The Ultimates

  • Core Identity: A groundbreaking and often controversial superhero initiative, originally conceived in the Ultimate Universe (Earth-1610) as a government-controlled, militarized response to global threats, whose “cinematic” and gritty realism fundamentally reshaped modern comics and heavily inspired the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
  • Key Takeaways:
  • Role in the Universe: The Ultimates of Earth-1610 were the primary superhero defense force for the United States, operating under the direct command of nick_fury and shield. In the Prime Universe (Earth-616), the name was later adopted by a proactive team led by captain_marvel_carol_danvers to tackle cosmic threats before they could endanger Earth.
  • Primary Impact: The original series by Mark Millar and Bryan Hitch pioneered a widescreen, decompressed storytelling style with a darker, more cynical, and politically charged tone. It modernized Marvel's flagship characters for a new generation and served as the direct conceptual blueprint for the first phase of the marvel_cinematic_universe, particularly The Avengers (2012).
  • Key Incarnations: The foundational Earth-1610 team was a government-sponsored celebrity task force with deeply flawed members. The later Earth-616 version was a cosmic think-tank and problem-solving unit composed of some of the universe's most brilliant and powerful minds, operating with a much purer, scientific mandate.

The Ultimates debuted in The Ultimates #1 in March 2002, serving as a cornerstone of Marvel's newly launched Ultimate Marvel imprint. The imprint was a bold initiative designed to attract new readers by starting Marvel's most famous characters over from scratch in a contemporary, accessible continuity, free from decades of convoluted backstory. The creative team of writer Mark Millar and artist Bryan Hitch was tasked with reinventing the avengers. They approached the concept with a philosophy they described as “realism” and “widescreen cinema.” Millar's writing injected a heavy dose of political satire, modern celebrity culture, and psychological complexity into the characters, often portraying them as deeply flawed and volatile individuals. Captain America was a man out of time, but also a blunt, jingoistic soldier; Hank Pym was a brilliant scientist plagued by insecurity and spousal abuse; and the Hulk was a cannibalistic monster driven by id and repressed desire. Bryan Hitch's artwork was revolutionary for its time. He employed a highly detailed, realistic style with panoramic, “widescreen” panels that mimicked the scope of a blockbuster film. His meticulous attention to detail in technology, architecture, and character anatomy grounded the fantastic elements of the story. This cinematic approach was a radical departure from traditional comic book art and became a defining feature of the Ultimate line, directly influencing the visual language of superhero films for years to come. The series was an immense critical and commercial success, but its cynical tone and controversial character moments (such as the domestic abuse storyline involving Giant-Man and the Wasp) have remained subjects of intense debate among fans.

In-Universe Origin Story

A critical distinction must be made between the original, definitive Ultimates of Earth-1610 and the later teams in the main Marvel continuity who adopted the name.

Earth-1610 (Ultimate Universe)

In the reality designated Earth-1610, the “Ultimates” were the public-facing name for S.H.I.E.L.D.'s Super-Human Defense Initiative. The program was spearheaded by General Nick Fury, a hardened veteran of the Cold War and director of S.H.I.E.L.D., who envisioned a team of super-powered individuals as America's ultimate deterrent in a world of escalating post-human threats. The project's foundation was laid decades prior with the original super-soldier, Captain America. After his disappearance in World War II, the super-soldier arms race he inspired led to numerous flawed and dangerous outcomes, including the creation of the Hulk. The modern program began with Fury recruiting billionaire industrialist Tony Stark and the scientific couple Dr. Hank Pym (giant_man) and Janet van Dyne (wasp). The team was officially formed when a S.H.I.E.L.D. science team discovered Captain America's body, perfectly preserved in the Arctic ice. Revived in the 21st century, Captain America became the team's field leader. The final member, Thor, was a self-proclaimed Norse god of thunder with anti-establishment views, whose immense power made him a necessary but volatile recruit. The team was headquartered in the Triskelion, a state-of-the-art S.H.I.E.L.D. facility in New York. Their first major public crisis was stopping a rampage by a newly unstable Dr. Bruce Banner, who had injected himself with a modified version of the super-soldier serum in a desperate attempt to prove his value to Fury. The ensuing battle in Manhattan caused massive destruction but ultimately established the Ultimates in the public eye as humanity's saviors. Their first major external threat was an invasion by a shape-shifting alien race known as the chitauri, who had been secretly manipulating human affairs since World War II.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

