Mystique (character)
Mystique | |
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File:Mystique11.png | |
Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | Cameo appearance: Ms. Marvel #16 (May 1978) Full appearance: Ms. Marvel #17 (June 1978) |
Created by | Chris Claremont Dave Cockrum |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Raven Darkhölme |
Species | Human Mutant |
Team affiliations | |
Notable aliases | Jean Grey, Professor Charles Xavier, Nick Fury, Storm, Raven Wagner, Leni Zauber, Valerie Cooper, Mallory Brickman, Ronnie Lake, Holt Adler, Surge, Foxx, Amichai Benvenisti[3] |
Abilities |
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Mystique (Raven Darkhölme)[5] is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics, commonly in association with the X-Men. Created by artist David Cockrum and writer Chris Claremont, she first appeared in the comic book Ms. Marvel #16, published in 1978.[6]
Mystique is a member of a subspecies of humanity known as mutants, who are born with superhuman abilities. Mystique is a shapeshifter who can mimic the appearance and voice of any person with exquisite precision, and her natural appearance includes blue skin and yellow eyes. She is typically portrayed as a foe of the X-Men.
Throughout most of her history, Mystique has been a supervillain, founding her own Brotherhood of Mutants and assassinating several important people involved in mutant affairs. She has commented that she is over 100 years old.[7] Mystique is the mother of the villain Graydon Creed, the X-Men hero Nightcrawler,[8] and adoptive mother of the heroine Rogue.[5] She is forced to abandon Nightcrawler, but raises Rogue for a number of years, and the two women have mixed feelings towards one another.[5]
Mystique appears in six of the X-Men films: she was portrayed by actress Rebecca Romijn in X-Men, X2 and X-Men: The Last Stand, while Jennifer Lawrence portrayed a younger version of the character in X-Men: First Class, X-Men: Days of Future Past,[9] X-Men: Apocalypse,[10] and the upcoming Dark Phoenix.[11] In 2009, Mystique was ranked as IGN's 18th Greatest Comic Book Villain of All Time.[12]
Publication history
Mystique was created by artist David Cockrum. Chris Claremont saw Cockrum's design, dubbed the character "Mystique", and, with Cockrum's permission, set her in Ms. Marvel #16 (May 1978).[13][14]
Claremont, a former X-Men writer, has said that he originally intended Mystique and Destiny to be Nightcrawler's biological parents (with Mystique having morphed into a male body for the act of conception),[15] but Marvel didn't agree, because at that time the Comics Code Authority prohibited the explicit portrayal of gay or bisexual characters.[16][17]
Fictional character biography
Mystique's exact age remains unknown. Her earliest meeting with her lover, Destiny (Irene Adler), occurred around "the dawn of the 20th century".[18]
Sabretooth
While in her Raven persona, Mystique adopts the identity of deceased German secret agent Leni Zauber. Both Leni and Victor Creed, a.k.a. Sabretooth, had been assigned with the assassination of a scientist in East Berlin. Mystique completes the mission in place of Leni, and then she and Victor have to hide in a safe location for a while. They become lovers, but she soon fakes her death in order to leave him.[19]
The result of this short-lived affair is reportedly the birth of Graydon Creed. A number of stories report that soon after his birth, Mystique gives him up for adoption. Others depict Mystique making arrangements for him from a distance. Raven keeps track of his activities until he reaches adolescence. Despite being the child of two mutants, Graydon is not a mutant himself. Mystique is disappointed and soon abandons him. Graydon grows to hate his parents, and eventually extends his hatred to all mutants. He becomes leader of the mutant-hating organization Friends of Humanity, and then a politician. At the height of his political ascension, Graydon is assassinated by an unknown shooter.[20] The shooter is later revealed to be a time traveling version of Mystique as part of a convoluted time paradox involving Jean Grey, Iceman, Toad, and Juggernaut.[21]
Nightcrawler
Still masquerading as Raven, Mystique is married to Baron Christian Wagner; older sources give his name as Count Eric Wagner, an affluent member of the German nobility. He proves to be a loving husband, but disappointing as a lover. His infertility adds to their marital problems. Mystique starts using her shapeshifting powers in order to secretly have sexual encounters with others. She is eventually seduced by fellow mutant Azazel. Azazel states that he is ruler of "an island nation off the coast of Bermuda: La Isla des Demonas", The Island of Demons.[volume & issue needed] He is later revealed to also have the power of immortality and to be the father of an ancient race of mutants known as the Neyaphem, active since at least 2000 BC.[volume & issue needed]
