Mephisto (Marvel Comics)
Mephisto | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | Silver Surfer #3 (December 1968)[1] |
Created by | Stan Lee (writer) John Buscema (artist) |
In-story information | |
Species | Demon |
Place of origin | Hell |
Team affiliations | Six-Fingered Hand Legion Accursed |
Notable aliases | Mephistopheles Satan Lucifer Beelzebub The Devil The Lord of Evil |
Abilities |
|
Mephisto is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character first appeared in Silver Surfer #3 (December 1968),[2] and was created by Stan Lee and John Buscema and based on Mephistopheles: a demon character from the Faust legend, who has sometimes been referred to as Mephisto. Introduced as a recurring adversary of the Silver Surfer and Ghost Rider (Johnny Blaze), Mephisto has also endured as one of Spider-Man's most prominent adversaries, being responsible for Norman and Harry Osborn's respective transformations into the Green Goblin and Kindred; and for the superhero's loss of his marriage to Mary Jane Watson, considering their future daughter Spider-Girl his archenemy. Mephisto has often come into conflict with Doctor Strange, Doctor Doom, Scarlet Witch and other heroes of the Marvel Universe, being responsible both for the creation of the Cosmic Ghost Rider and the descents of Phil Coulson and Otto Octavius into villainy.
Debuting in the Silver Age of comic books, the character has appeared in over five decades of Marvel continuity. The character has also appeared in associated Marvel merchandise, including animated television series, feature film, toys, trading cards, and video games.
Mephisto has been described as one of Marvel's most notable and powerful supervillains.[3][4][5][6][7]
Peter Fonda played the character in the 2007 film Ghost Rider, Ciaran Hinds played him in its 2012 sequel Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance, .
Publication history
[edit]Inspired by Mephistopheles of the Faust legend,[8] he was introduced into Marvel comics by writer Stan Lee and penciler John Buscema, Mephisto debuted in Silver Surfer #3 (cover dated Dec. 1968),[9] and was established as a perennial foe for the cosmic hero,[10] also appearing in Silver Surfer #8–9 (Sept.–Oct. 1969) and 16–17 (May–June 1970).
Author Mike Conroy has described Mephisto as "the tempter who could offer the endlessly soul-tormented Silver Surfer the world, even dangling the Surfer's off-limits long-distance lover in front of him. As always the case with Lee's heroes, the Surfer's goodness and nobility won out, but Mephisto was only stymied, not defeated, and the pattern was set."[11]
Mephisto went on to become a foe for the Norse god Thor in Thor #180–181 (Sept.–Oct. 1970), Astonishing Tales #8 (Oct. 1971) and Thor #204–205 (Oct.–Nov. 1972). He was later revealed to be the being to whom Johnny Blaze had sold his soul to and thus had been cursed to become the Ghost Rider,[12] in a retcon that placed him in the role originally played by Satan. This was later retconned back to Satan,[volume & issue needed] though Mephisto's influence is still felt in the 1990s by the Danny Ketch Ghost Rider.
Other appearances included posing as Satan in Marvel Spotlight #5 (Aug. 1972); tormenting the titular superhero team in Fantastic Four #155–157 (Feb.–April 1975) and Thor #310 (Aug. 1981) and 325 (Nov. 1982). Mephisto also guest-starred in two miniseries: The Vision and the Scarlet Witch (vol. 2) #1–12 (Oct. 1985–Sept. 1986) and Secret Wars II #1-9 (July 1985 – March 1986), before starring in the self-titled miniseries Mephisto vs. #1–4 (April–July 1987), battling four of Marvel's super-teams. The miniseries was penciled by co-creator Buscema.
In Daredevil #266 (May 1989), penciler John Romita, Jr. redesigned the character, reimagining him as a bloated, naked creature with short, vaguely frog-like legs and a demonic-looking head. Romita explained "I couldn't see the Devil with tights and a cape."[13] Subsequent portrayals have varied between Mephisto's original appearance and the Romita redesign.
Mephisto continued to torment the Scarlet Witch in Avengers West Coast #51–52 (Nov.–Dec. 1989); created a new adversary for the Marvel heroes in Daredevil #270 (Sept. 1989); and appeared in Marvel Graphic Novel No. 49 Doctor Strange and Doctor Doom: Triumph and Torment (1989). Additionally, he was featured prominently in the One More Day story line in The Amazing Spider-Man #544; Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man #24; The Sensational Spider-Man (vol. 2) #41 and The Amazing Spider-Man #545 (Oct. 2007–Jan. 2008).
