The Avengers
film were all drawn directly from the pages of Mark Millar and Bryan Hitch's seminal comic series.
The Ultimates burst onto the comic scene with The Ultimates
#1 in March 2002. They were a cornerstone of Marvel's ambitious Ultimate Marvel publishing line, which began in 2000 with Ultimate Spider-Man
. The imprint's mission was to jettison decades of convoluted continuity and reintroduce Marvel's flagship characters to a new, modern audience.
The creative team of writer Mark Millar and artist Bryan Hitch was pivotal to the series' success and identity. Millar, known for his cynical wit and high-concept, often controversial storytelling, deconstructed the classic archetypes of the Avengers. He asked questions like, “What would a super-soldier from the 1940s really be like today?” and “What kind of person would build a suit of armor to fight crime?” The answers were often unflattering and complex, reflecting a post-9/11 world full of paranoia, political maneuvering, and moral ambiguity.
Bryan Hitch's artistic contribution was equally revolutionary. He pioneered a style that became known as “widescreen” comics. Using detailed, realistic art, panoramic panels that mimicked cinematic aspect ratios, and an intense focus on verisimilitude—from the nuts and bolts on Iron Man's armor to the specific military hardware used by S.H.I.E.L.D.—Hitch made the extraordinary feel tangible. The book didn't just read like a comic; it felt like a storyboard for a blockbuster Hollywood movie, years before the MCU would make that a reality. This cinematic approach is arguably the book's most enduring legacy.
The origin of The Ultimates is one of the clearest examples of the divergence between Marvel's comic universes and their adaptations. The name itself primarily belongs to one universe, while its spirit and DNA define another.
In the reality designated Earth-1610, the formation of The Ultimates was a calculated government initiative, not a chance gathering of heroes. Following the re-emergence of mutants as a public phenomenon, General Nick Fury, the grizzled, no-nonsense director of the international peacekeeping force S.H.I.E.L.D., successfully lobbied the U.S. government to fund a publicly-accountable superhuman response team. This was not just for global defense, but as a powerful deterrent to other nations developing their own super-powered assets. The program's foundation was the original Super-Soldier Program that created Captain America. Fury's team reverse-engineered this science, but their first modern subject, Dr. Bruce Banner, became a catastrophic failure. Desperate to prove his research's value and driven by deep-seated insecurities, Banner's experiments resulted in the creation of the monstrous and uncontrollable Hulk. The initial roster was assembled with surgical precision:
This core group was housed in the Triskelion, S.H.I.E.L.D.'s state-of-the-art headquarters off the coast of Manhattan. Their public debut was not against a cosmic god, but against one of their own: Bruce Banner, who unleashed the Hulk in a desperate, jealousy-fueled rage. The ensuing battle in Manhattan was a brutal, destructive affair that cemented the team's power in the public eye but also highlighted its inherent instability.
In the main Marvel continuity (Earth-616), a team named The Ultimates did not exist until many years later, long after the Ultimate Universe's version had made its mark. This new team was formed in the aftermath of the multiverse-shattering Secret Wars
(2015) event.
Led by Captain Marvel (Carol Danvers), this version of The Ultimates was not a government-run strike force but a proactive cosmic problem-solving unit. Their mission was to tackle “the big problems” on a universal scale, addressing cosmic threats before they could ever reach Earth. The team's mandate was scientific, philosophical, and immensely powerful.
Their roster was comprised of some of the most intelligent and powerful beings on the planet:
Their first and most audacious mission was to solve the “problem” of Galactus, the Devourer of Worlds. Instead of fighting him, they forced his transformation from a force of cosmic destruction into Galactus the Lifebringer, a force of cosmic restoration. This act immediately established them as one of the most effective and ambitious teams in Marvel history, a far cry from the gritty, grounded conflicts of their Earth-1610 namesake.
