Death Adder (comics)

Death Adder (comics)
Death Adder
Death adder 2.jpg
Death Adder. Art by Rick Bryant.
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance Marvel Two-in-One #64 (June 1980)
Created by Mark Gruenwald
Ralph Macchio
In-story information
Alter ego Roland Burroughs
Team affiliations Serpent Society
Serpent Squad
Abilities Bionic tail with spikes
Poison-tipped talons
Ability to breathe underwater

Death Adder (Roland Burroughs), is a fictional supervillain in the Marvel Comics universe. He was one of the original members of the Serpent Society.

Contents

Fictional character biography

Roland Burroughs was born in Rochester, New York. A small time thug, Death Adder is chosen by Roxxon Oil Company to participate in a covert operation to retrieve the powerful Serpent Crown from the Atlantic Ocean. At Roxxon's Mutagenic Laboratory, Roland is surgically given gills and a bionic tail, as well as poison-tipped claws, to help him in his endeavors. An accident happens during this process which renders Death Adder mute. During the mission, he and his group, the third Serpent Squad, came into direct conflict with the heroes known as The Thing, Stingray, and Triton. The Serpent Squad is successful in finding the Serpent Crown, but are defeated by the heroes and taken into custody.[1]

He and his former teammates, Black Mamba and Anaconda, joined together again to infiltrate a zoo to sabotage Tony Stark's automatic animal-feeder and find a valuable weapon known as the "microscanner". This device scans and disrupts various body functions. They are ambushed and defeated by Iron Man, but were able to escape.[2] They later receive an invitation to join Sidewinder's Serpent Society.[3] All three attended the first organizational meeting of the Serpent Society.[4] It was there in the Serpent Society that Death Adder was able to shine, killing M.O.D.O.K. during their first mission by scrapes of his poisoned talons. He encounters Captain America during this mission.[5] He also participates in a mission to kill Captain America, whom the retired Porcupine had ostensibly captured. This was actually a ruse devised by the Captain, and it eventually led to a battle which Death Adder (along with Cottonmouth and Rattler) lost.[6]

When ordered to bring the failed Princess Python back to her original group, the Circus of Crime, Death Adder's serpent saucer crashes in the South Bronx due to unrevealed reasons. Leaving Princess Python where she was and attempting to take a cab back to the base, he is shot and killed by the vigilante known as the Scourge of the Underworld, who is posing as the cab driver. His body is later found by Sidewinder, and his closest friends Anaconda and Black Mamba were able to mourn his death.[7]

Death Adder was later among the seventeen criminals, all murdered by the Scourge, to be resurrected by Hood using the power of Dormammu as part of a squad assembled to eliminate the Punisher.[8] He will be teamed up with the Basilisk.[9] The Hood hosts a meeting for the resurrected criminals and explains to them that they have to kill the Punisher, telling them it was the Punisher who acted as the Scourge who killed them, and that if they do not kill the Punisher after one month the spell will end. Death Adder and Basilisk hold G.W. Bridge's family hostage to make him tell them where they can find the Punisher.[10] Death Adder is one of the few villains to survive the battle against Punisher and Bridge, with it being implied in his next appearance [11] that the Hood, in spite of his failure to kill the Punisher, performed the necessary spell required to ensure Death Adder's normal life span was restored. Along the way, Death Adder underwent surgeries provided to him via the Hood to undergo a major physical transformation. No longer does Death Adder wear a mask, as his face now resembles a chicken/lizard hybrid with a beak for a mouth and a fin much like his original mask possessed.[volume & issue needed]

Powers and abilities

Through mutagenic experimentation by the Brand Corporation, Death Adder's strength, stamina, durability, agility, and reflexes were artificially enhanced. He also became amphibious, able to breathe underwater through artificial gills as well as breathing on land through his nose. His anatomy was bionically bolstered to be able to withstand the ocean depths. His eyes were augmented to be able to see clearly in the murky depths of the ocean. He had a bionic tail which he could control like a fifth limb. He was able to swim at superhuman speeds.

Death Adder wore lightweight full body armor supplied by the Brand Corporation, which included special spike-studded casing for his tail and titanium talons on his gloves. He sometimes filled the reservoirs in each of his gloved fingers with snake venom which could be squeezed through a tiny hole in each of his talons. These fingers could be pneumatically elongated from 8 to 15 inches (380 mm) in length.

Roland Burroughs had a college degree in engineering.

