Leader (character)
The Leader | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | Tales to Astonish #62 (December 1964)[1] |
Created by | Stan Lee (writer) Steve Ditko (artist) |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Samuel Sterns |
Species | Human mutate |
Team affiliations | Intelligencia Humanoids Freehold / New Freehold Riot Squad Lethal Legion Thunderbolts[2] |
Partnerships | Abomination Madman |
Notable aliases | The Red Leader[2] |
Abilities |
|
The Leader (Samuel Sterns) is a
Sterns worked as a janitor in
The character has been adapted from the comics into various forms of media, including television series and video games. Samuel Sterns made his cinematic debut in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) film The Incredible Hulk (2008), portrayed by Tim Blake Nelson, and will return in Captain America: Brave New World (2025). In 2009, the Leader was ranked as IGN's 63rd Greatest Comic Book Villain of All Time.[5]
Publication history
The character first appeared in Tales to Astonish #62[6] (December 1964), and was created by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko.[7]
Fictional character biography
Born in
A special Humanoid that was previously programmed for the sole purpose of bringing the Leader back to life in the event of his death is activated upon his loss of heartbeat and resurrects him with a specially-prepared device called the Revivo-Beam, after which he resurfaces after months in hiding to engage in a number of plots against the Hulk, including an alliance with General Ross.[15] He also attempts to steal the U.S. Army's Tripod Observation Module (TOM), nicknamed the Murder Module and then, with the help of the Rhino, interrupts the wedding of Bruce Banner (the Hulk's alter ego) and Betty Ross by shooting Banner with a ray which restores the Hulk to his savage state,[16] gamma-irradiates Manhattan's water supply to transform its inhabitants into loyal servants,[17] and clashes with the Hulk and the Avengers twice.[17][18] Eventually, the Leader's mutation destabilizes and he reverts to the form of Samuel Sterns. He convinces the Gray Hulk to transfer the gamma radiation from the recently Hulk-like Rick Jones into himself, and the Leader is restored with a new appearance and a psychic link to Rick.[19] The Leader subsequently detonates a gamma bomb in a small Arizona town, killing over 5,000 people. The few survivors, now enhanced, provide him with valuable research subjects and a group of superhuman enforcers called the Riot Squad.[20] With their help, he builds a self-sufficient society called Freehold in Alberta, populated with civilians dying from radiation poisoning. When the Leader's brother Philip Sterns becomes the Madman, the Leader deems him a threat and sends the Hulk to eliminate him.[21]
When Freehold is targeted by
When Banner is dying from ALS, the Hulk is summoned by the Leader, who had created a new body from various organic materials. The Leader tells the Hulk that he is preparing to transcend the mortal plane, and he grants the Hulk the cure to Banner's condition in exchange for the Hulk bearing witness to his ascension. However, the Leader's body explodes at a crucial juncture. Later, Banner mentally hears the Leader begging him for help, having apparently made a grave mistake. The Leader is ultimately abandoned by Banner, who is unable to help.[25]
The Leader survives once more as a large disembodied head in a tank within a hidden California base. Planning to create a new body from the Hulk's DNA, the Leader establishes the clandestine organization Home Base and dispatches agents to pursue the Hulk after framing him for the death of a young boy. After all his other agendas fail, the Leader finally manages to mind-control the Hulk and guides him towards his secret base, with the intention of taking his indestructible body for himself. Because of intervention by Nadia Blonsky, Betty Ross, Doc Samson, and Iron Man, the plan fails and the Leader dies again.[26]
After the Leader regains his body through unknown means, he is captured by S.H.I.E.L.D. and brought to trial for his crimes, but his attorney manages to have him found not guilty by reason of insanity.[27] Shortly afterward, the Leader discovers he is dying and builds a dome in a Nevada desert to survive.[28] Upon recovering, he joins the Intelligencia,[29] and he takes part in the creation of the Harpy II (Marlo Chandler), the Red Hulk (General Ross), and the Red She-Hulk (Betty Ross). However, when Ross discovers that the Red She-Hulk is actually his daughter, he furiously drains the gamma radiation from the Leader's body, depriving him of his super-intelligence and changing him back into Samuel Sterns.[30]
Subsequently taken into custody so that he may divulge information on the Intelligencia's plans,[31] Sterns is subjected to a dose of red gamma radiation by the Red Hulk, who intends to make Sterns his intelligence agent.[32] However, Sterns is shot and killed when the Punisher discovers him.[33] The Red Hulk further exposes his body to gamma radiation, which revives him and transforms him into the Red Leader.[34] Initially forced to work for Ross's Thunderbolts, the Red Leader manages to escape and begins to rebuild his criminal empire, but is recaptured. He makes a pact with Mephisto to free himself, and is later dragged to Hell.[35]
