Branded a traitor by the vicious Colonel Yon-Rogg of the Kree for defending the people of Earth, Captain Mar-Vell assumes the human identity of Walter Lawson and becomes the planet's protector against an awesome array of interstellar baddies! Prepare to batten down the hatches for battles with the massive Sentry #459, the savage Super-Skrull, Prince Namor of Atlantis himself and Quasimodo the Living Computer! While you're at it don't forget to grab some tissues for the heartbroken Medic Una as the good Captain falls for Avenger-to-be Carol Danvers in her first-ever appearance! Collecting MARVEL SUPER-HEROES #12, 13 and CAPTAIN MARVEL (Vol. 1) #1-9.
Roy Thomas was the FIRST Editor-in-Chief at Marvel--After Stan Lee stepped down from the position. Roy is a longtime comic book writer and editor. Thomas has written comics for Archie, Charlton, DC, Heroic Publishing, Marvel, and Topps over the years. Thomas currently edits the fanzine Alter Ego for Twomorrow's Publishing. He was Editor for Marvel comics from 1972-1974. He wrote for several titles at Marvel, such as Avengers, Thor, Invaders, Fantastic Four, X-Men, and notably Conan the Barbarian. Thomas is also known for his championing of Golden Age comic-book heroes — particularly the 1940s superhero team the Justice Society of America — and for lengthy writing stints on Marvel's X-Men and Avengers, and DC Comics' All-Star Squadron, among other titles.
Also a legendary creator. Creations include Wolverine, Carol Danvers, Ghost Rider, Vision, Iron Fist, Luke Cage, Valkyrie, Morbius, Doc Samson, and Ultron. Roy has also worked for Archie, Charlton, and DC among others over the years.
3 stars is being generous. These issues cover the very beginning of the Captain Marvel story. Way before Jim Starlin took over and changed the Marvel universe. Very basic art and plots. And to tell you the truth nothing that stood out. Only for folks who want to read the complete Captain Marvel history. Looking forward to the Starlin stories.
This was always one of my favorite comic series as a kid. I enjoyed the fact that the main character was not just your usual superhero fighting the bad guys. Of course Stan Lee gave him the usual conflicting emotions and problems he infused into the Marvel characters of the ‘60s. Great SiFi comic series, oh and of course later in the run this is where Thanos really comes to the fore as a major villain. Very recommended
Marvel Comics take on the Captain Marvel character. Gone are the teenage boy and his mentor along with SHAZAM. They are replaced with a 60's style and cameos galore from other Marvel characters.
Captain Mar-vell is a member of the Kree Space Empire sent to Earth to learn the fate of Sentry 459 destroyed by the FF. His superior wants him dead to take the woman Mar-vell loves for his own. Jealousy and intrigue with a lot of great sci-fi action for the true believers. Nuff said.
Overall: a perfect collection of Stan Lee's 1960s comics. Cliche now, but revolutionary at the time, I'm sure.
A collection of nine Captain Marvels which are interwoven with the Fantastic Four and Submariners story lines.
I picked this up to look at a collection of 1960s era Marvels and it did not let me down. It's cliche and outdated now, but they are classic examples of what made Lee the superhero of comic book creators. I'll admit, the repetitive story lines with "insert here" villains gets old quickly, but does anyone complain about the way a classic car runs without power steering or power windows? Nope! Classic are classics, even though Captain Marvel wasn't the most famous classic. He's the Chevy Malibu of classic cars.
I would recommend this to: comic book lovers, historian readers and classic lovers.
The dialogue and science are ridiculous (but hey, I like old comics), and the women get sexist treatment, but the plot and cast are surprisingly good. I love the setup of this alien spy torn between his soldier's duty and his own moral compass, a hero on Earth constantly having to make excuses about it to his superior officer (who is secretly trying to kill him). It's like if My Favorite Martian was about a secret agent. Plus, Carol Danvers!
mar-vell is my son. my SON. i can’t say i didn’t fall asleep through some of these stories but marv is such a like-able little alien, and his team-up with rick jones is adorable.
Mar-Vell is a Kree soldier sent to study the people of Earth to evaluate their strength and threat level as a precursor to invasion. Mar-Vell is in love with his ship's medic Una. Unfortunately, so is their superior officer Yon-Rogg and he intends to use this mission as a way to get Mar-Vell out of the picture.
Mar-Vell arrives on earth outside of the NASA launch centre at Cape Canaveral. Taking over the identity of deceased scientist Walter Lawson, Mar-Vell infiltrates the Cape. However, after chief of security Carol Danvers defends Mar-Vell when Yon-Rogg tries to kill him with a giant android, Mar-Vell starts to consider that maybe humans shouldn't be wiped out.
It was really interesting to read the early origins of the Captain Marvel character, and to see its surprising influence on the Captain Marvel film, but these comics really aren't very good. They're dull and repetitive and mostly unimaginative. It improves somewhat when Arnold Drake takes over for Roy Thomas and starts to give the Kree more personality, but unfortunately he also starts reducing Carol Danvers to the role of love interest/damsel in distress, which is pretty disappointing. I know it gets heavily revamped when Roy Thomas comes back with Gil Kane for #17 so I'm looking forward to that.
