avengers_secret_wars_film

Avengers: Secret Wars

  • Core Identity: Secret Wars is Marvel's ultimate multiverse-shattering mega-event, a conceptual battleground where cosmic entities force heroes and villains into conflicts that redefine reality itself.
  • Key Takeaways:
  • Role in the Universe: Originally conceived as Marvel's first company-wide crossover event in 1984, the Secret Wars brand has evolved to represent the absolute apex of existential, multiversal threats. It is the narrative framework used to fundamentally reshape the Marvel Universe, from introducing new characters and concepts to rebooting the entire continuity. Multiverse.
  • Primary Impact: The 1984 original famously introduced Spider-Man's black alien symbiote suit (leading to the creation of Venom), while the 2015 epic by Jonathan Hickman culminated in the temporary destruction of the entire Marvel Multiverse and its subsequent rebirth, integrating characters like Miles Morales into the prime Earth-616 reality.
  • Key Incarnations: In the comics, Secret Wars has primarily been driven by the god-like Beyonder (1984) and later by Doctor Doom usurping cosmic power to save remnants of reality (2015). In the Marvel Cinematic Universe, it is being positioned as the climactic finale of the “Multiverse Saga,” with Kang the Conqueror and his variants set up as the central multiversal antagonists.

The name Secret Wars refers to two primary, universe-defining comic book maxiseries published by Marvel Comics, decades apart, each with its own unique creative genesis and purpose. The original, `Marvel Super Heroes Secret Wars`, a 12-issue limited series that ran from May 1984 to April 1985, was the brainchild of then-Editor-in-Chief Jim Shooter. The series' creation was uniquely driven by a commercial partnership with the toy company Mattel. Seeking to compete with Kenner's popular DC Super Powers toy line, Mattel licensed Marvel's characters and requested a major comic book event that would feature a vast array of heroes and villains in a single, easily understandable conflict, providing a narrative basis for the action figures. Shooter himself wrote the entire series, with art primarily by Mike Zeck and Bob Layton. It was a landmark event, establishing the template for the summer crossover blockbusters that would become a staple of the industry. Its title was reportedly chosen based on market research indicating that the words “secret” and “wars” were popular with young readers. Over thirty years later, Marvel revisited the concept with `Secret Wars`, an 9-issue limited series (originally planned for 8) that ran from May 2015 to January 2016. This event was the culmination of years of intricate plotting by writer Jonathan Hickman, primarily seeded throughout his epic runs on `Fantastic Four`, `Avengers`, and `New Avengers`. Unlike the commercially-driven original, the 2015 version was a dense, complex, and philosophically ambitious narrative that served as the climax to the “Incursion” storyline, where parallel universes were colliding and annihilating one another. With breathtaking art by Esad Ribić, this Secret Wars was a critical and commercial success, serving as a “soft reboot” for the Marvel Universe, leading into the “All-New, All-Different Marvel” publishing initiative.

Marvel Super Heroes Secret Wars (1984)

The origin of the first Secret War was abrupt and absolute. A mysterious, impossibly powerful cosmic entity, who would come to be known as the The Beyonder, observed the Marvel Universe from a realm beyond all dimensions. Fascinated by the concepts of heroism, villainy, and the perpetual conflict between them, he constructed a patchwork planet called “Battleworld” from pieces of various worlds. He then instantaneously abducted a curated selection of Earth's most powerful heroes and villains, transporting them to this new arena. His declaration was simple and terrifying: “I am from beyond! Slay your enemies and all that you desire shall be yours! Nothing is impossible for me!” The assembled heroes included members of the `avengers` (Captain America, Thor, Iron Man (James Rhodes), Hulk, Captain Marvel (Monica Rambeau), Hawkeye, She-Hulk, and the Wasp), the `x-men` (Professor X, Cyclops, Storm, Wolverine, Rogue, Nightcrawler, and Colossus), the `fantastic_four` (Mister Fantastic, the Human Torch, and the Thing), and `spider-man`. The villains included Doctor Doom, Doctor Octopus, Ultron, Galactus, Kang the Conqueror, the Absorbing Man, the Wrecking Crew, and the Enchantress. The story chronicled their desperate struggle for survival and the ideological clash between the heroes who sought to find a way home without compromising their morals and the villains who immediately began scheming for power.