Mystique becomes pregnant, but her husband becomes suspicious and his own father suggests a blood test to verify whether the child is his. Mystique uses a dagger to murder him and then buries him. She gives birth to a baby with black hair, yellow eyes, blue skin, and a pointed tail. The locals consider the mother and child to be demons and attempt to kill them. Mystique escapes but abandons her son. He is found and raised by Gypsy sorceress Margali Szardos and named Kurt Wagner.[volume & issue needed]
Rogue
Mystique becomes the adoptive mother of the four-year-old girl Rogue. Rogue had run away from her home in rural Caldecott County, Mississippi. The girl was living alone in a wooded area, brandishing a shotgun and trusting no one, when Mystique found her. Destiny foresees that Rogue will be important to them and Mystique seeks her out, gains her trust, and takes her in. She and Destiny raise the girl, and Mystique grows to be very protective of her.
Mystique, as Raven Darkhölme, rises rapidly through the United States Civil Service to the trusted position of Deputy Director of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) in the United States Department of Defense. This position gives her access to military secrets and advanced weaponry, both of which she uses for her own criminal and subversive purposes. In this position, she attempts the theft of the Centurion weaponry from S.H.I.E.L.D.[22] She also beat Ms. Marvel's lover Michael Barnett to death, and sought to kill Ms. Marvel.[23]
To help her in her criminal activities, Mystique organizes her own incarnation of the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants, consisting of herself, Avalanche, the Blob, Destiny, and Pyro. The Brotherhood attempts to assassinate Senator Robert Kelly, a notoriously anti-mutant politician. The X-Men thwart the assassination attempt, and all of the Brotherhood save Mystique herself are incarcerated.[24]
Rogue is trained by Mystique and eventually joins the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants. Her mutant power is the ability to absorb the memories, personality, and skills or powers of whomever she touches. To free the other members of the Brotherhood, Mystique concocts a plan involving Rogue absorbing the powers of Ms. Marvel and the Avengers. Though the plan is successful, the Avengers ultimately defeat the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants, capturing all of them except Rogue and Mystique. Moreover, Rogue finds that she has absorbed Ms. Marvel's memories, personality, and powers permanently.[25] In a further humiliation, a confrontation at the Pentagon ends with Mystique being defeated and turned over to the authorities by a powerless Ms. Marvel.[26]
The Brotherhood of Evil Mutants eventually escape, and battle against Dazzler.[27] In an act of revenge against Mystique, Mastermind unbalances Rogue's psyche with the one she absorbed from Ms. Marvel, which prompts her to defect to the X-Men.[28] Because Rogue left without a word, Mystique assumes that Professor X, the X-Men's mentor, brainwashed her. The Brotherhood of Evil Mutants accordingly launches an attempt to kill Professor X. Rogue stops Mystique, and explains that she joined the X-Men because Professor X, as the world's most powerful telepath, is her best hope of healing for her fragmented psyche. Mystique reluctantly relinquishes her guardianship of Rogue.[29]
Freedom Force
Anti-mutant sentiment rises and the federal government launches its own covert anti-mutant program, Project Wideawake. Believing that the times have become too dangerous for the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants to continue, Mystique goes to Doctor Valerie Cooper, special assistant to the head of the National Security Council, and offers the Brotherhood's services to the government. In return for entering government service, Mystique and her team receive a presidential pardon for all criminal charges, to be revoked if any member of Freedom Force is found committing a crime. Cooper agrees to convey the offer to the President on the condition that the Brotherhood arrests their founder, Magneto. The Brotherhood, now reincarnated as Freedom Force, are defeated by Magneto and the X-Men. When Magneto learns that Freedom Force are official federal agents, he voluntarily surrenders to them.[30]
Mystique leads Freedom Force in capturing the Avengers on behalf of the federal government.[31] She clashes with X-Factor in seeking to arrest Rusty Collins.[32] With Freedom Force, she fights the X-Men in Dallas, and witnesses her foster daughter's apparent demise.[33] With Freedom Force, she battles Cyclops and Marvel Girl.[34] With Freedom Force she seeks to arrest Rusty Collins again, and battles the New Mutants.[35] She finally succeeds in capturing Collins as well as Skids.[36] She leads Freedom Force against the Reavers on Muir Island. On this particularly disastrous mission, Freedom Force loses two of its members, Stonewall and Mystique's lover Destiny.[37] The death of her lover leaves Mystique psychologically scarred.
