Throughout the past month, my fellow COBRAS have been presenting their takes on costumed adventurers who crossover with the espionage genre. This week, I’m taking a look at some of my favorite super-hero spies, unveiling a character one at a time from the banner above. In case you missed an entry, so far we’ve seen:
The introduction, in which I link to all of the other COBRAS entries
THUNDER Agents (that’s No-Man above)!
Dell Comics’ Werewolf
Harvey Comics’ / Jim Steranko’s Spyman
Apologies for the delay on this. And apologies also for the fact that I put off emailing writer Jeff Parker about today’s spotlighted supergroup, Agents of Atlas, until Thursday night. Too late unfortunately to request an interview, but Parker was kind enough to let us plunder his blog for past commentary about the Agents that we’ll put to use here. He also rattled off a list of things he thought you all might want to know about the team:
- …They were the secret force of the FBI’s Department Zero in the late 50’s…
- …They’ve reformed to take on the modern Marvel Universe…
- …They operate from a hidden underground city…
- …and they have a flying saucer at their disposal.
Agents of Atlas is one of my favorite books of the past few years, both the mini-series and the recently started ongoing (run, don’t walk, to your nearest comic store!). And here’s perhaps the best recommendation I can make for the book: all those cool things above? They wouldn’t even be in my top five list of reasons that I love the Agents. Or, perhaps you didn’t notice the uniformed gorilla in the banner today….
Parker is no stranger to the thriller. The place I first saw his work was in the self-published Interman in 2003, which was Eurospy meets Johnny Quest (or at least artist Doug Wildey) meets contemporary theories on the nature of evolution. For awhile, I considered spotlighting Interman this week. At the very least, you should take a peek at this promo poster, and see if you’re not compelled to place an Amazon order.
Agents of Atlas is a different animal– a sort of revisionist history, conspiracy theory, Wold Newton meets science fiction B-movie, and if you’re scratching your head to say, “That sounds sort of like Planetary,” I’d call that an apt comparison, both in terms of content and in terms of quality (those of you who are scratching your heads and saying, “What’s a Planetary?” just know that I consider this a praise of the highest order). The original mini-series was supported by alternate-reality marketing, the first comic series that I know of that utilized the new media phenomenon, which featured intertextual story from the viewpoint of the mysterious Mr. Lao. Interior art was illustrated by the amazingly talented Leonard Kirk, and covers were brought to life by the equally spectacular Tomm Coker.
The origin of the team lies in Marvel Comics’ What If? #9, published in 1973, which speculated on the nature of an Avengers team formed from 1950s Marvel characters to protect President Dwight Eisenhower from the Communist Yellow Claw. They were revived (at the insistence of editor Mark Paniccia) by Parker and Kirk in a 2006 mini-series where they found themselves reunited to investigate the mysterious Atlas Foundation.
I’m going to force myself to limit my explanation of the Agents to the first few issues of the mini-series. Just know that things happen in the last issue, awesome fantastic things that I really want to blab about, that alter the nature of the Agents as a team, and lead directly into their ongoing series. Find the trade paperback collection of the mini first, then start reading the current run. To start, why don’t we meet the Agents themselves? We got these dandy pictures from the Agents of Atlas website, and the Parker quotations from a set of articles on the series at Comic Book Resources.
JIMMY WOO
Jimmy Woo is a former FBI agent turned Agent of SHIELD turned Agent of Atlas whose arch enemy is the villainous Communist mastermind / Fu Manchu analogue Yellow Claw.
Jeff says: “…Jimmy came from the ‘Yellow Claw’ comic book of the ’50s, tirelessly on the case of the criminal mastermind. I don’t know if there was simply a mandate to put out a Fu Manchu-clone book, but what I find interesting is that they at least let the hero be of Chinese roots, in a time that being balanced towards minorities just wasn’t a priority….Jim Steranko brought Jimmy into SHIELD a few years later because, hey, the Yellow Claw turned up. That turned out to be a robot, but it gave Jimmy another chance to shine, so it’s worth it.”
GORILLA MAN
Ken Hale was a soldier of fortune who feared death. He’d heard of the legend of the Gorilla Man, which said that if you killed the Gorilla Man, you would become immortal. Turns out there’s a bit of a catch. You get immortality yes, but then you become the Gorilla Man.
VENUS
First thought to be an incarnation of the ancient goddess, but actually was a naiad, or siren, given a soul by a mystic hired to kill her. Has the power to control the emotions and perceptions of others through her siren song.
Jeff says: “On a small, human scale, you’ve probably experienced women like her…An attractive woman with such presence that when she says the briefest of things to men-and looks them in the eye- they just lose it. They can’t focus, they feel like they’re underwater and even the most James Bond of the bunch can’t keep his composure. It’s generally pretty hard to say what’s affecting the guys the most. Sure she’s gorgeous, but so are other girls and they don’t all make you walk into walls because you’re trying to keep track of where she is in the room. Is it something in her eyes, or the unearthly quality of her voice?”
M-11, The HUMAN ROBOT
Retroactively named after the issue he first appeared in, Menace #11, M-11 was a robot who murdered his creator. Tracked down by the Agents, M-11 is reprogrammed to be a force for good.
MARVEL BOY / BOB
Bob Grayson’s father was a Jewish scientist who chose to flee the Earth with his infant son during the rise of Nazi Germany. Their atomic rocket overshot the moon, and they wound up on Uranus, where interactions with Uranian eternals left Bob with an altered physiology and a set of Marvel bands that grant him a number of powers.
NAMORA
A cousin of Namor, the Sub-Mariner, her father was killed by land-walkers, and she swore vengeance agains the evils of the world.
…And with that, I’ve run out of time for tonight. Tune in again tomorrow, when we’ll be covering the adventures of the mysterious Agents of Atlas, and offering a link to a complete tale of the 50s-era Agents by Parker and artist Benton Jew!












