Rage (comics)

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Rage
AbilitiesSkilled street fighter
Superhuman strength, speed, stamina, durability and resistance to injury
Ability to leap great distances

Rage (Elvin Daryl Haliday, sometimes misspelled "Holliday", first name sometimes given as "Eldon") is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. He has been a member of the Avengers and the New Warriors, and appeared in the pages of The Avengers, New Warriors, Night Thrasher, and Avengers: The Initiative.

Publication history

Rage was created by Larry Hama and Paul Ryan and first appeared in The Avengers vol. 1 #326 (November 1990).[1]

Fictional character biography

Origin

Elvin Daryl Haliday was born in

Brooklyn, New York. At age 13, he was exposed to toxic waste after hiding from bullies, which accelerated his growth and gave him superhuman physical abilities. Encouraged by his grandmother to use his newfound abilities for good, Elvin adopted a costume and the name Rage.[2]

Avengers

Soon after his transformation, Rage confronted the Avengers, demanding to be made a member. He scolded Captain America for the team's lack of any black members. Rage left after a brief scuffle, but ended up assisting the Avengers in their next mission against L.D.50. Alongside the Avengers, he battled other-dimensional alien prisoners.[3] After the team was reorganized under a new United Nations charter, Rage was invited to join as a probationary member.

In one of his first adventures as an Avenger, Rage battled

Grotesk.[7] Rage was also shown, along with the Sandman, being trained by Captain America.[8]

After racial tensions escalated due to the machinations of the energy vampire called the Hate-Monger, Rage and the New Warriors battled the Sons of the Serpent.[9] The Avengers joined the fray, and Captain America was ultimately able to calm the situation and forced the Hate-Monger to retreat. During the battle, though, it came out that Rage was, in fact, only a teenager. Because of this, Cap told Rage that he could not be an Avenger, but could continue as a trainee if he wished.[4]

New Warriors

Rage was dejected with the demotion. He soon helped the New Warriors and

Folding Circle. This Quinjet ended up being stolen by the Folding Circle, the very villains the New Warriors had gone off to fight.[10] He was ultimately fired from the Avengers complete with a parting punch in the jaw from Hercules himself. About an hour later, he joined the New Warriors as a full member, and was given a new costume.[11]

With

Force of Nature, the Trans-Saballian army,[13] and, with Spider-Man, Archangel, and Doctor Strange, went up against Darkforce.[14]

During his time with the New Warriors, Elvin's grandmother Edna Staples was killed by a street gang called the Poison Memories, bent on revenge against the team, leaving him an orphan. He donned a new costume after that, including a metal helmet.

Andrew Chord, the legal guardian of his teammate Night Thrasher, became Elvin's legal guardian.[16] For some time, Rage was in legal trouble with the authorities, as he had been accused of murdering Kimeiko Ashu, the leader of the Poison Memories.[16] He was ultimately cleared of all charges with the assistance of Night Thrasher,[16] who later took him to Paris for a memorial service for his grandmother.[16]

Rage was part of the attacking force that traveled to a duplicate Earth on the far side of the Moon during the

Infinity Crusade. He teamed up with the X-Men member Cyclops and they were the closest to get to the villain's cathedral headquarters. Rage was swiftly dropped with a nerve pinch by Gamora and was out for the rest of the battle.[17]

Later, Rage and Night Thrasher were voted out of the New Warriors after they had been absent during the team's battle with the paramilitary group Undertow who had enslaved their teammate Namorita.[18] After their expulsion from the New Warriors, for a short time, Rage and Night Thrasher acted as mentors to their former foes, Psionex.[19]

Later, Rage and Night Thrasher took it upon themselves to free Namorita from Undertow.[20] After doing so, all three returned to the New Warriors.[21] Eventually, though, the team began to drift apart and Night Thrasher formally disbanded them.[22]

Reserve Avenger

After the New Warriors broke up, Elvin left for boarding school.[23] Speedball contacted him to join a new version of the team, but Elvin turned him down, preferring to concentrate on his studies.[24]

Elvin remained inactive as an adventurer and only returned a couple of times when called on as a reserve Avenger. First, he assisted the team against Morgan le Fay after the heroes returned from the Heroes Reborn universe.[25] He later assisted them during the Avengers Disassembled situation.[26]

Civil War

Rage and former teammate

Superhuman Registration Act. Rage is seen escaping from the containment van that held those that refused to comply with the Act.[29][30]

The Initiative

Sometime later, Rage is seen on board a bus of new recruits arriving at

Warbound with the defeated Avengers lying at their feet. The recruits are defeated and imprisoned at Madison Square Garden and fitted with obedience disks to prevent their escape. They are subsequently rescued by the Shadow Initiative.[33] The recruits (except for Komodo, who had obeyed orders not to engage the Hulk) are then subjected to even more verbal abuse and more intense training by Gauntlet as punishment for breaking ranks. Shortly thereafter, Gauntlet is found beaten nearly to death with a New Warriors "NW" scrawled across his chest in his own blood.[34] All former New Warriors members and associates on base are detained for questioning. During the S.H.I.E.L.D.
investigation, Rage reveals that he had an altercation with Gauntlet the day before the assault and that Gauntlet was about to recommend washing him out of the program and that his powers be removed until he turns 18.