After somehow escaping from Mephisto's captivity, the Red Leader is tracked down by "Doc Green", an ingenious and ruthless new personality of the Hulk, and is deprived of his powers. However, the Red Leader had previously taken possession of an artificial intelligence created by Banner, which restores his intellect, powers and original green-skinned complexion.[36]
In the miniseries Hulkverines, the Leader is shown to be detained at Shadow Base Remote Facility 43B using Big Bob's Lumber Lounge in Akron, Ohio as a front. He is approached by Agent Castillo, who informs him that the Hulk has returned from the dead and they need his help to kill him. The Leader accepts, but stabs Agent Castillo, stating that he would rather do it himself. The Leader arrives at the area where the Hulk and Weapon H are fighting each other, until Shadow Base agents led by Agent NG catch up to him. As the Hulk starts sneezing, the Leader states to Agent NG that he infected Clayton Cortez with a gamma-altering virus. Arriving where Weapon H had knocked the Hulk unconscious, the Leader begs for Weapon H to finish him off. When the Leader threatens his family as part of Plan C, he detonates some bombs near Weapon H to get away. Clayton chases after the Leader until Wolverine arrives.[37] The Leader brings out the Humanoids, only for them to be regressed back to their pods by reverse-engineered Humanoids when former Weapon X Project scientist Dr. Aliana Alba shows up. She advises the Leader to leave the disposal of Wolverine to her. After a brief fight, the Leader explains that he was pursuing the Hulk, while Dr. Alba states that she was pursuing Wolverine. They come to a conclusion that they were manipulated by someone who wants Weapon H dead. This leads to them making plans to capture the Hulk to collaborate on a project. The Leader and Dr. Alba later attack Shadow Base's Remote Facility FN34.[38] After the larger Humanoid abducts Wolverine and Bruce Banner, it brings them to Shadow Base's Remote Facility FN34 as they begin the experiment that gives the Hulk the claws of Wolverine and Wolverine the strength of the Hulk. The Leader and Dr. Alba unleash the mutated Hulk and Wolverine on Shadow Base Auto-Op WMD Facility BX91 in Central, Ohio using Green Energy Corp as a front. Weapon H arrives and lures them towards the Leader and Dr. Alba. When Weapon H destroys the remote control in the Leader's hand, Dr. Alba withdraws the nanobots that were placed in Wolverine and Bruce Banner and places them in Weapon H. It does not work on Weapon H, as the Leader repairs his teleporter enough to get himself and Dr. Alba away from Weapon H. After watching the aftermath from afar, the Leader and Dr. Alba share a romantic kiss as they embrace each other.[39]
After the Hulk left after finding that
The Leader begins working on studying the Below-Place where gamma mutates travel to after dying and before resurrecting. He began to learn how to control the Green Door while in the Below-Place. He encountered Brian Banner, who wanted the Leader to help him escape the Below-Place. Instead, the Leader removed his skeleton for research. Following the Hulk's victory over Xemnu, the Leader had Rick Jones send a surge of gamma energy into the Hulk during a
During the "Empyre" story line, it was revealed that the Leader also used the Green Door to return the She-Hulk to life after she was possessed by a Cotati.[42]
Powers and abilities
The Leader has superhuman mental acumen as a result of his exposure to an explosion of gamma-irradiated waste. He is capable of knowledge and comprehension that is beyond the human ability to understand. Just as the Hulk has the potential for limitless strength, the Leader has the potential for limitless intelligence, being capable of mastering every worldly subject and adopting concepts completely foreign to his environment. His higher brain functions, including pattern recognition, information storage/retrieval and logical / philosophical structuring have been enhanced to inhuman levels. He also has total recall of every event he has witnessed since the accident that transformed him and can calculate possibilities and outcomes so accurately that it borders on predicting the future. Despite his limitless intelligence and supreme knowledge, his effectiveness as a villain is greatly hampered by his own arrogance, immaturity, impatience and obsession with killing the Hulk, which constantly causes him to lose sight of necessary details and act prematurely, causing the ruin of his schemes. His egotism also briefly led him to embark on two mad and impractical schemes to turn the rest of humanity into gamma mutates like himself.[17][18]
He has also unlocked latent telekinetic and telepathic powers within himself. He is able to control the minds of ordinary humans by merely touching them (aside from gamma-mutated individuals like the Hulk or the Abomination), mind-wipe the memories of several humans at once, create illusions to trick others or disguise himself, and project telekinetic blasts potent enough to topple a very weakened Hulk.