The concept of “The Ultimates” did not exist in the primary Marvel Universe until after the multiversal collapse and rebirth chronicled in the Secret Wars (2015) event. With the multiverse newly reformed, Captain Marvel sought to create a team that would proactively solve cosmic-level problems before they could become Earth-threatening crises. She adopted the name “Ultimates” for this new endeavor. This team was fundamentally different in mandate and composition from its Earth-1610 predecessor. It was not a government military unit but a brain trust of powerhouse heroes dedicated to cosmic peacekeeping and scientific exploration. The roster included:

  • Captain Marvel (Carol Danvers): The leader, providing military strategy and cosmic awareness from her time with S.W.O.R.D. and the Guardians of the Galaxy.
  • Black Panther (T'Challa): The King of Wakanda, providing unparalleled intellect, resources, and technology.
  • Blue Marvel (Adam Brashear): A genius-level physicist and anti-matter powerhouse, acting as the team's chief scientist.
  • Spectrum (Monica Rambeau): A hero capable of transforming into any form of energy on the electromagnetic spectrum, offering incredible versatility.
  • Ms. America (America Chavez): A young hero with the unique ability to punch star-shaped portals between dimensions, providing the team with instant interstellar and interdimensional travel.

Their first mission was to “fix” Galactus. Instead of fighting him, they used Wakandan technology to accelerate his incubation process, transforming him from the Devourer of Worlds into Galactus the Lifebringer, a force for cosmic restoration. This act immediately established the Ultimates as a major force in the cosmic hierarchy.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

The Marvel Cinematic Universe (Earth-199999) does not have a team explicitly named “The Ultimates.” However, the MCU's avengers are, in concept, execution, and aesthetics, a direct adaptation of the Earth-1610 Ultimates, not the classic Earth-616 Avengers. The MCU's “Avengers Initiative” was a S.H.I.E.L.D. project masterminded by Nick Fury to bring together a group of remarkable people to fight the battles Earth never could. This premise is identical to the Ultimates' origin. The adaptation went further:

  • Nick Fury: The MCU's Nick Fury, portrayed by Samuel L. Jackson, is visually and personality-wise a direct lift of the Ultimate Universe Nick Fury, who was famously drawn in Jackson's likeness years before the actor was cast.
  • Team Dynamic: The initial tension, infighting, and clashing egos of the 2012 Avengers film mirror the dysfunctional “celebrity” dynamic of Millar's Ultimates far more than the comradely nature of the original Silver Age Avengers.
  • Aesthetics and Tone: The grounded, militarized, and tech-focused aesthetic of S.H.I.E.L.D., the Helicarrier, and agents like Hawkeye and Black Widow are all hallmarks of the Ultimate comic.
  • The Chitauri: The alien invaders in The Avengers (2012) are explicitly named the Chitauri, a direct pull from the first major story arc of The Ultimates.

Therefore, while the name is different, the spirit and concept of the Ultimates are the foundational DNA of the MCU's most important superhero team.

The structure, purpose, and membership of the Ultimates differ dramatically between their Earth-1610 and Earth-616 incarnations.

