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: A volatile and often dangerous mantle born from scientific genius and psychological instability, Yellowjacket is most famously the aggressive alter ego of Dr. Hank Pym, but has also been a heroic codename for criminal-turned-Avenger Rita DeMara and a militarized supervillain identity for Darren Cross in the MCU.** * **Key Takeaways:** * **A Fractured Legacy:** Unlike singular identities like [[captain_america]] or [[iron_man]], Yellowjacket is a legacy title deeply tied to the mental state of its wielder. For its originator, [[hank_pym]], it represents a schism in his personality, a manifestation of insecurity and aggression brought on by a chemical accident and immense psychological pressure. This makes Yellowjacket one of the most complex and tragic personas in the [[avengers]]' history. * **Hero and Villain:** The Yellowjacket identity has straddled the line between hero and villain. While Hank Pym's tenure was marked by erratic and sometimes shameful behavior, he still operated as a hero. His successor, Rita DeMara, began as a super-criminal with the [[masters_of_evil]] before reforming and heroically serving with the [[guardians_of_the_galaxy]]. This duality is a core theme of the mantle. * **Prime Universe vs. MCU Divergence:** The distinction between the comic and film versions is one of the most pronounced in Marvel adaptations. In the Earth-616 comics, Yellowjacket is an internal struggle for a founding Avenger. In the [[marvel_cinematic_universe]], the identity is externalized into a separate character, Darren Cross, who acts as a dark, corporate-militarist mirror to the heroic legacy of [[ant-man]]. ===== Part 2: Origin and Evolution ===== ==== Publication History and Creation ==== The Yellowjacket persona first burst onto the scene in **''Avengers'' #59**, published in December 1968. The character was co-created by writer Roy Thomas and artist John Buscema. This period of the late Silver Age of comics was a time of creative evolution, with writers beginning to explore more complex psychological themes and personal failings within their superhero casts. The creation of Yellowjacket was a deliberate narrative choice to inject a new level of drama and unpredictability into the life of Dr. Hank Pym, a character who had already cycled through multiple heroic identities (Ant-Man, Giant-Man, Goliath). By introducing a persona born from a mental breakdown, Thomas and Buscema crafted a storyline that challenged the very definition of what a hero could be. This new identity was not a simple costume change; it was a fundamental shift in personality. He was cocky, aggressive, and dangerously impulsive—everything the mild-mannered Dr. Pym was not. This arc, culminating in his shocking marriage to Janet van Dyne, remains one of the most memorable and impactful storylines from that era of //The Avengers//. ==== In-Universe Origin Story ==== The origin of Yellowjacket is a tale of two vastly different realities, one rooted in psychological trauma and the other in corporate espionage and ambition. === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === The birth of the Yellowjacket persona in the main Marvel comics continuity is inextricably linked to a severe mental health crisis suffered by its founder, Dr. Hank Pym. While working alone in his laboratory, Pym's frustration with his own perceived inadequacies and the pressures of his life as an Avenger reached a breaking point. A lab accident involving experimental gases shattered his already fragile psyche, triggering a dissociative identity disorder or a form of schizophrenia. From this crisis, a new personality emerged. This persona, calling himself "Yellowjacket," was the polar opposite of the cautious and often insecure Hank Pym. He was brash, arrogant, and reckless. In his first appearance, he burst into Avengers Mansion, claiming to have killed Hank Pym, and demanded membership on the team. He even kidnapped his own girlfriend, Janet van Dyne ([[the_wasp]]). In a bizarre twist, Janet, recognizing Hank's underlying psychological turmoil, played along with the new persona. When Yellowjacket impulsively proposed to her, she accepted, hoping it would be the catalyst to shock him back to his senses. They were married in //Avengers// #60. It was only after a confrontation with the Circus of Crime, where Janet's life was endangered, that the shock of potential loss snapped Pym's fractured mind back together, merging the Pym and Yellowjacket personas. For years afterward, Pym adopted Yellowjacket as his primary heroic identity, though the underlying instability and aggressive tendencies would remain a part of his character, leading to future crises and personal failings. Later, the mantle was taken up by Rita DeMara. A skilled technician and professional criminal, DeMara stole one of Pym's older Yellowjacket costumes to join the Masters of Evil. After several clashes with the Avengers, she found herself stranded in the 31st century, where she reformed and joined the original Guardians of the Galaxy, serving as a hero until her tragic death upon returning to the present day. