Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Yellowjacket ====== ===== Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary ===== * **Core Identity:** **Yellowjacket is a legacy mantle in the Marvel Universe, intrinsically linked to [[pym_particles]] and size-altering technology, most famously adopted by its brilliant but deeply troubled creator, [[hank_pym]], during a severe mental health crisis, and later re-envisioned as a villainous identity for his corporate rival, [[darren_cross]], in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.** * **Key Takeaways:** * **Role in the Universe:** More than a simple superhero or supervillain identity, Yellowjacket functions as a narrative symbol. In the comics, it represents the darker, more volatile aspects of Hank Pym's genius and psyche. In the [[marvel_cinematic_universe|MCU]], it is a militarized, corporate perversion of the heroic [[ant-man]] legacy. * **Primary Impact:** The Hank Pym incarnation is responsible for one of the most controversial and impactful storylines in [[avengers]] history, "The Court-Martial of Yellowjacket," which explored themes of mental illness and domestic abuse. The MCU version established the template for Ant-Man's cinematic foes, blending personal rivalry with technological escalation. * **Key Incarnations:** The fundamental difference lies in intent and origin. Earth-616's primary Yellowjacket (Hank Pym) was a new, aggressive heroic persona born from a psychological breakdown. The MCU's Yellowjacket (Darren Cross) was a purpose-built weapon and a distinct villain created to oppose the heroes, transferring the original's instability to a separate character. ===== Part 2: Origin and Evolution ===== ==== Publication History and Creation ==== The Yellowjacket identity first appeared in **//Avengers// #59 (December 1968)**, created by writer **Roy Thomas** and artist **John Buscema**. This was not the introduction of a new character, but a dramatic rebranding of the established hero and founding Avenger, Dr. Hank Pym, who had previously operated as Ant-Man, Giant-Man, and Goliath. The shift to Yellowjacket was a deliberate creative choice to inject more drama and interpersonal conflict into the Avengers roster. Thomas conceived of Yellowjacket as a manifestation of Pym's long-brewing inferiority complex and mental instability. The character's debut was shocking: he claimed to have killed Hank Pym, brazenly demanded a spot on the Avengers, and impulsively proposed to Janet van Dyne. This storyline was a product of the late Silver Age's transition into the more psychologically complex Bronze Age of comics, where creators began exploring the flaws and failings of their heroes in greater depth. The name itself, taken from the aggressive wasp species, was chosen to reflect this new, edgier persona. Years later, the mantle would be passed to **Rita DeMara**, a criminal technician who first appeared in **//Avengers// #264 (February 1986)**. Her character arc, from a member of the [[masters_of_evil]] to a redeemed hero and member of the [[guardians_of_the_galaxy]], represented a different exploration of the identity—one of theft and eventual redemption. The modern conception of Yellowjacket has been heavily influenced by the MCU. Following the success of the 2015 film //Ant-Man//, the comics introduced their own version of Darren Cross as Yellowjacket, first appearing in **//The Astonishing Ant-Man// #12 (September 2016)**, retroactively aligning the comic continuity more closely with the popular cinematic depiction. ==== In-Universe Origin Story ==== The origin of Yellowjacket is a tale of two universes, diverging significantly in character, motivation, and context. === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === In the prime Marvel continuity, the Yellowjacket identity has been worn by multiple individuals, each with a distinct origin. ==== The Troubled Hero: Dr. Henry "Hank" Pym ==== The original and most significant Yellowjacket was Dr. Hank Pym. His adoption of the mantle was not a planned career change but the result of a severe schizophrenic breakdown. While working in his lab, Pym accidentally inhaled a mixture of experimental chemicals. The fumes fractured his psyche, causing a dissociative identity crisis. A new, more aggressive and uninhibited personality emerged, suppressing the cautious, insecure Hank Pym. This new persona designed a new costume with powerful bio-blasters (or "stingers") and dubbed