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The Phalanx are a fictional cybernetic species appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. They have come into conflict with the X-Men as well as other groups on several occasions. They form a hive mind, linking each member by a telepathic system.
Phalanx | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | Uncanny X-Men #305 (April 1994) |
Created by | Scott Lobdell Joe Madureira Chris Claremont Bill Sienkiewicz |
Characteristics | |
Notable members | Stephen Lang Cameron Hodge Candy Southern Warlock/Douglock Harvest Ultron |
Inherent abilities | Transforms sentient beings into techno-organic lifeforms and assimilates them into its collective. Superhuman strength, stamina, and durability, teleportation, shapeshifting |
Publication history
editThe Phalanx were co-created by writer Scott Lobdell and artist Joe Madureira but owe much in concept and appearance to the original Technarchy by writer Chris Claremont and artist Bill Sienkiewicz. Appearing in prototype variations in earlier issues, the Phalanx are featured in Uncanny X-Men #312 (May 1994). [citation needed]
Fictional history
editOrigins
editThe Phalanx are a mechanical species of unknown origin. However, they are believed to have been created by the Titans, a group of advanced disembodied consciousnesses.[1][2][3]
The Phalanx wield various advanced ships and use techno-organic viruses to create drones and infect civilizations.[4][5][6][7][8] The virus compels its victims to build a "Babel Spire" to attract the Technarchy, who consume the planet. If the Phalanx find the society worthy or of great interest to them, they instead assimilate its members into their hive mind.
Phalanx on Earth
editThe Phalanx on Earth were initially formed by a group of human mutant haters who voluntarily infected themselves with the Transmode virus, taken from the remains of the renegade Technarch Warlock. Steven Lang, who had used the Sentinels against the X-Men many years before, was recruited from a mental hospital to become an "interface". Uninfected by the Transmode virus, Lang was meant to be a buffer, keeping the Phalanx "on track" for its intended purpose.[9] Lang was assisted by Cameron Hodge, a fellow anti-mutant with immortality obtained from the demon N'astirh. Years ago, in a failed effort to contract the Transmode virus, Hodge had killed Warlock. In an attempt to destroy Archangel, Hodge used a Phalanx construct of Candy Southern.[10]
Phalanx' initial attempt to assimilate mutants into its collective was thwarted by the natural resistance of mutants to the Transmode virus. In a scheme to subvert the X-Men's mutant genome knowledge base, Phalanx attacked the X-Mansion, kidnapped most of the X-Men and replaced them with disguised Phalanx members. Banshee returned to the school after the attack and kidnappings. The imposters' ignorance of Professor X's inability to walk alerted Banshee to their deception. Sabretooth, recruited from a cell in the complex, joined with Banshee to save Emma Frost and Jubilee. When Banshee discovered the Phalanx had accessed the location of several young mutants for use in further study, he alerted Wolverine and Cable. In turn, they recruited Cyclops and Jean Grey. Professor X, Excalibur, X-Factor and X-Force sought the location of a third, unknown, group of Phalanx. To prevent the Phalanx from accessing any further information, Banshee destroyed the knowledge base.[11]
While Banshee's group scramble to save the young mutants, the Phalanx secretly follow them and impersonate various people.[12][13] Eventually, the group save all the targeted mutants except for Blink, who sacrifices herself to save the rest and kill Harvest.[14][15]
The rest of these young mutants went on to become the core of Generation X, tutored by Banshee and Emma Frost. Meanwhile, the other mutant teams found a group of Phalanx attempting to follow their genetic instruction to construct a Babel Spire to contact the Technarchy. Douglock led a small team consisting of Forge, Wolfsbane and Cannonball in destroying the spire. Cyclops' group, covertly assisted by Lang, assault the core Phalanx base on Mount Everest to rescue the X-Men.[16]
Much later, it is revealed that Mister Sinister captured a Phalanx and experimented on it to replicate its abilities. Eventually, it is disconnected from the Phalanx hive mind and loses most of its body, but manages to regrow by assimilating humans before the X-Men defeat it.[17]
Clones of the Phalanx (and others) remain captive in Mister Sinister's prize collection.[18] However, despite Sinister's best efforts, they were wiped from existence by the Phoenix Force.[19]
The Shi'ar Massacre
editAnother group of Phalanx later almost decimated the Shi'ar Empire in the absence of the Imperial Guard. With their bodies now pitch-black, except for a few red and blue glowing sensor slits, this new breed only displayed the basic Phalanx and Technarchy features while shapeshifting or when individuals were damaged. These Phalanx also considered themselves as "pure" Phalanx compared to such sects like the one on Earth and hadn't any reservations about infecting mutants with the transmode virus as they almost transformed Rogue.[20] The Phalanx made their way to Chandilar, the throneworld of the Shi'ar Empire where they tried to assimilate the "Nest", actually the hatching chamber where all Shi'ar eggs were being nurtured. Had they succeeded, the entire next generation of Shi'ar would have become part of the Phalanx collective. However, Beast developed a device that would emit a certain frequency to separate the organic from the technological part, causing all Phalanx within its range to dissolve but not before thousands or more Shi'ar were massacred.[21] The rest of this group later conquered another planet,[22] but were destroyed by the Magus after the construction of a Babel Spire.[23]
Annihilation: Conquest
editA new breed of Phalanx is the primary villain with the Super-Adaptoid as an enforcer. They tried to begin where Annihilus left off. When the Kree began the test of the new defensive network, the Phalanx managed to corrupt the system directly through the Kree homeworld of Hala, surrounding the entire Kree Empire in an inescapable energy barrier. They also spread their Transmode Virus, turning all organic life forms into Phalanx, fully under their control and members of their single-minded matrix. High-powered beings such as Ronan the Accuser were made into their group Select, used to cut off any attempts to stop the spread and control of the Phalanx. The Kree who didn't fall under control fought back against their oppressors as well as Quasar (Phyla Vell), Moondragon, Adam Warlock, Star-Lord and the Dirty Half Dozen only to discover that they were under Ultron's control.[8][24]
It was later revealed that the Kree had in the past, captured several hive-mind species, to weaponize them and use them against rival empires, among them the Phalanx. They were however deemed a failure by the Black Judges due to their advanced adaptivity.
