affiliated teams | |||||||||||
Locations | |||||||||||
In other media |
| ||||||||||
Silver Surfer | |
---|---|
Supporting characters | |
Enemies |
|
Group affiliations | |
Titles and storylines | |
Other media | |
See also |
Marvel's cosmic setting | |||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alien species | |||||||||||||||
Groups |
| ||||||||||||||
Microverse | |||||||||||||||
Negative Zone | |||||||||||||||
Storylines | |||||||||||||||
Superhuman races | |||||||||||||||
Teams |
| ||||||||||||||
Related articles |