Great Lakes Avengers | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | West Coast Avengers #46 (July 1989) |
Created by | John Byrne |
In-story information | |
Base(s) | GLA Headquarters in Milwaukee, Wisconsin |
Member(s) | Mister Immortal (leader) Big Bertha Doorman Flatman Good Boy See below |
The Great Lakes Avengers (also known as The Lightning Rods, The Great Lakes X-Men, The Great Lakes Champions, and The Great Lakes Initiative) are a fictional superhero team appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The characters were introduced in West Coast Avengers #46 (July 1989), and were created by John Byrne.
The team first appeared in West Coast Avengers vol. 2 #46 [1] and then made appearances in issues #48–49 and #64, and a cameo appearance in Avengers West Coast Annual #6. The GLA also make an appearance in issue #309 of Avengers and in the 1990 Avengers Annual. This was followed by appearances in issues #15–17 and #25 of Thunderbolts and issues #10–11 and #61 of Deadpool .
In 2005, the GLA were featured in a self-titled, four-issue mini-series (written by Dan Slott) and the one-shot, GLX-Mas Special. This was followed in 2006 by a minor appearance in I ♥ Marvel: Masked Intentions, The Thing vol. 2, #8, and Cable and Deadpool #30. In 2007, the team was featured in the one-shot Deadpool/GLI Summer Fun Spectacular. The team also made cameo appearances in issues #19 and #25 of Avengers: The Initiative and a minor appearance in issue #3 of Age of Heroes. In 2011, the team made an appearance in issue #6 of Fear Itself: The Home Front.
A new volume and ongoing series of the team debuted in 2016 from writer Zac Gorman (Rick & Morty) and artist Will Robson (Star-Lord). [2] Seven issues were published for this series before ending. [3] Since then, the team and its associated cast have had only minor appearances and cameos in other Marvel comics.
The team has changed its name on several occasions. The Avenger Hawkeye first protests their use of the name "Avengers", [4] and eventually the GLA are sent a cease-and-desist order by the Maria Stark Foundation. [5] The team rename themselves the Lightning Rods after fellow super-team, the Thunderbolts. [6] While working for S.H.I.E.L.D., Mr. Immortal suggests a name-change to S.W.O.R.D., [7] although ultimately the team's name is changed to the Great Lakes X-Men when its members collectively realize that they are all mutants. [5]
After another cease and desist — this time from Marvel Girl of the X-Men — the GLA rename themselves the Great Lakes Champions. [8] Following the events of Avengers: Civil War , the team operated as the Great Lakes Initiative in the state of Wisconsin. [9] Some time later, the team reverts to the name Great Lakes Avengers. [10]
Craig Hollis discovers that he is immortal after being shot by a group of thieves and left for dead, and he decides to fight crime as Mr. Immortal. He realizes that operating alone may not be feasible. He places an advertisement for costumed adventurers in the local paper and assembles the Great Lakes Avengers, recruiting Dinah Soar, Big Bertha, Flatman and Doorman. Mr. Immortal refuses one candidate, Gene Lorrene, a leather fetishist calling himself Leather Boy. Turned down because he has no superpowers and is therefore ineligible, Lorrene takes the rejection personally. [11]
The team is first seen in public by Avengers Hawkeye and Mockingbird, who watch the group as they foil a robbery attempt. Although annoyed by the team's naiveté and their use of the Avengers name without permission, Hawkeye and Mockingbird agree to act as the team's mentors. [12] The Great Lakes Avengers assist the Avengers and West Coast Avengers from time to time, and once help them fight Terminus. [13] After aiding the Thunderbolts against the villain Graviton, [14] the GLA clash with the mercenary Deadpool. [15]
After a period of inactivity, the team learns that the West Coast Avengers have been disbanded and that Hawkeye has been killed. [16] The team subsequently battle Maelstrom, who is building a doomsday device. During this encounter, Dinah Soar is killed. New members Squirrel Girl (who has a pet squirrel Monkey Joe) and Grasshopper are then recruited. Although Maelstrom is defeated via Mr. Immortal's trickery, Doorman, Grasshopper and Monkey Joe are all killed (the last of these murdered by Gene Lorrene, who sought revenge against the GLA). Mr. Immortal is also killed several times, though he always recovers. Doorman is revived soon after his death and learns that he is connected to the Darkforce Dimension, and Mr. Immortal learns that as an immortal he is considered Homo sapiens supreme. Despite defeating Maelstrom and saving the universe, the Great Lakes Avengers' victory goes unnoticed. After receiving a subpoena from the Avengers and discovering that they are all mutants, the team decides to rename themselves the Great Lakes X-Men. [5]
Squirrel Girl acquires a new partner, a female squirrel called Tippy-Toe; Grasshopper II dies after misjudging his armor's jumping capabilities and Doorman becomes an "angel of death" charged with conveying the souls of the dead to the afterlife. [17] After Flatman wins a superhero poker tournament and Marvel Girl demands that they drop the "X-Men" name, the team assumes the name Great Lakes Champions. [18]