Secret Wars (2015)

The 2015 event had a much more gradual and horrifying origin, meticulously built across years of storytelling. The central catalyst was the phenomenon of “Incursions”—a multiversal decay where two parallel Earths would become the focal point of their colliding universes. If one Earth was not destroyed, both universes would be annihilated. Earth-616's Illuminati (Iron Man, Mister Fantastic, Doctor Strange, Black Panther, Namor, Black Bolt, and Beast) discovered this threat and secretly began a desperate campaign to save their world, destroying countless other Earths in the process, shattering their own morality to do so. Their efforts ultimately failed. The final Incursion was between the prime Earth-616 and the Ultimate Universe (Earth-1610). As reality collapsed, Doctor Doom, having previously discovered the source of the Incursions—the enigmatic Beyonders—confronted them with the Molecule Man and managed to steal their omnipotent power. While the heroes launched a “life raft” with a handful of survivors, Doom used his newfound godhood to salvage the dying fragments of dozens of destroyed realities. He stitched them together into a new Battleworld, a single, feudal planet ruled by his absolute will as God Emperor Doom. The origin of this Secret War was not the whim of a curious god, but the last, desperate act of a supervillain who saved what little was left of existence by becoming its absolute tyrant. The story began eight years after the end of everything.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) Foreshadowing

The MCU has not yet adapted Secret Wars, but the entire “Multiverse Saga” (Phases 4-6) is explicitly building towards it, with a film titled `Avengers: Secret Wars` scheduled for release. The MCU's version blends elements from both comic storylines with its own unique lore. The foundation was laid in `Loki` (Season 1), which established the existence of the multiverse, variants, and the Time Variance Authority (TVA). The villain, “He Who Remains,” a variant of Kang the Conqueror, explained that a multiversal war between his variants had nearly destroyed all of existence, forcing him to prune the timeline into a single “Sacred Timeline.” His death at the hands of Sylvie unleashed the multiverse once more. The concept of “Incursions” was officially introduced in `Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness`, where Earth-838's Illuminati revealed that their Doctor Strange had caused an Incursion by using the Darkhold, forcing them to execute him. The film's post-credits scene showed the 616-Doctor Strange being recruited by Clea to fix an Incursion he himself caused. `Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania` further established the threat of the Council of Kangs, an infinite army of Kang variants led by Immortus, Rama-Tut, and a version implied to be Scarlet Centurion, who seek to control the multiverse. It is heavily implied that this impending multiversal war between the Kangs, and the resulting Incursions, will be the cataclysm that leads to the MCU's version of Battleworld and the Secret Wars.

1984's Secret Wars: The Battle on Battleworld

The narrative is a straightforward “heroes vs. villains” battle royale. The Beyonder promises the ultimate prize to the victors, forcing the two factions into direct conflict on the alien Battleworld. The heroes, led by Captain America, attempt to maintain their principles, while the villains, fractured by internal power struggles, are largely manipulated by the far more ambitious Doctor Doom.

  • Doctor Doom's Ambition: Immediately dismissing the Beyonder's simple game, Doom seeks the ultimate prize: the Beyonder's own power. He captures and studies Klaw, whose sonic form has a unique connection to Galactus, who in turn has observed the Beyonder.
  • Spider-Man's New Suit: After his classic red-and-blue suit is damaged, Spider-Man is directed to a machine he believes will repair it. Instead, he unwittingly bonds with an alien symbiote, which forms a new, black-and-white costume that can respond to his thoughts and generate its own webbing. This is arguably the series' most enduring legacy.
  • The Rise and Fall of God-Doom: In a stunning move, Doctor Doom successfully creates a device that drains the power of a distracted Galactus and then challenges the Beyonder directly. He temporarily usurps the Beyonder's omnipotence, becoming a god. However, he is unable to control the immense power, and his own tormented subconscious allows the heroes to find a weakness, which Klaw exploits, causing Doom to lose control and the Beyonder to reclaim his might.
  • The Thing's Decision: Ben Grimm, discovering he can willingly change between his human and rock forms on Battleworld, decides to stay behind for a time to explore this new aspect of himself, asking She-Hulk to take his place on the Fantastic Four back on Earth.
  • The Symbiote Saga: Spider-Man brings the black suit back to Earth, beginning the storyline that would lead to his separation from the now-sentient symbiote and its subsequent bonding with Eddie Brock to become Venom.
  • Roster Shake-Ups: She-Hulk officially joined the Fantastic Four, and Colossus ended his relationship with Kitty Pryde after falling for the alien healer Zsaji on Battleworld, a plot point that would have ramifications in the X-Men titles.
  • New Characters: The series introduced two new characters: the second Spider-Woman (Julia Carpenter) and the villainess Titania, a lifelong rival for She-Hulk.
  • The Sequel: The Beyonder, now curious about humanity, came to Earth in `Secret Wars II`, a widely criticized sequel that lacked the focus and impact of the original.

