Arnim Zola
Arnim Zola | |
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Arnim Zola Art by Steve Epting | |
Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | Captain America #208 (Apr 1977) |
Created by | Jack Kirby |
In-story information | |
Partnerships | Red Skull |
Notable aliases | The Bio-Fanatic |
Abilities |
Genius biochemist and scientist Specially-modified robot body grants: ESP Box Mind control Mind ray Mind transfer |
Arnim Zola is a fictional supervillain appearing in the Marvel Comics universe. He is a master of biochemistry and is an enemy of Captain America and the Avengers. He first appeared in Captain America #208 (April 1977), created by writer/artist Jack Kirby. He was originally a Nazi biochemist during World War II and survived into the modern age by transferring his conscious mind into the body of a sophisticated robot which protected his mind by storing it in its chest and displaying a digital image of Zola's face on its chest plate.
Arnim Zola was a biochemist during World War II, experimenting with genetic engineering. His skills as a geneticist drew the attention of the Red Skull who used him in an attempt to create super soldiers. One of his experiments led to the brain of Adolf Hitler being copied into a being later known as the Hate-Monger. In order to survive the end of World War II Zola managed to transfer his mind into a robot body and later enabled his mind to survive by uploading itself to various networks as the robotic body was destroyed. At one point Zola discovers the "Z Dimension" where he resides for decades, creating a daughter, Jet, and a son, later known as Ian Rogers. Captain America enters the dimension and spends decades in the alternate dimension while very little time passes on earth. During the AXIS storyline Zola assists the Red Skull, only to be attacked by Captain America, Falcon and his children Jet and Ian Rogers.
Zola has appeared in several live-action movies in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, portrayed by Toby Jones. First as a human, working for Red Skull during World War II in Captain America: The First Avenger and later as a digitized brain living in a computer system during Captain America: The Winter Soldier. Jones also reprised the role in the Agent Carter television show, showing him as a prisoner after the end of World War II. Zola was also a character in Nick Fury: Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D., portrayed by Peter Haworth and was also seen in The Super Hero Squad Show, The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes and Ultimate Spider-Man.
Publication history
Created by Jack Kirby, Arnim Zola first appeared in Captain America #208 (April 1977), followed by issues #209-212 (May–August 1977) of the same title.
The character subsequently appeared in:
- Super-Villain Team-Up #17 (June 1980)
- Captain America #275-277 (November 1982-January 1983)
- The Avengers Annual #13 (1984)
- X-Factor Annual #3 (1988)
- Captain America #350 (February 1989)
- Marvel Comics Presents #24 (July 1989)
- Excalibur v.1 #36 (April 1991)
- Captain America #383 (March 1991)
- #387 (July 1991)
- #393-396 (October 1991-January 1992)
- Captain America Annual #11 (1992)
- Marvel Comics Presents #106 (1992)
- Fury #1 (May 1994)
- Captain America #437 (March 1995)
- Iron Man/X-O Manowar: Heavy Metal #1
- X-O Manowar/Iron Man in Heavy Metal #1 (September 1996)
- Thunderbolts #4 (July 1997)
- #24 (March 1999)
- Wolverine #139 (June 1999)
- Thunderbolts #33 (December 1999)
- Captain America #50 (February 2002)
- Secret War: From the Files of Nick Fury (2005)
- Marvel Holiday Special #2006
- Captain America #24 (January 2007)
- #26 (July 2007)
- X-Men #200 (August 2007)
- The Uncanny X-Men #488 (September 2007)
- Cable & Deadpool #45 (November 2007)
- Thunderbolts: International Incident (April 2008)
- Captain America #34-36 (March–May 2008)
- #38 (July 2008)
- Wizard Deadpool #0
- Invaders Now! #2 (November 2010).
Arnim Zola received an entry in the original Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe #1 (January 1983), The Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe Deluxe Edition #1 (August 1985), and All-New Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe A-Z #12 (2006).
Fictional character biography
Arnim Zola was a Swiss biochemist during World War II who became one of the first human genetic engineers in history after finding papers and equipment used by the offshoot race of humanity known as the Deviants. He finds a ready home among the Nazi party, who see his experiments as a means to ensure the existence of the Master Race.
