Monday, September 7, 2020

For My World To Live, Your Children Must Die!


Can YOU


Name This Marvel Villain??



While investigating the disappearance of a number of children from the streets of New York, Captain America and the Falcon discover that they're both working the same case--at which point they cross paths with Batroc the Leaper (along with "Batroc's Brigade"), who it turns out is employed by the culprit! And while confronting Batroc, our heroic pair discover the shocking identity of their foe--one whose might beggars description!




Granted, the Stranger is well known for capturing other beings and transporting them to a planet where they are kept in captivity as specimens for study--but why take an interest in terran children, when on more than one occasion he's attempted to destroy the entire human race?

The answer comes when Cap and the Falcon make their move to stop him, only to be stopped in their tracks--and they learn that "the Stranger" is only a facade for another alien who bears his likeness, and, it would appear, much of his power.




As we might expect, Jakar's motivations prove to be wholly different from those of the Stranger, in that he seeks to return his plague-stricken people to life using the life-force of the children he abducts.




We might assume here that Jakar has succeeded in transporting the assembled children to his dimension, though he's only moved them to a hidden laboratory on the Hudson shore where his equipment will initiate the transferral. Batroc, Cap, and the Falcon all manage to track and follow, only to be captured with ease; but before the fatal switch is thrown, the Falcon manages to escape, and he and Cap wage a fierce struggle against Jakar, who it seems they can only delay.

Fortunately, that delay allows Cap to grasp at a straw which might yet see them prevail--a straw that plays on feelings of guilt which we haven't previously seen in Jakar but which surface when Cap focuses on the one member of the alien's race whose empty gaze now registers with Jakar in a much more direct way.




In spite of Jakar's good intentions, however, he's eventually intercepted by the true Stranger, who naturally considers Jakar to be a being well-suited for study on his specimen-world. It's there where Quasar, on his own mission to that world, encounters him--his excruciating captivity having made him eager for the release of death.



Jakar, along with a number of other captives, manage to escape their fate as specimens when the Over-Mind arrives and liberates them for his own purposes--after which Jakar makes dealing with the Stranger a priority, while hopefully finding the means to once again see to the revival of his people and, from there, go on to rule our universe. We've yet to see him achieve those ends--but somewhere in the universe, there's a stranger "Stranger" whose plans of revenge and conquest may one day be revived.

4 comments:

Big Murr said...

I never heard of this chap! At the initial question "Can You Name this Marvel Villain?", I was making up snarky replies in my head at being "Stranger's surreal twin" or something. And, it turns out that is precisely what he is!!

Concerning the tale itself...a story can, if one is feeling generous, get away with one "how is this amazing bit of plot development happening? Luck or some providence..?" (Jakar's glimpse of other dimensions) When the story tries to trot out a second one (Cap at the view screen), it better damn well be explained. I'm getting the sense from this synopsis that this deus ex machina moments had no "deus" at work. When Cap pondered aloud, I was anticipating the Stranger working a scheme with this doppelganger.

Comicsfan said...

"Stranger" things have happened, Murray!

HAHAHAHAHAhahahahaha

Anonymous said...

I have this comic.
It's weird...I think I read somewhere that it was originally supposed to be the ACTUAL Stranger here, the art was already done, but for some reason they decided to make it some other guy. My theory is (and Lordy I am often mistaken) is that the Stranger's origin here didn't jive with the origin story given earlier in the F.F.
To wit, somebody did not do their research!
Rather than redo the dang thing, and this was some good penciling, just slap a different name on guy.
It's the only explanation that makes sense. Whaddaya gonna do, wake up Sal in the middle of the night and tell him he's gotta redraw a couple pages with the Dreaded Deadline doom barreling down? No way Jose.
It was the Seventies, man.

M.P.

Comicsfan said...

To further muddy the waters, M.P., the Stranger later revised his story where he claimed to have originated from the world of Gigantus as the counter to the Over-Mind--which is probably for the best, since with no origin tale for him that's proven to be reliable, he indeed remains a "stranger."