Shriek

  • Core Identity: A dangerously unstable supervillainess, Shriek is a mutant with the devastating powers of sonokinesis and dark empathic manipulation, most infamous as the psychotic lover and primary accomplice of the serial killer Carnage (Cletus Kasady).
  • Key Takeaways:
    • Role in the Universe: Shriek serves as the matriarch of Carnage's “family” of killers and is the emotional amplifier of his chaos. Her ability to incite fear and hatred in entire populations makes her a city-level threat, representing a unique form of psychological terror.
    • Primary Impact: Her introduction in the 1990s redefined the scale of Spider-Man's street-level conflicts, culminating in the crossover event Maximum Carnage, where her powers were instrumental in plunging New York City into violent anarchy. She is intrinsically linked to the darkest, most nihilistic corner of Spider-Man's rogues' gallery.
    • Key Incarnations: In the primary comic universe (Earth-616), Frances Barrison's powers were triggered by a combination of trauma and exposure to the Darkforce Dimension, granting her both sonic and powerful empathic abilities. In Sony's Spider-Man Universe (SSU), she is an innate mutant whose powers are purely sonic, with her origin and motivations tied directly and solely to her childhood romance with Cletus Kasady.

Shriek burst onto the Marvel scene in Spider-Man Unlimited #1 (May 1993), marking the explosive start of the 14-part crossover saga, Maximum Carnage. She was conceived by a creative team that included writer Tom DeFalco and artist Ron Lim, with significant input from Terry Kavanagh and Jerry Bingham. Her creation was a direct response to the “grim and gritty” comic book trend of the 1990s, an era that favored more extreme, violent, and psychologically complex characters. Carnage, having already proven immensely popular, needed a supporting cast to elevate his next storyline from a simple killing spree to a full-blown epic. The writers developed the idea of a twisted “family” unit built around him, and Shriek was designed to be his partner and matriarch—a Harley Quinn to his Joker, but infused with a far more nihilistic and malevolent ideology. Ron Lim's visual design was instantly iconic: the wild, two-toned hair, the facial marking over her left eye (later revealed to be a scar), and a punk-goth aesthetic that perfectly captured her chaotic nature. She was not merely a sidekick; she was an enabler and an amplifier, whose unique powerset was purpose-built to escalate Carnage's terror to a city-wide scale.

In-Universe Origin Story

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

Shriek's origin in the primary Marvel continuity is a tragic and complex tapestry woven from abuse, crime, and supernatural encounters. Born Frances Louise Barrison, her childhood was marked by severe trauma. She was relentlessly tormented by her mother for being overweight, leading to a deeply fractured psyche and a lifelong battle with mental illness. As a young adult, she descended into a life of crime, primarily as a drug dealer. Her life took a dramatic and horrifying turn during an encounter with the vigilante duo Cloak and Dagger. While fleeing from the police, she was shot in the head by an officer. In the ensuing chaos, she stumbled into the dimensional nexus of Cloak's Darkforce Dimension. The combination of the severe head trauma and the exposure to the otherworldly energies of the Darkforce had a profound and transformative effect. It didn't kill her; instead, it awakened her latent mutant genes, granting her formidable powers. The experience shattered what was left of her sanity. She was apprehended and incarcerated at the Ravencroft Institute for the Criminally Insane, where she was subjected to cruel and dehumanizing treatments. It was here that she adopted the moniker “Shriek,” embracing the madness that had consumed her. Her true debut as a supervillain occurred when Cletus Kasady, bonded with the Carnage symbiote, staged a bloody breakout from Ravencroft. The sheer destructive power of his escape seemed to resonate with her, fully unlocking her powers. Drawn to his nihilistic “philosophy” of ultimate freedom through chaos, she immediately allied herself with him. She viewed him as a kindred spirit, and together they embarked on a killing spree that would become the foundation of the Maximum Carnage event, forming a “family” with other escaped super-criminals like Doppelganger, Demogoblin, and Carrion.