In 2009, Mephisto was ranked #48 on IGN's list of Greatest Comic Book Villains of All Time.[14]
Fictional character biography
[edit]Introduction (1960s–1970s)
[edit]Mephisto is a perennial villain in the Marvel Universe, and is responsible for a number of evil acts, including capturing and holding the soul of Cynthia von Doom – the mother of Doctor Doom — until Doctor Strange and Doom freed her so she could ascend into Heaven.[15] He was jealous of the worship of the fire demon Zarathos, so, posing as Satan, Mephisto creates the Ghost Rider by bonding Zarathos to Johnny Blaze.[16] Mephisto refers to his domain as Hell.[17] In one story where he battled Thor, he was shown to have various historical villains in his realm, such as Adolf Hitler, Blackbeard, and Attila the Hun.[18]
Mephisto claims to have been created, along with many other demons, by the supreme being whose suicide resulted in the creation of the Marvel Universe, as well as the Infinity Gems. He also claimed that his totally evil nature is because the supreme being did not choose to make him good, as that being had no concept of it.[19] He witnessed the Celestial known as the Progenitor succumbing to the Horde on Earth, with Mephisto, still young in the form of a fly, taking this opportunity to give birth to his maggots.[20]
Secret Wars II, 1980s and The Infinity Gauntlet
[edit]In Secret Wars II, Mephisto seeks to steal the Beyonder's powers or to destroy him to win the favor of Death. Mephisto sends an army of supervillains called the Legion Accursed to attack the Beyonder, who is saved by the Thing. After the Legion Accursed was defeated, Mephisto returned its members to where they were before he formed the group.[21]
Mephisto later creates his "son", Blackheart, a demonic entity that plagues many of Earth's heroes.[22] Mephisto later manipulates the sorcerer Master Pandemonium into gathering the five scattered fragments of his soul that were lost in an ill-fated encounter with the aforementioned Franklin Richards.[23][24] When the Scarlet Witch attempts to use magic to conceive children with her husband, the android Vision, she unknowingly summons two of Pandemonium's soul fragments, which are born as her infant twins. The revelation of her children's origin, followed by their loss when they are reabsorbed into him, drives the Scarlet Witch insane.[25]
Mephisto also tries to destroy the Avenger Hawkeye when he enters Hell to try to save the soul of his deceased wife, Mockingbird.[26]
Mephisto acted as a servant of the mad Titan Thanos during the "Infinity Wars", seeking to attain power for himself.
Alongside the Grim Reaper, Blackheart brings Wonder Man to Mephisto's realm to battle Mephisto.[27]
In a series of confrontations that also involve the Ghost Rider, the Punisher and the Wolverine, Blackheart kills Mephisto and takes over his portion of Hell.[28][29] Mephisto survives, although as more of a ghostly apparition (claiming he had been denied a place in both Heaven and Hell), and for a time tricks the Silver Surfer into believing he was dead so as to collect his soul and thus perhaps regain his former power, but the Surfer refutes him and, with his allies, defeats Mephisto, resulting in his spirit form being seemingly destroyed.[30]
Mephisto again survives death and soon finds himself with access to another universe: the Earth of the Top Cow universe. Seeking to torment an entirely new world of superheroes, he plots to enter this world and remake it for his own dark desires. But Eternity senses this cosmic disruption and sends several heroes (Jennifer Kale, the Wolverine, the Ghost Rider, the Silver Surfer and Elektra) to that universe to aid a group of Top Cow heroes (Witchblade, Weapon Zero, Cyblade and Ballistic) to combat and ultimately defeat Mephisto. However, his resulting banishment back to Earth-616 seemed to restore him as a tangible physical threat, though without his elevated place of Hellish power, and he would torment heroes for some years to come, like Nighthawk,[31] the Black Panther,[32] the Slingers,[33] the Hellcat[34] and Magik.[35]
2000s
[edit]One More Day
[edit]Mephisto heals May Parker in exchange for changing the personal timelines of Peter Parker (Spider-Man) and Mary Jane Watson so that they never married, claiming he did so only because he hated their happiness (also adding that he has no interest in taking Spider-Man's soul because such a deal would result in him tormenting a soul that is willing to accept the punishment because its sacrifice saved another, a righteousness which disgusts him). He also, at Mary Jane's request, erases all knowledge of Peter's secret identity, both learning only at the point of their memories being erased that their future daughter will be erased as well. During the process, Harry Osborn is also brought back to life;[36] the alteration of the timeline retcons the details of Harry's death being faked by his father.[37]
In 2021, it was revealed that Mephisto had an interest in destroying Peter's personal life because he had foreseen a future in which he attacked Earth: at first, the vision is presented in such a way that Mephisto and his demons have managed to take over, only to be overthrown by Peter. However, Doctor Strange deduced the demon was lying by noting Mephisto always did more than hurt Peter alone. In truth, the demon's vision was that Peter and Mary Jane's future daughter, May Day Parker, would be the one to end his reign. By attacking their relationship, Mephisto was thus hoping to avert the destruction of his future empire.[38]
2010s
[edit]"Siege"
