Mad Thinker

Marvel Comics fictional character
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Comics character
Mad Thinker
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceFantastic Four #15 (June 1963)[1]
Created byStan Lee (writer)
Jack Kirby (artist)
In-story information
Alter egoJulius
Team affiliationsMaggia
Triumvirate of Terror
Intelligencia
Illuminati
PartnershipsPuppet Master
Egghead
Klaw
Wizard
Awesome Android
Notable aliasesDr. José Santini, The Thinker
AbilitiesMaster tactician and strategist
Genius-level intellect
Ability to project his mind into the body of Awesome Android and other robots

The Mad Thinker is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. He is portrayed to be an evil genius specializing in robotics. He is sometimes referred to just as "The Thinker".

Publication history

The Mad Thinker was introduced by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby in Fantastic Four #15 (June 1963).[2] Lee and Kirby gave the mad scientist a special ability to predict events to the precise second.[3]

Little to nothing was known of his origins or true identity until, over fifty years later, the Mad Thinker's first name was revealed to be Julius in the pages of Brian Michael Bendis and Alex Maleev's Infamous Iron Man #2.[4]

Fictional character biography

The professional criminal mastermind known as the Mad Thinker made his debut fighting the Fantastic Four.[5] He once attempted to take over New York City using the Baxter Building as his base and all organized crime members as his lieutenants. The Fantastic Four were lured away from New York just before a meteorite struck the city and briefly knocked out electrical power, including the Baxter Building's defense systems. The Mad Thinker took the opportunity to create a robotic servant, the Awesome Android. He trapped the Fantastic Four in the lower quarters of the building but was eventually caught after being stopped by an unforeseen factor: the building's mailman, Willie Lumpkin, who on Reed Richards' orders rang a bell at 4 pm, activating a circuit breaker built into all of his devices.[6]

It seemed that his primary objective had not been to take over the city, but to steal Reed's technology. The Mad Thinker would gladly get sent to prison for a peek at the secrets of what he considered the greatest mind in the world.

After his initial defeat against the Fantastic Four, the Mad Thinker teamed with the Puppet Master for the first time. He used the original X-Men through a mind-controlled Professor X to battle the Fantastic Four.[7] Again with the Puppet Master, he pitted the Thing against the Human Torch, but was foiled by Reed Richards.[8] Later he created a radio-controlled bouncing ball with which he tried to eliminate the Thing and Torch while they were at a new dam's opening and nearly brought down the ball, but the Torch was able to destroy it.[9]

He then created Quasimodo, a "living" computer. He located and revived the original Human Torch and used him to battle the present-day Torch.[10] Later, with his Triumvirate of Terror (consisting of Piledriver, Hammerhead, and Thunderboot), he captured the Avengers and invaded Avengers Mansion, believing that he had successfully overcome them by remembering to take advantage of the human element of his enemies' personalities that he had forgotten in the past, but he was nevertheless foiled by the unexpected intervention of Hercules, who had only recently begun to stay with the Avengers following his exile from Olympus.[11]

The Mad Thinker impersonated Dr. Jose Santini and disrupted an attempt to cure the Thing, causing the Thing to turn against the Fantastic Four.[12] However, the Mad Thinker was captured by Mister Fantastic and the Human Torch. From his prison cell, he sent a battle android called the Monster Android against the Fantastic Four, but the android was sent into the Negative Zone by Mister Fantastic.[13]

He allied with the Puppet Master again and with Egghead in their attempted blackmail of the United States government using a laser-firing satellite and a giant android called "Gargan-Droid".[14] Again with the Puppet Master, he attacked the Fantastic Four using androids of their past foes.[15] With the Puppet Master, he then battled Spider-Man and the Thing.[16]

The Mad Thinker then took part in the Black Lama's contest of super-villains, but was defeated by Iron Man.[17] Mad Thinker then re-established control of his robot the Scavenger and sent it against the Fantastic Four. He was defeated by Thundra, Tigra, and Brute.[18] He then battled the Thing, Daredevil, Vision, and Yellowjacket.[19] With the Puppet Master and Wizard, he attempted to disrupt the wedding of the Human Torch and Alicia Masters.[20] The Mad Thinker later took control of the computers in Fantastic Four headquarters, but was foiled by Mister Fantastic.[21]

The Mad Thinker constructed android duplicates of his favorite thinkers to populate his own town called "Ponder" and had one of his robots bring Captain America to that town. Most of them were destroyed by Team America and Mad Thinker was arrested by S.H.I.E.L.D.[22]

