Eternals
Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary
- Core Identity: The Eternals are a near-immortal race of superhumans, engineered by the cosmic gods known as the Celestials from proto-humanity, who are locked in an endless war with their monstrous counterparts, the Deviants.
- Key Takeaways:
- Role in the Universe: The Eternals serve as the divinely-appointed protectors of Earth's evolution, specifically tasked by their creators, the Celestials, to defend the planet from the genetic chaos of the Deviants and to “correct excess deviation” in all its forms.
- Primary Impact: Their existence represents one of the Marvel Universe's greatest secrets and foundational myths. Their technology, conflicts, and the very fact of their Celestial-guided evolution have secretly shaped human history, mythology, and even the genetic potential for super-beings.
- Key Incarnations: The fundamental difference lies in their origin and purpose. In the comics (Earth-616), they are an evolutionary offshoot of humanity, created on Earth. In the Marvel Cinematic Universe, they are synthetic, programmable androids built on the World Forge and sent to planets to facilitate the birth of new Celestials.
Part 2: Origin and Evolution
Publication History and Creation
The Eternals first appeared in The Eternals #1, published in July 1976. They were created, written, and drawn by the legendary Jack “The King” Kirby upon his return to Marvel Comics after a stint at rival DC Comics. The series was Kirby's grand-scale exploration of cosmic mythology, ancient astronauts, and the origins of humanity, heavily influenced by popular pseudo-scientific theories of the time, most notably Erich von Däniken's 1968 book Chariots of the Gods?.
Initially, Kirby's The Eternals was not intended to be part of the mainstream Marvel Universe. It was a self-contained epic, allowing Kirby the creative freedom to build a new pantheon of gods without being constrained by existing continuity. However, after the series was canceled after 19 issues and one annual, characters like Ikaris and Sersi were gradually integrated into the wider Marvel continuity through guest appearances in titles like Thor and The Avengers. This integration retroactively established the Celestials' experiments as a cornerstone of Earth's superhuman history, explaining not only the Eternals and Deviants but also the latency of the mutant X-gene in humanity.
The concept was famously revived and modernized in 2006 by writer Neil Gaiman and artist John Romita Jr. in a celebrated miniseries. This series reintroduced the characters to a new generation, adding a layer of mystery and psychological depth by having the Eternals living on Earth with their memories wiped. Most recently, writer Kieron Gillen and artist Esad Ribić have radically redefined the Eternals' lore, introducing dark secrets about their resurrection process that have thrust them into major conflicts like the Judgment Day crossover event.
In-Universe Origin Story
The origin of the Eternals is a tale of cosmic intervention on a planetary scale. While the core concept of Celestial experimentation is present in both major continuities, the specifics, purpose, and consequences differ dramatically.
Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)
Approximately one million years ago, a colossal starship belonging to the space gods known as the Celestials arrived at Earth. This “First Host” of Celestials, led by Arishem the Judge and Gammenon the Gatherer, discovered that the nascent life on the planet had the potential for greatness. They selected a tribe of early proto-humans (Homo erectus) and subjected them to a series of profound genetic experiments. This cosmic tampering resulted in the creation of three distinct offshoots of humanity:
- The Eternals (Homo immortalis): Beings of immense power, longevity, and stability. The Celestials imbued them with the ability to process and manipulate vast quantities of cosmic energy. They were designed to be beautiful, god-like figures who would serve as Earth's protectors and shepherds of its evolution. They were granted a form of collective immortality through a sophisticated resurrection process known as “The Machine.”
- The Deviants (Homo descendus): The genetic opposites of the Eternals. Where the Eternals were stable, the Deviants were unstable. Their genetic code is chaotic, resulting in every Deviant being born with a unique, often grotesque, mutation. This “changing people” became a race of monstrous, warring beings who despise the Eternals for their perfect forms and the Celestials for their perceived abandonment. Their purpose was to introduce variety and change into the biosphere.
- Baseline Humanity (Homo sapiens): The Celestials also altered the DNA of the remaining proto-humans, implanting a latent potential for superhuman evolution. This “X-Gene” would eventually lead to the emergence of mutants millions of years later, making humanity a species with the capacity to one day rival the Celestials themselves.