himself "Yellowjacket." In a stunning display of bravado, he burst into Avengers Mansion, claiming to have murdered Hank Pym and demanding membership on the team. The only person to see through the facade was his long-time partner, Janet van Dyne (The Wasp). Seeing a chance to finally get the commitment from Hank that he was too insecure to offer, she played along with his delusion. When Yellowjacket rashly proposed to her, she accepted. The shock of the wedding and Janet's acceptance momentarily shattered the delusion, allowing Pym's true personality to resurface, though he retained the Yellowjacket identity for a considerable time. This persona would continue to be a source of immense personal conflict, culminating in his eventual expulsion from the Avengers. ==== The Redeemed Thief: Rita DeMara ==== The second major Yellowjacket was Rita DeMara. A highly skilled technician and professional criminal, she was hired by the [[masters_of_evil]] to steal Hank Pym's original Yellowjacket costume from Avengers Mansion during the "Under Siege" storyline. Initially, she used the suit for criminal endeavors, battling the Wasp and other heroes. However, DeMara's path was one of slow redemption. After a stint in prison, she found herself swept into a complex temporal conflict alongside the Guardians of the Galaxy from the 31st century. Traveling with them and seeing true heroism firsthand changed her perspective. She eventually returned to the 20th century and formally joined the Avengers, seeking to atone for her past. She bravely fought alongside the team until she was tragically killed by the temporal entity Immortus during "The Crossing" event, sacrificing her life to save her teammates. ==== The Modern Villain: Darren Cross ==== Long before the MCU film, Darren Cross was a villain in the comics, but not as Yellowjacket. He was the head of Cross Technological Enterprises and a rival to Scott Lang. After the //Ant-Man// film's success, the comic universe adapted the concept. A resurrected Darren Cross, seeking revenge on Scott Lang, acquired a prototype Yellowjacket armor from the black market. This version was a deliberate echo of the MCU villain: a ruthless corporate figure who co-opted Pym's technology for purely malicious and personal ends. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === In the MCU (designated Earth-199999), the Yellowjacket identity has a singular, unambiguous origin tied directly to the villain **Darren Cross**. Darren Cross was the brilliant protégé of Dr. Hank Pym at Pym Technologies. Pym, haunted by the dangers of his Pym Particle discovery, refused to share the formula and hid his past as the original Ant-Man. This secrecy and perceived lack of faith drove a wedge between them. Obsessed with recreating his mentor's legendary formula, Cross eventually forced Pym out of his own company and took over as CEO. Cross successfully, though imperfectly, cracked the Pym Particle formula. However, repeated, unprotected exposure to the unstable particles began to severely affect his mind, eroding his sanity and amplifying his paranoia and aggression. He saw the Pym Particle not as a tool for heroism, but as the ultimate weapon. To this end, he designed the Yellowjacket suit: a state-of-the-art, militarized combat armor that integrated his shrinking technology with an arsenal of advanced weaponry. The suit was the centerpiece of his plan to sell advanced weapons technology to the highest bidder, including operatives from [[hydra]]. His transformation into Yellowjacket was the culmination of his resentment towards Pym and his descent into madness. His primary goal was to destroy his mentor's legacy and prove his own superiority, leading to a climactic battle against Pym's chosen successor, [[scott_lang_ant-man|Scott Lang]]. Unlike the comic version's complex psychological origins, the MCU's Yellowjacket is a clear-cut story of a protégé's ambition curdling into villainous obsession. ===== Part 3: Powers, Abilities & Technology ===== The Yellowjacket identity is defined by its advanced suit, which grants the wearer a suite of powers based on Pym Particles. However, the specifics of the technology and the user's inherent skills vary greatly between universes and wearers. === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === The comic book Yellowjacket suit is a direct evolution of Hank Pym's Ant-Man and Giant-Man technology. * **Pym Particle Manipulation:** The core function of the