The Mad Thinker later refused involvement in Loki's "Acts of Vengeance". He instead escaped prison, and sent Gargantua against Wonder Man and the Wasp in an attempt to forestall the proposed Super-Powers Registration Act.[23] Later, he attempted a robbery using robot dinosaurs, and was foiled by Destroyer and Tattletale of Power Pack.[24]

The Mad Thinker became interested in the young super-group called the New Warriors, and posed them a riddle when they first formed.[25] In the final issue of the series, the answer to the riddle was revealed: the Mad Thinker's nephew had accidentally gained uncontrollable superpowers from his lab, killing his mother in the process. Now, the Thinker wanted them to help him.[26]

Since then, the Mad Thinker has been seen battling She-Hulk in a prison escape attempt. However, this Mad Thinker was revealed to be merely yet another android duplicate of the real Mad Thinker.[volume & issue needed] Following the destruction of this android, the Awesome Android (now calling itself Awesome Andy) took custody of the android's still-functional head,[volume & issue needed] until it was stolen by the teenage supervillain Southpaw.[volume & issue needed]

Although willing to kill heroes who get in his way, there are lines the Mad Thinker will not cross. A partnership with the Wizard was cut short after the kidnapping of the child Franklin Richards. The Wizard wished to experiment upon Franklin and learn the secret of his vast powers. The Mad Thinker, however, claimed that this had an almost certain probability of Franklin's death. When the Wizard acknowledged this, but decided to continue anyway, an angry Thinker dissolved the partnership and helped lead Franklin's godfather, The Thing, to where the Wizard had the boy hostage.[volume & issue needed]

When Spider-Man's dimwitted enemy Rhino had an operation that made him a genius, he broke the Mad Thinker out of jail so he could join his crime syndicate.[27]

The Mad Thinker then allies himself with the Puppet Master, planning to strike against the Fantastic Four yet again.[volume & issue needed] Told that he preferred to be called "The Thinker", The Puppet Master asked him why he had been called "The Mad Thinker" in the past. The reply was that he used to have "repressed anger issues". When the Puppet Master asks him about his anger, he replies that "it isn't repressed any more".[volume & issue needed] He has built a device to amplify the Puppet Master's power so that they can escalate a battle between the two rival factions in the Super Hero Civil War.[volume & issue needed]

In exchange for not being connected to the crimes on Yancy Street, Reed has the Mad Thinker double-check his calculations concerning the potential effects of not supporting the registration of all superheroes.[28]

During the "Dark Reign" storyline, Quasimodo analyzed his creator for Norman Osborn. He recommended to Norman that he would lead a group against Mad Thinker if Norman wanted to go after him.[29]

Mad Thinker, along with Awesome Android, later appear as members of the Intelligencia.[30][31] Mad Thinker even created the Gammadroid which he used to help MODOK and Hulk Robot capture Red Hulk.[32]

During a conflict between the Intelligencia and the Sinister Six as a prelude to the Ends of the Earth storyline, Mad Thinker was able to briefly deactivate Electro's powers, but was caught off-guard when Electro physically attacked him instead, the surprise of the attack allowing Electro to defeat him. He was presumably killed when Doctor Octopus used the Zero Cannon to launch him into space. MODOK Superior vows to find a way to restore his fellow Intelligencia members.[33]

MODOK Superior was able to revive Mad Thinker and the other Intelligencia members where they began to formulate their plans after their predicted shatter of the superhero community.[34]

During the Time Runs Out storyline, Mad Thinker was at some point contracted by Doctor Doom to be part of his attempts at uncovering the truth behind the Incursions. Thinker managed to tap into and map the Mapmakers network, allowing them to locate the source of the Incursions.[35]

As part of the "All-New, All-Different Marvel," Mad Thinker appears as a member of The Hood's incarnation of the Illuminati.[36]

Sometime later, the Mad Thinker appears in La Paz, Bolivia where he is surprised by Doctor Doom in his version of the Iron Man armor, who offers him the chance to turn his life around in exchange for a device he used in a robot. Upon refusing, Mad Thinker activated a few robots to fight Doom only for him to be defeated.[37] Mad Thinker is later shown to be in S.H.I.E.L.D. custody.[38]