Following their creation, the Eternals established great cities like Olympia in Greece and Polaria in Siberia. They became locked in a perpetual, brutal war with the Deviant empire based in the sunken city of Lemuria. Over millennia, human civilizations witnessed the Eternals' power and beauty, mistaking them for the gods of Greek, Roman, and other mythologies, a misconception the Eternals sometimes encouraged. Their primary directive from the Celestials was to protect the Celestial “process” on Earth, which primarily involved defending the planet from Deviants and awaiting the Celestials' eventual return for judgment. A major modern retcon by Kieron Gillen revealed a horrifying truth behind their immortality: every time an Eternal is resurrected by The Machine, a random human life is consumed to pay the “cost.” This revelation re-contextualizes their role as protectors into something far more parasitic and sinister.
Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)
The MCU origin, as detailed in the film Eternals (2021), is a complete reimagining of the comic book lore. In this continuity, the Eternals are not an evolutionary offshoot of humanity. They are entirely artificial beings, synthetic humanoids created by the Prime Celestial, Arishem the Judge, in a cosmic foundry called the World Forge. They are, in essence, highly advanced, immortal androids. Arishem's grand design involves seeding countless planets across the universe with Celestial “eggs” in their cores. For a Celestial to “emerge,” it requires a vast amount of intelligent life energy, which can only be generated by a large, thriving planetary population. However, an apex predator known as the Deviants would invariably evolve on these worlds and consume the intelligent life, preventing the Celestial birth. To solve this problem, Arishem created the Eternals. Their sole, programmed purpose is to be sent to these “seeded” planets to eliminate the Deviants, allowing the native population to flourish and grow. Once the population reaches the required threshold, the Emergence occurs, a new Celestial is born, and the planet is destroyed in the process. The Eternals are then collected, their memories of the previous cycle are wiped clean, and they are sent to a new planet to repeat the process. The Eternals of Earth arrived in 5,000 BC, believing their home planet was Olympia and their mission was simply to protect humanity from Deviants. They spent millennia guiding and protecting human civilization until they believed the last of the Deviants were defeated. They then went their separate ways, awaiting a call from Arishem to return home. However, the impending Emergence of the Celestial Tiamut from Earth's core forces them to reunite and confront the true, genocidal nature of their mission, causing a schism between those loyal to Arishem's plan and those who have grown to love humanity.
Part 3: Powers, Culture & Key Members
Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)
The powers of the comic book Eternals are vast, derived from their ability to metabolize and manipulate cosmic energy on a molecular level. While all Eternals share a baseline set of abilities, many choose to specialize in specific disciplines over their long lives.
- Core Shared Abilities:
- Immortality & Durability: Eternals do not age and are immune to all terrestrial diseases. Their bodies are incredibly resilient to injury, capable of withstanding extreme temperatures, pressures, and impacts. They can only be killed through catastrophic molecular dispersal.
- Superhuman Strength, Speed, & Stamina: All Eternals are significantly stronger and faster than the finest human athletes.
- Flight: By psionically levitating themselves, most Eternals can fly at supersonic speeds.
- Cosmic Energy Manipulation: They can project powerful concussive blasts, heat, and light from their hands and eyes.
- Psionics: All Eternals possess some degree of telepathy, telekinesis, and the ability to create illusions.
- Matter Transmutation: One of their most potent abilities is the power to rearrange the atoms and molecules of objects, transforming one substance into another. Sersi is the most skilled practitioner of this power.
- The Uni-Mind:
A unique gestalt entity formed when Eternals join together in a ritual of collective consciousness. The Uni-Mind combines the will, intelligence, and power of all its participants into a single, immensely powerful psionic being of pure energy. It is led by the Prime Eternal and is used to make critical decisions or face threats too great for any single Eternal.
- Culture and Society:
Eternal society is ancient and highly structured. They are led by a Prime Eternal, a title held by figures like Zuras and, later, Ikaris. Their primary cities are Olympia (hidden in the Greek mountains) and the Polar Eternals' city of Polaria in Siberia. Their culture is often depicted as aloof, conservative, and disconnected from the rapidly changing human world they are sworn to protect. A fundamental schism exists between those who wish to remain isolated and those, like Sersi, who actively engage with humanity.
