Fury (Marvel Comics)

Fury (Marvel Comics)

Superherobox|

caption=The Fury vs. Captain Britain
from "The Daredevils" #11
Alan Davis, Art
|

caption = Linda McQuillan and Fury from "The Daredevils" #9
Art by Alan Davis
comic_color=background:#ff8080comic_color=background:#ff8080
character_name=The Fury
real_name=not applicable
publisher=Marvel Comics
debut=
creators=Alan Moore and Alan Davis
alliance_color=background:#c0c0ff
alliances=
aliases=
powers=Regeneration,
Energy blasts,
Adaptive learning & self-modification|

The Fury is a fictional character created by writer Alan Moore and illustrator Alan Davis as an antagonist for the Marvel Comics hero "Captain Britain". The character was later revisited by writer Chris Claremont, who used the Fury as an opponent for the X-Men.

Fictional character biography

The Fury is a deadly "cybiote" (presumably an android or cyborg) built by the reality-manipulating psychic Mad Jim Jaspers of the parallel timeline of Earth-238 in order to destroy all superhumans but himself. It is physically powerful, capable of generating lethal energy blasts and of adapting and regenerating its mechanical body. Like most of Jim Jaspers' other homicidal agents, the Fury was named for a minor character in "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland":

The Fury slew all of Earth-238's superheroes, with the exception of Captain UK, who fled to another world at the moment that the Fury killed her husband Rick. Most of the Fury's victims on Earth-238 were based on British comic book characters from the 1950s-1970s. After succeeding in its mission, the Fury was deactivated until Captain Britain and his elflike sidekick Jackdaw were sent to Earth-238 by the Captain's mythic mentor Merlyn. Jaspers had his agents, the Status Crew, reactivate the Fury and send it to kill the hero. The Fury murdered Jackdaw, and then killed Captain Britain himself.

The Captain was retrieved by Merlyn and revived in the alien magician's home dimension, Otherworld. The Fury detected that its prey again lived, and began to adapt itself to interdimensional travel in order to hunt him down. Meanwhile, the temporal overseer Mandragon destroyed Earth-238 in order to kill Jaspers; the Fury only barely escaped to Captain Britain's native world, Earth-616. There, the Fury killed several more of Captain Britain's allies, finally confronting Earth-616's counterpart of Mad Jim Jaspers, who was beginning to organize a program against his own world's superhumans. The Fury determined that this Jaspers was not its creator and therefore was not exempt from its directive to kill superhumans. The two fought, but the Fury won when it transported the pair to the empty void that had been Earth-238. Jaspers was unable to use his powers of reality manipulation in a universe where reality had been destroyed, and the Fury swiftly lobotomized him. The weakened Fury returned to Earth-616, where it was ambushed and torn apart by Captain UK, sustaining more damage in the process than it could regenerate.

The Fury preyed on Captain Britain's mind and was used thusly by the insane Orpington-Smythe, leader of the R.C.X.. He had one of his super-powered agents cast an illusion of Captain Britain's lover Meggan, making her look like the Fury. The Captain instantly struck her down, though she survived with minor injuries.

The Fury reappeared years later in several issues of "Uncanny X-Men" ["Uncanny X-Men" #444-447] that were written by Captain Britain co-creator Chris Claremont and illustrated by Fury co-creator Alan Davis. The Fury, having regenerated (but not up to its previous power levels due to the severity of the damage inflicted by Captain UK), destroyed Captain Britain's home and beat the visiting X-Men unconscious. It took control of Sage, an X-Men member, who possessed a "computer brain", and had her attack her teammates, but its control over her was severed by an electrical field created by Storm. The Fury was again destroyed when Rachel Summers created an artificial black hole inside its body, collapsing it into a singularity.

In "Uncanny X-Men" #462, Mad Jim Jaspers was resurrected in Otherworld and appeared to have merged with the Fury. This lead into the miniseries in which Jaspers began transforming the Capitan Britain Corps members into Fury, who decimated the rest of the corps. In the conclusion of this series Fury took completed control of Jaspers before being defeated and destroyed. However, a small remnant of Fury is shown binding with an unknowing Merlyn.

Powers and abilities

The Fury seemed to be harder and harder to defeat every time Captain Britain and the X-Men confronted it. The Fury was described as "the supreme killing machine" and usually defeated its super-powered quarries with energy blasts that it could fire from its left arm. The Fury could also fire poisonous, barbed darts. The Fury carried detailed files on all known super humans, and its sophisticated array of sensors was powerful enough to recognize when it has killed all super humans present in the universe. The Fury possessed limited teleportation abilities, but it should be noted that when it decided to continue its campaign against super human it acquired the ability to cross dimensions. Trans-dimensional travel nearly destroys the Fury, and it usually needs to acquire raw "genetic material" to rebuild itself. The Fury can kill regular humans and use their bodies for this purpose, although killing non-super humans appears to not be a primary function of the Fury. The Fury's dart weapon is tipped with a powerful mutagenic, possibly to ready the body for absorption. The Fury kills a host body with its attached barb and drags the body closer to itself. Sid, a hapless drifter, managed to escape the Fury shortly after it warped to Captain Britain’s dimension, but he was grazed by one of the Fury's darts. The powerful toxin turned him into a grotesque monster that terrorized London until Captain Britain and the British Army killed him. It is unknown how Mad Jim Jaspers acquired the technical proficiency to make a complex construct like the Fury, although it is possible that he used his reality warping powers to give him access to the technology.

Other versions

pectacular Spider-Man Adventures

"Spectacular Spider-Man Adventures", a monthly comic based on the 1990s Spider-Man cartoon and published by Panini Comics in the UK, featured the Fury in #133 (April 2006). [ [http://www.downthetubes.net/news_archive/2006/01january2006.html Fury Returns] , Down The Tubes, January 26, 2006] The creature emerged in Scotland and battled both Captain Britain & Spider-Man; Captain Britain eventually sacrificed himself to stop it by trapping them both in another reality.

Ultimate Fury

In "Ultimate Spider-Man" #71, in a dream of Peter's, appears a robot very similar to the Fury.

Collections

The Fury's appearances have been collected into a number of trade paperback:

* "Captain Britain" (by Alan Moore and Alan Davis, collects collects "Marvel Super-Heroes" #386-388, "The Daredevils" #1-11, & "The Mighty World of Marvel" #7-13, 1982-1984, 208 pages, Marvel Comics/Marvel UK, 2002, ISBN 0-7851-0855-6)

* "Uncanny X-Men: The New Age, Volume 1: The End Of History" (collects "The Uncanny X-Men" #444-449, 144 pages, Marvel Comics, December 2004, ISBN 0-7851-1535-8)

* "X-Men: Die By The Sword" (128 pages, Marvel Comics, April 2008, ISBN 0-7851-2791-7)

Notes

References

*
* [http://www.internationalhero.co.uk/f/fury.htm The Fury] at the International Catalogue of Superheroes
* [http://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix/fury1.htm The Fury] at the Appendix to the Handbook of the Marvel Universe


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