Thunderbolt (Marvel Comics)

Thunderbolt is the name of two fictional characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.

Fictional character biography

William Carver

Thunderbolt I
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance Daredevil #69 (Oct 1970)
(as Thunderbolt):
Power Man #41
Created by Roy Thomas
Gene Colan
In-story information
Alter ego William Carver
Abilities Superhuman speed and reflexes

William Carver was born in Harlem, New York. Returning to Harlem after military service, William was approached by several members of a local violent street gang named the Thunderbolts, eager to have William in their group for his military training. Carver refused, and the next day went to work as an assistant district attorney under then-District Attorney Franklin Nelson. When Nelson learned of the Carver's encounter with the Thunderbolts gang, he instructed Carver to infiltrate them to gather enough information about their illegal activities to shut them down. Carver helped gather enough evidence to send several members to prison.

Months later, William's younger brother Lonnie Carver was gunned down in front of him. At the funeral, William spotted Lonnie's murderer and chased him through the cemetery. As the two men struggled, a bolt of lightning hit them, killing the sniper instantly. Carver was saved by an experimental cobalt radiation treatment during which he was unintentionally exposed to an unusual amount of radiation. The radiation mutated his body to give him the ability to move at superhuman speeds and enhanced his reflexes. Carver began a career as a costumed crime-fighter, calling himself Thunderbolt after his first criminal enemies, and tried to discover who had ordered Lonnie's assassination.

Carver soon discovered that the radiation he was exposed to sped up not only his reflexes, but his aging, as he was now aging at a rate of several years per week. Carver tracked down his old ally, Power Man and Cage's ally Iron Fist to help him find Lonnie's killer. They discovered that it had been attorney "Big" Ben Donovan, whose younger brother Paul had been one of the Thunderbolts gang members that William Carver sent to prison. Paul Donovan was killed in prison, and Big Ben blamed Carver for his death, sending an assassin to kill William's brother Lonnie in revenge.

After his confession, Big Ben Donovan pulled a gun on Thunderbolt. As the two men struggled, the gun went off and accidentally killed Donovan. Thunderbolt's mission completed, he succumbed to his body's rapid aging and died, content that his brother's murder had been avenged.[1]

Luis Barrett

Thunderbolt II
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance Incredible Hulk Annual #17 (1991)
In-story information
Alter ego Luis Barrett
Team affiliations Pantheon
Abilities Superhuman speed and reflexes

Luis Barrett had somehow obtained superhuman speed while in high school. He came from a poor family and knows that he wouldn't obtain scholarship after he graduates. Justin Hammer later learned of Luis' powers and sent Barrier, Blacklash, and Ringer II to bring Luis to him. Justin Hammer gave William Carver's Thunderbolt costume to Luis Barrett so that he can convince him to join Hammer's criminal enterprises in exchange for funding his college scholarship. When members of the Pantheon warned Luis of Hammer's intentions, Luis turned against Justin Hammer's villain allies during a plot to steal an experimental plane from Air Force One base. Ringer bound Thunderbolt's legs during the fight. Before Blacklash could attack Thunderbolt, he managed to take out Blacklash despite the fact that his legs were bound. Although Luis was left with no other means of going to college, Ulysses noted that Luis is now on the right track.[2]

Luis is being considered as a "potential recruit" for the Initiative program, according to Civil War: Battle Damage Report.

References

  1. Power Man/Iron Fist #62
  2. Incredible Hulk Annual #17

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, February 27, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.