Mystique is later nearly killed by Dr. Valerie Cooper, who is under the Shadow King's mental control.[38] She then impersonates Dr. Valerie Cooper.[39] Mystique is eventually discovered impersonating Dr. Cooper, and saves Xavier's life by killing the Shadow King's human host, Jacob Reisz.[40] She finally reconciles with Rogue.[41] In time, she comes to terms with Destiny's death.[42] She teams with Spiral and Wolverine in thwarting Mojo's near-destruction of the universe.[43] Mystique later briefly stays as a guest at Xavier's mansion. She begins going insane, and leaves the mansion under the care of Forge.[44]
X-Factor
Mystique resurfaces several months later, in a failed attempt to kill Legion for his murdering of Destiny.[45] Mystique has an implant put in her skull by Forge in order for the government to be able to keep track of her. She is then forced to become a member of the government-sponsored team X-Factor after being arrested for trying to blow up a dam.[46] In truth, Mystique had been trying to save the dam, which the U.S. Government wanted to destroy so that they could blame it on mutants. Her membership leads to tension with her teammates when Sabretooth is added to the team months later as a sleeper agent[47], for the main purpose of killing Mystique before she can uncover the truth about the conspiracy. She slowly develops a romantic relationship with team-leader Forge (though he later thought that she was just using him).[48]
Part of the conspiracy involves Mystique's son Graydon Creed running for President, under an anti-mutant platform.[49]
At the same time, both Graydon and Mystique learn that Destiny married and had children during one of the couple's separations. Destiny/Irene's children are now adults with their own children, one of which is a mutant. Graydon has the mutant teen savagely beaten by members of the Friends of Humanity, as a warning towards his mother. Mystique is furious and wants to kill her son, but stops when she is given a message that Graydon's backers want her to kill him and turn her son into a martyr.[50]
Mystique then seeks to save her son from being betrayed by his backers, but fails. Graydon's death ushers in a new wave of anti-mutant violence. Sabretooth acts on his orders to kill the members of X-Factor as "Operation Zero Tolerance" is activated. Mystique distracts Sabretooth long enough to keep him from finishing off the team.[51] Mystique then flees the scene after arranging for X-Factor to receive medical treatment for the wounds Sabretooth inflicted.
