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Smasher
Smasher I by Dave Cockrum
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceX-Men #107 (October 1977) (I)
War of Kings #1 (March 2009)(II)
War of Kings #3 (May 2009)(III)
Created byChris Claremont and Dave Cockrum
In-story information
Alter egoVril Rokk (I)
Salac Tuur (II)
Unrevealed (III)
Isabel "Izzy" Kane (IV)
SpeciesAlien (I-III)
Human (IV)
Team affiliationsImperial Guard (I, II, III, and IV)
Avengers (IV)
AbilitiesSuperhuman strength via cosmic radiation absorption
Ability to download additional powers via exospex
Flight via anti-gravity "flight patches"

Smasher is the name of multiple different fictional characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.

Publication history

Smasher first appeared in X-Men #107 (October 1977-February 1978), and was created by Chris Claremont and Dave Cockrum.

A new Smasher, named Isabel Kane, appears as a member of the Avengers in the Marvel NOW! relaunch.[citation needed] Her name was originally given as "Isabel Dare", but the collected edition of her first appearance said her surname was "Kane". According to editor Tom Brevoort, this change was deliberate; he even stated that "Dare was a mistake in the first place," as the character was intended to be Captain Terror's granddaughter from her first appearance.[1]

Yet more Smashers, operating directly under Imperial control, appear in the 'Infinity' crossover.[2]

Fictional character biography

The title of Smasher has been used by three different humanoid aliens who served in the Shi'ar Imperial Guard.

Vril Rokk

This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (October 2014)

The first Smasher was Vril Rokk, who had a long, distinguished service with the Guard. He was also romantically linked with fellow Guardsman Plutonia.[volume & issue needed]

In Untold Tales of Captain Marvel — which takes place before his first encounter with the X-Men — Smasher, the Guard, Marvel and the Kree all meet. A small division of the Guard, Deathbolt, Smasher, Fang and Oracle had been selected to guard the personage of Deathbird, the current ruler of the Shi'ar empire. They allied, then fought with the Kree after the latter came to their assistance against a murderous attack from the Skrulls. They later are involved with a confrontation against the Brood.[3]

When Cassandra Nova was devastating the Shi'ar empire, Smasher was one of the few entities that managed to personally protect the empress Lilandra.[volume & issue needed] Under protest, Smasher is ordered to travel to Earth to warn the X-Men about the threat Nova posed.[volume & issue needed] He crash lands in a field full of cows. He does not make it to the mansion until well after the Imperial Guard, brainwashed by Nova, were attempting to kill the X-Men. His presence manages to convince the Guard to fight against Nova, although he and the others were swiftly defeated by her.[volume & issue needed]

Smasher is later killed by Vulcan, a powerful mutant who attempts to conquer the Shi'ar empire.[4]

Salac Tuur

Vril Rokk is soon replaced with another Smasher, Salac Tuur. The new Smasher was among the Imperial Guardsmen who attacked the Kree homeworld during the wedding of Crystal and Ronan the Accuser. During the battle, Smasher was killed by the Inhuman Karnak.[5]

Third Smasher

The uniform and title of Smasher was passed onto an unidentified member of the original's race; however, this version of Smasher was soon killed by Gladiator during a raid by the Starjammers and Guardians of the Galaxy. The Strontian praetor killed Smasher as a sign of defecting to Lilandra.[6]

Izzy Kane

A new Smasher appears in the Marvel Now! relaunch as part of Captain America's new Avengers line-up.[7][8] She joins the Avengers to help fight Ex Nihilo on Mars.[9] She is revealed to be Isabel "Izzy" Kane, a college student and astronomer from Iowa. After finding a pair of high-tech goggles that had been left behind in a cornfield by Vril Rokk when he crashed to the Earth to warn the X-Men about Cassandra Nova, Izzy becomes the new Smasher and Earth's first member of the Imperial Guard. Izzy is introduced to Captain America by her grandfather Dan Kane, an acquaintance from World War II.[10]

As part of the Avengers, Izzy meets the Guardians of the Galaxy when their ship is ambushed and crashes into a mall's parking lot.[11]