[edit]Mephisto had bartered part of his realm to the Asgardian death goddess Hela for 1,001 years in exchange for control for 101 days of the 13 surviving Dísir, dangerous evil predecessors to the Valkyries that were created by Odin's father Bor.[volume & issue needed] This troubles the minions who had previously lived in this territory, and part of Siege Aftermath shows the "last stand of the perfidious diaspora" in what seems to have been a revolt. The revolt is quickly put down by the Dísir under Mephisto's command. The Dísir leader Brün tries to negotiate with Mephisto because she wishes to invade Hela's realm of Hel and feast on the souls of the Asgardian dead. Mephisto tells her that he has no interest in Hel, but he does not object to their invasion.[39] Thor, trying to defend Hel and its dead, enters Mephisto's domain to find the Eir-gram, a magical sword that can cut the otherwise insubstantial Dísir. Mephisto offers to give him the Eir-Gram and a "happily ever after" for Asgard if he agrees not to interfere with one of Mephisto's plans, which is not at that time named. Thor remains silent the whole time. Mephisto grants him entry to Hell, but Thor must survive many difficulties before he finds the blade.[40]
"Fear Itself"
[edit]Mephisto appears before a de-powered Johnny Blaze during the attack by Sin in the form of Skadi and states that he has damned the human race. Mephisto then states that he will help Johnny save the human race from the Serpent and the Worthy.[41] Mephisto goes on a date with New Mutants member Magma; apparently confiding in her, he explains that, while he is the embodiment of one of the great forces of the universe, the force that created him also gave him desires and emotions, and he occasionally wants to do things that humans do.[42] Magma later confided to Blink that she has subsequently seen Mephisto again, but wishes to keep it secret.[43] After speaking with the Gods at the Infinite Embassy, Mephisto headed to the Devil's Advocacy to speak with the other demons about the Serpent's threat on Earth.[44]
Mephisto briefly appears to assist Deadpool in destroying one of his demon lieutenants,[45] before taking a major part in the Hell on Earth War,[46] where he is defeated and replaced by X-Factor member Strong Guy as ruler of Hell.[47]
Remaining era
[edit]When the Thunderbolts were accidentally transported to Hell, Mephisto took the opportunity to give them a way out if they defeated Strong Guy.[48] The Red Hulk convinced Strong Guy to abandon the position of Hell-lord and try to regain his lost soul, allowing Mephisto to regain the throne of Hell and let the Thunderbolts return to Earth.[49]
The New Multiverse
[edit]Mephisto is revealed to have assumed the form of the Maker to try to prevent Victor von Doom from redeeming his soul.[50]
"Damnation"
[edit]Mephisto finds out that Doctor Strange has restored the lives of the Las Vegas citizens that were killed during when HYDRA bombed an attack during the organization's takeover of the United States. He orchestrates events that cause his demons to bring Doctor Strange to his recently created Hotel Inferno. Mephisto claims that the remnants of Las Vegas were in his realm before it was restored. Hotel Inferno starts to have an effect on the people of Las Vegas. It also had an effect on the Black Panther, Captain Marvel, the Falcon, Hawkeye, and Jane Foster's Thor form where they were all turned into Ghost Rider-like creatures.[51] As Hotel Inferno starts to affect the people of Las Vegas, Doctor Strange fought Mephisto in a game of blackjack. The deal is that Mephisto had to return the souls to Las Vegas if Doctor Strange won and that Doctor Strange's soul would be claimed by Mephisto if Mephisto won. Though Doctor Strange won by cheating, Mephisto found out and had Doctor Strange tortured.[52] Mephisto then turns Doctor Strange into a Ghost Rider-like creature.[53] After Mephisto removes the Ghost Rider from Johnny Blaze, he throws Blaze from the roof.[54] Mephisto appeared on the battlefield and gloated on them, sending Johnny Blaze to attack him. Just then, the possessed Avengers attack Mephisto, as Wong revealed that Mephisto rendering his throne vacant has enabled the Ghost Rider to become the new ruler of Mephisto's realm. After Doctor Strange returned from the Realm Between, he assisted the Midnight Sons and the Avengers in preventing Mephisto from returning to his realm to reclaim his throne. Though Doctor Strange defeated him, Mephisto fled back to his realm where he was defeated by Johnny Blaze and the different Ghost Riders from across the Multiverse. After Johnny Blaze sent Mephisto back to Earth, he was kept at the top of Hotel Inferno in countless restraints as Hotel Inferno remained on Earth. As Doctor Strange, the Avengers, and the Midnight Sons left upon Las Vegas returning to normal, Wong remained behind to keep an eye on Hotel Inferno's casino.[55]
In an alternate future where Thanos conquered the universe, Frank Castle signs a demonic deal with Mephisto to become a Ghost Rider,[56] becoming known as the Cosmic Ghost Rider after being bestowed with the Power Cosmic by Galactus, before coming to serve Thanos after spending countless years on a lifeless Earth after Mephisto's eventual silence, and going insane.[57] After Thanos has the Cosmic Ghost Rider drag his past self to the future to kill him, the past Thanos, upon returning to the present, beats up Mephisto and tells him to stay away from Castle, confusing Mephisto and as such bringing Castle to his attention; Mephisto is subsequently beaten up by Gwen Poole and Squirrel Girl.[58]
Doctor Strange later spoke to Mephisto about removing the One Below All's possession from the Hulk after the brief Defenders reunion. Mephisto states that the One Below All is far stronger than he is.[59] Miles Morales later makes a deal with Mephisto to reverse time and resurrect Viv Vision and Kamala Khan, unknowingly at the cost of the death of a woman Miles had earlier saved.[60]
"War of the Realms"
[edit]A flashback revealed that Mephisto came into contact with the Power Elite at some point and helped them out by creating simulacrums that the Power Elite programmed to become the Squadron Supreme of America. This group is used by a somehow-revived Phil Coulson to become the sanctioned superhero team for the United States.[61]
Spider-Geddon's aftermath