Mystique goes into hiding, taking the identity of the senator's wife Mallory Brickman, using her husband's influence to set the FBI on Sabretooth. She prevents Rogue from giving up her mutant powers and continues her investigation of the U.S. Government over her son's death, leading to her aiding Toad and his most recent incarnation of the Brotherhood of Mutants on a mission to raid a government base. The mission fails thanks to Machine Man, who fights the Brotherhood and forces the team to flee. Mystique flees to Europe. While taking the form of a blonde haired woman, Mystique is confronted by a famous photographer who proposes to make her a big fashion model.[volume & issue needed]
Amused, Mystique accepts and quickly becomes the fashion industry's newest top model. Using her money, Mystique moves back to New York and into an expensive penthouse apartment. There, Skrulls staying in a nearby building frame Mystique for the murder of a Japanese diplomat. With help from Shadowcat and Rogue, Mystique is cleared and leaves town. Before she leaves, Shadowcat finds one of Destiny's diaries, left there by Destiny herself before she died.[volume & issue needed]
Breakdown
While gaining critical intelligence on the identity of those who were involved in her son's death and the attempt to kill her using Sabretooth, Mystique suddenly loses her powers while pretending to be a man in a busy office workplace.[volume & issue needed]
Mystique is arrested. The U.S. Government acts on their intelligence regarding Mystique, and destroys all of the alternate identities that she established over the years and confiscate the money she and Destiny had hidden away. The loss of her powers and her freedom causes her to lash out at everyone around her. Rogue has no sympathy for Mystique's plight. The relationship sours when Rogue refuses to tell Mystique that the X-Men are going to fight the High Evolutionary, who was responsible for depowering all mutants, in order to restore everyone's powers. The X-Men defeat the High Evolutionary and restore everyone's powers, allowing Mystique to escape jail.[volume & issue needed]
Mystique is sent back in time by the original X-Factor's sentient ship. Raven finds that she is destined to be part of a great time paradox, where she finds herself with a time delay weapon, which she is about to program to kill Graydon. After some deliberation, she decides to activate the weapon to kill Graydon. Mystique's sanity is further damaged by the revelation that Destiny was one of the founding members of the anti-mutant conspiracy Mystique had dedicated countless years to fighting, and had willfully withheld medical treatment to mutant children that would have resulted in them not growing up deformed due to their mutations.[volume & issue needed]
This leads to Raven again going mad. She reforms the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants for another assassination attempt on Senator Kelly, and kidnaps Moira MacTaggert and impersonates her in order to access her research on the Legacy Virus. Mystique uses samples of the Legacy Virus to create a biological weapon that would infect humans and not mutants, and develops a cure for the Legacy Virus.[volume & issue needed]
The assassination attempt on Kelly ends in failure when Pyro betrays his teammates. Mystique blows up MacTaggert's research facility, fatally injuring the doctor. Mystique then shoots Moira's foster daughter Wolfsbane with a prototype of Forge's neutralizer gun, depowering her. The X-Men confront Mystique and she is seriously wounded. She tells the X-Men that Destiny had predicted a dark future for mutant-kind, and that the future Destiny foretold kept on unfolding despite all that Mystique had done to prevent it. She believes that the only way to save them is to eradicate all humans.[volume & issue needed]
Mystique is sent to prison, but quickly escapes. She allies herself with Martinique Jason in an attempt to wrest control of the X-Corps from its founder, Banshee. Outfitted with a device that gives her the ability to generate an electrical charge, Mystique creates the identity of a supervillain named Surge and joins the X-Corps. While Jason mind-controls the other members of the organization, Mystique brings Banshee's organization down and slits his throat, leaving him in critical condition.[volume & issue needed]
Double agent
Professor X is forced to make Mystique his secret agent, as his previous one, Prudence Leighton, has died and Mystique is the only one suitable to complete the missions. Xavier poses as Magneto to rescue Mystique from the Department of Homeland Security and from execution at the hands of Johny Kitano, Special Magistrate for Homo Superior crimes against humanity, and a mutant himself.[52] At this time, Mystique claims that there is an imposter out to frame her, taking control over the Brotherhood and sending them on their recent missions (the assassination of Moira and the infiltration of X-Corps). As long as Mystique completes the missions without killing anybody, Xavier, working with Forge, keeps her safe from the authorities, who are out to execute her.