Sony's Spider-Man Universe (SSU)

In the cinematic continuity of Sony's Spider-Man Universe, specifically in the film Let There Be Carnage (2021), Shriek's origin is significantly streamlined and re-contextualized to tie her directly to Cletus Kasady from childhood. Portrayed by actress Naomie Harris, Frances Barrison is depicted as a troubled youth living at the St. Estes Home for Unwanted Children. It was there she met and fell in love with a young Cletus Kasady, finding solace in their shared trauma and alienation. Unlike her comic counterpart, this version of Shriek is an innate mutant whose powerful sonic abilities manifested early in life. An incident where she attacked a police officer during an attempt to escape St. Estes led to her being separated from Cletus. Deemed too dangerous, she was taken to the Ravencroft Institute. During her transfer, she lashed out with her sonic scream, which caused police detective Patrick Mulligan to shoot her in the eye, permanently scarring her and costing him his hearing in one ear. Her powers in this universe are purely sonokinetic. The film omits her empathic abilities to create a more straightforward powerset and a clearer weakness for both her and the symbiotes. Her entire motivation is centered on her love for Cletus and her desire for revenge against Mulligan. Her decades-long incarceration at Ravencroft, where she was held in a soundproofed glass cell, only deepened her rage and her longing to be reunited with her one true love. When an adult Cletus becomes Carnage, his first priority is to free her, setting the stage for their destructive rampage across San Francisco. This cinematic origin transforms her from a chaotic force drawn to Carnage into the central reason for his initial rampage, making their dark love story the emotional core of the film's conflict.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

Shriek's powerset makes her one of the most insidious and dangerous non-cosmic villains in the Marvel Universe, capable of dismantling not just buildings, but entire societies from within.

  • Powers and Abilities:
    • Sonokinesis (Sound Manipulation): This is her most overt power. Shriek can generate and project powerful sonic waves from her vocal cords and hands.
      • Concussive Force: Her primary offensive use is to create devastating “sonic shrieks” or concussive blasts that can shatter steel, pulverize concrete, and incapacitate superhumans like Spider-Man and Venom.
      • Sonic Lances: She can focus her sonic energy into precise, armor-piercing projectiles.
      • Defensive Shields: She can create shields of solid sound to deflect physical and energy attacks.
    • Empathic Manipulation (Dark Empathy): This is her most dangerous and defining ability. Shriek can psionically tap into the minds of those around her and draw out their darkest, most negative emotions.
      • Inciting Violence: She can amplify feelings of anger, fear, hatred, and despair in individuals or vast crowds, causing them to erupt into mindless violence, riots, and hysteria. This was her key weapon during Maximum Carnage, turning ordinary citizens into a violent mob.
      • Psychological Warfare: She can target specific individuals, forcing them to confront their deepest fears and insecurities, often paralyzing them with self-doubt or driving them to madness.
      • Emotional Nullification: Conversely, she has at times been shown to be able to suppress emotions, rendering people apathetic.
    • Levitation/Flight: By manipulating sound waves around her body, Shriek can levitate and fly at moderate speeds, granting her significant mobility in combat.
    • Latent Mutant Status: It has been confirmed that Frances was born a latent mutant. The combined traumas of being shot, exposed to Cloak's dimension, and witnessing Carnage's breakout were the catalysts that activated her dormant X-gene.
  • Weaknesses:
    • Mental Instability: Shriek's greatest weakness is her own fractured psyche. Her powers are often tied to her emotional state, making her unpredictable. She is deeply codependent, almost always requiring a figure like Carnage to give her purpose.
    • Sensory Overload: While she controls sound, it is possible for a sufficiently powerful or specific sonic frequency to overwhelm and harm her, a vulnerability shared by symbiotes.
    • Psychic Resistance: Individuals with strong willpower or telepathic defenses, such as Jean Grey or Professor X, can resist or even turn back her empathic attacks.
  • Personality:

Shriek is the embodiment of chaotic evil filtered through a lens of maternal obsession and codependency. She is not merely insane; she has a coherent, albeit terrifying, worldview. She believes that chaos is the ultimate form of love and freedom, and that murder is a form of self-expression. She often acts as a twisted maternal figure, particularly towards Doppelganger, whom she treated as her and Carnage's “son.” This desire to create a “family” is central to her character, as she seeks to replicate a sense of belonging that she was denied in her own abusive childhood. She is manipulative, vicious, and utterly without remorse, finding genuine joy in the suffering and panic she inflicts.

Sony's Spider-Man Universe (SSU)

The cinematic adaptation focused Shriek's abilities for a more streamlined and visually coherent cinematic threat.