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === In the MCU, the story of Yellowjacket is completely reimagined, with the identity belonging not to Hank Pym, but to his alienated and ambitious protégé, **Darren Cross**. As depicted in the 2015 film ''Ant-Man'', Cross was a brilliant scientist handpicked by Hank Pym to work at Pym Technologies. However, Pym refused to share the secret of the [[pym_particles]], fearing their potential for misuse. This secrecy fostered a deep resentment in Cross, who saw Pym's caution as a personal slight and a denial of his own genius. After forcing Pym out of his own company, Cross became obsessed with cracking the Pym Particle formula. He eventually succeeded, but his version of the formula was imperfect. Repeated exposure to the unstable particles began to warp his mind, eroding his sanity and amplifying his paranoia and aggression. Driven by a desire to surpass his former mentor and profit from his creation, Cross developed a highly advanced, militarized combat suit he christened the "Yellowjacket." Unlike Pym's Ant-Man suit, which was designed for espionage, the Yellowjacket suit was a weapon of war, equipped with articulated plasma cannons and a heavily armored exoskeleton. Cross's goal was to sell this technology to the highest bidder, which included a faction of [[hydra]]. His transformation from brilliant scientist to unhinged supervillain was complete, making him the dark reflection of everything Hank Pym feared his technology could become. His story arc culminates in a desperate battle with the new Ant-Man, Scott Lang, which ends with Cross being uncontrollably shrunk into the Quantum Realm. He would later resurface in ''Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania'', grotesquely mutated by his uncontrolled shrinking into the cyborg known as M.O.D.O.K. (Mechanized Organism Designed Only for Killing), serving Kang the Conqueror. ===== Part 3: Abilities, Equipment & Personality ===== The capabilities and nature of Yellowjacket vary dramatically between the comic universe's primary users and the MCU's singular villain. === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === The Earth-616 Yellowjacket's abilities are derived from Hank Pym's genius-level intellect and his mastery of Pym Particles. * **Powers and Abilities:** * **Size-Shifting:** The core ability granted by [[pym_particles]]. As Yellowjacket, Pym typically preferred shrinking to insect-size for stealth and combat agility. However, he retained the ability to grow to giant-statures (as Giant-Man/Goliath), granting him immense strength and durability proportional to his size. * **Bio-Energy Blasts ("Stingers"):** Yellowjacket's signature offensive weapon. The suit's gauntlets contain powerful bio-electric blasters capable of firing concussive blasts of energy. These "stings" are potent weapons, effective against a wide range of opponents. * **Insect Communication and Control:** Like his Ant-Man persona, the Yellowjacket helmet contains psionic technology that allows him to communicate with and command insects, particularly Hymenoptera (wasps, bees, ants). This allows him to use swarms for distraction, reconnaissance, or direct attack. * **Flight:** The suit is equipped with small, insect-like wings that allow for stable flight when at a shrunken size. * **Equipment:** * **Yellowjacket Suit:** A costume woven from unstable molecules, allowing it to adapt to his radical size changes without tearing. * **Bio-Sting Gauntlets:** The primary weapon system integrated into the suit's gloves. * **Cybernetic Helmet:** The interface for his insect communication abilities. * **Personality (Hank Pym):** The Yellowjacket persona is the embodiment of Hank Pym's repressed feelings of inferiority, jealousy, and anger. Where Pym is contemplative and insecure, Yellowjacket is impulsive, arrogant, and often confrontational. This persona allowed Pym to act on his worst impulses, famously leading to him striking his wife, Janet, in a moment of extreme stress (//Avengers// #213), an act that has haunted the character for decades. While he eventually integrated this personality, the aggressive streak remained a part of his character, a constant reminder of his inner demons. * **Personality (Rita DeMara):** Rita's personality as Yellowjacket was initially that of a cocky, thrill-seeking criminal. She was competent and ambitious. After her reformation, she retained her confidence but tempered it with a genuine desire to do good, proving to be a loyal and courageous, if sometimes sarcastic, teammate to the Guardians of the Galaxy. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === The MCU's Yellowjacket is a product of advanced, weaponized technology, representing a significant power upgrade from the comic original. * **Powers and Abilities (via Suit):** * **Advanced Size-Shifting:** Powered by Darren Cross's flawed but potent version of the Pym Particle, the suit allows for rapid shrinking. * **Superhuman Durability:** The suit is a heavily armored combat chassis, providing significant protection from physical trauma, bullets, and explosions. * **Flight:** The suit is equipped with four large, articulated mechanical appendages on its back. These limbs not only provide stability and allow for rapid, agile flight, but can also be used as sharp, stabbing weapons in close-quarters combat. * **Plasma Cannons:** The most significant offensive upgrade. The articulated appendages are tipped with powerful plasma cannons, capable of firing lethal energy blasts that can vaporize human targets and damage reinforced structures. This is a far cry