One of Xavier's enemies, the Quiet Man, who is actually Prudence Leighton inhabiting the body of her assassin,[53] contacts Mystique and offers to give her an interference transmitter which would keep her safe from the authorities if she kills Xavier. Creating a plan that would free her from both men, Mystique pretends to try killing Xavier while secretly working with the mutant thief Fantomex, after alerting Forge to stop her at the last moment. Her plan is to have the Quiet Man see this and believe that she really has attempted to kill Xavier and is still working for him. The other X-Men believe that Mystique has tried killing Xavier and seek her out.[54]
Rogue tracks her down. Distraught with rage, she attacks her foster mother. Mystique escapes by blowing up the house and going through the window, changing her form to shield her fall.[54]
Mystique goes to the Quiet Man, who is planning on having her killed. After a battle, Mystique kills the Quiet Man, saves her former field-handler Shortpack, and discovers the Quiet Man's interference transmitter was a fake. She tries to steal Forge's interference transmitter but is caught. After some angry words, he smashes it and tells her he never wants to see her again. The two share a sad goodbye kiss and Mystique leaves. After Mystique is gone, Forge realizes that she had already switched his transmitter for the fake one.[53]
Joining the X-Men
Mystique later infiltrates the X-Men, posing as a young girl named Foxx and joining Gambit's training squad, the Chevaliers.[55] She attempts to seduce Rogue's boyfriend Gambit to break them up so she can set her daughter up with a young mutant named Augustus,[56] but Gambit resists. Mystique ultimately reveals herself to him, telling him that she is trying to relieve the tension between him and Rogue (because of the two being unable to touch due to her ability to absorb someone's essence upon skin-to-skin contact). Mystique then metamorphoses into Rogue and tells Gambit that he would not be cheating on Rogue if he had sex with her in Rogue's form.[57]
When the telepath Emma Frost discovers who Foxx really is, the X-Men confront Mystique. Mystique tells them that she had been lonely and wants to join the X-Men. Mystique uses Rogue's doubts about what happened between her and Gambit to sow further discord in Rogue's relationship with Gambit.[58]
The X-Men vote and decide to have Mystique join them on a probationary status (though Rogue is one of the ones who vote against her joining). Nightcrawler asks her to leave for a while regardless of the vote, saying that he needs more time adjusting to the idea of her being a member. Mystique agrees and leaves.[59] After M-Day, she joins the X-Men and brings Augustus (Pulse) along with her. Both have been crucial in the downfall of Apocalypse.[volume & issue needed]
Marauders
After the Hecatomb battle on Providence, Rogue's team returns to Rogue's childhood home in Caldecott County, Mississippi, which Mystique owns for some downtime. Mystique alerts the X-Men, who come to treat Rogue's illness, that there are intruders in the area. Only after Lady Mastermind drops her illusions do the X-Men realize that it is an all-out attack, and that both Lady Mastermind and Omega Sentinel (the latter being possessed by Malice) have defected sides. During the Marauders' initial ambush, Mystique prevents Scalphunter from shooting Rogue. She then reveals herself as a traitor as well, shoots her adopted daughter, and orders the remaining Marauders to kill the X-Men.
Mystique remains with the Marauders during the hunt for the first new mutant baby, but is revealed to have murdered Mister Sinister in a plot involving the baby and Rogue's killing touch. She also appears to be working with Gambit, who, like her, has ulterior motives to want to betray Mister Sinister. When Sinister approaches Mystique as she is with the comatose Rogue, Mystique shoves Sinister onto Rogue, killing him through fatal skin-to-skin contact. Then, in keeping with the words of the Destiny Diaries, she touches the baby's face to Rogue's. The baby's touch purges her of the Strain 88 virus and all the residual psyches she had absorbed over her life, including Hecatomb. Rogue is sickened by Mystique's manipulations, and leaves.
Wolverine tracks Mystique to the Middle East and then into Afghanistan.[60] It is hinted at that Mystique's recent betrayal is not the only reason Logan is out to kill her, as they have a common history of friendship, love, and ultimately, betrayal.[61] After a heated fight, Wolverine wounds Mystique, but denies her the Coup de grâce.[62]
Manifest Destiny
Mystique shows up again, posing as Bobby Drake's ex-girlfriend Opal Tanaka. She sets off a bomb inside of Bobby's Blackbird before shooting him and kicking him out of the plane.[63] Later, she follows Iceman to the hospital and injects him with a fatal dose of a toxin created by Mister Sinister. Hospital staff try to get to Iceman, but they are held back by Mystique while Iceman expels the toxin from his system. Afterward, Mystique attacks Iceman in a truck and sets the truck ablaze with Iceman in it. Iceman steps out of the fire unharmed and disarms and immobilizes Mystique, but she escapes after turning her body into her child form. Mystique impersonates Iceman and stands on top of the Golden Gate bridge threatening to blow it up. Iceman arrives and discovers the reason for Mystique doing this is Wolverine telling her that she will die alone. After a heated conversation, Iceman freezes the bomb. Mystique jumps off the bridge into the water. Iceman tells Cyclops and Hank McCoy that he knows that she is not dead and thanks her for what she did for him.[64]