- Key Members (Comics):
^ Name ^ Primary Role & Specialization ^
| Ikaris | The quintessential Eternal warrior. Specializes in flight and cosmic energy beams from his eyes. Often serves as a field leader. |
| Sersi | The most powerful transmuter among the Eternals. An Avenger who embraces humanity more than any other. |
| Thena | A fearsome warrior and scholar, often mistaken for the goddess Athena. Wields a spear that projects cosmic energy. Cursed with “Mahd Wy'ry,” a form of dementia caused by their long lifespans. |
| Makkari | The fastest of the Eternals, dedicating his powers to achieving ultimate speed. Has been both male and female, and at one point became the prophet for the Dreaming Celestial. |
| Druig | The ambitious and morally corrupt cousin of Ikaris. Specializes in psionics, particularly mind control, and seeks power above all else. |
| Ajak | The designated communicator with the Celestials. Able to speak directly to the Space Gods when they arrive. Historically male in the comics. |
| Zuras | The first Prime Eternal and father of Thena. A powerful and wise leader, often compared to Zeus. |
| Gilgamesh | Also known as “The Forgotten One,” an immensely strong Eternal who has lived as a hero among humanity for millennia and served as an Avenger. |
| Sprite | A powerful illusionist trapped in the body of a child. This eternal youth has made them bitter and prone to malicious pranks and schemes. |
Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)
The MCU Eternals possess similar powers but with a more visually distinct and specialized application. Their powers are a golden, cosmic energy that manifests in unique ways for each individual. As artificial beings, their abilities are designed to be complementary for a balanced combat team.
- Source of Power: Their power comes from an internal cosmic energy source, directly linked to their creator, Arishem. Unlike their comic counterparts, their powers are more defined and less interchangeable.
- Structure and Purpose: The team had a clear hierarchy. Ajak was the Prime Eternal, the spiritual leader and the only one who could communicate directly with Arishem. Ikaris served as the tactical leader in the field. Their sole purpose was to execute Arishem's plan, with no deviation permitted, until Sersi and her faction chose to rebel.
- Key Members (MCU Versions) & Powers:
^ Name ^ Primary Role & Specialization ^
| Ajak (Salma Hayek) | Prime Eternal. Possesses advanced healing abilities, able to heal both herself and others. The sole conduit to Arishem. |
| Ikaris (Richard Madden) | Tactical Leader. Can fly and projects powerful cosmic energy beams from his eyes. The team's most powerful warrior. |
| Sersi (Gemma Chan) | Empathic Transmuter. Can transmute inanimate matter. Her powers later evolve to affect living and cosmic matter. |
| Thena (Angelina Jolie) | Elite Warrior. Can manifest weapons of pure cosmic energy. Suffers from Mahd Wy'ry, causing her to relive traumatic memories of past apocalypses and attack her teammates. |
| Kingo (Kumail Nanjiani) | Energy Projector. Shoots bolts of cosmic energy from his fingertips. Has spent his time on Earth becoming a Bollywood movie star. |
| Sprite (Lia McHugh) | Master Illusionist. Can project complex, life-like illusions over vast areas. Appears as a 12-year-old girl. |
| Phastos (Brian Tyree Henry) | Master Inventor. Can conceptualize and create any invention or weapon he can imagine using cosmic energy and available materials. |
| Makkari (Lauren Ridloff) | Super-Speedster. The fastest woman in the universe, using her speed to scout and rescue civilians. She is deaf in this incarnation. |
| Druig (Barry Keoghan) | Mind-Controller. Can psionically control the minds of multiple sentient beings at once. |
| Gilgamesh (Don Lee) | Super-Strength. The strongest Eternal, capable of generating a powerful cosmic exoskeleton around his arms for enhanced striking power. |
Part 4: Key Relationships & Network
Core Allies
- The Celestials: A complex relationship of creator and creation, god and worshipper. In the comics, the Eternals revere and fear the Celestials, obeying their edicts without question for millennia. In the MCU, this relationship is shattered when the truth of their mission is revealed, turning Arishem into an antagonist.
- The Avengers: Several Eternals have served as members of Earth's Mightiest Heroes. Sersi had a long and notable tenure with the team in the 1990s, where she developed a romantic relationship with the Black Knight. Gilgamesh also served as an Avenger. Their immense power makes them valuable, if sometimes aloof, allies.
- Thor and the Asgardians: The Eternals have had numerous interactions with the Asgardians, often stemming from humanity's confusion between the two pantheons. While they have clashed, they have also allied against common threats like the Celestials themselves.
Arch-Enemies
- The Deviants: The primary and eternal antagonists of the Eternals. The conflict between the genetically stable Eternals and the chaotically mutated Deviants is the foundational war of their existence. The Deviants, led by figures like Warlord Kro, resent the Eternals for their beauty and favor from the Celestials and seek to conquer the surface world.