Death Adder (Theodore Scott)

Death Adder
Comic image missing.svg
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance Civil War Files #1 (September, 2006)
In-story information
Alter ego Theodore Scott
Team affiliations Serpent Society
Thunderbolts
Abilities Bionic tail with spikes
Poison-tipped talons
Ability to breathe underwater

Civil War/The Initiative

A new Death Adder appeared during Civil War.[volume & issue needed] He is seen alongside many others criminals in the Thunderbolts army.[volume & issue needed]

Death Adder has been identified as one of the 142 registered superheroes who appear on the cover of the comic book Avengers: The Initiative #1.[12]

Secret Invasion

In Secret Invasion, the new Death Adder joined the Serpent Society. The Society held a number of civilians hostage in a compound in the American Midwest claiming they were protecting themselves from the Skrulls. However, they were easily defeated by Nova and his new Nova Corps.[13]

Other versions

  • Death Adder, among other villains, was revived by the Grandmaster and pitted against the Avengers. He eventually poisoned and killed Tigra, but after Death was freed from her imprisonment, she reverted the world back to the way it was before The Grandmaster's meddling.

Ultimate Death Adder

Death Adder appeared in the Ultimate Universe, though this version is actually female and was portrayed as a normal female who wore civilian clothing and had green lizard-like skin, along with her tail and claws. She works alongside the Serpent Squad and battles the Fantastic Four while searching for the Serpent Crown.

In other media

Television

  • The Roland Burroughs version of Death Adder appears in The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes episode "Ultron-5." He and the rest of the Serpent Society battled the Avengers.

References

  1. ^ Marvel Two-in-One #64-65
  2. ^ Iron Man #160
  3. ^ Captain America #308
  4. ^ Captain America #310
  5. ^ Captain America #313
  6. ^ Captain America #315
  7. ^ Captain America #318
  8. ^ Punisher Vol. 7 #5
  9. ^ http://www.comicbookresources.com/news/preview2.php?image=previews/marvelcomics/punisher/villains/PunisherVillains-4.jpg
  10. ^ Punisher #6-10
  11. ^ Iron Man V5 #20
  12. ^ Avengers: The Initiative #1 Character Map
  13. ^ Nova vol. 4 #19

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Death adder — may refer to: In herpetology: All members of the genus Acanthophis, a group of highly venomous elapids found in Australia and New Guinea Agkistrodon contortrix, a.k.a. the copperhead, a venomous pit viper species found in North America In fiction …   Wikipedia

  • Death (comics) — Death, in comics, may refer to: Comic book death, the deaths of characters in comic books and the related entry: List of dead comic book characters The personification of death: Death (DC Comics) Death (Marvel Comics) Death, a member of the… …   Wikipedia

  • List of Marvel Comics mutates — Mutate (as a noun) is a term used to refer to superhumans who acquired their superpowers by exposure to some mutagenic compound, energy or transformative magical influence (either accidentally or deliberately). Unlike Marvel s Mutants, Marvel s… …   Wikipedia

  • Anaconda (comics) — Superherobox caption=Anaconda, art by Mark Gruenwald Josef Rubinstein. comic color=background:#ff8080 character name=Anaconda real name=Blanche Sitznski species=Mutated Human publisher=Marvel Comics debut= Marvel Two in One #64 (June 1980)… …   Wikipedia

  • Cottonmouth (comics) — Cottonmouth Cottonmouth, art by unknown. Publication information Publisher Marvel Comics …   Wikipedia

  • Black Mamba (comics) — Black Mamba Black Mamba. Publication information Publisher Marvel Comics …   Wikipedia

  • Asp (comics) — Superherobox caption=Asp, art by Ron Lim. comic color=background:#ff8080 character name=Asp real name=Unknown species=Human publisher=Marvel Comics debut= Captain America #310 (October 1985) creators=Mark Gruenwald Paul Neary alliance… …   Wikipedia

  • Rattler (comics) — Superherobox caption=Rattler, art by unknown. comic color=background:#ff8080 character name=Rattler real name=Gustav Krueger publisher=Marvel Comics debut= Captain America vol. 1 #310 (October 1985) creators=Mark Gruenwald and Paul Neary… …   Wikipedia

  • Porcupine (comics) — Superherobox comic color=background:#ff8080 caption= character name=Porcupine real name=Alexander Gentry publisher=Marvel Comics debut= Tales to Astonish #48 (October 1963) creators=Stan Lee and Don Heck alliance color=background:#ffc0c0… …   Wikipedia

  • Aspic (comics) — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Aspic. Aspic (Death Adder) est un super vilain appartenant à l univers de Marvel Comics. Il est apparu pour la première fois dans Marvel Two in One #64, en 1980. Sommaire 1 Origines …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”