suit is its ability to harness Pym Particles, allowing the user to rapidly alter their size, density, and strength. * **Shrinking:** The wearer can shrink to the size of an insect or even to sub-atomic scales. A key aspect of Pym's science is that the user retains their full-size strength and mass while shrunken, allowing them to exert tremendous force. * **Growth:** While Pym used this ability more as Goliath and Giant-Man, the Yellowjacket suit retains the potential for growth, though it is used less frequently under this persona. * **Bio-Energy Blasts ("Stingers"):** The suit's primary offensive weapon. The gauntlets can generate and project powerful blasts of bio-electric energy. The intensity of these blasts can be varied from a mild stunning effect to a force capable of melting steel. This was a significant upgrade from his previous Ant-Man gear. * **Flight:** The suit incorporates a set of small, durable, insect-like wings that deploy from the back. These wings beat at an incredibly high frequency, allowing for stable flight, hovering, and high-speed aerial maneuverability. * **Enhanced Durability:** The costume is made of unstable molecules and synthetic stretch fabric, allowing it to conform to the wearer's size changes without tearing. It also offers a degree of protection against physical impacts and energy attacks. * **Wearer-Specific Skills:** * **Dr. Hank Pym:** As the suit's creator, Pym possesses a **genius-level intellect** across numerous scientific fields, including biochemistry, robotics, quantum physics, and entomology. His greatest asset is his mind, though it is also his greatest weakness. He is the creator of the robotic tyrant [[ultron]]. He also retains the cybernetic helmet technology that allows him to telepathically communicate with and control insects. * **Rita DeMara:** Rita was a gifted **master technician and engineer**, capable of understanding and modifying Pym's complex technology. She was also an accomplished **cat burglar** and a skilled hand-to-hand combatant, skills she honed further during her time with the Guardians and Avengers. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === The MCU's Yellowjacket suit is less a superhero costume and more a piece of advanced military hardware, a "weaponized version" of the Ant-Man suit. * **Unstable Pym Particle Shrinking:** Like the Ant-Man suit, it uses Pym Particles for size-alteration. However, Cross's formula is imperfect and prolonged use has a degenerative effect on the user's brain chemistry, leading to mental instability and psychosis. * **Armored Carapace:** The suit is a fully enclosed, heavily armored exoskeleton made from a titanium alloy. It is far more durable than Scott Lang's leather-based Ant-Man suit, capable of withstanding bullets, explosions, and significant physical trauma. * **Plasma Cannons:** The MCU's version of the "stingers" are far more powerful. Mounted on two articulated, back-mounted mechanical arms, these cannons fire high-energy plasma blasts capable of vaporizing objects and people. The arms provide a 360-degree field of fire, making Yellowjacket incredibly dangerous in combat. * **Articulated Appendages:** In addition to the plasma cannon arms, the suit features four sharp, pincer-like legs on its back, also used for combat and for clinging to surfaces, enhancing its insectoid theme. * **Advanced HUD and Sensors:** The helmet contains a sophisticated heads-up display and sensor suite, allowing Cross to track targets, analyze his surroundings, and operate the suit's complex weapon systems. The entire suit is hermetically sealed, allowing for operation in hazardous environments. * **Comparative Analysis:** The core difference is philosophy. Pym's Ant-Man suit (both 616 and MCU) was designed for infiltration and non-lethal engagement. Cross's Yellowjacket suit is designed for one purpose: destruction. It sacrifices stealth and finesse for overwhelming firepower and brute force, a direct reflection of its creator's personality. ===== Part 4: Key Relationships & Network ===== The relationships surrounding the Yellowjacket mantle are often fraught with conflict, betrayal, and complexity, primarily due to the actions of Hank Pym. ==== Core Allies ==== * **Janet van Dyne (The Wasp):** Janet is the most critical figure in the Yellowjacket saga. Her relationship with Hank Pym is one of Marvel's most tragic and enduring love stories. She was the only one who recognized him in his Yellowjacket