[edit]When the Spider-Man of Earth-44145 threatens the life of James Martin, the Superior Spider-Man (Doctor Octopus' mind in the Proto-Clone) uses a signal move he learned from Doctor Strange to call Mephisto, who states that the Spider-Man of Earth-44145 is out of his jurisdiction. The Superior Spider-Man asks Mephisto to restore him to the man he once was for a day so that he can fight the Spider-Man of Earth-44145. While Mephisto states that he either has or does not have his soul, he does have a counteroffer that will restore his body without disease (physical and mental) and the taint of Peter Parker. As the Superior Spider-Man tells Anna Maria Marconi that there is no other option, he expects Mephisto to uphold his end of the bargain.[62]
2020s
[edit]"Heroes Reborn"
[edit]After being killed by Deadpool and going to Hell after his death for unspecified war crimes, Phil Coulson makes a deal with Mephisto to be restored to life in exchange for his fealty, with Mephisto creating simulacrums of the Squadron Supreme of America for him to control as a United States-sponsored superhero team. Coulson later wines with Mephisto while discussing his own plans to destroy the Avengers.[61] After acquiring the Pandemonium Cube, Coulson uses it to rewrite reality in Mephisto's name, erasing the Avengers from existence and making himself the President of the United States.[63] After his role in the reality change is discovered and he is defeated by his former idol Captain America, Coulson is imprisoned in the Pandemonium Cube by Mephisto as punishment and brought before a collection of Mephisto's counterparts from 615 other universes, with whom Mephisto proposes forming a "Council of Red" for multiversal conquest.[63]
"Sinister War"
[edit]Doctor Strange later visited Mephisto at the Hotel Inferno asking about what was wrong with Peter Parker's soul as well as how Harry Osborn was seemingly revived as Kindred.[64] It was during this confrontation that Mephisto confesses his true motivations for erasing the marriage of the Parkers, as at some undisclosed point in the future he finally seizes control of Earth, only for his reign to be ended by either Spider-Man or his daughter. Striking a deal with Peter to affect his soul and erasing both his marriage with Mary Jane and their daughter was Mephisto's way of ensuring that that future would never come to pass in either scenario. Mephisto is also revealed as the one responsible for the torment and creation of the Kindred Twins (the souls of Sarah and Gabriel, clones previously created by a temporarily insane Harry when he was alive and a posthumous A.I. of him to pose as the children of his father and Gwen Stacy, merged with the A.I. in physical demonic forms) as part of his long game waged against Peter Parker and the Osborn family, as well for Norman Osborn's initial transformations into the Green Goblin, having long ago made a deal with him in exchange for Harry's soul. Doctor Strange then strikes a deal with Mephisto to have Harry's soul returned to the body of his clone as the clone is dying, alongside the Kindred Twins.[38]
Using the Multiversal Masters of Evil
[edit]At the time when a version of Doctor Doom named Doom Supreme watched the Prehistoric Avengers send Kid Thanos back to his own time, Mephisto approached Doom Supreme and suggested to him that he put together a team that would defeat any team of Avengers. Doom Supreme took Mephisto's offer and formed a Multiversal version of the Masters of Evil consisting of a version of Kid Thanos, a version of Dark Phoenix and her pet Berserkers, a version of Erik Killmonger called King Killmonger, a version of the Green Goblin with Ghost Rider-like powers called the Ghost Goblin, and the Black Skull. Due to their agreement with the Council of Reds, they had to save Earth-616 for last. After each of the attacks from the Multiversal Masters of Evil, Doom Supreme and Kid Thanos meet up with the Iron Inquisitor and Mephisto in the form of a dog as he nears the corpse of the Orb. Under Mephisto's orders, Doom Supreme unburns Uatu's eye fragment and puts it in his own eye. As Doom Supreme and Kid Thanos enter a portal to meet with their teammates and get back to work, Mephisto and the Iron Inquisitor talk about what to do with the Multiversal Masters of Evil as Mephisto's dog form eats at the fragments of Uatu's eye. Then he has the Orb's corpse dumped into the ocean.[65]
The Serpent Society later performed a ritual to summon the "serpent" that they worshiped by taking some lives of the people in Serpent Solutions' old headquarters. When the Avengers arrive and found that Nighthawk defeated them, the portal that formed during the ritual summons Mephisto's dog form, as it was mentioned by Nighthawk that the serpent was one of Mephisto's forms. Before assuming his true form and retreating, Mephisto makes the Council of Reds known to the Avengers.[66]
In the distant past, Mephisto encounters Avenger Prime who states that he came to watch Mephisto lose. They watch as the Avengers arrive and confront the Prehistoric Avengers. As both Avengers fight, Avenger Prime goes on the offensive against Mephisto as Mephisto summons the Council of Reds to help subdue him. The Council of Reds begin their attack on the Avengers Tower in the God Quarry as the Ghost Rider's Hell Charger drives into some of them.[67] After the Council of Reds have been decimated by the Multiversal Avengers with help from Old Man Phoenix and the Granddaughters of King Thor, Captain Marvel, Nighthawk, and Thor of Earth-56377 find a smaller version of Mephisto who is the last of the Council of Reds. Just then, Mephisto appears and absorbs his variant as he appears in gigantic size, claiming that the Council of Reds had served their purpose. He then quotes "Welcome, Avengers, to the end of everything".[68] As Mephisto returns to Earth-616 during prehistoric times, a recuperated Kid Thanos informs him that Ghost Goblin and King Killmonger are dead, Black Skull was stripped of his Symbiote, and Doom Supreme and Dark Phoenix have fled. As Kid Thanos is shown with the corpses of Ghost Goblin, Hound, and King Killmonger as well as the unconscious body of Red Skull, Kid Thanos states that he can obtain the fresh knowledge of his fallen teammates on his dissection table as Mephisto states that Black Skull is not dead yet. When Kid Thanos states that it is a bad idea to take on the Avengers by himself, Mephisto enters a portal as he quotes "Taking on the Avengers myself. Heh. That's a fine idea". Arriving in the God Quarry, the Council of Red tell Mephisto that they are displeased with his actions and how their teammates fell to the Multiversal Avengers. Mephisto proceeds to kill the remaining Council of Red members and absorb them into his body. After defeating Captain Marvel, Nighthawk, and Thor of Earth-56377, a Celestial-sized Mephisto is spotted by Ant-Man of Earth-818 as Mephisto destroys the Carol Corps' Omni-Carrier causing Ant-Man of Earth-818 to inform Avenger Prime of what happened. Reinforcements come in the form of Ka-Zar, an alternate Galactus from the reality that Iron Inquisitor sent Ka-Zar from, Gorilla-Man, Ursa Major, and the Progenitor which was modified with Deathlok technology.