When the source of mysterious seismic events was revealed to be A.I.M. Island, Smasher went to investigate along with Cannonball and Sunspot. When they arrived to the location, they were captured by A.I.M. Troopers.[12] Smasher was chosen by Andrew Forson and Jude the Entropic Man to become his Messenger for the secret of the universe, that "Everything dies." Smasher is made to do so by Andrew Forson.[13]

She is later seen eight months in the future as seen in the Time Runs Out storyline having started a family with teammate Sam Guthrie.[14] She later rejoins with an Avengers team headed by Roberto DaCosta and Thor. Their goal is to find the threat causing the slow death of the multiverse and to kill it. This brings Smasher in direct opposition with Captain America's group.[15]

Sometime later, Smasher is seen with Cannonball and their son on another planet discussing their future together, which leads to Cannonball deciding to quit the U.S.Avengers so that he could be with his family full time.[16]

In the aftermath of the Secret Empire storyline, Smasher arrives on Earth and tells Sunspot that Cannonball, who was believed to be dead, is alive on another planet.[17]

Monster

A new Smasher not affiliated with the Imperial Guard was introduced in Monsters Unleashed. This version is a creation of Kid Kaiju that is composed of him and his five monsters Slizzik, Hi-Vo, Aegis, Scragg and Mekara. They come together to battle the Leviathon Mother when the Leviathon Tide invaded Earth.[18]

Powers and abilities

Like his predecessors, Smasher could naturally absorb cosmic radiation from his environment to increase his strength to superhuman levels.

Smasher wore special goggles called "exospex" that enabled him to "download" additional superhuman powers.[volume & issue needed] Via the exospex, he could obtain "penta-vision" (a form of X-ray vision), superhuman durability, even greater physical strength, and the ability to travel into hyperspace ("4-space"). Smasher was only capable of downloading one superpower at a time.

Smasher wore small anti-gravity "flight patches" that enabled him to fly. Flight patches are standard issue for Imperial Guardsmen who lack the power of flight.

Inspiration

Several of the members of the Imperial Guard are at least partly based on members of the DC Comics' team Legion of Super-Heroes. Dave Cockrum (co-creator of the Guard) also had a long run as artist on the Legion. Smasher is based on LSH member Ultra Boy.[citation needed]

Other versions

X-Men: The End

In the alternate future of X-Men: The End, Smasher is a veteran Guardian who is on duty when Cassandra Nova's plans are revealed. He attacks with a small group of other Guardians, all of whom are killed in the resulting battle.[19]

Star Trek/X-Men

Smasher and the Imperial Guard assist Deathbird in a mission.[20]

In other media

The first Smasher makes non-speaking cameo appearances in X-Men: The Animated Series.[21]

References

  1. ^ New Brevoort Formspring
  2. ^ Wolverine and the X-Men Annual #1 (November 2013)
  3. ^ Untold Tales of Captain Marvel #1-3 (1997)
  4. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #480 (January 2007).
  5. ^ War of Kings #1 (March 2009)
  6. ^ War of Kings #3 (July 2009).
  7. ^ Avengers (vol. 5) #1 (December 2012)
  8. ^ 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. 337. ISBN 978-1-4654-7890-0.
  9. ^ Avengers (vol. 5) #2
  10. ^ Avengers (vol. 5) #5
  11. ^ Guardians Team Up #1-2 (May 2015)
  12. ^ Avengers World #1
  13. ^ Avengers World #2
  14. ^ Avengers (vol. 5) #35 (September 2014)
  15. ^ Avengers (vol. 5) #39-40
  16. ^ U.S. Avengers #5 (June 2017).
  17. ^ U.S. Avengers #10 (November 2017).
  18. ^ Monsters Unleashed (vol. 2) #5
  19. ^ X-Men: The End: Book 3: Men & X-Men #1-2 (March–April 2006)
  20. ^ Star Trek/X-Men #1 (December 1996)
  21. ^ "X-Men: The Animated Series #317 - The Fate of the Phoenix (Episode)". Comic Vine. Retrieved April 20, 2024.