guise and married him, hoping to help him find stability. She was also the victim of his most infamous act, when he struck her during a mental breakdown. Despite the trauma, they have a deep, complicated bond, and she has always been his fiercest defender and the one person who could reach the man beneath the instability. * **The Avengers:** As a founding Avenger, Hank Pym's connection to the team is foundational. However, his time as Yellowjacket severely strained these relationships. His erratic behavior, arrogance, and the eventual court-martial led to his disgrace and departure. Figures like [[captain_america]] and [[iron_man]] struggled to reconcile the brilliant scientist they knew with the unstable man he became. For Rita DeMara, the Avengers represented her chance at redemption, and she formed strong bonds with teammates like Hercules and the Black Knight. ==== Arch-Enemies ==== * **Ultron:** While not a direct foe of the Yellowjacket persona, Ultron is the ultimate consequence of Hank Pym's fractured psyche. Pym created Ultron using his own brain patterns as a template, inadvertently passing on his own mental instability and a deep-seated, Oedipal hatred for his "father." The immense guilt Pym feels over unleashing one of the world's greatest threats was a major contributing factor to the breakdowns that led to the Yellowjacket identity. Every battle with Ultron is a deeply personal failure for Pym. * **Scott Lang (Ant-Man):** This rivalry is exclusive to the MCU. Darren Cross's animosity is directed at both Hank Pym for casting him aside and Scott Lang for being chosen as Pym's successor. He sees Scott as an unworthy, pathetic thief who was handed the greatness Cross felt he had earned. Their conflict is a battle of protégés, with Scott representing Pym's heroic ideals and Cross representing the perversion of his science. ==== Affiliations ==== * **The Avengers:** Both Hank Pym and Rita DeMara served as members of the Avengers as Yellowjacket. Pym's tenure was marked by controversy and ended in his expulsion. DeMara's tenure was part of her heroic redemption, and she died an Avenger. * **Masters of Evil:** Before her reform, Rita DeMara was a key member of Baron Zemo's Masters of Evil during their successful takeover of Avengers Mansion. She served as the team's technical expert, using her skills to bypass the mansion's advanced security systems. * **Guardians of the Galaxy:** Rita DeMara was a member of the original, 31st-century Guardians of the Galaxy for a time, having been thrown into their timeline. Her time with them was instrumental in her turn from villainy to heroism. * **Cross Technological Enterprises / HYDRA (MCU):** Darren Cross used his position as CEO of C.T.E. to fund and develop the Yellowjacket project. In his desperation to sell the technology, he entered into a deal with a HYDRA contingent led by Mitchell Carson, demonstrating his complete lack of morality. ===== Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines ===== The Yellowjacket identity has been at the center of several character-defining, and often infamous, storylines. ==== The Coming of... Yellowjacket! (Avengers #59-60) ==== This is the debut of the persona. A brash, overconfident man calling himself Yellowjacket crashes an Avengers meeting, callously claims to have killed Hank Pym, and demands to be made a member. His aggressive proposal to Janet van Dyne and their subsequent wedding stunned the team. The storyline's climax reveals that Yellowjacket //is// Pym, suffering from a chemical-induced schizophrenic episode. It established the core psychological conflict that would define Pym's character for decades. ==== The Court-Martial of Yellowjacket (Avengers #212-213, 217, 224) ==== This is arguably the most notorious Hank Pym story ever published. Facing suspension from the Avengers due to his increasingly reckless behavior, a desperate Pym secretly constructs a powerful robot, Salvation-1, programmed with a specific weakness only he knows. His plan is to have the robot attack the Avengers, allowing him to single-handedly defeat it and prove his value. When Janet discovers his plan and begs him to stop, he lashes out, striking her across the face in a moment that has haunted the character ever since. The plan fails spectacularly, Captain America defeats the robot, and Pym is court-martialed and expelled from the Avengers in disgrace. This story cemented Yellowjacket as a symbol of a fallen hero. ==== Under