A definite slide from the level of quality in other Marvel titles of the time.
Very frustrating to have such a preposterous premise overlaid on a promising one (alien agent infiltrating Earth, starting to respect the native population, while his villainous superiors literally hang over his head - ruined by the credulity-obliterating Walter Lawson/missile base conceit).
I'm usually a Don Heck booster, but his work on this title is definitely perfunctory.
Roy Thomas' writing is not up to the standard he's setting for himself on the Avengers and elsewhere, and then Arnold Drake comes in and all the worst aspects of his X-Men run come with him - bizarre plots abandoned halfway through, confusion causing art snafus, no stakes from one arc to the next.
This book was just not it. Some of you are blatant attempts to grab a trademark and it shows.
An exciting glimpse at the early days of Carol Danvers! That's obviously not the point of these comics, our here here is Mar-vell, the Kree man sent to spy on earth who keeps putting the wellbeing of earthlings above his mission parameters. He's very interesting and I've enjoyed getting to know him and seeing how his motivations and sympathies change. But I also love Carol, and it's cool to see her start in the 60s, where she is already a confident woman in a "masculine" role (head of security) who takes her job very seriously. (and if she gets to kiss an alien superhero every so often that's great for her too). She does face a lot of work-place sexism though, which is frustrating, but also makes me wonder what the writers were intending with that. Anyway, a great book if you like looking at the origins of these marvel characters.
I gotta say, I was pleasantly surprised by this book. I went into this fully anticipating it being a slog to get through and not really entertaining but it came through in so many ways. The amazing art by Don Heck along with the recurring storylines of Yon-Rogg constantly trying to get Mar-Vell killed made for such a compelling story in my opinion. The love triangle between Una and Carol Danvers starts to blossom and unfortunately the masterwork only went up to Issue #9 so we don’t see the payoff of this plot thread. I really hope Marvel publishes Epic Collections of this material one day as I prefer not dishing out lots of money for the omnibus.
Marvel comics hadn't even figured out who this character was or would be by the time they started publishing his tales. They just needed a place-holder to retain the rights to the name, so they published a generic sci-fi character motivated by conflicting drives. One is his sense of duty to the empire, one is for his girlfriend. Quaint, generic, and long-winded. I get into moods where this kind of thing is exactly what I want, and no one does it better than our friends from the early days of the Bullpen.
It was a time of somewhat simpler art( although Gene Colan and Don Heck were great), simpler plots, and silly names for villains and gear. Also interesting how women were viewed, Marvel gets kudos for having a woman as head of security, not so much for the "it must be hard to be a girl in that position" and the woman as victim trope. Still, historically interesting for how we got here, with Carol Travers as Marvel and a movie soon.
The adventures of Marvel's Captain Marvel are mix of superhero action with space age espionage as Mar-Vell, "man of the Kree" is torn between his duty to the empire and his newfound affection for the people of Earth. The sci-fi fin-headed helmet makes Captain Marvel stand out from other Marvel heroes of the time and the set up is an interesting twist on a few different ideas. Gene Colan's art on the initial issues is spectacular and his successor Don Heck is no slouch either. Definitely not the top shelf of Marvel history but some fun comics nonetheless.
Loved to jump into the old school style where the bad guy was always bad and the good guy was just only in this book the good guy is an alien who might just have to destroy the Earth and he struggles with his conscious as get to know these strange earthlings and solves their problems
A reread for the sake of tracking a number of cosmic threads in my Fan Four 60th anniversary read-through. There are some fun components to the alien spy caught in the in-between, but the components are showing. You can feel the screws and the glue that have composed the drama.
I've never read Captain Marvel before, other than the Thanos War, so wanted to read the full run. Classic art, dated for sure, but great to read books from 50+ years ago the still impact the characters we know today. A fun read, just but my cup of tea.
I have been a big fan of Marvel's Captain Marvel for years. I had most of the issues of the comics, but was missing the very beginning of his origin and story, so I picked up the Marvel Masterworks edition one day at my local bookstore. I enjoyed it very much. It is hard sometimes to read these older comics. They had a different tone, a different way of writing; they have more innocence than the newer comics. Although disastrous things happen, the idea that there is someone to save the day and the violence isn't quite so in your face. At times it took me out of the story a bit, but at the same time, it was like going back to my childhood sitting reading comics for hours while the breeze blew through my bedroom window.
A bit antiquated in thinking, too many plot holes to mention, and sometimes the words are just a bit odd. Overall, illustration is cool, but looking forward to reading a modern take on Captain Marvel. Reminds me of how many Superman knock-offs exist, but nonetheless a good aspect on Krees. Nice to see a bit of history before diving into new stuff. This begins my yearly comic book kick-off.
A fun read of a Kree who is sent to Earth to observe for the Empire before they decide the fate of Earth. Things are complicated when his commanding officer wants him dead while the love of his life waits in torment.
I only read this because I'm a collector of the Marvel Masterworks collection, but it was great fun. Granted it contained an awful lot of comic book tropes that have been done better and that were more memorable, but for a character I'd never read about before this was a welcome introduction.