One of his first accomplishments is the creation of a brain pattern imprinting device, which allows a person's mental essence to be projected into a cloned brain. Zola uses this machine on Adolf Hitler, creating the Hate-Monger.[1]
The Red Skull also financed some of Zola's experiments, allowing him to produce such creations as Primus, Doughboy, and Man-Fish.[2] During one such experiment Zola collects humans from the rubble of New York City after the devastation caused by the being known as Onslaught. Zola endows a teenager with superpowers, creating the hero known as Jolt, who is eventually stopped by the Thunderbolts.[3] Zola also collected DNA samples of Captain America at the time when the Skull's body began to age rapidly,[4] and used this template to create a new body for his ally.[5]
As part of another experiment, he collects the DNA of Basilisk, Ben and May Parker, Bird-Man, Bucky, Cheetah, Cyclone, Gwen Stacy, Kangaroo, Mirage, Porcupine, Red Raven, Ringer, 5 of the Salem's Seven, Turner D. Century, and Whizzer and then uses them to create Proto-Husks that are destroyed by Deadpool.[6]
A copy of Zola, who had been impersonating Brian Braddock's mentor Professor Walsh, dies at Meggan's hands.[7]
During the X-Men: Endangered Species storyline, Arnim Zola was among the nine supervillain geniuses recruited by Beast to help him reverse the effects of Decimation.[8]
In the aftermath of the Superhuman Civil War, Zola joins the Red Skull in his newest attempt to kill Captain America, which succeeds. Afterwards, while the Skull is busy with his plans to control America with a puppet government, Zola attempts to reverse-engineer a mysterious device given to him by Doctor Doom, as well as craft a device that will separate the Skull's consciousness from the mind of Aleksander Lukin, which was the result of misuse of the Cosmic Cube. He manages to unlock the device's secrets and has a brainwashed Sharon Carter hooked up to it. However, she breaks off the connection, just as S.H.I.E.L.D. agents storm the base. Zola quickly transfers the Skull out of Lukin but his body is destroyed by the Grand Director. The Skull is stuck in one of Zola's robot bodies.[9]
Stuck in a computer somewhere, Zola is located by Norman Osborn. He informs Osborn, the current director of H.A.M.M.E.R., that Captain America is locked in space and time on the date of his supposed death. Doom's machine was meant to bring him back for an unknown purpose but because of Sharon, he has become unstuck in time, causing him to relive the events of World War II.[10] By the time Zola rebuilds the machine in Castle Doom, Sharon Carter is brought to him so that he can transfer the Red Skull's mind into her body.[11]
Eventually, Captain America finds Zola hiding in an alternate dimension, Dimension Z, where time moves at faster rate than on Earth. There Zola has built a massive fortress where he is making a massive army of genetically altered soldiers with the intent of conquering Earth. In the initial assault, Cap rescues a genetically engineered infant boy (Zola's son, Leopold). In the decade stranded in Dimension Z, Cap raises the boy as his own son, Ian. The two take up with the peaceful Phrox, and eventually lead a rebellion to stop Zola's forces, now commanded by Zola's daughter, Jet Black. Ian is later captured by Zola, and brainwashed to accept Zola as his father again, but eventually breaks out of his control, only to be shot by Sharon Carter. Eventually, Carter sacrifices herself to destroy Zola and his fortress, allowing Cap and a now reformed Jet to escape back to Earth, where only seconds have passed since his arrival in Dimension Z.[12]
During the AXIS storyline, Red Skull tells Arnim Zola that everything is in place on his end. Zola is confronted by his daughter Jet Zola who refuses to return to her father's side. Falcon sneak attacks Zola. Ian finds and frees Sharon Carter, only to learn that Zola has a bomb strong enough to destroy all of New York City. Falcon removes the telepathic antenna on Zola's body to stop him from controlling the bomb, but it only sets it to activate. Falcon takes the bomb high into the sky above New York before it goes off.[13]
Arnim Zola 4.2.3
A flawed copy of Arnim Zola's consciousness in a robot body is recruited by the Shadow Council. He faces the Secret Avengers who are investigating the Shadow Council's mining operations inside of a "bad continuum" (a malformed reality). Although he is defeated by the Secret Avengers, his fate afterwards is unknown.[14]
Powers and abilities
Arnim Zola has no natural superpowers, but he is a scientific genius and biochemist specializing in genetics and cloning. He is not only capable of creating exact clone copies of his "clients". He has also created monsters which are conditioned to do his bidding.
