Secret Wars II
- Superhero
Al Milgrom
Secret Wars II is a nine-issue comic book limited series and crossover published from 1985 to 1986 by Marvel Comics. The series was written by Marvel's then editor-in-chief Jim Shooter and primarily pencilled by Al Milgrom.[1]
The series was a sequel to original series Secret Wars, published in 1984 and 1985. The series tied-in with issues of other Marvel titles, with each "tie-in" featuring a "Secret Wars II" logo in the top right hand corner to indicate that it was a part of the overall story. This was the first time Marvel published a story where the reader would have to purchase multiple titles in order to read the entire story.[1]
Plot
The entity that instigated the first Secret War, the Beyonder, visits Earth in search of enlightenment and inevitably comes into conflict with Earth's superhumans and the cosmic entities that exist in the Marvel Universe. At first, the Beyonder tries to figure out the meaning of the simple everyday tasks humans do, such as: eating, sleeping, using the bathroom, etc, then the Beyonder works for a mobster and becomes very powerful and obsessed with gadgets. The Earth's heroes are very suspicious of him and this causes the Beyonder to retreat to a lone island. Mephisto recruits an army of supervillains with boosted strength, but The Thing fights them off after he is given augmented strength as well. The Beyonder falls in love with Dazzler, and tries to start a relationship with Boom Boom, but both turn him down. It is also explained how Doctor Doom, who was killed in the "normal" timeline, was able to appear in the first Secret Wars. The Beyonder recreates Doom's body from its disintegrated particles and sends him back in time to the start of the Secret Wars, causing Doom to live them in reverse order.
The Beyonder is eventually dealt with, although the heroes also have to prevent the destruction of the planet as a consequence of his actions.[2] Beyonder attempts to become a human while still retaining all his powers. The demon Mephisto attempts to destroy him while in this form since he is now "merely human."
A sequel in the form of a single issue revealed that the Beyonder was an evolved Cosmic Cube and evolved into a being called Kosmos.[3]
Tie-in issues
- July 1985:
Captain America #308; Iron Man #197; New Mutants #30; Uncanny X-Men #196
- Aug. 1985:
The Amazing Spider-Man #268; Fantastic Four #282; Web of Spider-Man #6
- Sept. 1985:
Avengers #260; Daredevil #223; The Incredible Hulk #312
- Oct. 1985:
Alpha Flight #28; Avengers #261; Dazzler #40; Rom #72
- Nov. 1985:
Doctor Strange #74; Fantastic Four #285; The Thing #30
- Dec. 1985:
Cloak and Dagger #4; The Micronauts: The New Voyages #16; Power Pack #18; Power Man and Iron Fist #121; Thor #363
- Jan. 1986:
Amazing Spider-Man #273; New Defenders #152; New Mutants #36; Peter Parker, The Spectacular Spider-Man #111; Uncanny X-Men #202
- Feb. 1986:
Amazing Spider-Man #274; Avengers #265; Fantastic Four #288; New Mutants #37; Uncanny X-Men #203
- March 1986:
Avengers #266
- March 1990:
Quasar #8
- Dec. 1998:
Deadpool Team Up #1
Reception
John Gregory Betancourt reviewed Secret Wars II for the July 1986 issue of Amazing Stories and said that "I felt this series was something special [...] I think you might be pleasantly surprised if you haven't read any comics lately."[4]
Secret Wars II was 1985's bestselling comic book; however, it was "one of the most despised comics of the year" in the eyes of the fan press, receiving poor reviews and making numerous "worst comics of the year" lists.[1]
Collected editions
- Secret Wars II (paperback), ISBN 9780785158301
Title | Material collected | Published date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|
Secret Wars II | Secret Wars II #1-9 | December 2011 | 978-0785158301 |
Marvel Super Heroes Secret Wars: Battleworld Box Set | Secret Wars II #1-9, New Mutants #30, 36-37, Captain America #308, Uncanny X-Men #196, 202-203 Iron Man #197, Web of Spider-Man #6, Amazing Spider-Man #268, 273-274, Fantastic Four #282, 285, 288, 316-319, Avengers #260-261, 265-266, Daredevil #223, Incredible Hulk #312, Alpha Flight #28, Dazzler #40, Thing #30, Doctor Strange #74, Cloak & Dagger #4, Power Pack #18, Thor #363, Power Man & Iron Fist #121, New Defenders #152, Spectacular Spider-Man #111. Also includes Marvel Super-Heroes Secret Wars, Marvel Super-Heroes Secret Wars: To Battleworld and Back, Thing: Battleworld, Marvel Super-Heroes Secret Wars Aftermath, Secret War, Beyond the Secret Wars and Marvel Super-Heroes Secret Wars: Behind the Scenes. | June 2015 | 978-0785197515 |
Notes
- ^ a b c Dallas, Keith (May 28, 2013). American Comic Book Chronicles: The 1980s. TwoMorrows Publishing. pp. 139–140. ISBN 978-1-6054-9046-5.