2015's Secret Wars: The Death and Rebirth of Everything

The story begins after the multiverse is already dead. All that remains is Battleworld, a patchwork planet created and ruled by the iron will of God Emperor Doom. This world is composed of different “domains,” fragments of dead realities, each with its own alternate-reality population, ruled by a “Baron” loyal to Doom. The universal religion is worship of Doom, the savior of reality. The narrative follows the survivors from Earth-616's life raft, led by Reed Richards, as they emerge from stasis eight years later into this strange new world and challenge Doom's divine rule.

  • The Arrival of the Rafts: Two life rafts survived the final Incursion. The first, carrying the Cabal (led by Thanos and Earth-1610's Reed Richards, The Maker), was released first by Doctor Strange (now Doom's sheriff). The second, carrying the 616 heroes, is released later, shattering the fragile peace of Battleworld.
  • The Death of Sheriff Strange: When Doctor Strange teleports the 616 survivors away from Doom's wrath to protect them, he admits to Doom that he knew they would one day challenge him. Enraged by this perceived betrayal from his closest confidant, Doom kills Strange with a single blast, a shocking moment that demonstrates his absolute power and paranoia.
  • The Phoenix and the Thor Corps: The amnesiac Cyclops, a 616 survivor, is found to still be a host for the Phoenix Force. He launches a rebellion against Doom, which is ultimately quashed by Doom's multiversal police force, the Thor Corps. Doom personally confronts and kills Cyclops, breaking the Phoenix's neck.
  • Reed vs. Reed: The Maker (Ultimate Reed Richards) secretly allies with 616's Reed Richards, believing they are intellectually superior and should rule together. However, the Maker's inherent villainy leads him to try and betray his counterpart, resulting in Molecule Man, the source of Doom's power, disgustedly compressing him into a block of flesh.
  • The Final Confrontation: God vs. Scientist: The climax sees Black Panther, wielding an Infinity Gauntlet, distract Doom while Reed Richards confronts him in his sanctum. The battle is not one of fists, but of ideology. Reed forces Doom to admit that, for all his power, Reed would have done a better job of saving reality. This single seed of doubt is all Molecule Man needs to hear. He releases his power from Doom and gives it to Reed.
  • The All-New, All-Different Marvel: Reed Richards, with the help of his son Franklin and the Molecule Man, doesn't just restore Earth-616; he rebuilds the entire multiverse. This “soft reboot” allowed Marvel to make significant, organic changes to its status quo.
  • Integration of Characters: Key characters from other realities were folded into the new prime universe. Most notably, Miles Morales (the Ultimate Spider-Man) and his supporting cast were now part of the main continuity, with a history retroactively created for them.
  • The Maker's Survival: The twisted Ultimate Reed Richards survived and became a major recurring villain in the new universe, particularly in the `Venom` series.
  • The Richards Family's New Mission: Instead of returning to Earth, Reed, Sue, Franklin, Valeria, and the Future Foundation ventured into the newly born multiverse to seed it with life and explore it, leaving Earth to believe they were dead for several years. Doctor Doom, his face healed by Reed, returned to Latveria and briefly attempted a heroic path as the Infamous Iron Man.

This section details the central figures and groups whose actions defined the respective Secret Wars events.