from the "stings" of the comic version, firmly establishing the suit as military hardware. * **Equipment:** * **Yellowjacket Armored Suit:** A self-contained, environmentally sealed combat suit made from a titanium alloy. It features a sophisticated HUD (Heads-Up Display) and integrated weapon systems. The suit's design is notably more insectoid and menacing than the classic comic book look. * **Personality (Darren Cross):** Darren Cross is driven by a toxic cocktail of ambition, pride, and a profound inferiority complex centered on Hank Pym. He desperately craves Pym's approval and respect, and his inability to gain it fuels his rage and paranoia. The exposure to his own unstable Pym Particles exacerbates these traits, making him erratic, cruel, and monomaniacal. He has no moral compass regarding the sale of his technology, viewing it purely as a means to prove his superiority over Pym. His personality is less a psychological split and more a descent into madness fueled by science and resentment. ===== Part 4: Key Relationships & Network ===== ==== Core Allies ==== * **Janet van Dyne (The Wasp):** Janet is the most critical figure in the story of Hank Pym's Yellowjacket persona. Her decision to marry him while he was in that unstable state was a desperate gamble to save the man she loved. Their relationship during this time was tumultuous, defined by his aggression and her attempts to ground him. Even after the infamous "slap" incident that led to their divorce, their bond remained, and they would eventually reconcile, showcasing a complex and enduring love story. * **The Avengers:** As a founding member, Hank Pym's relationship with the [[avengers]] is foundational. However, the Yellowjacket persona strained this relationship to its breaking point. His arrogance grated on teammates like [[captain_america]], and his actions during his court-martial led to his temporary expulsion from the team. Despite this, the Avengers remained his family, often being the ones to pull him back from the brink. * **Guardians of the Galaxy (31st Century):** For Rita DeMara, this team was her found family and the catalyst for her redemption. Stranded in the future, she found a place alongside Vance Astro, Martinex, and Charlie-27. She proved her worth as a hero and formed deep friendships, particularly with Charlie-27, before her untimely death. ==== Arch-Enemies ==== * **Hank Pym (Himself):** For the original Yellowjacket, the greatest enemy was always internal. The persona was born from Hank Pym's own deep-seated insecurities, self-doubt, and mental illness. His most significant battles were not against supervillains, but against his own destructive impulses, which threatened to destroy his marriage, his friendships, and his heroic legacy. * **Scott Lang (Ant-Man) & Hank Pym (MCU):** In the MCU, Darren Cross's entire villainous motivation is defined by his relationship with these two men. He sees Pym as the withholding father figure whose approval he can never earn, and Scott Lang as the unworthy usurper of the legacy and technology he feels is rightfully his. This personal, bitter rivalry drives the central conflict of the ''Ant-Man'' film. * **Ultron:** While not an exclusive enemy of the Yellowjacket persona, the sentient, genocidal A.I. [[ultron]] is Hank Pym's most horrifying creation and his greatest failure. Ultron's existence is a constant source of guilt for Pym, a burden he carries across all his identities. Ultron's Oedipal hatred for his "father" makes any confrontation between them intensely personal and destructive. ==== Affiliations ==== * **The Avengers:** Hank Pym, as Yellowjacket, served multiple tumultuous tenures with Earth's Mightiest Heroes. This period was defined by both heroic victories and intense personal conflict. * **Masters of Evil:** Rita DeMara's first major affiliation was with Baron Zemo's incarnation of this supervillain team. She participated in the famous "Under Siege" storyline, the definitive assault on Avengers Mansion, before beginning her path toward reformation. * **Pym Technologies / Cross Technologies (MCU):** Darren Cross's entire professional life was tied to this company, first as Hank Pym's protégé and later as the CEO who rebranded it Cross Technologies after seizing control. It was the platform from which he developed the Yellowjacket weapon. * **HYDRA (MCU):** In his desperation to sell his technology and legitimize his creation, Darren Cross entered into a partnership with a remnant faction of HYDRA led by Mitchell Carson, cementing his status as a global threat. ===== Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines ===== ==== The Coming of Yellowjacket! (Avengers #59-60, 1968) ==== This is the foundational storyline that introduced the world to the Yellowjacket persona. It begins with Hank Pym's mysterious disappearance and the sudden, explosive arrival of a new, arrogant hero. Yellowjacket's claims to have murdered Pym, his aggressive demands for Avengers membership, and his whirlwind courtship and marriage to Janet van Dyne shocked readers. The story perfectly established the core mystery and psychological drama of the character, revealing in its climax that Yellowjacket was Pym himself, a victim of a mental breakdown. The arc set the stage for years of character development and turmoil. ==== The Trial of Yellowjacket (Avengers #212-213, #217, #224, 1981-1982) ==== Written