While the MCU's premier team is named the Avengers, its conception, tone, and initial lineup are almost entirely a cinematic adaptation of The Ultimates from Earth-1610. The creators of the MCU, particularly Kevin Feige, Nick Fury actor Samuel L. Jackson, and The Avengers
director Joss Whedon, have openly cited the Millar/Hitch series as a primary source of inspiration.
Key elements borrowed from The Ultimates include:
The Ultimates
and the foundational premise of the MCU's Phase One.The Avengers
film are the Chitauri. In the Earth-1610 comics, the Chitauri were a reptilian, shapeshifting race that were Millar's stand-in for the Skrulls. The MCU adopted the name and their role as Loki's invading army.The two primary teams operating under the “Ultimates” banner could not be more different in their purpose, organization, or membership.
The primary mission of the Earth-1610 Ultimates was to serve as America's first line of defense against superhuman threats, both foreign and domestic. However, their mandate was explicitly political. They were a tool of national security and a symbol of American power, deployed to enforce foreign policy and act as the ultimate deterrent. Public perception, managed by S.H.I.E.L.D.'s PR division, was a constant concern, with the team's exploits often spun for public consumption.
Member | Codename | Role & Key Attributes (Earth-1610) |
---|---|---|
Steve Rogers | Captain America | The Super-Soldier. A brilliant field commander and the team's moral backbone, but also a blunt, uncompromising soldier from a bygone era struggling with modern morality. |
Tony Stark | Iron Man | The Futurist. Provided the team's cutting-edge technology and a significant portion of its funding. His personality was defined by arrogance, alcoholism, and a death wish stemming from his brain tumor. |
Thor Odinson | Thor | The God of Thunder. Initially, his divine nature was ambiguous; S.H.I.E.L.D. believed he was a rogue super-soldier with stolen European technology. He was an anti-establishment environmentalist who often clashed with the team's government mandate. |
Bruce Banner | The Hulk | The Monster Within. A gifted but deeply insecure scientist who created the Hulk formula in a failed attempt to recreate the super-soldier serum. He was a constant liability, and his transformations were treated as a weapon of mass destruction. |
Hank Pym | Giant-Man | The Scientist. A brilliant biochemist who suffered from a severe inferiority complex, leading to spousal abuse and reckless behavior. He could grow to immense size but was often the team's weakest link emotionally. |
Janet Pym | The Wasp | The Heart. A mutant with the ability to shrink, fly, and fire bio-stings. She was intelligent and media-savvy, often acting as the team's public face. She grew into a strong, independent hero after leaving her abusive husband. |
Clint Barton | Hawkeye | The Operative. A former black-ops soldier with near-superhuman accuracy. He was a stone-cold professional, the unflinching wet-works agent of the team, a family man whose identity was kept top secret. |
Natasha Romanoff | Black Widow | The Spy. An ex-KGB assassin of dubious loyalty. She was a master of espionage and seduction, and her ultimate allegiance was always in question, leading to a shocking betrayal. |
The mission of the Earth-616 Ultimates was purely proactive and cosmic. As articulated by their leader, Captain Marvel, their goal was to “solve the impossible” and neutralize universe-level threats before they could endanger reality. They operated on the frontiers of science and metaphysics, dealing with concepts like cosmic neutrality, interdimensional incursions, and the fundamental forces of the universe.
Member | Codename | Role & Key Attributes (Earth-616) |
---|---|---|
Carol Danvers | Captain Marvel | The Leader. As commander of Alpha Flight, she had the authority and experience to direct the team's cosmic-scale missions. |
T'Challa | Black Panther | The King/Strategist. His intellect, political power as sovereign of Wakanda, and advanced technology made him the team's anchor. |
Adam Brashear | Blue Marvel | The Super-Genius. A master of theoretical physics and antimatter manipulation, his power and intellect were often the key to solving their “impossible” problems. |
Monica Rambeau | Spectrum | The Energy Master. Her ability to become and control any energy on the electromagnetic spectrum made her one of the most versatile and powerful beings on the team. |
America Chavez | Ms. America | The Key. Her unique power to create portals to any point in the multiverse was the lynchpin of the team's operational mobility. |
Galactus | The Lifebringer | The Converted Threat. Formerly the Devourer of Worlds, the Ultimates forcibly evolved him into a creator of life, temporarily making him a complex and powerful ally. |
The Earth-1610 Ultimates existed within a web of complex, often fraught, relationships that defined their world.