Earth-1610 (Ultimate Universe)

  • Mandate: To serve as the United States' primary public deterrent against super-human, extraterrestrial, and other “Tier-1” threats. They were a branch of S.H.I.E.L.D. and, by extension, an instrument of U.S. foreign policy. Their missions often involved overt military action, public relations management, and clandestine operations. They were as much a propaganda tool as a rescue team.
  • Structure: A quasi-military hierarchy with a clear chain of command.
  • Director: General Nick Fury of S.H.I.E.L.D. was the ultimate authority, managing the team's budget, mission assignments, and political fallout.
  • Field Leader: Captain America was the designated leader during combat operations, respected for his tactical genius and experience.
  • Headquarters: The Triskelion, a massive S.H.I.E.L.D. complex off the coast of New York, serving as their base of operations, barracks, and research facility.
  • Support Staff: An enormous S.H.I.E.L.D. support crew handled logistics, intelligence, scientific analysis, and medical support.
  • Key Founding Members:
  • Captain America (Steve Rogers): The super-soldier and moral compass, though often portrayed as a gruff, old-fashioned man struggling with the moral ambiguity of the modern world.
  • Iron Man (Tony Stark): A brilliant but reckless billionaire who financed much of the team's equipment. His alcoholism and cavalier attitude often created friction. He pilots a sophisticated suit of armor and has a benign brain tumor driving his daredevil behavior.
  • Thor (Thorlief Golmen): A European anarchist and self-proclaimed god. For much of his tenure, S.H.I.E.L.D. and the public questioned whether he was a true deity or a powerful mutant with a god complex and advanced technology.
  • Giant-Man & Wasp (Hank & Janet Pym): A brilliant but deeply troubled scientific couple. Hank's inferiority complex and abusive behavior toward Janet became a major internal crisis for the team. Janet was a sharp, capable scientist and the team's public relations face.
  • Hulk (Bruce Banner): S.H.I.E.L.D. kept Banner under lock and key, attempting to control the monstrous and often cannibalistic Hulk, seeing him as a weapon of last resort.
  • Later Key Members:
  • Hawkeye (Clint Barton): A non-powered, black-ops human soldier with unmatched marksmanship. He was a ruthless family man and Fury's most trusted operative.
  • Black Widow (Natasha Romanov): A former spy of unknown origin, she was a deadly close-quarters combatant and strategist who was later revealed to be a traitor.
  • Quicksilver (Pietro Lensherr) & Scarlet Witch (Wanda Lensherr): The mutant children of Magneto, who defected from their father's Brotherhood to join the Ultimates, though their unusually close sibling relationship was a source of tension.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