Dark X-Men
Mystique joins Norman Osborn's Dark X-Men, posing as Professor Charles Xavier for P.R. purposes. Osborn has her injected with nanites and kept on a short leash; should she try anything, Osborn would turn her into a human bomb.[65] After the defection of Emma Frost, Namor, and Cloak and Dagger, Mystique leads the remaining members of the team under the public guise of Jean Grey, as no one could prove Jean had actually died, but mainly to hurt those who had caused her great harm.[66]
Wolverine, having returned from hell and retrieved his possessed body from a demonic force, targets Mystique after finding out she was responsible for sending his soul there at the behest of The Red Right Hand.[volume & issue needed] Mystique is shot by a hit-man named Lord Deathstrike. Badly wounded, Mystique patches herself and escapes on a motorcycle. Wolverine and Lord Deathstrike are in hot pursuit of Mystique throughout the San Francisco streets simultaneously.[volume & issue needed] Mystique ultimately confronts Wolverine, who stabs her with his claws, killing her.[volume & issue needed] Lord Deathstrike collects Mystique's body and auctions it off. Her corpse is sold for 5 million to group of ninjas. It is implied these are agents of The Hand.[67]
Revival
Mystique is seen alive again posing as Sabretooth at Los Angeles International Airport.[68] In the form of Sabretooth she has agreed to assist the Hellfire Club in their destruction of the Jean Grey School.[volume & issue needed] Mystique, as Sabretooth, was a faculty member of The Hellfire Academy.[volume & issue needed] When the Hand revived Mystique, her powers were enhanced and she is now capable of changing her scent to match the forms she takes.[69]
Receiving word that the original X-Men are in the present day, Mystique seeks out young Scott Summers to manipulate him into thinking she has his and mutantkind's best interests at heart.[volume & issue needed] She uses Lady Mastermind and Sabretooth to commit robberies and frame the X-Men.[volume & issue needed] Viper shows up. Mystique explains to her that she wants to buy Madripoor from HYDRA and control the crime in the area. Before this transaction is completed, the X-Men raid the place.[volume & issue needed] Lady Mastermind and Mystique are captured,[volume & issue needed] but Mystique escapes in a S.H.I.E.L.D. helicopter.[volume & issue needed]
Mystique is attacked by Iceman, who is possessed by the Apocalypse fragment.[volume & issue needed] After Iceman is shattered into pieces by Thor, Mystique takes the Apocalypse fragment and swallows it to inherit its powers.[volume & issue needed]
In order to help move her plans along, Mystique drugs and replaces Dazzler, who's now became SHIELD's mutant liaison, allowing her to set up her New Brotherhood under Maria Hill's nose.[volume & issue needed] She sets up operations in Madripoor, allowing her to regularly visit to 'investigate' the mutant uprising there, while secretly being the one in charge of it.[volume & issue needed] She offers Magneto a place in her New Brotherhood after he leaves the Uncanny X-Men team, but he rejects it on the grounds of her financing her operation via drug money from Mutant Growth Hormone sales, attacking and defeating her Brotherhood and stealing her chopper in order to find his own place in the new world.[volume & issue needed]
Uncanny Avengers
Mystique appears as a member of Magneto's unnamed supervillain group during the fight against Red Skull's Red Onslaught form.[70] When the heroes and villains present undergo a moral inversion due to a flawed spell cast by the Scarlet Witch and Doctor Doom,[71] Mystique joins the other inverted villains in the 'Astonishing Avengers' as they go up against the inverted X-Men and Avengers,[72] also working to prevent the inverted Nightcrawler from killing those who were involved in the riot that nearly killed him before his first meeting with Professor X.[73] During the final fight, Mystique briefly poses as Professor X to try to get through to the 'reborn' Apocalypse (Actually the now-adult clone of Apocalypse known as Evan Sabahnur that the X-Men had been trying to raise away from his template's influence),[74] but is converted back to her usual villainous attitude at the conclusion of the storyline.[75]
Powers and abilities
Mystique is a mutant shapeshifter with the ability to psionically shift the formation of her biological cells at will to change her appearance and thereby assume the form of other humans and animals.[76][77] She can also alter her voice to duplicate exactly that of another person. Originally, it was clearly stated that Mystique's powers were limited to appearances only; she could not assume the powers of the people she morphed into or alter her body to adapt to different situations. Additionally she could not change her overall body mass when taking on the appearance of a person larger or smaller, but due to subsequent enhancements she has stated that her body mass is not fixed and can change when she does.[78]
Her body is not limited to purely organic appearances: She also has the ability to create the appearance of clothes and other materials out of her own body, including items such as glasses, zippers, identity cards, handbags and even test tubes. Mystique is shown in at least one instance transforming a metallic part of her costume into a functioning blaster pistol.[79] Whether this is a function of her powers or the costume piece itself, is unclear.