[69] As Mephisto goes on the attack, the Deathlok-modified Progenitor fights him. He proceeds to eat the remains of his fallen Council of Red members before resuming the fight. As the God Quarry begins to crumble, Mephisto takes a sample of the power from below it as Old Man Phoenix and Avenger Prime recognize the energies as the remnants of an ancient Multiverse where there is no running from it as Mephisto plans to use its powers to end the Multiverse.[70] After he was separated from his fallen Mephisto variants, Mephisto was confronted by Doom Supreme who stated that he is too weak to wield the power he just unleashed. Mephisto states that he was planning to use this power to free himself from his usual lifestyle. Doom Supreme then turns against Mephisto by attacking him. After Doom Supreme is turned to stone by the sample of the ancient Multiverse's energy, Iron Man and Ant-Man of Earth-818 plan to deal with Mephisto. As the reconstructed Doom the Living Planet and the Mjolnir variants work to clog the breach, Mephisto claims that they can't hold back the entrophy as he is punched by Nighthawk and Agamotto does a special punishment for him. Once he is back in Hell, Mephisto is annoyed with Orb next to him. Mephisto is annoyed with Orb mentioning that Avenger Prime no longer stands watch alone in the God Quarry.[71]
Powers and abilities
[edit]Mephisto is an extremely powerful immortal demonic entity possessing abilities used by manipulating the forces of magic.[72] Mephisto can employ his power for a variety of uses, including superhuman physical attributes, shape and sizeshifting, projecting illusions, manipulating memories, and altering time and reality.[73][74][75][76][77][72] He is also highly resistant to injury.[78] With his regenerative healing factor, Mephisto has the ability to recover quickly.[5][79]
The character has been shown to be energized by sources of evil in the human realm, such as the alien Dire Wraiths.[23] Like other demons, Mephisto is symbiotically linked to, and considerably more powerful within, his own realm, and the character is able to transform the structure at will.[80] Within it he has threatened a galaxy and stalemated a nourished Galactus until the latter threatened to consume his realm.[81] If Mephisto's physical form is destroyed, the character will regenerate and reform in his domain.[82] Mephisto is known for acquiring souls, but cannot subjugate the will of another being without the victim's permission, which is usually done with some form of pact.[83][84]
Cultural impact and legacy
[edit]Critical reception
[edit]George Marston of Newsarama stated, "Mephisto may be one of Marvel's most iconic, enduring villains - and that's no surprise considering he's based on the archetype of the Christian devil, pretty much the most iconic 'villain' in religion, folklore, and in some cases, even as a metaphorical force in world history. Marvel's comic book take on the concept of an omnipotent, omniscient infernal manipulator who rules over his own realm of eternal punishment through treachery and torture has had a similar impact on the history of the Marvel Universe.[3] Marc Buxton of Den of Geek called Mephisto one of the "greatest monstrous creations that ever sprang from the nightmares of the House of Ideas," writing, "You can't very well have a list of the most nefarious Marvel monsters without listing the devil, hisownself. Not really the Biblical devil, Mephisto is a netherworldly tempter, a soul broker, and a liar who pretty much serves the same exact purpose as the Devil but he won't get Marvel in trouble with Christian conservatives. Mephisto first battled the Silver Surfer in the Silver Age (HEY!) and has bedeviled (hiYO) just about every Marvel hero. He recently pissed off fandom by cutting a Faustian deal with Peter Parker and erasing Spidey's marriage. Mephisto was a key figure in The Infinity Gauntlet, constantly whispering Iago like in Thanos' ear and is the very symbol of corruption in the Marvel Universe."[85]
Accolades
[edit]- In 2014, IGN ranked Mephisto 48th in their "Top 100 Comic Book Vilains" list.[5]
- In 2015, Den of Geek ranked Mephisto 13th in their "Marvel's 31 Best Monsters" list.[85]
- In 2017, Den of Geek ranked Mephisto 14th in their "Guardians of the Galaxy 3: 50 Marvel Characters We Want to See" list.[86]
- In 2018, CinemaBlend included Mephisto in their "5 Marvel Villains We'd Love To See In Black Panther 2" list.[87]
- In 2020, CBR.com ranked Mephisto 2nd in their "10 Most Powerful Comic Book Villains With Demonic Origins" list.[88]
- In 2020, CBR.com ranked Mephisto 3rd in their "Marvel: Dark Spider-Man Villains, Ranked From Lamest To Coolest" list.[89]
- In 2021, Screen Rant ranked Mephisto 4th in their "Mephisto & Every Other Marvel Comic Demon, Ranked By Power" list.[90]
- In 2021, CBR.com ranked Mephisto 2nd in their "Marvel: 10 Strongest Demons In The Franchise" list.[91]
- In 2021, Looper ranked Mephisto 4th in their "Strongest Supervillains In History" list.[6]
- In 2022, Screen Rant ranked Mephisto 2nd in their "10 Most Powerful Marvel Comics Horror Characters" list,[92] 4th in their "10 Most Powerful X-Men Villains In Marvel Comics" list[93] and included him in their "10 Most Powerful Wonder Man Villains In Marvel Comics" list.[94]
- In 2022, CBR.com ranked Mephisto 4th in their "Wonder Man's 10 Greatest Enemies" list[77] and 6th in their "Marvel's 10 Scariest Monsters" list.[95]
Other versions
[edit]Guardians of the Galaxy
