1- Scarlet Witch
2- Sir James Jasper
3- Jamie Braddock
4- Now, for 4: if the shit is true, about Wyncham ordering to GALACTUS to gtfo, than the Marquis of Death is 4th. If not, he falls at 5.
5- Franklin Richards is said to be respected in his power by the Celestials themselves. In one reality, he was Galactus and in a particular story line, he resurrect Galactus with his sister.
Mutant Files: Clyde Wyncham ~ Marquis of Death
http://www.killermovies.com/forums/f98/t511737.html
Originally posted by Bouboumaster
4- Now, for 4: if the shit is true, about Wyncham ordering to GALACTUS to gtfo, than the Marquis of Death is 4th. If not, he falls at 5.
.
This pretty much certifies, Clyde Wyncham from Marvel 1985 is "The Marquis of Death" and Cannon.
1985, Old Man Logan, Millar FF - CONECTION REVEALED
http://comics.ign.com/articles/949/949454p1.html
Originally posted by Frank Miller
GN Comics: You'd mentioned before that your work in Fantastic Four, 1985 and Wolverine would all be linked in some fashion. Can you talk about that a bit – at least as much as you can?Millar: Oh yeah, I'll just reveal everything. Actually when I started doing it, it was just a cheap marketing ploy. –laughs- And nobody is more surprised than me that these stories have genuinely tied in! –laughs- At first I was hoping the big books like Wolverine would prop up the smaller books like 1985. But it worked out really tight.
It was really important to me that everyone could understand every book without picking up the others. There's nothing more miserable than picking up a bunch of crap books you don't want to buy. I mean, the comic book industry for the last two years has felt like that. It's all a bunch of rubbish tie-ins to books you quite like and things like that, you know? So I wanted them to be quite individualistic but you would get something out of it if you bought all the books.
So here's how they tie in. 1985 is the origin of Clyde Wyncham. And Clyde is the guy who grows up to be the greatest super-villain of all time far into the future. He is back in the Master of Doom storyline in Fantastic Four. What he's done is he's become the master of all space and time and co-exists from the end of the universe to the beginning through multiple dimensions and so on. He's just the biggest badass, you know? So you have his earliest, embryonic state in 1985 and it kind of explains who he is.
So tell sell this in the most cynical way, 1985 is the origin of Dr. Doom's teacher as well as being a nice, little Stephen King superhero story, you know? And Wolverine: Old Man Logan ties into this because, without spoiling the end of 1985, the place where Clyde Wyncham is put at the end of 1985 is broken into in Old Man Logan. For people who've read the story, they know it's about the supervillains all getting together and wiping out the superheroes. So they open all the prisons and they discover this secret prison called "Clyde's Pit" which is where the worst supervillains are kept – the guys we've never heard about. And Clyde is the most dangerous supervillain of all, and he's freed in Old Man Logan. This is referred to in Fantastic Four.
So the whole thing is this big, intricate web. Each thing is self-contained but hopefully they make a cool, big story. It's my own little event. After Civil War I kind of wanted to do a one-man event.
Originally posted by id369[/B][/QUOTE] Does it say that he brought the actual 616 characters into the 'real' world?
[B]
This pretty much certifies, Clyde Wyncham from Marvel 1985 is "The Marquis of Death" and Cannon.1985, Old Man Logan, Millar FF - CONECTION REVEALED
http://comics.ign.com/articles/949/949454p1.html[QUOTE= Frank Miller]
GN Comics: You'd mentioned before that your work in Fantastic Four, 1985 and Wolverine would all be linked in some fashion. Can you talk about that a bit – at least as much as you can?Millar: Oh yeah, I'll just reveal everything. Actually when I started doing it, it was just a cheap marketing ploy. –laughs- And nobody is more surprised than me that these stories have genuinely tied in! –laughs- At first I was hoping the big books like Wolverine would prop up the smaller books like 1985. But it worked out really tight.
It was really important to me that everyone could understand every book without picking up the others. There's nothing more miserable than picking up a bunch of crap books you don't want to buy. I mean, the comic book industry for the last two years has felt like that. It's all a bunch of rubbish tie-ins to books you quite like and things like that, you know? So I wanted them to be quite individualistic but you would get something out of it if you bought all the books.
So here's how they tie in. 1985 is the origin of Clyde Wyncham. And Clyde is the guy who grows up to be the greatest super-villain of all time far into the future. He is back in the Master of Doom storyline in Fantastic Four. What he's done is he's become the master of all space and time and co-exists from the end of the universe to the beginning through multiple dimensions and so on. He's just the biggest badass, you know? So you have his earliest, embryonic state in 1985 and it kind of explains who he is.
So tell sell this in the most cynical way, 1985 is the origin of Dr. Doom's teacher as well as being a nice, little Stephen King superhero story, you know? And Wolverine: Old Man Logan ties into this because, without spoiling the end of 1985, the place where Clyde Wyncham is put at the end of 1985 is broken into in Old Man Logan. For people who've read the story, they know it's about the supervillains all getting together and wiping out the superheroes. So they open all the prisons and they discover this secret prison called "Clyde's Pit" which is where the worst supervillains are kept – the guys we've never heard about. And Clyde is the most dangerous supervillain of all, and he's freed in Old Man Logan. This is referred to in Fantastic Four.
So the whole thing is this big, intricate web. Each thing is self-contained but hopefully they make a cool, big story. It's my own little event. After Civil War I kind of wanted to do a one-man event.
Originally posted by CharmanderDoes it say that he brought the actual 616 characters into the 'real' world? [/QUOTE]
Well it would Be Clyde’s World or Universe. So yeah, him brining 616 Marvel characters into his world, and practically controlling them is cannon.
It then ties in with Old Man Logan, where 50 years from the current date he is freed. And then with Dooms Master arc in the Fantastic Four.
So how about them apples?
Originally posted by id369So... they were 616 characters?
Well it would Be Clyde’s World or Universe. So yeah, him brining 616 Marvel characters into his world, and practically controlling them is cannon.It then ties in with Old Man Logan, where 50 years from the current date he is freed. And then with Dooms Master arc in the Fantastic Four.
So how about them apples?