- Thanos: The Mad Titan is the most infamous Eternal. In the comics, Thanos is the son of two Eternals from the colony on Titan (A'lars and Sui-San), but was born with the “Deviant Syndrome,” giving him his monstrous appearance and vast power. He embodies the worst potential of his lineage and is an enemy to all life, including his own people.
- Uranos: An ancient, tyrannical Eternal from the first generation who believed in total war against the Deviants and all lesser life. His brutal civil war against his brother Kronos led to his exile and imprisonment. He has recently been freed and serves as a major antagonist to the modern Eternals, representing their dark, fascistic past.
- The Horde: The antithesis of the Celestials, often described as the “locusts of the universe.” These insectoid beings are a universal plague that follows in the Celestials' wake. The Eternals, as servants of the Celestials, are fundamentally opposed to this cosmic force of anti-creation.
Affiliations
Beyond their own society, the Eternals' primary affiliations have been with superhero teams. Sersi and Gilgamesh's time with The Avengers represents their most significant integration with human society. During the Secret Invasion event, Ajak and Makkari were part of Hercules' “God Squad,” a team of divine beings assembled to fight the Skrull gods.
Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines
The Eternals (1976) by Jack Kirby
The foundational epic that introduced the world to the Eternals, Deviants, and Celestials. The story revolves around the impending arrival of the Fourth Host of Celestials to Earth to pass judgment on their creations. Archaeologist Dr. Daniel Damian and his daughter Margo stumble upon this hidden war, with Ikaris serving as their guide to a world of gods and monsters. Kirby used the series to build a massive, original mythology, establishing the core tenets of the Eternals' existence, their conflict with the Deviants under Warlord Kro, and the awe-inspiring, silent power of the Celestials.
The Eternals (2006) by Neil Gaiman and John Romita Jr.
This landmark miniseries revitalized the franchise for the modern era. The story begins with the Eternals living on Earth as ordinary humans—doctors, party planners, mechanics—with no memory of their true identities. A medical student, Mark Curry (secretly Makkari), begins to uncover the truth after being contacted by Ikaris. The plot reveals that the amnesia was the work of Sprite, who, tired of being a child forever, used the power of the Dreaming Celestial (a dormant Celestial buried beneath San Francisco) to rewrite reality. The series was a critical success, reintroducing the characters with psychological depth and setting the stage for their re-integration into major Marvel events. It also established the critical plot point that “The Machine”—their resurrection device—was broken.
Judgment Day (2022)
This massive crossover event between the Avengers, X-Men, and Eternals elevated the Eternals to the forefront of the Marvel Universe. With the secret of mutant resurrection on Krakoa revealed to the world, the Prime Eternal Druig declares mutants to be a form of “excess deviation” and launches a genocidal war. To stop the conflict, a group of heroes and rebel Eternals resurrect the Avengers' Celestial base, creating a new, impossibly powerful god, the Progenitor. However, the Progenitor immediately decides to judge every single being on Earth on an individual basis, threatening to destroy the planet if it is found wanting. The event forced the Eternals to confront the dark secret of their resurrection—that it costs a human life each time—and broadcast this truth to the world, shattering their god-like image forever.
Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions
- Uranian Eternals (Earth-616): A small offshoot of the main Eternals. In the aftermath of the ancient Eternal civil war, a group of peaceful Eternals led by Uranos's brother Kronos left Earth. A second group, led by the defeated Uranos, was also exiled. This second group crash-landed on Uranus, where they established a colony. The Uranian Eternals are a distinct society, and one of their members, Marvel Boy (Robert Grayson), has operated on Earth as a superhero.
- Earth-X / Earth-9997: In this alternate reality, the Celestials' plan was far more insidious. They implanted a Celestial egg in the Earth's core and manipulated humanity's genetic code so that they would eventually develop superpowers. The goal was for the entire super-powered population to act as an antibody, protecting the growing Celestial from any cosmic threat. In this universe, the Eternals are fully aware of this plan and act as willing shepherds of humanity's “evolution” towards their eventual destruction, putting them in direct conflict with Earth's heroes. This concept was a major influence on the MCU's adaptation.
- Thanos's Titanian Eternals (Earth-616): After the civil war, the pacifist Eternal A'lars (brother of Zuras) left Earth and journeyed to Saturn's moon, Titan. There, he and a small group of followers founded a new civilization, using their technology to create an artificial ecosystem. These Titanian Eternals are the society from which Thanos was born. Unlike their Earth-bound cousins, they are more scientifically focused and have largely avoided the war with the Deviants.