The Leader is also a technological genius that specializes in gamma radiation. He has created technology that is beyond human ability, including vehicles, weaponry, computers, laser pistols, pulse weapons and kinetic gauntlets, and is particularly adept at genetic engineering and manipulating radiation for many nefarious purposes. The Leader has created an army of synthetic henchmen at his disposal called the "Humanoids" that have served him throughout his career of world domination, mainly as bodyguards, soldiers and laboratory servants. They have versatile programming capacities to allow them to perform any task, do not tire, talk or need sustenance and have elastic-like bodies that make them immune to blunt impacts. They range in size from microscopic to hundreds of feet tall. The Humanoids are usually controlled directly through the Leader's own mental commands, but can also be pre-programmed to carry out a certain directive. The Leader has also developed gamma bombs, shield generators to cover large areas, cages for holding the Hulk, powered armor, teleportation devices, android duplicates, a means of controlling the minds of the Hulk or the Rhino through technological devices,[26][43] a special Humanoid which was programmed to bring him back to life in the event of his death by using a device called the Revivo-Beam that was made to do so[15] and Omnivac, a sentient computer that maintains the enormous space station he has used as a base of operations.[43]
On occasion, the Leader has been shown to have the ability to change himself back into Samuel Sterns, but this ability resulted in him losing all memory of his identity as the Leader, as Sterns' mind was ill-equipped to cope with the Leader's intellect (although he always remembered everything when he changed back into the Leader again). It has been revealed when the Leader changes back into Sterns, Sterns gets a little smarter each time this happens (although Sterns is still nowhere near the Leader in terms of intellect)[volume & issue needed].
Although the Leader can be killed, being a gamma mutate, he is able to resurrect himself each time he is by passing through the Green Door, which makes him virtually immortal.[44]
Other versions
Marvel Zombies
The zombified version of the Leader makes his first appearance in
Ultimate Marvel
The
The Ultimate version of Samuel Sterns is an elderly doctor who is seen in a wheelchair. In
Reception
In 2009, the Leader was ranked as IGN's 63rd Greatest Comic Book Villain of All Time.[53]
In other media
Television
- The Leader appears in "The Incredible Hulk" segment of The Marvel Super Heroes, voiced by Gillie Fenwick.
- The Leader appears in The Incredible Hulk (1982) episode "Punks on Wheels", voiced by G. Stanley Jones.
- The Leader appears in the Iron Man episode "Hulk Buster", voiced by Matt Frewer.[54]
- The Leader appears in Ogress, and the Gamma Warriors.
- The Leader makes a non-speaking cameo appearance in The Super Hero Squad Show episode "Tremble at the Might of... M.O.D.O.K.!".[citation needed]
- The Leader appears in Prison 42, where he warns the Avengers of Annihilusand the Annihilation Wave with his psionic powers.
- The Leader appears in the Skaaruntil the Hulk frees him from the Leader's control and fights the titular Agents of S.M.A.S.H. on several occasions.
- The Leader appears in the Ultimate Spider-Man episode "Contest of Champions" Pt. 3, voiced again by James Arnold Taylor.[54]
- The Leader appears in Avengers Assemble, voiced again by James Arnold Taylor.[54] Following minor appearances in the episodes "Building the Perfect Weapon" and "World War Hulk", the Leader appears in the two-part episode "Avengers No More" as the apparent leader of the Cabal, whom he leads in stealing a prototype Arc Reactor and Vibranium to build a Static Expander. While they come into conflict with the Avengers, the Cabal capture them and scatter them across time and space. In response, the Black Panther gathers the Avengers' reserve members to fight back. The heroes defeat the Leader and take him into custody while the rest of the Cabal abandon him and escape.
- The Leader appears in Marvel Future Avengers, voiced by Yoshihito Sasaki in Japanese and Benjamin Diskin in English.[54] This version is a member of Kang the Conqueror's Masters of Evil.
- The Leader appears in the M.O.D.O.K. episode "If Saturday Be... For the Boys!", voiced by Bill Hader.[56]
Film
The Leader appears in several drafts for unproduced scripts for a
Marvel Cinematic Universe
Dr. Samuel Sterns appears in media set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), portrayed by Tim Blake Nelson.[59]
- First appearing in the film Emil Blonskyinto the Abomination. After the latter injures Sterns and destroys his lab, one of Banner's blood samples drips into Sterns' open head wound, causing his cranium to rapidly expand.
- Sterns appears in the tie-in comic book Stalingrad accent and offers to take her there. However, she rebuffs him and takes him into S.H.I.E.L.D. custody.[60]
- Sterns will appear in the upcoming film Captain America: Brave New World.[61]
Video games
- The Leader appears in The Incredible Hulk (1994).
- The Leader appears in Hulk, voiced by Michael Dobson.[54] This version possesses levitation and teleportation capabilities as well as psionic abilities such as telekinesis, energy projection, and creating illusions of himself.
