He came with the mansion. Edwin Jarvis was in the employ of Tony Stark, but he soon became the butler and leader of the support staff of the Mighty Avengers. Like most men of his profession, he was not that interested in taking a leading public role, but that did not mean he was not a stalwart when push came to shove. Quite the opposite instead.
In an attack by the Masters of Evil, Jarvis was once nearly killed. He recovered eventually to once again take his role as the keeper of the mansion. I first met Edwin Jarvis way back in the series when for a short time it was believed he had turned upon his employers, driven to the brink by a need for money for the welfare of his mother. Here's how it went down.
"The Crimson Cowl!" That name reverberates in my memory as it was the nom de guerre of one of Mavel's most significant and visceral arch villains. We encounter the Crimson Cowl for the first time in the pages of The Avengers #54 when he meets with Jarvis, the seemingly disloyal butler of the Assemblers. Hidden within dramatic flowing robes, the Crimson Cowl is a figure of mystery and cruel authority.
At the time he is the leader of a gang of Avengers foes reorganized to seek vengeance against their old foes. Klaw, Whirlwind, Melter, Radioactive Man, and even the Black Knight form the ranks of these "New Masters of Evil".
With such a group of craven but ambitious criminals, the Crimson Cowl is forced to show his strength in the face of attempted revolts within the ranks, as we can see in this encounter with Klaw.
It is seemingly revealed in the Cowl's debut appearance that he is in fact Jarvis himself, using a mere robot to fool the Masters of Evil themselves (and the reader) into thinking their leader was someone else.
But that ruse within a ruse is uncovered in the very next issue when we discover to our dismay that Jarvis was merely a pawn of the real Crimson Cowl, who finally reveals himself to be in reality the robot itself, a robot who calls himself "Ultron-5 The Living Automaton".
Ponder these pages to see that momentous revelation in all its dramatic glory. The Masters of Evil are defeated, and the plan of Ultron fails. But soon we learn more.
Ultron-5 is not done with the Avengers. Instead, we learn that he was in fact created by Henry Pym himself, one of the founding members of the Avengers.
Ultron-5 in an act similar to Pym's creates his own artificial life form, dubbing it The Vision and sending it on a mission to infiltrate and destroy the Avengers themselves. Of course, that scheme fails well.
Even Ultron-5's seeming destruction cannot end his threat.
For soon he returns under the new name of "Ultron-6".
And not contented with that continues to upgrade himself into the "Ultimate Ultron". Ultron is of course defeated by the Avengers, but the robot seems always to return to menace them and the world itself, carrying on the legacy of the mysterious "Crimson Cowl".
I first read those Crimson Cowl/Ultron 5 tales in the UK Avengers weekly comic back in the mid 1970s and the story has remained with me to this day. An exciting/ fun comic book story with sublime art by John Buscemas . Ultron has remained a firm favourite villain of mine since that day, a villain that looks genuinely powerful and capable of taking on multiple super clad heroes. Even today, in my rare forays into new comics I will pick up any books I see Ultrons evil image appearing in.
ReplyDeleteThe exquisite evil of Ultron is he truly doesn't care about humanity. He's utterly cold-blooded.
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