After escaping from S.H.I.E.L.D. custody, Mad Thinker became obsessed with Mister Fantastic's whereabouts, as he has not returned to Earth-616. Misinterpreting Mister Fantastic's absence, Mad Thinker thinks that Mister Fantastic wants Mad Thinker to succeed him and the Fantastic Four.[39] While styling his hair after Mister Fantastic and calling himself by that name, Mad Thinker hired three people named Lumen, Goodfire, and Smash to make up his Fantastic Four and gives them powers similar to the Fantastic Four. Mad Thinker now has elasticity, Lumen can become invisible with the side-effect of distorting the perception of the environment around him if he loses control of his invisibility, Goodfire has a blue fiery plasma form which she can't turn off and can also fly in this form, and Smash possesses super-strength and enhanced durability while sporting gold-colored skin. He took his Fantastic Four to follow Human Torch and Thing on their multiverse travels in order to eliminate the old remnants of the Fantastic Four. Mad Thinker's Fantastic Four confronts Human Torch and Thing in an unidentified reality. Despite Human Torch and Thing being powerless at the time, the two of them held their own against Mad Thinker's Fantastic Four until they escaped.[40]

Powers and abilities

The Mad Thinker does not have superhuman powers. However, he is an extraordinary genius with knowledge of technology centuries beyond conventional science, for reasons unexplained. He has an eidetic memory and can rapidly organize and correlate vast amounts of information and perceive non-obvious patterns. He has the facilities and means to create all manner of sophisticated weaponry, androids, armor, and vehicles.

His analytical, mathematical, and geometrical abilities are of a sophisticated order not commonly found on Earth. He is particularly adept at computers, robotics, and artificial intelligence, with Ph.D.s in computer science and engineering. He has constructed his own android Awesome Android and twice resurrected the original Human Torch. He also built Quasimodo and the Scavenger, and various other equipment as needed, including monocle-sized hypno-lenses. In addition to his own achievements he has stolen much of the secret technology of Reed Richards, back in the incident when he took over the Baxter building.

The Mad Thinker is also a proficient disguise artist. Through a surgically implanted radio link, he is able to project his consciousness into an android simulacrum of himself.

The Thinker's intricate plans are most often foiled by what he refers to as the x-factor, or human unpredictability. Also the Thinker is not an intuitive genius (e.g., Reed Richards) and is thus incapable of true invention; instead, he synthesizes for his own use the creations of others (e.g., his android creations are based on discoveries of Reed Richards).

The Mad Thinker is able to escape from prison with little difficulty. He often uses his thoughts to control a robot at a remote, secret base. This gives him an alibi—he is already in prison.

Mad Thinker's robots and androids

The following robots and androids were created by Mad Thinker:

Other versions

Ultimate Marvel

In the Ultimate Marvel imprint, the Baxter Building was the home of a Think Tank of young geniuses, funded by the US Government. A girl named Rhona Burchill was considered for the project, but was denied due to her borderline psychotic tendencies. Enraged, she went home and concocted an accelerant that would allow her to think many times faster. Needing more brain mass to handle the drug, she anesthetized her brother Bobby, and using a crude surgical technique, cut out portions of his brain and grafted them onto her own. Claiming that "You don't need a Think Tank - You just need a thinker", she attacks the Baxter Building and lays a trap that ensnares the Fantastic Four, several soldiers and Fantastic Four supervisor Lt. Lumpkin. When she tells her story in her now stream of consciousness speech pattern to the Four, Reed calls her mad. She replies, "If it's mad to think the unthinkable, then I'm the maddest thinker there ever was". Based on this comment, she has since been referred to as the Mad Thinker.[44]

She also appeared as the villain in the Ultimate X4 miniseries which showed her with an android resembling the Awesome Android which she calls Robby. During this appearance she attempted to steal Cerebro and use it to gain control of all the minds on the planet, but, with the aid of Wolverine, Shadowcat and Iceman, the Fantastic Four were able to distract her until Reed could reprogram Cerebro to cause Rhona to develop the power of empathy rather than control, forcing her to shut Cerebro down or lose herself amid the pain of the world. Though she attempts to escape, Wolverine had cut a certain hose in her escape vehicle, causing it to explode on her when she activates the after burners.[45]

What If?

In a parody issue of What If?, the entry entitled "Spidey Intellectual Stories" (a send-up of The Electric Company's Spidey Super Stories) has Spider-Man defeating the Mad Thinker by debating philosophy, severely boring the observing Uatu the Watcher.[46]

In other media

Television

Miscellaneous

The Mad Thinker appears in issue #12 of The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes tie-in comic.[48] Working out of Solocorps Labs, he approaches Bruce Banner in disguise and exploits his desire to be rid of the Hulk, using a machine to drain his gamma energy with the intention of weaponizing it. When the Avengers arrive to stop him, the Mad Thinker uses the energy to transform Captain America. However, he is defeated by Banner, who subsequently re-absorbs the gamma energy to prevent it from overloading.