Moira's 6th Life
editIn the timeline created by the sixth life of Moira MacTaggert, the war between humans, mutants, and machines ended with the emergence of post-humans, the genetically engineered next step of human evolution that quickly took over Earth and reigned as its dominant species for a millennium. Like the Children of the Vault, these genetically engineered superhumans were known as the Homo novissima.
In hopes of preserving their civilization, these post-humans turned the planet Nibiru into a planet-size artificial intelligence, Nimbus, to draw the attention of a stronger civilization that could help them ascend to the next galactic level. Subsequently, the Phalanx found and absorbed Nibiru and followed the implicit invitation to Earth.
After reaching Earth, the Phalanx announced they would absorb and assimilate the post-humans’ intelligence and preserve it as part of their collective as well as the larger Dominion they served therefore initiating the "Ascencion". While this would allow post-human culture, history, and collective consciousness to exist outside of the bounds of space-time, the Phalanx would have to destroy every living thing on Earth to harvest enough energy for the expansion process.[25]
Although one post-human Elder was assimilated and killed through this process, the death of Moira MacTaggert ended this timeline before the Phalanx could consume the post-humans and make their machine intelligence part of a Dominion.[26]
Experimentation
editGiven the powerful nature of the Phalanx, different individuals and governments attempted to experiment with the alien race.
- British intelligence group Black Air acquired several Phalanx specimens, and determined how to control them. They used at least one Phalanx (which had a Brood as its template) as a guardian "warliquid" at their London headquarters, the Blackwall. They kidnapped and manipulated Douglock as part of a plot to gain outright dominion over the earth by the channeling of demonic energy.
- After a battle with the Silver Surfer, Cable was partially lobotomized to save him from Galactus. Now trying to save him, Deadpool tracked down the Fixer to save Cable. Deadpool comes into possession of a Phalanx fetus which Cable later subdues.
- Before the Phalanx Covenant event started, it was revealed that Mister Sinister was able to capture a Phalanx which he kept experimenting until he was capable to replicate their hive mind form which he then used to link himself with every clone of him by a telepathic system.
Attributes
editIn contrast to the fiercely independent Technarchy, the Phalanx exhibit a hive mind reminiscent of insects. Although individual members retain memories and some aspects of their personalities from before assimilation, they are typically unable to act against the collective will without first being disconnected from the group consciousness, as was the case with Douglock.
Phalanx, like the Technarchy, can infect other organisms with the transmode virus with any physical contact - the only known exception being Earth mutants who possess a degree of immunity to the transmode virus. This seems to be a limitation of the Phalanx which their Technarchy progenitors do not have, as Warlock had no problems infecting his future teammate Magik (accidentally) when they first met and repeatedly infecting Cypher to form the Douglock entity on multiple occasions. In Cypher's case the effect was reversed without apparent incident, though Warlock was constantly worried that a time would come when the reversal would not take.
Any organism infected by the Phalanx is automatically inducted into the group mind. Certain individuals with exceptional powers and/or abilities retain their identity.
Phalanx possess the Technarchs' abilities to shapeshift and teleport, but cannot grow in size and mass without absorbing external matter. Over time, they can adapt to attacks used against them.