  • Reed Richards (Mister Fantastic): The undisputed protagonist of the 2015 event. His entire arc in Hickman's saga was about confronting his failures with the Illuminati. The final battle against his arch-nemesis, Doctor Doom, was a philosophical debate over who was more fit to be a god, a debate Reed ultimately won.
  • Captain America (Steve Rogers): The moral compass and field leader of the heroes in the 1984 event. He was the one who rallied the disparate heroes into a cohesive force, never wavering from his principles even when offered ultimate power.
  • Spider-Man (Peter Parker): A key point-of-view character in both events. In 1984, his story was personal, focused on his new costume and his surprising combat prowess (defeating the X-Men single-handedly at one point). In 2015, he was a veteran hero, one of the few to remember the world before Doom, acting as a crucial mentor to the younger Miles Morales.
  • Doctor Doom (Victor Von Doom): While an antagonist, Doom's arc is complex enough to be considered a protagonist's journey in the 2015 event. He is the savior of reality, but also its tyrant. His struggle to maintain control, his complex relationship with Strange and Susan Storm, and his ultimate admission of inadequacy to Reed Richards make him the story's most compelling character.
  • The Beyonder: The engine of the 1984 story. A being of infinite power from another dimension, his motives were born of a childlike curiosity, making him unpredictable and terrifying. He was not truly “evil,” but his amorality and lack of understanding of lesser beings made him the ultimate threat.
  • God Emperor Doom (2015): The absolute ruler of Battleworld. This version of Doom achieved his lifelong dream of total dominion, but it was a hollow victory built on a lie. He was paranoid, lonely, and haunted by the memory of the world he allowed to die. He is the story's primary antagonist, the very system the heroes must overthrow.
  • The Beyonders (2015): The true antagonists of the larger story leading to Secret Wars. These “Ivory Kings” were the entities responsible for the multiversal decay, seemingly as a grand experiment. They were so powerful they killed all the Celestials and even abstract entities like Eternity and the Living Tribunal. Doom's entire reign was built upon the power he stole from them.
  • The Heroes of 1984: A unified group led by Captain America, their primary goal was survival and returning home. Though they had internal squabbles (particularly between the Avengers and the more militant X-Men), they presented a united front against the villains.
  • The Villains of 1984: A fractured and opportunistic coalition. While Galactus acted as an independent third party, the other villains were constantly backstabbing each other. Most eventually fell in line behind Doctor Doom, not out of loyalty, but because he was their best chance at victory.
  • The Thor Corps (2015): The police force of Battleworld. Comprised of thousands of variant Thors from across the dead multiverse, they wielded their hammers in the name of God Emperor Doom, dispensing his justice. Their loyalty to Doom was absolute, as he was the source of their existence.
  • The Survivors of Earth-616 (2015): The small group of heroes who survived the final Incursion on Reed's life raft. This group, including Captain Marvel, Black Panther, Star-Lord, and Thor (Jane Foster), formed the core of the rebellion against Doom.

Battleworld is the iconic setting of both major Secret Wars events, but its nature and composition were vastly different in each incarnation.

The Original Battleworld (1984)

Created by the Beyonder, the first Battleworld was a simple, functional arena. It was a single planet cobbled together from pieces of dozens of other worlds, including a suburb of Denver, Colorado. Its terrain was diverse, featuring deserts, mountain ranges, and swamps, all designed to facilitate the conflict. The key structures were the massive fortress “Doop” (the villains' base) and the heroes' headquarters, “Heroes' Base.” It was a temporary, artificial construct created for a single purpose: to host the Beyonder's war game. It was a stage, not a living world.

God Emperor Doom's Battleworld (2015)

This version of Battleworld was infinitely more complex and narratively rich. It was not a game board, but the last bastion of existence itself.