Ultimatum
event, a traumatized and nihilistic Reed Richards became a supreme villain. He was a far greater threat than any before, using his super-genius to attack the entire world. He became the arch-nemesis for the surviving members of the Ultimates and a major threat to the entire Marvel multiverse.Unlike the Avengers of Earth-616 who long operated with autonomy, the Ultimates were a direct extension of the U.S. Government. They were deployed to neutralize threats in sovereign nations, which was framed as peacekeeping but viewed by the rest of the world as an act of aggression. Their public perception was meticulously curated. Scandals, such as Hank Pym's assault on his wife Janet or the Hulk's rampage, were major PR crises that S.H.I.E.L.D.'s damage control teams worked tirelessly to spin or suppress.
This opening arc established the team's core concept. It detailed Nick Fury's recruitment drive, the reawakening of Captain America, and the deeply flawed personalities of each member. The story subverted classic hero tropes, presenting Hank Pym as an abusive spouse, Tony Stark as a functioning alcoholic, and Bruce Banner as a pathetic weakling who becomes a monster out of sheer desperation. The climax, a visceral and terrifying battle between the newly-formed team and the Hulk in Manhattan, demonstrated Bryan Hitch's “widescreen” style and set a new standard for gritty superhero action.
Often considered the pinnacle of the entire Ultimate line, this storyline escalated the stakes from internal drama to global political thriller. The central plot involves an unknown traitor within the team systematically dismantling them from the inside: Thor is declared a fraud and imprisoned, Hawkeye's secret family is murdered, and Captain America is framed for treason. This internal sabotage is revealed to be a precursor to a full-scale invasion of the United States by the Liberators. The arc is a masterclass in tension and deconstruction, exploring themes of patriotism, unilateralism, and the very definition of a “hero” in a world of complex geopolitics.
This 2008-2009 crossover event was the death knell for the original vision of the Ultimate Universe. Caused by Magneto, who reverses the planet's magnetic poles in grief over the deaths of his children, the event triggers a worldwide cataclysm. A massive tidal wave strikes New York, killing millions, including numerous members of the Ultimates and their supporting casts (Wasp, Hank Pym, and Thor are among the casualties). The storyline was infamous for its shocking and often gratuitous violence, and it permanently fractured the Ultimates as a team and the Ultimate imprint as a whole.
This Earth-616 series completely redefined the team's name for a new era. Focusing on the cosmic team led by Captain Marvel, writer Al Ewing crafted a high-concept science-fiction epic. The team's mission to change Galactus into a Lifebringer was a radical and successful endeavor. They went on to confront the fundamental nature of time, face off against the powerful cosmic entity Logos, and played a pivotal role in the Civil War II
event, where their predictive justice methods came into conflict with Iron Man's faction. It was a celebration of cosmic Marvel, standing in stark intellectual contrast to the visceral, political nature of the original Earth-1610 team.
The Ultimates
.Ultimate Avengers
and Ultimate Avengers 2: Rise of the Panther
, were released in 2006. These were very faithful adaptations of the first two volumes of the comic, retaining much of the darker tone, character conflicts, and storylines, including the Hulk's rampage and the Chitauri invasion. They serve as a direct look at how the comic's plot was translated before the live-action MCU.The Ultimates
has had a lasting impact on the comic book industry, influencing countless artists and leading to a more cinematic approach to panel layout and detail across many publishers.The Ultimates
because Marvel's then-Editor-in-Chief Joe Quesada planned a “secret invasion” storyline for the main universe and wanted to reserve the Skrulls. The name and role were later adopted by the MCU for The Avengers
(2012).Civil War II
crossover event. Their ability to predict future crimes put them at the center of the story's ideological conflict about determinism vs. free will.