  • Powers and Abilities:
    • Sonokinesis: This is her sole superpower in the film. Her “shriek” manifests as a visible, destructive wave of sonic force capable of throwing cars, shattering reinforced glass, and causing immense physical damage. The power is shown to be potent enough to forcibly separate Eddie Brock from the Venom symbiote and to harm the Carnage symbiote, which is established as being particularly vulnerable to certain sonic frequencies. The film omits her empathic and flight abilities entirely.
  • Weaknesses:
    • Sonic Frequencies: Her greatest strength is also her greatest weakness. While she generates destructive sound, she herself is vulnerable to specific frequencies and overwhelming sonic feedback. The final battle hinges on this weakness, as a massive church bell is used to incapacitate both her and Carnage.
    • Physical Vulnerability: Without flight or enhanced durability, she is as physically vulnerable as a normal human when her powers are neutralized.
  • Personality:

Naomie Harris's Shriek is defined by love and vengeance. Her personality is less about a broad philosophy of chaos and more about a singular, obsessive devotion to Cletus Kasady and a burning hatred for the system that separated them. She is portrayed as a woman deeply wounded by her past, her rage and pain fueling her powers. While still a villain, the film grants her a more tragic and sympathetic motivation compared to her comic book counterpart's gleeful nihilism. Her goal is not to plunge the world into anarchy, but to eliminate her enemies and be with the man she loves, making her a more focused and personal antagonist.

Shriek's primary alliances are almost exclusively with the group of villains she assembled with Carnage, a makeshift family bound by a shared love for slaughter.

  • Carnage (Cletus Kasady): This is the central relationship of Shriek's existence. She is utterly devoted to Cletus, viewing him as a messiah of chaos. She acts as his lover, his confidante, and his chief lieutenant. Their relationship is a grotesque parody of a romance, built on murder instead of affection. While she often defers to him, she is also one of the few people who can influence him, and her empathic powers often serve to stoke his own homicidal tendencies. Their bond is so strong that even after her death, Carnage sought to resurrect her during the events of Absolute Carnage.
  • Doppelganger: The monstrous, six-armed clone of Spider-Man created during the Infinity War was found by Shriek and Carnage. Lacking any real intelligence, the creature was adopted by Shriek as her and Cletus's “son.” She doted on it, protected it fiercely, and treated it like a loyal pet. This bizarre maternal instinct highlights the part of Shriek that craves a family, even one composed of monsters.
  • Demogoblin: The demonic, hellfire-wielding version of the Hobgoblin joined the family during Maximum Carnage. His motivations were different; he believed he was on a divine mission to punish sinners, which often put him at odds with Shriek and Carnage's more nihilistic, “kill-for-fun” ethos. He was the fanatical zealot of the group, providing a dark spiritual justification for their rampage.
  • Carrion (Malcolm McBride): The tragic figure of Malcolm McBride, afflicted with the Carrion virus, was the final member of the original family. He was easily manipulated by the stronger personalities of Carnage and Shriek, his own fractured mind latching onto their cause. He represented the malleable, easily corrupted youth drawn into their web of chaos.
  • Spider-Man (Peter Parker): As Carnage's primary partner, Shriek is a natural and formidable foe for Spider-Man. Her powers are uniquely suited to attack his greatest strengths. Her sonic blasts target his enhanced senses, and her dark empathy preys upon his guilt and overwhelming sense of responsibility. During Maximum Carnage, she was arguably a greater threat than Carnage himself, as she turned the very people Spider-Man swore to protect against him.
  • Venom (Eddie Brock): Shriek despises Venom, viewing him as a failed “father” to Carnage and a hypocrite. Their battles are brutal, as her sonic attacks are a critical weakness for the Venom symbiote. Ideologically, they are polar opposites: Venom's lethal protector mentality clashes with Shriek's pure, unadulterated love of chaos for its own sake.
  • Cloak and Dagger: Shriek holds a special animosity for Cloak, whose powers inadvertently led to her creation. The duo has frequently confronted Shriek, with Dagger's powers of light and purity serving as a direct counterpoint to the darkness Shriek wields through her empathic and Darkforce-linked abilities.
  • Carnage Family: Her primary and most defining affiliation. She is the co-founder and matriarch of this collective of killers.
  • Doom Maidens: During the Fear Itself event, Shriek was recruited by Caroline le Fay into her all-female team of super-villainesses, the Doom Maidens, to battle the Defenders.
  • Sinister Sixteen: She was briefly a member of the Hobgoblin's (Roderick Kingsley) massive criminal enterprise and fought against the Superior Foes of Spider-Man as part of a “Sinister Sixteen.”
  • Church of the New Darkness: After being resurrected by Carnage during Absolute Carnage, she served as a high priestess in his cult, which worshipped the dark symbiote god Knull.