With the beginning of the Civil War storyline, the GLC decide to comply with the Superhuman Registration Act, in fact waiting in line to register the day the Act is announced. The team is renamed as the Great Lakes Initiative, becoming officially sanctioned by the Fifty State Initiative as the team for the state of Wisconsin. [19]
The team and Deadpool stop A.I.M. from using an "inebriation ray" that induces drunkenness in superheroes. Deadpool is granted reserve membership on the team, but is forcibly evicted from GLI headquarters after proving to be too much of an annoyance. [20]
The team also appears during the Secret Invasion storyline confronting a Skrull disguised as Grasshopper, with help from Gravity and Catwalk. [21] When Norman Osborn assumes control of the Initiative, he transfers Gravity to a leadership role in the GLI, much to the superhero's dismay. [22]
After a fight with Fin Fang Foom, Squirrel Girl elects to leave the team and return to New York, [23] because she feels that the other team members (who simply stayed in their headquarters, playing cards, during the fight) have come to rely upon her too much, and that her continued presence will prevent them from reaching their full potential as heroes and as a team. [10]
During the Fear Itself storyline, the team has reverted to the name Great Lakes Avengers and they encounter Asbestos Man, who had been taking advantage of the fear and chaos that is happening. After standing around him for hours, Mr. Immortal talks him into giving up in return for being remembered by the others. [24]
It is revealed that the team had disbanded and gone their separate ways. Flatman receives a visit from Connie Ferrari, a lawyer representing the real Avengers, who informs him that the GLA has been reinstated as a permanent addition to the Avengers. Flatman reunites with Big Bertha and Doorman, though Mr. Immortal doesn't show up and Squirrel Girl apparently ignores Flatman's call. The team moves to a new headquarters, a factory owned by Tony Stark in Detroit, Michigan. The team visits a local bar, where a fight breaks out after the owner, Nain Rogue, insults the team. Upon getting arrested after a fight, Doorman escapes, leaving Flatman and Bertha to deal with a young girl named Goodness Silva, who can transform into a werewolf, who was attacking the cops inside the station. Ferrari gets the team released over the accusations of councilman Dick Snerd, who is actually Nain Rouge. She also helps the team recruit Goodness Silva, who takes the name of Good Boy. After Snerd shuts the team down, Mr. Immortal returns and goes on patrol with Flatman, while Bertha, Doorman and Good Boy go to Nain Rogue's bar to find clues. At the bar, Bertha and Good Boy find Snerd drunk and discern his secret identity. Doorman is brought to the Darkforce Dimension where Oblivion angrily questions his absence, while Mr. Immortal and Flatman resolve their issues. Bertha and Good Boy take Nain Rogue hostage, where he reveals some of his background story. While Mr. Immortal, Bertha, and Flatman attend to a visiting Ferrari, Good Boy nearly kills Nain over an insult. After Ferrari tells the team to lie low for a couple of days, Bertha goes to a modeling gig for a weight-loss product created by Dr. Nod — a trap set to get a sample of her mutant DNA and use it to improve his product with Bertha's powers. Meanwhile, Good Boy's brother, Lucky, visits her at GLA HQ and tells her they need to leave town due to what she did to Nain Rogue. Bertha fights back against Dr. Nod and his squad, but Dr. Nod ingests much of the supplements, becoming a huge monster, and injures her. Bertha sends a text to the rest of the team, including Good Boy, and takes some of the supplements herself to fight Dr. Nod. During the battle, Dr. Nod takes more of the supplements, becoming much bigger and monstrous. On Mr. Immortal's suggestion, Doorman and Mr. Immortal enter Dr. Nod's body, where Mr. Immortal kills him by punching his heart. After their victory, the team is visited at their headquarters by Deadpool of the Avengers Unity Division who tells them that they've been fired and can no longer use the Avengers name, since their legal claim did not hold up in court. While he claims that people simply "didn't like them", he does comfort them by proclaiming that they could try to be in the spotlight again in a few years. [25]
Character | Real Name | Joined in | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Mr. Immortal | Craig Hollis | West Coast Avengers #46 (vol. 2, Jul. 1989) | Current leader of the team. |
Dinah Soar | Unknown | Killed by Maelstrom in GLA #1. | |
Big Bertha | Ashley Crawford | Active in the GLA. | |
Flatman | Dr. Val Ventura | Active in the GLA. | |
Doorman | DeMarr Davis | Former avatar of Deathurge and current herald of Oblivion. Active in the GLA. | |
Assisted the team by training them, but it is not clear if they joined.