  • Mandate: To identify and neutralize cosmic-scale threats before they can reach Earth. Their mission statement was “Solve Everything.” They operated outside of national jurisdictions, viewing the planet as a single entity to be protected from existential dangers in the wider universe. Their approach was primarily scientific and strategic rather than purely militaristic.
  • Structure: A collaborative council of peers.
  • Leader: Captain Marvel served as the de facto leader and mission coordinator, but decisions were made through consensus among the core members.
  • Headquarters: The Triskelion, which in the 616 universe was the former headquarters of S.H.I.E.L.D. and later Alpha Flight, served as their primary base. They also utilized Wakanda's advanced resources and Blue Marvel's undersea science fortress.
  • Affiliation: They worked closely with the Alpha Flight Space Program, a remnant of the Canadian super-team repurposed as Earth's first line of defense against alien threats.
  • Key Members (Both Incarnations):
  • Captain Marvel (Carol Danvers): The visionary leader who founded the team to change Earth's reactive posture to a proactive one.
  • Black Panther (T'Challa): The team's chief strategist and financier, providing access to Wakanda's unparalleled technology and political influence.
  • Blue Marvel (Adam Brashear): The lead scientist, whose knowledge of the multiverse and theoretical physics was essential for their cosmic missions. He was the intellectual heart of the team.
  • Spectrum (Monica Rambeau): The team's “first responder” and most versatile powerhouse, capable of reconnaissance, analysis, and immense energy projection.
  • Ms. America (America Chavez): The team's transport. Her ability to navigate the multiverse was the key that made their proactive mission possible.
  • Galactus (The Lifebringer): After his transformation, Galactus briefly became an unlikely ally of the Ultimates, working with them to re-seed barren worlds and confront cosmic imbalances.
  • S.H.I.E.L.D. (Earth-1610): The relationship between the Ultimates and S.H.I.E.L.D. was one of total integration. The Ultimates were S.H.I.E.L.D.'s most powerful asset. Nick Fury was both their commander and, in some ways, a father figure, albeit a manipulative and ruthless one. This dynamic meant the team was powerful but had little autonomy, often forced into ethically gray missions for political purposes.
  • Alpha Flight Space Program (Earth-616): For the 616 Ultimates, Alpha Flight was their primary operational partner. While the Ultimates focused on grand cosmic strategy, Alpha Flight handled the logistics, intelligence gathering, and planetary defense network. This symbiotic relationship allowed the Ultimates to focus on galaxy-spanning threats without being bogged down by terrestrial concerns.
  • The Fantastic Four (Earth-1610): The young, celebrity-scientist Fantastic Four often crossed paths with the Ultimates. While generally allies, there was a professional rivalry between the government-funded Ultimates and the more independent, publicly adored FF. Reed Richards, in particular, occasionally provided scientific consultation.
  • The Chitauri (Earth-1610): The first major threat the Ultimates faced as a team. The Chitauri were a reptilian, shape-shifting alien race who viewed sentient life as a resource to be consumed. Their leader, Herr Kleiser, had a personal history with Captain America from WWII. The defeat of their invasion of Earth was the Ultimates' defining public victory.
  • Loki (Earth-1610): The Ultimate Universe's Loki was a malevolent reality-warper and the brother of Thor. He viewed the Ultimates, particularly his brother, as a perversion of the old world of gods and monsters. He was the mastermind behind the creation of the Liberators, framing Thor as a fraud and orchestrating a massive international invasion of the United States.
  • The Liberators (Earth-1610): A multi-national super-team created by a coalition of nations (including China, Russia, and Iran) as a counter-force to the perceived American imperialism of the Ultimates. They were a dark mirror of the team, with members analogous to Captain America (The Colonel), Iron Man (Abomination), and Thor (Perun). Their invasion of the U.S. was a brutal conflict that forced the Ultimates to confront the global consequences of their existence.
  • The First Firmament (Earth-616): The 616 Ultimates faced threats on a scale their 1610 counterparts never dreamed of. The First Firmament was the sentient first iteration of the cosmos, which sought to reclaim its place by destroying the current Marvel Multiverse. The Ultimates' battle against it involved confronting cosmic entities like Master Order and Lord Chaos and ultimately resulted in Galactus the Lifebringer chaining the entity in a desperate gambit.

The Ultimates' primary affiliation defines their very nature. The Earth-1610 team was a subdivision of shield, making them an official government organization with all the power and political baggage that entailed. Their actions were subject to review by the President and the World Security Council. The Earth-616 team was more of an independent NGO with a cosmic scope, affiliated with the Alpha Flight Space Program but not beholden to any single government, allowing them to operate with a purer, scientific agenda. They were, in essence, the “Avengers of the cosmos.”

Super-Human (The Ultimates, Vol. 1, #1-6)

This inaugural storyline detailed the formation of the team. It introduced the core members, established their deeply flawed personalities, and showcased their volatile team dynamics. The arc culminated in the team's first public outing: stopping a destructive rampage by Bruce Banner's Hulk through Manhattan. The battle was a brutal, bloody affair that caused immense collateral damage but successfully sold the Ultimates to the public as necessary protectors. It perfectly encapsulated the series' themes of power, responsibility, and the messy reality of super-heroics.

Homeland Security (The Ultimates, Vol. 1, #7-13)

This arc deals with the aftermath of the Hulk incident and the discovery of the Chitauri, a genocidal alien race that had infiltrated Earth. It was revealed that the Chitauri were the “Nazis from space” Captain America fought in WWII. The story climaxes with a full-scale Chitauri invasion, which the Ultimates, with the help of a massive S.H.I.E.L.D. armada, repel in a devastating battle. The event solidified Captain America's leadership and the team's role as Earth's defenders, but also showed the immense cost of their battles.