Maximum Carnage

This 14-part 1993 epic is Shriek's definitive story. After Carnage's escape from Ravencroft, he frees Shriek, and they embark on a rampage across Manhattan. Shriek's role is pivotal: she is the catalyst that transforms a killing spree into a city-wide crisis. Using her dark empathy on a massive scale, she blankets New York City in a psychic wave of rage and despair, causing widespread riots and turning ordinary citizens into a violent mob that attacks heroes and law enforcement alike. She forms her “family” with Carnage, Doppelganger, and Demogoblin, acting as the group's emotional core. Throughout the event, she personally torments Spider-Man, nearly breaking his spirit. Her eventual defeat comes at the hands of Iron Man's “good karma” generator, a device that floods the city with positive emotions, which overwhelms and incapacitates her, leaving her catatonic.

Planet of the Symbiotes

In this 1995 storyline, Shriek, still recovering from the events of Maximum Carnage, plays a smaller but important role. Incarcerated once again, she is able to telepathically sense the psychic scream of an invading army of symbiotes from space. Her connection to the symbiote hive mind (likely a result of her close association with Carnage) allows her to broadcast this psychic pain, which nearly drives Eddie Brock and the Venom symbiote insane. She serves as an early warning system and a source of psychological torment for Venom, showcasing the lingering effects of her powers.

Absolute Carnage

This 2019 event marked a major return for the character. After having been killed in a previous storyline, Shriek's corpse is recovered by the new Knull-worshipping Carnage. He resurrects her using a piece of the Grendel (dragon) symbiote, granting her enhanced powers and a more monstrous appearance. She becomes a key figure in his doomsday cult, the Church of the New Darkness. As his devoted priestess, she helps him hunt down anyone who has ever bonded with a symbiote to extract their codexes. Her arc in this event reaffirms her unbreakable bond with Cletus and elevates her from a mere psychotic partner to a true disciple of a dark god.

  • Ultimate Universe (Earth-1610): While Frances Barrison herself does not appear, a character named Shriek makes a brief appearance in Ultimate Comics: Spider-Man. This version is a member of a team of teenage super-criminals known as the Femme Fatales. Her powers are similar, but her backstory and connection to Carnage are non-existent in this continuity. She is a minor antagonist, a far cry from her Earth-616 counterpart's significance.
  • Video Games: Shriek's most famous alternate appearance is as a recurring boss in the 1994 Super Nintendo and Sega Genesis beat 'em up game, Spider-Man and Venom: Maximum Carnage. The game is a direct adaptation of the comic storyline, and she fights alongside Carnage and Doppelganger, using sonic projectiles and her signature scream. She also appears as a playable character in LEGO Marvel Super Heroes 2, included as part of the “Spider-Man: Homecoming” Character Pack.
  • Spider-Gwen (Earth-65): In the reality of Spider-Woman (Gwen Stacy), a version of Shriek appears as the frontwoman for a rock band called “The Shrieking Canaries,” alongside other sound-based characters. This version's powers are tied to her music, offering a less villainous and more creative interpretation of the character.
  • Marvel Zombies: A zombified version of Shriek appears alongside a horde of other undead villains, demonstrating that even in a zombie apocalypse, she sticks close to other super-criminals.

1)
Shriek's real name, Frances Louise Barrison, is often shortened to “Sandra Deel” in early appearances and secondary materials, which was later retconned. The name “Barrison” is now her established canon surname.
2)
Her distinctive facial marking was initially just part of her design, but was later established in the Venom: Let There Be Carnage film as a scar from a gunshot wound. This idea was later subtly integrated into some comic interpretations.
3)
According to creator Tom DeFalco, Shriek was designed to be the “darkest, most evil” female character they could imagine at the time, a direct contrast to the more redeemable female rogues in Spider-Man's gallery.
4)
Her first appearance is in Spider-Man Unlimited #1 (May 1993). The Maximum Carnage storyline ran through all five ongoing Spider-Man-related titles at the time: Amazing Spider-Man, Spectacular Spider-Man, Spider-Man, Web of Spider-Man, and Spider-Man Unlimited.
5)
In Venom: Let There Be Carnage, Shriek's prison uniform bears the number “4,” a subtle nod to her being the fourth member of the original Maximum Carnage “family” (after Carnage, Doppelganger, and Demogoblin).
6)
Despite her prominent role in Maximum Carnage, Shriek has had relatively few major appearances outside of Carnage-centric stories, cementing her status as being almost exclusively defined by her relationship with Cletus Kasady.