- ^ Avengers #266 (April 1986)
- ^ Fantastic Four #319 (Oct. 1988)
- ^ "Amazing Stories v61n02 (1986 07) (EXciter dtsg0318)".
References
- Secret Wars II at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
- The Marvel Chronology Project
- Mitchell Brown's The Unofficial Comics Crossover Index page on Secret Wars II (via Wayback Machine)
- The Unofficial Handbook of Marvel Comics Creators
- v
- t
- e
- Contest of Champions (June 1982)
- Secret Wars (May 1984)
- Secret Wars II (July 1985)
- Mutant Massacre (October 1986)
- The Fall of the Mutants (January 1988)
- The Evolutionary War (1988)
- Inferno (October 1988)
- Atlantis Attacks (1989)
- Acts of Vengeance (December 1989)
- The Infinity Gauntlet (July 1991)
- Operation: Galactic Storm (March 1992)
- The Infinity War (June 1992)
- The Infinity Crusade (June 1993)
- Age of Apocalypse (January 1995)
- DC vs. Marvel (April 1996)
- Onslaught (May 1996)
- Heroes Reborn (1996)
- Maximum Security (December 2000)
- JLA/Avengers (Sept. 2003)
- Secret War (February 2004)
- Avengers Disassembled (August 2004)
- Ultimate Nightmare (October 2004)
- Ultimate Secret (May 2005)
- House of M (June 2005)
- Last Hero Standing (August 2005)
- Decimation (December 2005)
- Ultimate Extinction (January 2006)
- Annihilation (March 2006)
- Civil War (July 2006)
- Ultimate Power (December 2006)
- The Initiative (March 2007)
- World War Hulk (July 2007)
- Last Planet Standing (July 2007)
- Annihilation: Conquest (August 2007)
- Secret Invasion (June 2008)
- Dark Reign (December 2008)
- Ultimatum (January 2009)
- War of Kings (March 2009)
- Fall of the Hulks (December 2009)
- Realm of Kings (January 2010)
- Siege (January 2010)
- Ultimate Comics: Doomsday (January 2010)
- World War Hulks (February 2010)
- The Thanos Imperative (July 2010)
- Shadowland (September 2010)
- Chaos War (October 2010)
- Age of X (January 2011)
- Fear Itself (March 2011)
- Spider-Island (June 2011)
- Ultimate Fallout (July 2011)
- Avengers vs. X-Men (April 2012)
- Age of Ultron (March 2013)
- Infinity (August 2013)
- Inhumanity (December 2013)
- Original Sin (May 2014)
- AXIS (October 2014)
- Spider-Verse (November 2014)
- The Black Vortex (February 2015)
- Secret Wars (May 2015)
- Avengers: Standoff! (March 2016)
- Civil War II (June 2016)
- Inhumans vs. X-Men (November 2016)
- Monsters Unleashed! (January 2017)
- Secret Empire (May 2017)
- Damnation (February 2018)
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- The War of the Realms (April 2019)
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- Gang War (December 2023)
- Blood Hunt (May 2024)
- Venom War (August 2024)
- Raid On Greymalkin (December 2024)
- One World Under Doom (2025)
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