Gods and Monsters (The Ultimates 2, #1-13)

Considered by many to be the pinnacle of the series, this storyline sees the team fall apart from within due to public mistrust and Loki's insidious manipulations. Loki frames Thor for releasing classified information, leading to Thor's removal from the team. He then orchestrates the creation of the Liberators, an international anti-Ultimates super-team that launches a surprise invasion of America. The storyline is a scathing critique of post-9/11 American foreign policy, culminating in a brutal war on U.S. soil that sees the Ultimates broken and nearly defeated before rallying to expose Loki and push back the invaders.

Ultimatum (Ultimate Marvel Crossover Event)

This universe-spanning event was a cataclysm for the Ultimates and the entire Earth-1610 reality. Caused by Magneto, who reverses the planet's magnetic poles in a fit of grief, the event triggers a worldwide tidal wave that kills millions, including many heroes like the Wasp, Hank Pym, and Doctor Strange. The surviving Ultimates lead the charge against Magneto, with the event ending in a brutal, morally compromised “victory” that leaves the team and their world permanently shattered. The optimism of the early series was completely extinguished, paving the way for a darker, more desperate era.

Eternity War (Ultimates 2, Vol. 2, #1-9)

The defining arc for the Earth-616 team. Having transformed Galactus and explored the very edge of the multiverse, the Ultimates find themselves caught in a cosmic civil war between the highest order of abstract beings. The story sees them trying to stop the First Firmament from destroying the multiversal structure. It's a high-concept, sci-fi epic that pushed the characters to their absolute limits, forcing them to make impossible choices and ultimately leading to the team's dissolution as they are branded cosmic criminals for their interference.

  • Marvel Cinematic Universe (Earth-199999): As detailed earlier, the MCU's Avengers are the most prominent and successful “variant” of the Ultimates. The entire concept of a government-sponsored team brought together by a Samuel L. Jackson-esque Nick Fury to fight off an invasion by the Chitauri is lifted directly from The Ultimates Volume 1. The grounded, militaristic tone of films like Captain America: The Winter Soldier also owes a heavy debt to the Ultimate Universe's depiction of S.H.I.E.L.D.
  • The Maker (Reed Richards of Earth-1610): While not a version of the team, The Maker is arguably the most important character to emerge from the Ultimates' universe. This version of Reed Richards became a villain after the events of Ultimatum, believing that morality and heroism were insufficient to solve the world's problems. He survived the destruction of his universe during Secret Wars and became a major, morally ambiguous antagonist in the prime Earth-616 universe, forever serving as a dark reminder of the Ultimate Universe's cynical worldview.
  • Ultimate Avengers (Animated Films): Marvel Animation produced two direct-to-video films, Ultimate Avengers and Ultimate Avengers 2, which were largely faithful adaptations of the first two volumes of The Ultimates comics. They captured the core plot points, such as finding Captain America in the ice and fighting the Chitauri, but significantly toned down the darker, more controversial elements of Mark Millar's writing, such as the domestic abuse and political satire, to make it more suitable for a broader audience.

1)
The visual appearance of Nick Fury in the Ultimate Universe was based on actor Samuel L. Jackson, with his permission, years before he was ever considered for the role in the MCU. Writer Mark Millar reportedly told Jackson, “We're going to make this character look like you, and you'll probably get to play him in the movie one day.” This turned out to be remarkably prescient.
2)
In The Ultimates #1, a French citizen mocks Captain America, leading Steve Rogers to point to the “A” on his helmet and state, “You think this letter on my head stands for France?” This line was famously adapted for the 2012 Avengers film.
3)
The term “Tier-1 Threat” used by Nick Fury to classify global-level dangers was popularized by the comic and reflects the series' effort to use militaristic and political jargon to ground its superhero concepts in a more realistic context.
4)
Bryan Hitch's “widescreen” art style was incredibly labor-intensive, leading to significant delays between issues. The first 13-issue volume took nearly two years to complete, and the 13-issue second volume took almost three years. Despite the delays, the quality of the art is considered a major reason for the series' enduring influence.
5)
The Earth-616 Ultimates' first mission to “heal” Galactus was a direct refutation of the classic superhero trope of always solving problems with violence. Their goal was to use science and cosmic power to change a fundamental force of the universe for the better, establishing their unique, proactive mandate.