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Zarrko

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Zarrko, the Tomorrow Man
Zarrko as depicted in Journey into Mystery #101 (February 1964). Art by Jack Kirby.
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceJourney into Mystery #86 (November 1962)
Created byStan Lee (Writer)
Jack Kirby (Artist)
In-story information
Alter egoArtur Zarrko
Notable aliasesBoris
The Tomorrow Man
Abilities
  • Genius-level intellect
  • Advanced scientific and technological skills

Zarrko, the Tomorrow Man is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character is most commonly associated with Thor.[1]

Publication history

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Zarrko was created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, and first appeared in Journey into Mystery #86 (November, 1962).[1]

Fictional character biography

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Zarrko is an evil scientist from the future, born in Old New York of the peaceful 23rd century of an alternate future. Zarrko was once a civil servant, but built a time machine to travel through time and gather weapons. Zarrko stole an experimental cobalt bomb, but came into conflict with Thor, and was eventually defeated and rendered amnesiac.[2]

Loki eventually restored Zarrko's memories, leading him to return to the 20th century with a giant mining robot and coerce Thor into helping him in exchange for not attacking further. When Zarrko and Thor return to the 30th century, the latter works with the ruling World Council to defeat the former.[3]

Zarrko later clashed with Kang when he tried to conquer Zarrko's 23rd century. Zarrko enlisted the aid of Spider-Man and Iron Man, as Kang had captured the other Avengers, to get inside Kang's base. Zarrko then sent three devices to the Present to de-evolve that era to pre-industrial times, except for an area containing an American missile base, from which he planned to steal nuclear weapons and rule the 23rd Century, but this was stopped by Spider-Man and the Human Torch. Spider-Man then returned to the 23rd century with the Inhumans and defeated the two villains.[4][5]

Zarrko later conquered an Earth in the 50th century, where he encountered the Time-Twisters. He used his Servitor robot to enlist the aid of Thor and the Warriors Three to defeat the Time-Twisters. He journeyed with them to the "end of time" to thwart the Time-Twisters's birth, but when he returned to the 50th Century he found himself deposed as ruler.[6]

Sometime later, Zarrko travelled to 2591 and tricked Dargo, the Thor of that era, into accompanying him to the 20th Century to battle the second Thor and Beta Ray Bill. Zarrko sought to use the energy unleashed by their hammers in the clash to activate the radical Time Stabilizer device to use to collapse all the timelines into one. However, he has left adrift in the time-stream.[7]

In one of the last story arcs of Thor vs Zarrko, Zarrko's plot was revealed to be a plan to save humanity. In his future, Thor had separated from his human self, Jake Olson, and lost his ability to understand humanity. Because of this, Thor became more and more oppressive and imposing, and believed that ruling humanity was the only just thing to do. Zarrko knew that in his future, Thor would become a tyrant, so he had to travel back in time and stop him before the Odin Force made him invincible and near-omnipotent.[volume & issue needed]

When the Governments of Earth launched a massive assault on Asgard, Zarrko was seen trying to escape with his time machine, only to be stopped by Thialfi.[volume & issue needed]

Zarrko's attempted time travel was instrumental for Thor to create for himself a new future in which he would never be the tyrant he would have been without his human self.[volume & issue needed]

Zarrko later returned disguised as Boris, a manservant to Kristoff Vernard, the heir of Doctor Doom, who had become a member of the Fantastic Four following the "death" of Mister Fantastic.[8] He was soon exposed but used his time machine to cause chaos in the building by bringing in various heroes and villains from the past and the future to fight it out. He later escaped, deciding that all he wanted was a quiet place and plenty of food.[9]

In Marvel Now!, Zarrko appears as a prisoner in S.H.I.E.L.D. custody after trying to steal nuclear materials in their possession. When the space-time continuum is broken during Age of Ultron, S.H.I.E.L.D. enlists Zarrko to combat timestream-related threats.[10][11]

Skills and abilities

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Artur Zarrko is a genius with advanced studies in various applied sciences of his futuristic time period.[12]

Equipment

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Zarrko has designed numerous devices, such as force field projectors, radiation guns, the Servitor (a giant robot with extraordinary strength that can discharge concussive blasts and release time missiles containing "chronal energy" which allegedly reverses the flow of time), the time-scope (a device able to peer through different timelines), the RTS (a power-absorbing device), a mining robot, and the Time Cube (a time machine).

Other versions

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What If?

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In an issue of What If? that asked the question "What If Jane Foster Found the Hammer of Thor," Zarrko is among the villains that fight Jane Foster's form of Thordis.[13]

In other media

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Zarrko appears in "The Mighty Thor" segment of The Marvel Super Heroes, voiced by Rod Coneybeare. This version is from the 30th century.[citation needed]

References

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  1. ^ a b Rovin, Jeff (1987). The Encyclopedia of Super-Villains. New York: Facts on File. p. 349. ISBN 0-8160-1356-X.[1]
  2. ^ Journey into Mystery #86
  3. ^ Journey into Mystery #102
  4. ^ Marvel Team-Up #9-11
  5. ^ Cowsill, Alan; Manning, Matthew K. (2012). Spider-Man Chronicle: Celebrating 50 Years of Web-Slinging. DK Publishing. p. 67. ISBN 978-0756692360.
  6. ^ Thor #242-245
  7. ^ Thor #438-441
  8. ^ Fantastic Four #397
  9. ^ Fantastic Four #407-409
  10. ^ The Indestructible Hulk #11-15
  11. ^ Brevoort, Tom; DeFalco, Tom; Manning, Matthew K.; Sanderson, Peter; Wiacek, Win (2017). Marvel Year By Year: A Visual History. DK Publishing. p. 373. ISBN 978-1465455505.
  12. ^ Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe A to Z Vol 1 #14 (June 2010)
  13. ^ What If? #10