  • Creation: Forged by Doctor Doom from the “plunder” of over 40 dead realities in the wake of the final Incursion. Each piece of a dead universe became a “domain” on the new planet.
  • Structure: It was a feudal society under Doom's theocratic rule. Each domain was a separate kingdom with its own culture, laws, and alternate-reality populace, ruled by a Baron or Baroness appointed by and loyal to Doom. Crossing the border between domains was strictly forbidden.
  • Key Domains:
  • Doomgard: A floating Asgardian island that served as the seat of Doom's power.
  • The Kingdom of Manhattan: A fusion of Earth-616 and Earth-1610, serving as the central “civilized” domain.
  • The Deadlands: A wasteland south of a massive wall called “The Shield” (reminiscent of the Wall from Game of Thrones), filled with zombies, Annihilus's Annihilation Wave, and Ultron's robots.
  • Westchester: A domain populated by the students and faculty of the X-Men, where mutants were a dominant and respected class.
  • Egyptia: A kingdom ruled by a variant of Apocalypse, where the Avengers (the domain's protectors) were hosts to Khonshu.
  • Arcadia: A utopian island nation protected by A-Force, an all-female team of Avengers led by Baroness She-Hulk.
  • The Sun and Stars: In a feat of incredible power and subtle horror, the “sun” of Battleworld was revealed to be the flaming Human Torch (Johnny Storm), held in a perpetual state of “nova,” and the “stars” in the sky were the sleeping forms of the Richards family, whom Doom kept as trophies. This world was a monument to Doom's victory and his profound insecurity.

The 2015 Secret Wars event was particularly notable for its vast array of tie-in miniseries, each exploring one of the domains of Battleworld. These series provided glimpses into fascinating alternate realities that would otherwise never exist.

  • Secret Wars: Old Man Logan: This series followed the journey of the grizzled, alternate-future Wolverine from the original `Old Man Logan` storyline. His domain was the Wastelands, and his story saw him cross the borders of Battleworld in a quest to avenge the deaths of his family, bringing him into conflict with the Thor Corps and God Emperor Doom himself. This version of Logan was one of the few characters to survive the end of Secret Wars and be transported to the new prime reality.
  • Thors: A “cop show” style procedural following the Thor Corps. The protagonists, including Ultimate Thor and Beta Ray Bill, investigated a murder mystery that threatened to unravel the very nature of Doom's reality. It provided a ground-level view of how Battleworld's justice system functioned.
  • A-Force: This series focused on the domain of Arcadia and its protectors, A-Force. When a member of the team breaks one of Doom's laws to save a citizen, the entire domain comes under threat, forcing She-Hulk and her team to defend their home from one of Doom's punishments. The series was notable for establishing Marvel's first all-female Avengers team.
  • Amazing Spider-Man: Renew Your Vows: Taking place in the Regency domain, this popular tie-in explored a reality where Peter Parker and Mary Jane Watson never separated and were raising their super-powered daughter, Annie May Parker. It depicted a family dynamic where Peter balanced his duties as Spider-Man with his responsibilities as a husband and father, fighting the tyrannical Baron Regent.

1)
The original 1984 `Marvel Super Heroes Secret Wars` was the best-selling American comic book series for over two decades, until the 2010s.
2)
Jim Shooter's original pitch for the series was titled `Cosmic Champions`.
3)
The idea of Spider-Man wearing a black costume was originally conceived by a fan, Randy Schueller, who submitted the idea to Marvel in a contest. Marvel purchased the idea from him for $220.
4)
Jonathan Hickman's run on `Avengers` and `New Avengers`, which directly sets up the 2015 `Secret Wars`, is often referred to by fans as “The Saga.” The entire story, spanning multiple years, is designed to be read as a single, cohesive narrative.
5)
In the 2015 event, the source of God Emperor Doom's immense power was the Molecule Man (Owen Reece), whom Doom kept hidden beneath his throne. Reece acted as a conduit, channeling the power of the Beyonders into Doom.
6)
Many fan theories about the upcoming MCU film `Avengers: Secret Wars` speculate that it will feature the return of characters from previous Marvel film franchises, such as 20th Century Fox's X-Men and Fantastic Four, as inhabitants of different Battleworld domains, mirroring the comic's multiversal nature.
7)
The phrase “Time Runs Out” was used as a branding for the final arc of Hickman's `Avengers` and `New Avengers` titles, which jumped forward eight months to the eve of the final Incursion, setting the immediate stage for `Secret Wars`.