Siege (Avengers #273-277) ==== This storyline features the debut of Rita DeMara as Yellowjacket. As part of Baron Zemo's massive Masters of Evil team, she plays a crucial role in the systematic and brutal takedown of the Avengers. Her technical expertise allows the villains to overcome the defenses of Avengers Mansion, leading to the severe beating of Hercules and the psychological torture of the team's butler, Jarvis. It's a powerful story that establishes her initial threat level before her eventual heroic turn. ==== Ant-Man (2015 Film) ==== This film serves as the definitive origin story for the MCU's Yellowjacket. The entire plot revolves around Darren Cross's obsessive efforts to perfect and sell his version of Pym's technology. The film details his mental decay, his strained relationship with his former mentor, and his development of the Yellowjacket suit. The climax is a brilliantly choreographed battle between Yellowjacket and Ant-Man that spans multiple scales, from a helicopter to a child's bedroom, ending with Cross's apparent death when Scott Lang goes sub-atomic to destroy his suit from the inside. ===== Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions ===== * **Ultimate Universe (Earth-1610):** In this darker, more grounded reality, Hank Pym is a member of the Ultimates. He is brilliant but also overtly abusive and unstable from the start. He operates as Giant-Man but adopts a Yellowjacket-inspired suit when he leads the "Ant-Man" swarm of drones for S.H.I.E.L.D. This version's instability culminates in a horrific domestic abuse incident with Janet, which is made public and leads to his expulsion from the team, a much more direct and less nuanced take on the Earth-616 storyline. * **"What If... The World Lost Its Mightiest Heroes?" (MCU - Earth-72124):** In the third episode of the //What If...?// animated series, a grieving and vengeful Hank Pym dons the Yellowjacket suit to systematically murder Nick Fury's candidates for the Avenger Initiative. Enraged by the death of his daughter, Hope van Dyne, on a S.H.I.E.L.D. mission, he uses the suit's shrinking capabilities to assassinate Thor, Hawkeye, and Bruce Banner, and nearly kills Tony Stark. This was the first time the MCU explicitly depicted Hank Pym himself as a villainous Yellowjacket, a direct homage to his troubled comic history. * **Marvel Zombies (Earth-2149):** In this reality, a zombified Hank Pym (as Giant-Man, but wearing a tattered Yellowjacket costume) is one of the most terrifying figures. Having "solved" his hunger by creating a larder of cloned human parts, he leads the zombified heroes in devouring the Silver Surfer and Galactus, gaining cosmic powers and becoming one of the "Galacti" who travel the universe consuming all life. ===== See Also ===== * [[hank_pym]] * [[ant-man]] * [[janet_van_dyne_the_wasp]] * [[darren_cross]] * [[pym_particles]] * [[avengers]] * [[ultron]] * [[rita_demara]] ===== Notes and Trivia ===== ((The infamous panel in //Avengers// #213 where Hank Pym strikes Janet was a result of a miscommunication. Writer Jim Shooter intended for the scene to be an accidental backhand as Pym was gesticulating wildly, but artist Bob Hall drew it as a deliberate, clenched-fist punch. By the time the error was caught, it was too late to change, and the more severe depiction became canon, defining Pym's character for decades.)) ((The name "Yellowjacket" is a common name in North America for predatory social wasps, known for their aggressive behavior, especially when defending their nests. This reflects the aggressive, territorial personality Pym adopted under the persona.)) ((In the comics, before becoming Yellowjacket, Darren Cross had a cousin named Crossfire who was a frequent foe of Hawkeye.)) ((Rita DeMara's heroic sacrifice in "The Crossing" was undone years later when the Scarlet Witch altered reality in the //Avengers Disassembled// storyline, bringing her back to life. She has since made sporadic appearances.)) ((The design of the MCU Yellowjacket suit, with its back-mounted mechanical arms and hard-light cannons, bears a strong aesthetic resemblance to Doctor Octopus from the Spider-Man comics, another brilliant scientist turned tech-based villain.)) ((Hank Pym's creation of Ultron and his subsequent mental breakdowns as Yellowjacket are often cited as prime examples of the "guilt-ridden scientist" archetype in comics, a trope famously established by figures like Dr. Frankenstein and Dr. Jekyll.))