- Dr. Samuel Sterns appears in The Incredible Hulk (2008) film tie-in game, voiced by Tim Blake Nelson.[54]
- The Leader appears as a playable character in Lego Marvel Super Heroes,[62] voiced again by Jeffrey Combs.[citation needed]
- The Leader and his Red Leader form appears in Marvel: Avengers Alliance.[63]
- The Leader appears as a playable character in Lego Marvel's Avengers.[64]
- The Leader appears as a playable character in Marvel Avengers Academy, voiced by Vince Melamed.[54]
Miscellaneous
The Leader appears in the X-Men/Avengers crossover trilogy Gamma Quest by
References
- ISBN 0-8160-1356-X.[1]
- ^ a b Thunderbolts (vol. 2) #6. Marvel Comics.
- ISBN 978-1-4654-7890-0.
- ^ "The Definitive Ranking of the Hulk's 20 Most Powerful Enemies". 17 January 2019.
- ^ "The Leader is number 63" Archived May 11, 2009, at the Wayback Machine. IGN. Retrieved July 28, 2020.
- ISBN 978-1-4165-3141-8.
- ISBN 9780780809772.
- ^ Tales to Astonish #63. Marvel Comics.
- ISBN 978-1465455505.
- ^ Tales to Astonish #60-63. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Tales to Astonish #62-64. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Tales to Astonish #68-69. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Tales to Astonish #73. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Tales to Astonish #74. Marvel Comics.
- ^ a b The Incredible Hulk (vol. 2) #115-117. Marvel Comics.
- ^ The Incredible Hulk (vol. 2) #123-124. Marvel Comics.
- ^ a b c The Incredible Hulk Annual #11. Marvel Comics.
- ^ a b The Incredible Hulk (vol. 2) #278-284. Marvel Comics.
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- ^ The Incredible Hulk (vol. 2) #344-345. Marvel Comics.
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- ^ a b The Incredible Hulk (vol. 3) #75-76. Marvel Comics.
- ^ She-Hulk (vol. 4) #20. Marvel Comics.
- ^ World War Hulk: Aftersmash! Warbound #3-5. Marvel Comics.
- ^ The Incredible Hulk (vol. 2) #604. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Hulk (vol. 2) #23. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Hulk (vol. 2) #28. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Thunderbolts (vol. 2) #2. Marvel Comics.
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- ^ Thunderbolts (vol. 2) #4. Marvel Comics.
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- ^ Hulkverines #2. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Hulkverines #3. Marvel Comics.
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- ^ The Immortal Hulk #34-36, 0, and 37-50 and King in Black: The Immortal Hulk #1. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Empyre: The Immortal She-Hulk #1. Marvel Comics.
- ^ a b The Incredible Hulk (vol. 2) #157-159. Marvel Comics.
- ^ The Immortal Hulk #34. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Marvel Zombies vs. Army of Darkness #3. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Marvel Zombies 3 #2-3. Marvel Comics.
- ^ "Tuesday, December 18, 2007: Marvel Comics for March". Comics Continuum. 2007-12-18. Retrieved 2014-05-14.
- ^ Ultimate Human #1. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Ultimate Human #4. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Ultimate Mystery #3. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Ultimate Mystery #4. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Ultimate Comics: Spider-Man #28. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Leader is number 63 Archived 2009-05-10 at the Wayback Machine, IGN.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j "The Leader Voices (Hulk)". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved January 20, 2024. A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its opening and/or closing credits and/or other reliable sources of information.
- ^ "New details on Marvel's Avengers Assemble and Hulk and the Agents of S.M.A.S.H." Flickering Myth. 2013-04-22. Retrieved 2014-05-14.
- ^ "'Marvel's M.O.D.O.K.': New Guest Stars Announced for Hulu Series". Marvel Entertainment.
- ^ "Hulk. Screenplay by John Turman" (PDF). thescriptsavant.com. Retrieved 12 August 2023.
- ^ "The Lost "Hulk" - David Hayter's Draft". 27 August 2003.
- ^ Carroll, Larry (November 21, 2008). "Tim Blake Nelson Will Battle Hulk As 'The Leader' In 'Incredible Hulk 2' — With Or Without Ed Norton". MTV. Archived from the original on September 15, 2012. Retrieved November 21, 2008.
- ^ The Avengers Prelude: Fury's Big Week #6-7. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Whitten, Sarah (September 10, 2022). "'Captain America: New World Order' Casts Shira Haas as Sabra and Tim Blake Nelson as The Leader". Variety. Archived from the original on September 10, 2022. Retrieved September 10, 2022.
- ^ "LEGO Marvel Superheroes: Stan Lee Hulks Out - Comic-Con 2013". IGN. 20 July 2013. Retrieved 20 July 2013.
- ^ "Marvel News, Blog, Articles & Press Releases | Marvel". Archived from the original on 2016-01-18.
- ^ "Characters - LEGO Marvel's Avengers Walkthrough & Guide - GameFAQs".
External links
- Leader at Marvel.com
- Samuel Sterns (Earth-616) on Marvel Database, a Marvel Comics wiki