by Jim Shooter, this is arguably the most infamous and character-defining arc for Hank Pym. Facing a court-martial from the Avengers due to his increasingly reckless behavior, a cornered and desperate Pym concocts a disastrous plan. He secretly builds a powerful robot programmed with a specific weakness only he knows, planning to have it attack the team so he can single-handedly defeat it and prove his worth. When Janet discovers his plan and tries to stop him, he lashes out and strikes her. The plan fails spectacularly, the Avengers easily defeat the robot, and Captain America discovers Pym's deception. This leads to his public disgrace, his expulsion from the Avengers, and the end of his marriage. It remains a dark, powerful, and controversial story about the fall of a hero. ==== Ant-Man (2015 Film) ==== For the MCU incarnation, this film is the character's definitive storyline. It chronicles Darren Cross's entire arc, from a bitter and ambitious scientist to a full-fledged supervillain. The film expertly parallels his descent with Scott Lang's heroic journey, making Yellowjacket a true dark mirror to Ant-Man. His motivations are clearly established, stemming from his twisted relationship with Hank Pym. The climax, a brilliantly inventive battle that shifts from a helicopter to a child's bedroom, showcases the full, terrifying potential of his weaponized suit and ends with his apparent disintegration into the Quantum Realm. ==== What If... the World Lost Its Mightiest Heroes? (What If...? S1, E3) ==== This animated MCU story presents a chilling alternate reality where Hank Pym, driven to madness by the death of his daughter Hope van Dyne during a S.H.I.E.L.D. mission, becomes a vengeful serial killer. Using a stolen Yellowjacket suit, he embarks on a campaign to destroy Nick Fury's Avengers Initiative before it can even begin. He successfully assassinates Thor, Hawkeye, Bruce Banner (Hulk), and Tony Stark. This episode showcases a terrifyingly effective and strategic version of Yellowjacket, unburdened by any morality, highlighting the lethal potential of the technology when wielded by a broken genius. ===== Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions ===== * **Ultimate Universe (Earth-1610):** In this reality, the "Yellowjackets" were not a single person but an army of advanced androids. Designed by a deeply unstable Hank Pym, they were intended to be part of the Ultimates' superhuman police force. These drones, controlled by Pym, were eventually used against the team when Pym's domestic abuse of Janet came to light, leading to a brutal confrontation with Captain America. This version completely divorces the name from a human identity and ties it to Pym's work with robotics, prefiguring his creation of Ultron in this universe. * **"Criti Noll" Skrull:** During the //Secret Invasion// storyline, the Skrull agent Criti Noll impersonated Hank Pym. For much of this time, he operated as Yellowjacket, using Pym's powers and a new, more insect-like suit design. He was a key figure in the Skrull's plan, creating a virus to disable Tony Stark's technology and giving Janet van Dyne a weaponized Pym Particle formula that turned her into a living bomb, leading to her apparent death. * **Marvel Zombies:** While the Yellowjacket persona itself is not prominent, the universe's Hank Pym (as Giant-Man) is a major character. After becoming a zombie, his scientific genius and size-shifting powers are used for horrific ends as he helps lead the zombie horde in consuming the entire universe. This represents the ultimate corruption of Pym's intellect and power. ===== See Also ===== * [[hank_pym]] * [[ant-man]] * [[the_wasp]] * [[pym_particles]] * [[avengers]] * [[darren_cross]] * [[ultron]] ===== Notes and Trivia ===== ((The infamous panel in //Avengers// #213 where Hank Pym strikes Janet was a source of lasting controversy. Writer Jim Shooter has stated his script called for an accidental, frustrated backhand as Hank dismisses her, but artist Bob Hall depicted it as a deliberate, closed-fist punch. This artistic interpretation solidified the moment as one of intentional domestic abuse, profoundly impacting the character's perception for decades.)) ((The codename "Yellowjacket" is a common name for predatory social wasps of the genera //Vespula// and //Dolichovespula//. These insects are known for their aggressive behavior, particularly when defending their nests, which aligns perfectly with the aggressive and defensive personality Pym adopted under the mantle.)) ((In the comics, Darren Cross was a completely separate character from Yellowjacket. He was the head of Cross Technological Enterprises and a cousin of the villain Crossfire. He became a giant, mutated pink hulk after an experimental heart transplant and had no connection to Pym Particles or the Yellowjacket identity. The MCU's decision to merge him with the Yellowjacket concept was a streamlined adaptation for the film.)) ((Rita DeMara's Yellowjacket costume was visually distinct from Pym's, featuring a unique "skirt" element and a different mask design, helping to establish her as her own version of the character.)) ((The design of the MCU Yellowjacket suit, particularly the articulated back-mounted limbs, was inspired by both the comics' more modern Yellowjacket designs and real-world military concepts for exoskeletons and drone technology.))