[edit]In the Guardians' 31st century timeline, he has a daughter named Malevolence.[96]
Universe X
[edit]In the Earth X sequel, Universe X, Mephisto is the force behind Pope Immortus (secretly Kang) and his extermination of Reed Richards' Human Torch to assume mutant dominance.[97] It was later revealed that in that reality, Mephisto is not the devil, but the first mutant to exist, where he is shaped by mankind's fear.[98]
Ultimate Marvel
[edit]Mephisto (as Satan) appeared in Ultimate Comics: Avengers as the man Johnny Blaze sold his soul to avenge his love Roxanne, and to punish the guilty as a "bounty hunter for Hell."[99]
Marvel Mangaverse
[edit]The demonic Mephisto helped create Galactus in Marvel Mangaverse.[100]
Marvel Zombies: Halloween
[edit]Mephisto appears in Marvel Zombies: Halloween, saving Kitty Pryde and her son, Peter, from a zombified Darkhawk, Alex Power, Squirrel Girl, Karolina Dean, and Mettle, to claim Kitty and Peter's souls for later.[101]
In other media
[edit]Television
[edit]- An illusionary version of Mephisto created by Mastermind appears in the Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends episode "The Prison Plot".[84]
- Mephisto was due to appear in the proposed second season of Silver Surfer (1998), at the end of the episode "Down to Earth".[102] with his demonic nature toned down and made acceptable for children. However, the series was cancelled before the second season could air.[103]
- Sacha Baron Cohen was cast in the role in an untitled television special.[104]
Film
[edit]- Mephisto, as Mephistopheles, appears in Ghost Rider (2007), portrayed by Peter Fonda. This version primarily appears in a human form, with glimpses of his true goat-like monstrous form appearing throughout the film, and employs a Ghost Rider as a bounty hunter. Prior to the film's events, he turned Carter Slade into his Ghost Rider in the 1800s to retrieve the Contract of San Venganza, but Slade betrayed Mephistopheles. In 1986, Johnny Blaze makes a deal with Mephistopheles to save the former's father from cancer in return for serving the devil at a future date, only for Blaze's father to die in an accident the next day. In the present, Mephistopheles transforms Blaze into his latest Ghost Rider to hunt down his traitorous son Blackheart before the demon can find the contract. After receiving help from Slade, Blaze defeats Blackheart and defies Mephistopheles by keeping his Ghost Rider powers instead of returning them, despite him offering to remove them.
- Mephisto, as the Devil, appears in Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance.[105][106] He takes the form of a man named Roarke (portrayed by Ciarán Hinds) and fathers a son with a woman named Nadya after saving her life. Employing Nadya's mercenary ex-boyfriend Ray Carrigan, Roarke intends to use the boy, Danny, as his host and gain full access to his powers on Earth instead of relying on bodies that rapidly decay. However, Blaze defeats Carrigan and protects the boy, who in turn boosts Blaze's powers to send the devil back to Hell.
Video games
[edit]- Mephisto appears as a boss in Silver Surfer (1990).[citation needed]
- Mephisto appears as an alternate skin for Blackheart in Marvel Super Heroes vs. Street Fighter.[citation needed]
- Mephisto makes a vocal cameo appearance in Fantastic Four.[citation needed]
- Mephisto appears as a boss in Marvel: Ultimate Alliance voiced by Fred Tatasciore.[107]
- Mephisto appears in the Ghost Rider film tie-in game, voiced by Kirk Thornton.[108]
- Mephisto appears in Marvel vs. Capcom 3: Fate of Two Worlds via Morrigan Aensland's ending.[citation needed]
- Mephisto appears in Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3 via Ghost Rider and Dante's endings.[citation needed] In the former ending, Dante and Trish attempt to force Mephisto to undo his demonic pact with Johnny Blaze. In the latter ending, Mephisto attempts to coax Dante into forming a pact with him, only for the Devil Hunter to force Mephisto to send him after Blackheart instead.
- Mephisto appears as a boss in Marvel: Avengers Alliance.[citation needed]
- Mephisto appears as a playable character in Marvel: Contest of Champions.[109]
- Mephisto appears as a playable character and boss in Marvel: Future Fight.[110]
- Mephisto appears as a boss in Marvel Future Revolution.[111]
- Mephisto appears in Marvel's Midnight Suns, voiced by Jason Isaacs.[112]
- Mephisto appeared as an NPC during Fortnitemares (2024) and as a purchasable outfit in Fortnite.[113]
References
[edit]- ^ Misiroglu, Gina Renée; Eury, Michael (2006). The Supervillain Book: The Evil Side of Comics and Hollywood. Visible Ink Press. ISBN 9780780809772.
- ^ 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. 238. ISBN 978-1-4654-7890-0.
- ^ a b George Marston (November 9, 2021). "Fans are seeing Mephisto all over Spider-Man - No Way Home and comic books may prove them right". gamesradar. Retrieved October 31, 2022.
- ^ Howard, Kirsten (October 19, 2022). "Why Are Marvel Fans So Obsessed with Mephisto?". Den of Geek. Retrieved October 31, 2022.
- ^ a b c "The Top 100 Comic Book Villains", IGN, retrieved October 31, 2022
- ^ a b Hinton, Chris (October 20, 2021). "Strongest Supervillains In History Ranked". Looper. Retrieved October 31, 2022.
- ^ Hoover, Brett (April 16, 2020). "10 Reasons Why Mephisto Is Secretly The Marvel Universe's Biggest Threat". CBR. Retrieved October 31, 2022.
- ^ Harn, Darby (February 5, 2021). "10 Things Only Comic Fans Know About Mephisto". Screen Rant.
Mephisto was co-created by legendary Marvel writer and editor-in-chief Stan Lee and equally-legendary artist John Buscema. They based the character on Mephistopheles, a demon from the legend of Faust. The character is a surrogate of Hell who more or less plays the same role in the various interpretations of the legend, especially in the historic play Doctor Faustus by Christopher Marlowe and the later play Faust written by the German author Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.
- ^ Harn, Darby (February 5, 2021). "WandaVision: 10 Things Only Comic Fans Know About Mephisto". ScreenRant. Retrieved October 31, 2022.