Character | Real Name | Joined in | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Hawkeye | Clinton Francis Barton | West Coast Avengers #46 (July 1989) | Currently leader of the Occupy Avengers. |
Mockingbird | Bobbi Morse-Barton | Currently a member of S.H.I.EL.D. | |
Character | Real Name | Joined in | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Squirrel Girl | Doreen Green | GLA #2 (July 2005) | Left the team because she felt they were relying too much on her, thus keeping them from reaching their own potential. |
Monkey Joe | Monkey Joe | Joined the team along with Squirrel Girl, but was killed by Leather Boy in a fit of jealousy. | |
Grasshopper | Doug Taggert | Killed soon after joining. | |
Tippy-Toe | Tippy Toe | GLA #4 | Squirrel Girl's current squirrel partner. Left the team with Squirrel Girl. |
Grasshopper | Neil Shelton | GLX-Mas Special | Unknown if he had any relation to the GLA. Killed when he accidentally propelled himself into space. |
Deadpool | Wade Wilson | Deadpool-GLI Summer Fun Spectacular #1 (September 2007) | Given reserve membership with the team until he was kicked out by Squirrel Girl. |
Grasshopper | Unknown | Murdered by Deadpool. | |
Gravity | Gregory Willis | Avengers: The Initiative #25 (August 2009) | Left shortly afterward, never seen in action with the team. |
Good Boy | Goodness Silva | The Great Lakes Avengers Vol. 2 #1 | Inducted as a member simply so she would not be prosecuted by authorities. Seemingly active in the GLA. |
Grasshopper | Unknown | Fantastic Four Vol. 6 #43 | First Grasshopper to survive a battle with the team. (Has not appeared since.) |
Character | Real Name | Joined in | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Leather Boy | Gene Lorrene | GLA #1 (June 2005) | Applied upon founding but considered ineligible for membership. |
Grasshopper | Unknown | Avengers: Initiative #19 (December 2008) | Revealed to be a Skrull infiltrator and was killed. |
The GLA appeared in the climax of the JLA/Avengers miniseries, where they assisted in the defeat of Krona. [26]
In August 2009, Time listed the Great Lakes Avengers among the "Top 10 Oddest Marvel Characters". [32]
Title | Material collected | Publication Date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|
G.L.A.: Misassembled | G.L.A. #1-4, West Coast Avengers #46, material from Marvel Super-Heroes #8 | December 2005 | 978-0785116219 |
The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl & the Great Lakes Avengers | G.L.A. #1-4, GLX-Mas Special, Thing (vol. 2) #8, Cable & Deadpool #30, Deadpool/GLI Summer Fun Spectacular; material from Marvel Super-Heroes #8, I Hear Marvel: Masked Intentions, Age of Heroes #3, I am An Avenger #1 | August 2016 | 978-1302900663 |
Great Lakes Avengers: Same Old, Same Old | Great Lakes Avengers #1-7 | May 2017 | 978-1302906214 |
The New Warriors is a fictional superhero team appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. They traditionally consisted of teenage and young adult heroes, and were often seen to serve as a junior counterpart to The Avengers in much the same way that the New Mutants/X-Force did with the X-Men. They made a cameo appearance in The Mighty Thor #411 and made their full debut in The Mighty Thor #412. Over the years, the New Warriors, in their various incarnations, have been featured in five different volumes of the title The New Warriors.