References

  1. ^ Misiroglu, Gina Renée; Eury, Michael (2006). The Supervillain Book: The Evil Side of Comics and Hollywood. Visible Ink Press. ISBN 9780780809772.
  2. ^ DeFalco, Tom; Sanderson, Peter; Brevoort, Tom; Teitelbaum, Michael; Wallace, Daniel; Darling, Andrew; Forbeck, Matt; Cowsill, Alan; Bray, Adam (2019). The Marvel Encyclopedia. DK Publishing. p. 221. ISBN 978-1-4654-7890-0.
  3. ^ Brevoort, Tom; DeFalco, Tom; Manning, Matthew K.; Sanderson, Peter; Wiacek, Win (2017). Marvel Year By Year: A Visual History. DK Publishing. p. 92. ISBN 978-1465455505.
  4. ^ As revealed in Infamous Iron Man #2. Marvel Comics.
  5. ^ Rovin, Jeff (1987). The Encyclopedia of Super-Villains. New York: Facts on File. p. 199. ISBN 0-8160-1356-X.[1]
  6. ^ Fantastic Four #15. Marvel Comics.
  7. ^ Fantastic Four #28. Marvel Comics.
  8. ^ Strange Tales #126. Marvel Comics.
  9. ^ Strange Tales #131. Marvel Comics.
  10. ^ Fantastic Four Annual #4. Marvel Comics.
  11. ^ The Avengers #39. Marvel Comics.
  12. ^ Fantastic Four #68-69. Marvel Comics.
  13. ^ a b Fantastic Four #70-71. Marvel Comics.
  14. ^ Sub-Mariner #14; The Avengers #63; Captain Marvel #14. Marvel Comics.
  15. ^ Fantastic Four #100. Marvel Comics.
  16. ^ Marvel Team-Up #6. Marvel Comics.
  17. ^ Iron Man #74-75, 77. Marvel Comics.
  18. ^ Fantastic Four #181-183. Marvel Comics.
  19. ^ Marvel Two-in-One #37-39. Marvel Comics.
  20. ^ Fantastic Four #300. Marvel Comics.
  21. ^ Marvel Fanfare #46. Marvel Comics.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Captain America #269. Marvel Comics.
  23. ^ Avengers Spotlight #28. Marvel Comics.
  24. ^ Power Pack #54. Marvel Comics.
  25. ^ The New Warriors #3. Marvel Comics.
  26. ^ The New Warriors #75. Marvel Comics.
  27. ^ Spider-Man's Tangled Web #5. Marvel Comics.
  28. ^ Fantastic Four #542. Marvel Comics.
  29. ^ Dark Reign Files #1. Marvel Comics.
  30. ^ Fall of the Hulks: Alpha. Marvel Comics.
  31. ^ Fall of the Hulks: Gamma. Marvel Comics.
  32. ^ a b The Incredible Hulk vol. 2 #608. Marvel Comics.
  33. ^ The Amazing Spider-Man #676. Marvel Comics.
  34. ^ Deadpool vol. 2 #55. Marvel Comics.
  35. ^ The New Avengers vol. 3 #24. Marvel Comics.
  36. ^ Illuminati #1. Marvel Comics.
  37. ^ Infamous Iron Man #2. Marvel Comics.
  38. ^ Infamous Iron Man #6. Marvel Comics.
  39. ^ Marvel 2-In-One #3. Marvel Comics.
  40. ^ Marvel 2-In-One #9. Marvel Comics.
  41. ^ Fantastic Four #79. Marvel Comics.
  42. ^ The Avengers #63. Marvel Comics.
  43. ^ a b Marvel Team-Up #129. Marvel Comics.
  44. ^ Ultimate Fantastic Four #19-20. Marvel Comics.
  45. ^ Ultimate X4 #2. Marvel Comics.
  46. ^ What If? #34. Marvel Comics.
  47. ^ "Mad Thinker Voice – Fantastic Four franchise | Behind The Voice Actors". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved December 22, 2019. Check mark indicates role has been confirmed using screenshots of closing credits and other reliable sources.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  48. ^ "Avengers Earth's Mightiest Heroes #12 - This Man, That Monster!; Fury File 2012-012; Rise of the Locust; Hulk Moon (Issue)". Comic Vine. Retrieved February 20, 2024.

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