Zola's most noticeable feat was performed upon himself. He constructed a specially-modified robot body which lacks a head. Instead, Zola's face is located via holographic projection on his chest. Atop his shoulders is an ESP Box, a psychotronic device which he uses to exert his control over his monster creations. The ESP Box grants Arnim Zola with a mind-control ability, a mind ray, and a mind transfer ability. In a limited effect, the Box can also be used as an offensive weapon. Whenever his body is damaged or utterly destroyed, Arnim is able to send his personality to another one stored elsewhere, thus giving himself a form of immortality.[15]
Other versions
In 2007 Arnim Zola appeared in Ultimates Annual # 2, written by Charlie Huston. Just like his Earth-616 incarnation he was also a Nazi biochemist. His role in World War II was to make a cadre of special master race troops so as to serve as Adolf Hitler's bodyguards.[16] Captain America was able to infiltrate Arnim Zola's facility and kill his first experimental monster, which Zola dubbed "Siegsoldat" ("Victory soldier"). The experiment's dead body then fell on Arnim Zola, seemingly killing him.[16] Zola did not die and the O.S.S. rescued him so as to harvest his intellect on the post-war super soldier program. Later they mapped his brain and created an artificial intelligence out of it before the tumors he had could degrade his mind.[16]
A short time before the Liberators attacked the United States,[17] a white survivalist group called the Marauders attacked the military base where Arnim Zola's AI was being held and stole it, along with some other weaponry. Arnim Zola was then able to convince the leader of the Marauders to allow Zola to commence experiments on him. Zola mutated the man until he was approximately 20-foot (6.1 m) tall and installed armor plating (and Zola's AI brain) on him with a hologram of Zola projected from the chest and was called Uber-Siegsoldat. He then took over the Marauders and got them to gather people for his experiments. Captain America and the Falcon were sent after him and were able to defeat him by freeing the people he had kidnapped, who promptly tore apart his body, whereupon Captain America collapsed a support strut onto the Zola AI.[16]
A young, apparently fully human named Arnim Zola III appeared in Ultimate Mystery, as a member of Roxxon's brain trust.[18]
In other media
Television
- Arnim Zola appears in the live-action television film Nick Fury: Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D., portrayed by Peter Haworth. He appears as an elderly wheelchair-bound HYDRA chemist.
- A young Arnim Zola appears in a flashback in the The Super Hero Squad Show episode "Wrath of the Red Skull". He is seen in a flashback giving Red Skull a wedgie back when he was Pink Skull.
- Arnim Zola appears in the animated series The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes, voiced by Grant Moninger. In "The Man in the Ant-Hill", he is seen as an inmate at the Big House. In "The Breakout", Zola escapes during the mass-breakout. In "Living Legend", Baron Heinrich Zemo reunites with Zola when they unleash Doughboy on New York. After Doughboy is defeated, Baron Zemo finds Zola pinned under Executioner as Enchantress proposes an offer to him. Afterwards, Zola and Doughboy remain a presence in the Masters of Evil. In "Acts Of Vengeance", Zola monitored the Masters of Evil's activities of Living Laser and Chemistro, right up to the points of fellow members' seeming demises at the hands of Enchantress and Executioner. Chemistro rats out where Zola has been hiding, but once the duo arrive at his safe house, Zola unleashes Doughboy on them who consumes the both of them; however, Enchantress is able to easily break out and disable both Doughboy and Zola. Their fates are left ambiguous as to whether they are dead or not.
- Arnim Zola appears in the Ultimate Spider-Man animated series, voiced by Mark Hamill. During World War II, he was a member of HYDRA where he fought Captain America and the Whizzer. In "S.H.I.E.L.D. Academy", he is the source behind the hacking of Amadeus Cho's Iron Spider armor. When Spider-Man and Iron Spider accidentally leave his cell open at the Triskelion, Zola's robot body activates. The next day, Zola tricks Iron Spider into bringing the ESP Box to him, allowing Zola to reassemble his body. While tracing Zola, Spider-Man and Iron Spider bring Agent Venom and Power Man to the Triskelion's underground laboratory where Zola unleashes his synthezoid army. In the nick of time, Whizzer arrives to help. Whizzer tells the heroes to target Zola's ESP box. This causes Zola to lose control of the synthezoids, and the laboratory to explode. Zola returns in "Attack of the Synthezoids", in which he replaces S.H.I.E.L.D. Academy staff and students at the Triskelion with Synthezoids, leaving only Spider-Man, Cloak, Agent Venom and Rhino to fight. After most of the Synthezoids are defeated, Cloak tracks Dagger to the Tri-Carrier where Zola has the real agents. Zola then uses the Tri-Carrier to launch missiles which destroy the Triskelion as Spider-Man leads Cloak, Agent Venom and Rhino into going after the Tri-Carrier. In the two-part "HYDRA Attacks", Zola collaborates with Doctor Octopus where they use a miniature Octobot to hack into Swarm's nanites so that they can reform the S.H.I.E.L.D. Tri-Carrier into HYDRA Island. Furthermore, they also used Doctor Octopus's Goblin Formula to turn Zola's HYDRA Agents into Green Goblins as part of their plan to take of Manhattan. With help from Iron Spider, Agent Venom and Scarlet Spider, Spider-Man was able to launch HYDRA Island to Saturn with Zola still on it while Doctor Octopus escapes. In "Double Agent Venom", Zola was able to return HYDRA Island to near Earth's orbit at the time when Doctor Octopus worked to remove the Venom symbiote from Flash Thompson. While confronting Spider-Man, Zola's robotic body was stabbed by Scarlet Spider. During the episode's course, Zola was shown to be annoyed with Doctor Octopus's obsession with defeating Spider-Man.