Robert "Robbie" Baldwin is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by artist Steve Ditko and writer Tom DeFalco, the character first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man Annual #22 originally known as Speedball, as well as in Civil War: Front Line #10 as Penance.
Bullseye is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character was created by Marv Wolfman and John Romita Sr. Depicted as a psychopathic assassin, Bullseye uses the opportunities afforded by his line of work to exercise his homicidal tendencies and to work out his own personal vendetta against Daredevil. He is also an enemy of the Punisher. Although he possesses no superpowers, Bullseye is able to use almost any object as a lethal projectile, be it weapons like shuriken and sai or seemingly harmless objects like playing cards and pencils. His marksmanship is uncanny, at a nearly supernatural level.
Taskmaster is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by writer David Michelinie and artist George Pérez, the character made his debut in The Avengers #195. Possessing photographic reflexes that allow him to mimic any fighting style at the cost of his long and short-term memory, he has served as an adversary of Marvel Universe superheroes such as Captain America, Ant-Man, and Spider-Man. He is usually depicted as a mercenary hired by criminal organizations to act as a training instructor. He is the biological father of Finesse.
"Avengers Disassembled" is a 2004 crossover storyline published by Marvel Comics involving the Avengers, Fantastic Four, Captain America, Spider-Man and Thor. The beginning of Brian Michael Bendis's Avengers run, it depicts the destruction of the existing traditional roster and the exile of several key members of the team. The storyline includes a number of subplots, some of which take place before and/or after the main events, which include other changes to the status quo: Iron Man once again closeting his secret identity, Spider-Man developing organic web-shooters, and the death of Thor and Asgard in one final Ragnarok.
Devil Dinosaur is a character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by Jack Kirby, the character first appeared in Devil Dinosaur #1. Devil Dinosaur is depicted as resembling an enormous, crimson Tyrannosaurus-like dinosaur. The character and his inseparable ape-like friend, Moon-Boy, are natives of "Dinosaur World," a version of Earth in a parallel universe where dinosaurs and other prehistoric creatures co-exist with tribes of primitive humanoid beings.
Dan Slott is an American comic book writer, known for his work on Marvel Comics books such as The Amazing Spider-Man, as well as She-Hulk, Silver Surfer, The Superior Spider-Man, Tony Stark: Iron Man, The Mighty Avengers, and Fantastic Four. His work for DC Comics includes the books Arkham Asylum: Living Hell and Batman Adventures.
Flatman (Matt) is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by John Byrne, the character first appeared in West Coast Avengers #46. Flatman belongs to the subspecies of humans called mutants, who are born with superhuman abilities. He is a member of the Great Lakes Avengers.
Squirrel Girl is a superheroine appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by writer Will Murray and writer-artist Steve Ditko, the character first appeared in Marvel Super-Heroes vol. 2 #8, a.k.a. Marvel Super-Heroes Winter Special. Murray created the character out of a desire to write lighthearted stories, in contrast to the heavily dramatic tales that were then the norm in mainstream comics.
The Grasshopper is the name of multiple humorous fictional superheroes appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics, all created by Dan Slott. No Grasshopper to date has survived past the issue in which they first appeared. The Grasshoppers are a simultaneous homage to and satire of stereotypical superheroes and Marvel's tendency towards animal-themed characters. They are also a lampoon of the tendency of superhero team books to introduce new, hastily developed characters only to dramatically kill them off within a few issues. The complicated romantic troubles of the first Grasshopper recall many characters with similar subplots, as does the unlikely family background of the second.
Mr. Immortal is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. He is the leader of the Great Lakes Avengers.
Doorman is a fictional mutant superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Big Bertha is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by John Byrne, the character first appeared in West Coast Avengers vol. 2 #46. Big Bertha belongs to the subspecies of humans called mutants, who are born with superhuman abilities. She is also a member of the Great Lakes Avengers.
Dinah Soar is a fictional superheroine appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Her name is a pun on the word "dinosaur".
Marvel's New Warriors is an unaired American television pilot created and written by Kevin Biegel for Freeform, based on the Marvel Comics superhero team of the same name. It was intended to be set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) and acknowledge the continuity of the franchise's films and other television series. The pilot was produced by ABC Signature Studios and Marvel Television.
Fresh Start is a 2018 relaunch of comic book publications by Marvel Comics, following Marvel Legacy.