- ^ Wells, John (2014). American Comic Book Chronicles: 1965-1969. TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 196. ISBN 978-1605490557.
- ^ Conroy, Mike. 500 Comicbook Villains, Collins & Brown, 2004.
- ^ Ghost Rider (vol. 2) #68 (May 1981)
- ^ Cordier, Philippe (April 2007). "Seeing Red: Dissecting Daredevil's Defining Years". Back Issue! (#21). TwoMorrows Publishing: 33–60.
- ^ Mephisto is number 48 Archived May 15, 2009, at the Wayback Machine, IGN.
- ^ Astonishing Tales #8 (Oct. 1971) and Marvel Graphic Novel No. 49 - Doctor Strange and Doctor Doom: Triumph and Torment (1989). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Marvel Spotlight #5 (Aug. 1972). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Rovin, Jeff (1987). The Encyclopedia of Super-Villains. New York: Facts on File. p. 216. ISBN 0-8160-1356-X.[1]
- ^ Thor #205 (Nov. 1972). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Silver Surfer (vol. 3) #45 (Jan. 1991). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Avengers (vol. 8) #38
- ^ Secret Wars II #7. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Daredevil #270 (Sept. 1989). Marvel Comics.
- ^ a b Fantastic Four #277 (April 1985). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Byrne, John (w), Byrne, John (p), Machlan, Mike (i). "I Sing of Arms and Heroes..." Avengers West Coast, no. 51 (mid-November 1989).
Byrne, John (w), Byrne, John (p), Machlan, Mike (i). "Fragments of a Greater Darkness" Avengers West Coast, no. 52 (December 1989). - ^ The Vision and the Scarlet Witch (vol. 2) #1–12 (Oct. 1985 – Sept. 1986) and Avengers West Coast #51–52 (Nov. – Dec. 1989). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Thunderbolts Annual 2000. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Wonder Man #22
- ^ Hearts of Darkness [graphic novel]
- ^ Ghost Rider/Wolverine/Punisher: The Dark Design graphic novel
- ^ Silver Surfer (vol. 2) #133–137
- ^ Nighthawk (miniseries) #1–3
- ^ Black Panther (vol. 3) #1–5
- ^ Slingers #11–12
- ^ Hellcat #1–3, Thunderbolts Annual 2000
- ^ Magik (vol. 2) #1–4
- ^ One More Day — The Amazing Spider-Man #544; Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man #24; The Sensational Spider-Man (vol. 2) #41 and The Amazing Spider-Man #545 (Oct. 2007–Jan. 2008). Marvel Comics.
- ^ The Amazing Spider-Man #581–582 (2008). Marvel Comics.
- ^ a b Amazing Spider-Man Vol 5 #74 (September 2021). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Thor #611. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Thor #612. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Ghost Rider (vol. 7) #1. Marvel Comics.
- ^ New Mutants (vol. 2) #37. Marvel Comics.
- ^ New Mutants (vol. 2) #41. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Journey into Mystery #627. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Deadpool (vol. 3) #11–12. Marvel Comics.
- ^ X-Factor #250-256. Marvel Comics.
- ^ X-Factor #256. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Thunderbolts (vol. 2) #21. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Thunderbolts (vol. 2) #22. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Infamous Iron Man #5-11. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Doctor Strange: Damnation #1 (Feb. 21, 2018). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Doctor Strange #386. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Doctor Strange: Damnation #2 (March 7, 2018). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Doctor Strange: Damnation #3 (March 21, 2018). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Doctor Strange: Damnation #4 (April 25, 2018). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Thanos (vol. 2) #13. "Thanos Wins". Marvel Comics.
- ^ Thanos (vol. 2) #16. "Thanos Wins". Marvel Comics.
- ^ The Unbelievable Gwenpool #25. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Defenders: The Best Defense #1. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Champions (vol. 3) #2. Marvel Comics.
- ^ a b Avengers (vol. 8) #18. Marvel Comics.
- ^ The Superior Spider-Man (vol. 2) #11. Marvel Comics.
- ^ a b Heroes Reborn #1. Marvel Comics.
- ^ The Amazing Spider-Man (vol. 5) #60. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Avengers (vol. 8) #51-54. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Avengers (vol. 8) #55. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Avengers Assemble Alpha #1. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Avengers: Forever (vol. 2) #14. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Avengers Vol. 8 #66. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Avengers: Forever Vol. 2 #15. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Avengers Assemble Omega #1. Marvel Comics.
- ^ a b Harn, Darby (March 5, 2021). "All of Mephisto's Powers, According To The Comics". ScreenRant. Retrieved October 31, 2022.
- ^ Thor #310 (Aug. 1981) and Daredevil #279 (April 1990). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Thor #310 (Aug. 1981). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Silver Surfer (vol. 3) #1 (July 1987)
- ^ The Amazing Spider-Man #545 (Jan. 2008). Marvel Comics.
- ^ a b Lovett II, Walter (September 8, 2022). "Wonder Man's 10 Greatest Enemies". CBR. Retrieved October 31, 2022.
- ^ Infinity Gauntlet #5 (Nov. 1991). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Rajput, Rohit (October 25, 2022). "Who is Marvel's Mephisto? Exploring the character amidst rumors Sacha Baron Cohen being cast as the villain". www.sportskeeda.com. Retrieved October 31, 2022.
- ^ Silver Surfer #3 (Oct. 1968). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Silver Surfer: Judgment Day (1988): written by Stan Lee, the creator of both characters.