As a shape-shifter, Mystique is able to constantly alter and rejuvenate her body's cells and thereby retain her youthful appearance despite being alive for over one hundred years.
Mystique received her first power enhancement in the X-Men Forever miniseries, in which she was exposed to dangerous levels of radiation in order to save the life of Toad. The process boosted her powers so that she can now morph her body into taking certain desired physical traits depending on her situation at the time. Examples of these new abilities include night vision, wings on her back,[80] talons in her fingers, and natural body armor.[76] She can compress into nearly two-dimensional like a sheet of paper to glide on air currents, similar to Mister Fantastic, which she uses to survive an explosion.[54] She has moved her vital organs out of place in order to survive gunshots to her torso and head,[81] and can make herself virtually invisible via camouflage. She has even, with strain, given herself two heads and four arms to facilitate a gun fight on two fronts,[82] as well as shapeshifted into herself as a small child.[52] She is also now able to hold a shape when knocked unconscious[83] and can conceal items in shapeshifted pouches under her skin.[84]
Following her death and resurrection by the Hand, her powers have been further enhanced.[85] She can now alter and conceal her scent from those with enhanced senses, and is capable of changing her shape to a greater degree, including altering her limbs to form tentacles and bladed weapons,[86] and compressing herself into a dog.[77]
Damage to her biological tissue is known to heal at a relatively fast rate and she can form a resistance to poisons upon contacting them. Her enhancements have allowed her to rapidly regrow severed limbs,[87] and rapidly recover from near fatal injury. Her powers grant her immunity to diseases, enhanced agility and strength, and agelessness.[4]
Mystique is a cunning strategist in terrorist and commando operations, and adept at martial arts and information technology. She has a talent for finding, stealing, and understanding cutting edge weaponry. She is a talented actress and a polyglot, being fluent in over fourteen languages. Her mind is naturally unreadable owing to changing grey matter and she wears devices to prevent telepathic intrusion. Furthermore, with over a century's experience in posing as other people she has picked up the uncanny skill of being able to identify people posing as others based on body language and changes in behavioral cues.
Having been alive a for at least a century, Mystique has built up considerable resources, one of her aliases being the billionaire B Byron Biggs who owns a number of safehouses around the world which are often protected by sophisticated security systems.[88] She also controls a variety of weaponry and gadgets, including the Changeling,[89] a highly advanced stealth ship capable of cloaking and flying at very high speed. The ship had sophisticated weapons and surveillance systems, with an on-board analysis computer and power-suppressing containment cells. The ship was destroyed.[volume & issue needed]
Other versions
Absorbed by Rogue
A copy of Mystique's mind, including her memories and personality, exists within the mind of Rogue ever since the events of "X-Men: Messiah Complex". She converses with Rogue. She also requests that Rogue turn over control of their body. Eventually she is erased by Professor Xavier.[90]
Age of Apocalypse
In the Age of Apocalypse timeline, she gave up her adopted daughter Rogue to Magneto and his X-Men.[91] Years later, Mystique is the ferrywoman to Avalon. It is her task to meet the refugees and make sure they meet the guide to Avalon, Cain. Though she works against Apocalypse, she is not much of a hero. She charges a heavy tariff to ferry the refugees to Avalon, taking all of their valuables. This plagues her conscience and she is reluctant to go to Avalon, as she feels that she is not fit to enter. Ultimately, she gets past her guilt to guide her son, Nightcrawler, to Avalon and find Destiny. She and her son form X-Calibre to defeat Apocalypse's agents, the Pale Riders and the Shadow King.[92]
Battle of the Atom