During the

Counter Force.[35] He later returned to Camp Hammond with the team, now calling themselves the New Warriors again,[36] and battled Ragnarok, the clone of Thor.[37]

Fear Itself

During the

Prodigy regarding magical hammers that have crashed into the Earth.[38] Rage and other heroes then battle Juggernaut, who was transformed into Kuurth: Breaker of Stone, in Las Vegas.[39] He is then seen with Debrii rescuing survivors and helps the team in their battle against Thor Girl, who had recovered her designate powers.[40]

Secret Wars 2015

During the Secret Wars storyline, Demolition Man met Rage and Edwin Jarvis at Avengers Mansion during the incursion between Earth-616 and Earth-1610. The two enjoyed a brief career as Luchadore wrestlers.[41]

Civil War II

During the

U.S. Agent, Rage delivers a speech, where he complains that Sam cares more about his reputation than others and that people need him to stand up for them.[42]

Captain America: Sam Wilson

Rage goes to Empire State University with the new Falcon, to confront an anti-immigrant politician who was giving a speech at campus. They later face the Bombshells, a trio of armored protesters, and defeat them. While returning home, Rage encounters

Speed Demon, who were robbing a pawn shop. After a brief fight, the villains escape and Rage is arrested by the Americops.[43] When Captain America offers him professional help, Rage turns it down, preferring to have him prove his innocence. Sam does that by releasing footage of the Americops beating him.[44] Judge David Roderick deemed the footage inadmissible and had Rage convicted. To get better proof of Rage's innocence, Sam later caught Speed Demon where he confessed to his and Man Mountain Marko's robbery of the pawn shop.[45] Rage is then beaten up in a penitentiary's Z Block by the super-powered prisoners which he previously apprehended. He was taken to the hospital. While visiting him, Sam is told by Claire Temple that Rage will not survive due to the extensive brain damage he sustained.[46]

Venomized

Rage eventually recovered from his coma, against all odds, and when the Hive's invaded Earth, they sent agents to force symbiotes into bonding with superhumans, so a Poison could assimilate both the symbiote and its host. Together with D-Man, Rage oversaw the evacuation of Manhattan across the Manhattan Bridge. They were both attacked by a group of Poisons and bonded to symbiotes. Shortly afterwards, Rage and his symbiote were consumed by a Poison, resulting in their deaths.

Mister Fantastic in the Negative Zone to fight the forces of the Cancerverse led by that universe's Sentry.[49]

Powers and abilities

Elvin's exposure to unknown biochemical radioactive wastes gave him superhuman strength, speed, stamina, durability and resistance to physical injury. He becomes exponentially stronger with applied force, such as hitting. He is able to use his enhanced strength to leap great distances. In his first appearance, Rage was shown outrunning a speeding subway train, but this ability has not been used again.

Rage possesses basic street-fighting skills, and has received some combat training from Captain America and Night Thrasher.

Rage usually wears a costume of synthetic stretch fabric and body armor, and formerly wore a helmet of unspecified material, all of which he designed for himself.

Other versions

House of M

Rage appears as a member of the House of M's version of the

Zero-G, Darkhawk, and Lightspeed.[50]

In other media

Rage makes a non-speaking cameo appearance in the Fantastic Four episode "To Battle the Living Planet".[51]

Reception

Newsarama ranked Rage as the seventh worst Avengers member, describing him as having been "created at a time when the formula for creating Avengers was Name > Costume > Concept > Usefulness > Relevance, and the formula for creating black superheroes was Teenager > Drugs > Skateboard > Urban > Character Development."[52]

References

  1. .
  2. ^ Avengers #328
  3. ^ Avengers #326-328
  4. ^ a b Avengers #329
  5. ^ Avengers #329-331
  6. ^ Avengers #334-339
  7. ^ Avengers Annual #20; Avengers West Coast Annual #6
  8. ^ Captain America #385
  9. ^ Avengers #341-342
  10. ^ New Warriors #22-25
  11. ^ New Warriors #26
  12. ^ New Warriors #27
  13. ^ New Warriors #29-30
  14. ^ New Warriors #32-34; New Warriors Annual #3
  15. ^ New Warriors #37
  16. ^ a b c d New Warriors #39
  17. ^ The Infinity Crusade v1 #5
  18. ^ New Warriors #57 (March 1995)
  19. ^ New Warriors #60, 63 & 64 (June, September & October 1995)
  20. ^ New Warriors #72-74 (June–August 1996)
  21. ^ New Warriors #75 (September 1996)
  22. ^ Nova (vol. 3) #3 (July 1999)
  23. ^ New Warriors (vol. 2) #0 (June 1999)
  24. ^ New Warriors (vol. 2) #1 (October 1999)
  25. ^ Avengers (vol. 3) #1-4 (February–May 1998)
  26. ^ Avengers #501-503 (October–December 2004)
  27. ^ She-Hulk vol. 2, #8 (July, 2006)
  28. ^ Civil War #1
  29. ^ Amazing Spider-Man #534
  30. ^ Fantastic Four #539
  31. ^ Avengers: The Initiative #1
  32. ^ Avengers: The Initiative #4
  33. ^ Avengers: The Initiative #5
  34. ^ Avengers: The Initiative #6
  35. ^ Avengers: The Initiative #12
  36. ^ Avengers: The Initiative #21
  37. ^ Avengers: The Initiative #22
  38. ^ Fear Itself: Youth In Revolt #1
  39. ^ Fear Itself: Youth In Revolt #3
  40. ^ Fear Itself: Youth In Revolt #4 & #6
  41. ^ Secret Wars Too #1
  42. ^ Captain America: Sam Wilson #11-13
  43. ^ Captain America: Sam Wilson #17
  44. ^ Captain America: Sam Wilson #18
  45. ^ Captain America: Sam Wilson #19
  46. ^ Captain America: Sam Wilson #20
  47. ^ Venomized #2
  48. ^ Venomized #5
  49. ^ Annihilation - Scourge: Omega
  50. ^ House of M: Avengers #3-4
  51. ^ "Rage (Character)". Comic Vine. Retrieved March 14, 2024.
  52. ^ "The 10 WORST AVENGERS of All Time". Newsarama. Retrieved 2 September 2017.

External links