- ^ Mephisto vs. the Fantastic Four #1 (April 1987). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Marvel Graphic Novel #49 - Doctor Strange and Doctor Doom: Triumph and Torment (1989). Marvel Comics.
- ^ a b Knox, Kelly (February 9, 2021). "How Mephisto Could Be Connected to WandaVision and The Snap". IGN. Retrieved October 31, 2022.
- ^ a b Buxton, Marc (October 30, 2015). "Marvel's 31 Best Monsters". Den of Geek. Retrieved October 31, 2022.
- ^ Buxton, Marc (May 19, 2017). "Guardians of the Galaxy 3: 50 Marvel Characters We Want to See". Den of Geek. Retrieved November 10, 2022.
- ^ Matt Wood (February 22, 2018). "5 Marvel Villains We'd Love To See In Black Panther 2". CINEMABLEND. Retrieved October 16, 2022.
- ^ Avina, Anthony (May 12, 2020). "10 Most Powerful Comic Book Villains With Demonic Origins". CBR. Retrieved October 11, 2022.
- ^ Motwani, Nishid (September 20, 2020). "Marvel: Dark Spider-Man Villains, Ranked From Lamest To Coolest". CBR. Retrieved November 8, 2022.
- ^ Harn, Darby (March 7, 2021). "Mephisto & Every Other Marvel Comic Demon, Ranked By Power". ScreenRant. Retrieved October 31, 2022.
- ^ Stanford, Jerry (January 26, 2021). "Marvel: 10 Strongest Demons In The Franchise, Ranked". CBR. Retrieved October 31, 2022.
- ^ Harn, Darby (October 14, 2022). "10 Most Powerful Marvel Comics Horror Characters". ScreenRant. Retrieved October 31, 2022.
- ^ Harn, Darby (October 9, 2022). "10 Most Powerful X-Men Villains In Marvel Comics". ScreenRant. Retrieved October 31, 2022.
- ^ Harn, Darby (June 26, 2022). "10 Most Powerful Wonder Man Villains In Marvel Comics". ScreenRant. Retrieved October 31, 2022.
- ^ Johnston, Chloe (October 8, 2022). "Marvel's 10 Scariest Monsters, Ranked". CBR. Retrieved October 31, 2022.
- ^ Guardians of the Galaxy #7
- ^ Universe X #9. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Universe X #X
- ^ Ultimate Comics Avengers 2 #2 (Aug. 2010). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Dunn, Ben (w), Dunn, Ben (a), Guru-eFX (col), Cebulski, C. B. (ed). "Hungry Planet" Marvel Mangaverse, vol. 1, no. 1, pp. 10–11 (June 2002).
- ^ Marvel Zombies Halloween #1. Marvel Comics.
- ^ "Silver Surfer Script 21". Silver-surfer.us. May 29, 1998. Retrieved February 12, 2011.
- ^ "Interview with Larry Brody". Marvelite.prohosting.com. Retrieved February 12, 2011.
- ^ Barnhardt, Adam (March 16, 2023). "Marvel's Mephisto Special Reportedly Filming (Report)". ComicBook.com. Archived from the original on March 16, 2023. Retrieved March 16, 2023.
- ^ Ponto, Arya (August 16, 2007). "Peter Fonda Talks About Working with Russell Crowe and 'Ghost Rider 2'". JustPressPlay.net. Archived from the original on September 26, 2007. Retrieved August 17, 2007.
- ^ "Hinds and Placido Joining Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance". SuperheroHype.com. October 1, 2010. Retrieved October 6, 2010.
- ^ "Mephisto Voices (Marvel Universe)". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved August 26, 2020.
- ^ "Kirk Thornton (579 Character Images)". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved August 26, 2020.
- ^ "CHAMPION SPOTLIGHT - MEPHISTO". Marvel Contest of Champions. September 27, 2017. Retrieved March 25, 2019.
- ^ "4/20 Update Details (Updated)". Marvel Future Fight. April 20, 2021. Retrieved April 27, 2021.
- ^ @MarvelFutureRev (January 20, 2022). "Mephisto has tormented many a Super Hero over eons. Now, Agents can battle this legendary Lord of Evil in #MARVELFutureRevolution!" (Tweet). Retrieved June 6, 2022 – via Twitter.
- ^ Huxley, Ben (November 28, 2022). "Marvel's Midnight Suns cast: All voice actors & characters confirmed". Radio Times. Retrieved August 21, 2023.
- ^ Dedmon, Tanner (October 12, 2024). "Fortnite Adding She-Venom, Agony, and More Marvel Skins During Fortnitemares". ComicBook.com. Retrieved October 13, 2024.
External links
[edit]- Mephisto at Marvel.com
- Mephisto at Marvel Directory
- Mephisto at The Appendix to the Handbook of the Marvel Universe
- Mephisto on Marvel Database, a Marvel Comics wiki
- Characters created by John Buscema
- Characters created by Stan Lee
- Comics characters introduced in 1968
- Demon supervillains
- Fictional characters who break the fourth wall
- Fictional characters who can change size
- Fictional characters who can manipulate time
- Fictional flies
- Fictional impostors
- Fictional characters with death or rebirth abilities
- Magical supervillains
- Marvel Comics shapeshifters
- Marvel Comics characters who can move at superhuman speeds
- Marvel Comics characters who can teleport
- Marvel Comics psychics
- Marvel Comics characters who use magic
- Marvel Comics characters with accelerated healing
- Marvel Comics immortals
- Marvel Comics characters with superhuman strength
- Marvel Comics demons
- Marvel Comics devils
- Marvel Comics film characters
- Marvel Comics male supervillains
- Mythology in Marvel Comics
- Spider-Man characters
- Supervillains with their own comic book titles