- Armin Zola appears in the Marvel Cinematic Universe series Agent Carter with Toby Jones reprising his role from the films. At the end of the episode "Valediction", Johann Fennhoff (who has a special device that is keeping his mouth shut) is placed in a prison cell and meets his cellmate Arnim Zola. Zola mentions being a fan of Fennhoff's work while giving a pencil and paper so they might collaborate, telling of the advantages of the American justice system.
Film
- Toby Jones portrays Arnim Zola in the live-action Marvel Cinematic Universe movie series produced by Marvel Studios:
- First appearing in the 2011 film Captain America: The First Avenger, Zola is a Hydra scientist who helped the Red Skull harness the Tesseract's power. Later captured by Captain America, Zola is forced to reveal the location of Red Skull's base to Colonel Chester Phillips.
- As revealed in the 2014 sequel Captain America: The Winter Soldier, Zola took advantage of S.H.I.E.L.D.'s Operation Paperclip to create a new incarnation of Hydra that slowly takes over the organization from within. Having also experimented on Bucky Barnes previously, Zola personally oversees the young man's transformation into the Winter Soldier. Suffering a terminal illness in 1972, Zola had his consciousness transferred into a 1970s era supercomputer located in a secret S.H.I.E.L.D. facility in New Jersey. From there, Zola masterminded S.H.I.E.L.D.'s "Project Insight" as a means to identify and target potential threats to Hydra's interests. Zola reveals all of this to Captain America and Black Widow when the two find the supercomputer housing his consciousness, stalling them in a sacrificial attempt to kill them with a missile sent by Alexander Pierce. The apparent destruction of Zola's host supercomputer is ultimately meaningless when Captain America and other foil "Project Insight" and expose Hydra within S.H.I.E.L.D., effectively leading to the agency's downfall.
Video games
- Arnim Zola appears in the video game Captain America: Super Soldier, voiced by André Sogliuzzo.[19] Captain America is briefed on Project: Master Man and how Dr. Zola has unlocked the secrets of the human genome as one step towards immortality. During Captain America's fight with the Sleeper, Zola used his Zola Bots (which resembled Arnim Zola's android body) to attack Captain America. In the post-credits, Zola unplugs from his defeated Zola Bots. The Red Skull orders him to get back to work, stating that they will be seeing Captain America again soon enough.
- Arnim Zola is featured as a boss in the Facebook game Marvel: Avengers Alliance. He is featured in the 10th Spec Ops.
- Arnim Zola appears in Lego Marvel Super Heroes, voiced by Robin Atkin Downes.[20] He appears as a minor antagonist and playable character
- Arnim Zola appears in Lego Marvel's Avengers in both his original robot version and his scientist iteration from Captain America: The First Avenger.
References
- ↑ Nick Fury, Agent of SHIELD #9 - 11
- ↑ Captain America #209 (May 1977)
- ↑ Thunderbolts #1-4
- ↑ Captain America #293-300
- ↑ Captain America #350
- ↑ Deadpool Vol. 3 #0
- ↑ Excalibur v.1 #36
- ↑ X-Men: Endangered Species #1
- ↑ Captain America vol 5 #25-42
- ↑ Captain America #600
- ↑ Captain America: Reborn #4
- ↑ Captain America v7 #1-10
- ↑ Captain America Vol. 7 #24
- ↑ Secret Avengers #18
- ↑ Captain America #38 (2008)
- 1 2 3 4 Ultimates Annual # 2 (2007). Marvel Comics.
- ↑ Millar, Mark (w), Hitch, Bryan (p). The Ultimates 2 #9. Marvel Comics.
- ↑ Ultimate Mystery #3-4. Marvel Comics.
- ↑ Jim Reilly (2010-10-05). "Captain America: Super Soldier Announced". Xbox 360 IGN. News Corporation. Retrieved 2011-01-11.
- ↑ "Galactus Lands in New LEGO Marvel Super Heroes Trailer - Marvel Heroes Games - News - Marvel.com".
External links
- Arnim Zola at Marvel.com
- Arnim Zola at Marvel Wiki
- Arnim Zola 4.2.3 at Marvel Wiki
- Arnim Zola at MarvelDirectory.com
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