Other versions
editMarvel 2099
editIn the possible future known as 2099, the Phalanx tried to invade the planet Earth a second time. To prevent Earth from being converted by the Transmode Virus, Spider-Man (Miguel O'Hara) forms an uneasy alliance with Dr. Doom, who had encountered the Phalanx in their first attempt to invade Earth in the 20th century. Doom knew that the Phalanx would have a "scout program" so he added his own subroutine to the coding called subroutine Cynthia which would erase the scout program. When Doom jumped to the future he lost track of the scout program and therefore created the Mutant Messiah myth to track the carrier down again.
When, during a mission, the mutant Nostromo becomes sheathed in a strange cocoon, he reveals himself to be the carrier when he "hatches" as a Phalanx. Doom sends some operatives to bring the boy to him, however, some of the operatives turn out to be Phalanx themselves and begin attacking the group.
Nostromo is eventually delivered to Doom, who then activates the subroutine within Nostromo and, bidding Spider-Man to take him to safety, blows up his castle, while Twilight brings reinforcements of aboriginal Martians to destroy the Phalanx in orbit.
Exiles
editIn the Exiles series, the dimension-hopping team visited a world infested by a mutated version of the Phalanx. On this world, Cypher fell ill with the Legacy Virus and in an act of desperation Warlock infected him with the transmode virus to try and save his life. Unfortunately the two diseases combined and mutated into something far worse. Within the year, almost all of the world's population were transformed into Phalanx drones, calling themselves the Vi-Locks. The group was led by Forge whose innate understanding of machinery made him a prime candidate for leadership. In the course of the team's mission, Blink was infected and slowly started succumbing to the virus. On a hunch, Morph was able to contact the Asgardians whose divine blood was able to heal the victims after they received a transfusion.
Cable
editIn yet another alternate reality, the Phalanx has overrun Earth, assimilating every lifeform. The mutant Cable serves as its central consciousness.
In other media
editTelevision
edit- The Phalanx appear in the X-Men: The Animated Series two-part episode "Phalanx Covenant", with the Phalanx Nexus voiced by Lally Cadeau and additional forms voiced by Stephen Ouimette and Don Francks. An amalgamation of the original comics version and the Technarchy, this version of the species can change their appearance at will and assimilate humans.[27]
- The Phalanx appears in the Ultimate Spider-Man episode "Home Sick Hulk", voiced by Fred Tatasciore.[28] Taking inspiration from the Annihilation Conquest design, these versions are metallic dwarfish insectoids who can infect organic lifeforms and absorb organic matter.
- A variation of the Phalanx appears in Avengers Assemble, voiced by Jim Meskimen.[29] This version resembles the Annihilation Conquest design, serving as Ultron's nano-virus through corrupted Life Model Decoys that assimilate humans.
Video games
editThe Phalanx appear in X-Men 2: Clone Wars.
References
edit- ^ Marvel Fact Files #19
- ^ Powers of X #2
- ^ Webber, Tim (March 22, 2023). "X-Men: What Is Dominion?". Marvel. Retrieved June 7, 2024.
- ^ Powers of X #2
- ^ X-Men (Vol. 5) #9
- ^ Uncanny X-Men #343
- ^ Annihilation: Conquest - Wraith #1
- ^ a b Bailey, Caleb (September 1, 2019). "10 Reasons Why The Phalanx Are One Of The Biggest Threats To The X-Men". CBR. Retrieved October 1, 2024.
- ^ Uncanny X-Men (1st series) #291
- ^ Uncanny X-Men (1st series) #306
- ^ Uncanny X-Men (1st series) #316
- ^ X-Men (2nd series) #36
- ^ Uncanny X-Men (1st series) #317
- ^ Allan, Scoot (April 28, 2022). "10 New X-Men Characters Who Debuted During The Phalanx Covenant Event". CBR. Retrieved October 1, 2024.
- ^ X-Men #37
- ^ Cable (2nd series) #16
- ^ Uncanny X-Men (2011) #4
- ^ Extraordinary X-Men #4
- ^ Uncanny X-Men (Vol. 2) #17
- ^ Uncanny X-Men (1st series) #343
- ^ Uncanny X-Men (1st series) #344
- ^ Warlock #7
- ^ Warlock #8
- ^ Annihilation Conquest: Quasar #1-4 (Jul.-Oct. 2007)
- ^ Powers of X #5
- ^ Powers of X #6
- ^ Sims, Chris (August 18, 2014). "X-Men Episode Guide 5x01: The Phalanx Covenant, Part 1". ComicsAlliance. Retrieved October 1, 2024.
- ^ "Home Sick Hulk". Ultimate Spider-Man. Season 1. Episode 19. September 9, 2012. Disney XD.
- ^ "The Ultron Outbreak". Avengers Assemble. Season 2. Episode 18. May 17, 2015. Disney XD.
Primary sources
edit- "Phalanx Covenant"
- Uncanny X-Men #291, #305-306, #343-344
- Warlock (M-Tech line) #7
- "Annihilation: Conquest – Prologue"