Death-Throws
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Death-Throws
The Death-Throws are a team of supervillains appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. They first appeared in ''Captain America'' #317 (May 1986) and were created by Mark Gruenwald and Paul Neary. Introduced as enemies of Hawkeye, the Death-Throws consists primarily of jugglers who each use various juggling props as weapons. Publication history Bombshell and Oddball first appeared in '' Hawkeye'' Vol.1 #3-4 (1983) and battled the title character. They later joined the juggling supervillain team known as the Death-Throws to face Hawkeye in the pages of ''Captain America'' #317 (1986) and ''Avengers Spotlight'' #23-25 (1989). Oddball battled Hawkeye once again in ''Hawkeye: Earth's Mightiest Marksman'' #1 (1998). The Death-Throws later appeared in ''Union Jack'' Vol.2 #1-2 (2006) and had cameo appearances in ''Captain America'' #411-414 (1993) and '' Avengers: The Initiative'' #27 (2009).The Death-Throws have also had notable entries in the ''Official Handbook ...
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Ringleader (comics)
The Death-Throws are a team of supervillains appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. They first appeared in ''Captain America'' #317 (May 1986) and were created by Mark Gruenwald and Paul Neary. Introduced as enemies of Hawkeye, the Death-Throws consists primarily of jugglers who each use various juggling props as weapons. Publication history Bombshell and Oddball first appeared in '' Hawkeye'' Vol.1 #3-4 (1983) and battled the title character. They later joined the juggling supervillain team known as the Death-Throws to face Hawkeye in the pages of ''Captain America'' #317 (1986) and ''Avengers Spotlight'' #23-25 (1989). Oddball battled Hawkeye once again in ''Hawkeye: Earth's Mightiest Marksman'' #1 (1998). The Death-Throws later appeared in ''Union Jack'' Vol.2 #1-2 (2006) and had cameo appearances in ''Captain America'' #411-414 (1993) and '' Avengers: The Initiative'' #27 (2009).The Death-Throws have also had notable entries in the ''Official Handbook ...
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Knickknack (comics)
The Death-Throws are a team of supervillains appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. They first appeared in '' Captain America'' #317 (May 1986) and were created by Mark Gruenwald and Paul Neary. Introduced as enemies of Hawkeye, the Death-Throws consists primarily of jugglers who each use various juggling props as weapons. Publication history Bombshell and Oddball first appeared in '' Hawkeye'' Vol.1 #3-4 (1983) and battled the title character. They later joined the juggling supervillain team known as the Death-Throws to face Hawkeye in the pages of '' Captain America'' #317 (1986) and ''Avengers Spotlight'' #23-25 (1989). Oddball battled Hawkeye once again in ''Hawkeye: Earth's Mightiest Marksman'' #1 (1998). The Death-Throws later appeared in ''Union Jack'' Vol.2 #1-2 (2006) and had cameo appearances in ''Captain America'' #411-414 (1993) and '' Avengers: The Initiative'' #27 (2009).The Death-Throws have also had notable entries in the ''Official Handbo ...
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Tenpin (comics)
The Death-Throws are a team of supervillains appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. They first appeared in ''Captain America'' #317 (May 1986) and were created by Mark Gruenwald and Paul Neary. Introduced as enemies of Hawkeye, the Death-Throws consists primarily of jugglers who each use various juggling props as weapons. Publication history Bombshell and Oddball first appeared in '' Hawkeye'' Vol.1 #3-4 (1983) and battled the title character. They later joined the juggling supervillain team known as the Death-Throws to face Hawkeye in the pages of ''Captain America'' #317 (1986) and ''Avengers Spotlight'' #23-25 (1989). Oddball battled Hawkeye once again in ''Hawkeye: Earth's Mightiest Marksman'' #1 (1998). The Death-Throws later appeared in ''Union Jack'' Vol.2 #1-2 (2006) and had cameo appearances in ''Captain America'' #411-414 (1993) and '' Avengers: The Initiative'' #27 (2009).The Death-Throws have also had notable entries in the ''Official Handbook ...
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Oddball (comics)
Oddball is the name of two fictional supervillains appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Publication history Oddball (Elton Healy) appears in ''Hawkeye'' Vol.1 #3–4 (1983), ''Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe'' Vol.2 (1986), ''Captain America'' #317, 395, 411–414 (1986–1993), ''Avengers Spotlight'' #23–25 (1989), ''Guardians of the Galaxy'' #28 (1992), ''Hawkeye: Earth's Mightiest Marksman'' #1 (1998) and ''Wolverine'' Vol.2 #167 (2001). He was created by Mark Gruenwald. The second Oddball (Orville Bock) appears in ''Union Jack'' Vol.2 #2 (2006), ''Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe A–Z'' Vol.3 (2008) and ''Dark Reign Files'' #1 (2009). Fictional character biography Elton Healey Elton Healey was born in Reno, Nevada. Along with his brother Alvin, Elton spent years as a street performer, becoming a master juggler. He also learned how to become a capable street fighter. Using these skills, Elton became the juggling supervillain Oddba ...
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Hood (comics)
The Hood (Parker Robbins) is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by writer Brian K. Vaughan, and artists Kyle Hotz and Eric Powell, the character was introduced in his own self-titled limited series, which started with ''Hood'' #1 (July 2002). Robbins was originally a petty criminal, until an encounter with a Nisanti demon, which he defeated and robbed of its hood and boots, gaining superpowers in the process, such as levitation and invisibility. As "the Hood", he became a well-known figure in the New York City criminal underworld, and eventually formed his own crime syndicate. Anthony Ramos is set to portray Robbins in the Marvel Cinematic Universe Disney+ series '' Ironheart'' (2023). Publication history Created by writer Brian K. Vaughan and artists Kyle Hotz and Eric Powell, the Hood first appeared in his own self-titled MAX limited series in 2002, which featured his origin, as a character who possesses a cloak and boots st ...
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Brothers Grimm (comics)
The Brothers Grimm are two sets of twin supervillains appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Publication history The first appearance of the first Brothers Grimm came in ''Spider-Woman'' #3. These were a pair of identical, magically animated mannequins created by doll collector Nathan Dolly (also known as Mister Doll) and his wife Priscilla. During their initial appearances only one was ever seen at a time and the singular identity, Brother Grimm was used instead of their true plural name. After three return appearances in ''Spider-Woman'', they perished in issue #12. Although the characters were introduced while Marv Wolfman was writing ''Spider-Woman'', their origin and identities were not revealed until Mark Gruenwald's run on the series. Questioned as to whether he had told Gruenwald the characters' origin or Gruenwald had come up with it himself, Wolfman admitted that he could not even remember if the origin he had originally envisioned for the character ...
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Crossfire (comics)
This page lists the supporting characters of Hawkeye with some of them being exclusive to the Ultimate Marvel reality. Supporting characters * Bangs – Weapons and explosives specialist of the W.C.A.''Hawkeye & Mockingbird'' #1 (2010) * Dominic Fortune – A soldier of fortune with a connection to Mockingbird's past.''Hawkeye & Mockingbird'' #1–6 (2010)''Widowmaker'' #1–4 (2010–2011) * London – Researcher and developer of the W.C.A. * Rover – A Bio-Com (Biological Combat Unit created by the Secret Empire) rescued by Hawkeye.''Hawkeye'' vol. 2 #1–4 (1994) * Twitchy – Senior intelligence analyst of the W.C.A.''New Avengers: The Reunion'' #2–4 (2009) * Grills – A man who lives in Hawkeye's building and owns a rooftop grill on which he barbecues for his friends. He knows Clint Barton is Hawkeye, but insistently thinks the latter is "Hawkguy". Grills was later killed by the Tracksuit Mafia. ** Grills made his live-action debut in the 2021 Disney+ series '' Hawkeye ...
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Hawkeye & Mockingbird
''Hawkeye & Mockingbird'' is a comic book ongoing series published by Marvel Comics starring superheroes Hawkeye and Mockingbird. Publication history The series launched in June 2010 as part of Marvel Comic's Heroic Age by writer Jim McCann and artist David López. ''Hawkeye & Mockingbird'' is the creative team's first ongoing series for Marvel, but they have previously collaborated on the 2009 miniseries ''New Avengers: The Reunion''. In an interview with Comic Book Resources, McCann stated that the themes of the book are "responsibility, trust, and overcoming devastating blows". López describes the artistic style as "an evolution", stating "I've been sketching for months and I've got a clearer feel of the mood we want for the book. Jim is giving me plenty of cool things to draw. We've got so much gasoline, powder, trick arrows, staff action and destruction of property that we're going to need new insurance – and at the same time, it's emotionally intense. It's a very s ...
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Dark Reign (comics)
Dark Reign is a 2008 to 2009 comic book branding used by Marvel Comics. It deals with the aftermath of the "Secret Invasion" storyline, which leads to a shift of power in the Marvel Universe toward Norman Osborn. The title refers to Osborn's rise to national power and the ramifications thereof. Joe Quesada, then-editor-in-chief of Marvel Comics, stated that "Dark Reign is not really an event, it's what's happening in the Marvel Universe." He believes that "Dark Reign leads to an interesting place in the Marvel Universe. I think you'll see a pulling back at the end of Dark Reign, but you'll understand at the end of it what we were trying to get to." Publication history The story-line begins with the release of ''Secret Invasion: Dark Reign,'' a one-shot Brian Michael Bendis (writer) and Alex Maleev (art), in December 2008. It continued in standalone mini-series and some individual issues of ongoing Marvel Comics titles throughout 2009. Selected ongoing Marvel titles were temporar ...
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Heroic Age (comics)
The Heroic Age is a 2010 comic book branding that ran through a number of books published by Marvel Comics. It began in May 2010, marking a major change in the status quo of the Marvel Universe after the events of the "Siege" crossover event, similarly to how " The Initiative" and " Dark Reign" dealt with the aftermath of "Civil War" and "Secret Invasion", respectively. Publication history Marvel publisher Dan Buckley stated that the Heroic Age was intended to be more constrained in its scope than previous initiatives: The initiative began in May 2010's ''Avengers'' #1, which reunited Iron Man, Captain America (both Steve Rogers and Bucky Barnes), Thor, and Hawkeye as teammates. The same month saw the start of a four-issue comics anthology limited series called ''Age of Heroes'', with Kurt Busiek writing the lead story. The idea behind the series is that, according to Tom Brevoort, "seeing as how Heroic Age will impact on characters both large and small, we thought it might be f ...
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Mockingbird (Marvel Comics)
Barbara "Bobbi" Morse is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character first appeared in ''Astonishing Tales'' #6 in 1971 in comics, 1971 as a supporting character and eventual love interest of Ka-Zar (Kevin Plunder), Ka-Zar, with a Ph.D in biology. She is soon revealed to be the highly trained Agent 19 of S.H.I.E.L.D., taking the moniker Huntress in ''Marvel Super Action'' #1 in 1976, and Mockingbird in ''Marvel Team-Up'' #95 in 1980, before going on to be a member of several Avengers (comics), Avengers teams, briefly marrying and subsequently divorcing Hawkeye (Clint Barton), Clint Barton / Hawkeye. Mockingbird has been described as one of Marvel's most notable and powerful female heroes. In media set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), Bobbi Morse (Marvel Cinematic Universe), Bobbi Morse appeared in the Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. (season 2), second and Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. (season 3), third seasons of the television series ...
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