Mystique's future is shown, where she is revealed to be the mother of Charlie Xavier II, the son of Charles Xavier, possessing his father's powers and appearance. While disguised as Moira MacTaggert she gives birth to Charlie, but upon birth she tearfully abandons her child. Later she raised her son Raze (conceived by Wolverine, with his mother's shape-shifting skills and his father's healing ability), who eventually killed her and took her appearance to rule Madripoor.[93]
Cable's Future
Mystique inquires of Cable "How does [history] judge the part we play here and now in protecting the remnants of mutant-kind?" He says "History is short on specifics" and that it only remembers broad movements, not individuals. She hints at wanting to know how she is remembered, and he comments that her name did survive in a database of his time. Her name is synonymous with traitor, comparing her name to Judas Iscariot. He adds that the information from his time is part of his history, as it was 2,000 years old.[94]
Exiles
In the Earth-797 reality, Mystique is apparently a man and goes by the name of Raphael-Raven Darkholme (and his alias is Mystiq). Much like the main Mystique, he has a relationship with Destiny but due to his gender has a child with her (Claremont's original plan for Nightcrawler's origin). They are both killed in unknown circumstances and Raphael often goes to their grave sites. On such an occasion, he is about to be attacked by soldiers when the Exiles' Sabretooth, who had been stranded on this Earth, saves his life. Saying he is in his debt, he joins the Exiles when they come to pick up their teammate.[volume & issue needed]
House of M
In the House of M, Mystique is an agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. and a member of its elite unit, the Red Guard, alongside Jessica Drew,[95] Toad, and her children Rogue and Nightcrawler. She's also involved in an affair with Wolverine, the Red Guard's leader. When this unit, in pursuit of their former leader, attacks the heroes 'awakened' by Layla Miller, the entire squad is restored. With all of reality against them, any personal history is set aside, and Mystique fights alongside the rest of the 'awakened' without incident.[volume & issue needed]
Marvel Mangaverse
In X-Men Mangaverse, Mystique teams up with Nightcrawler and other Brotherhood members. Storm later kills her with a lightning bolt.[volume & issue needed]
Marvel Zombies
Mystique appears as a zombie twice in the Marvel Zombies universe. She is first shown disguised as Scarlet Witch, in order to get close to and bite Quicksilver, thus becoming directly responsible for the fast spread of the zombie virus throughout the world. She is also shown fighting alongside zombie versions of Avalanche, Blob, and Pyro taking a direct blast from Cyclops right to the face.[volume & issue needed]
Ultimate Marvel
In the Ultimate Marvel Universe, Mystique is the former lover of Charles Xavier. During their stay in the Savage Land with Magneto, the young Emma Frost comes under the tutelage of Xavier, and shortly thereafter he dumps Mystique for Frost.[96] Ever since then, Mystique has held great resentment toward Xavier, which in turn makes her loyal to Magneto.[97] She teams up with Forge and helps Magneto escape the Triskelion by taking his place in the prison cell,[98] before she is replaced by Mastermind and Stacy X and given a new assignment. She is hinted to be one of the few who actually knows how Xavier's darker side operates, stating "We all bought into Xavier's dream until we got a look at the sick brain behind it."[99] It is later revealed that Emma Frost named Xavier's cat after Mystique, after the feline partially destroyed the decor of his office.[100] She briefly appears in Ultimates 3, impersonating the Black Widow to distract Tony Stark until knocked out by the Wasp.[101] She is later seen with the few surviving Brotherhood members still stationed in Wundagore.[102]
X-Men: The End
In the trilogy book series X-Men: The End Mystique is posing as Dark Beast and pretending to work with Mister Sinister. When Sinister murders Rogue she kills him. Gambit later asks her to look after his and Rogue's children when he goes off into space.[103]
X-Men Fairy Tales
Mystique appears briefly in the X-Men Fairy Tales limited series' first issue. She is leading a group of thieves who attack the old monk/Professor X. They are scared away by Hitome/Cyclops. The other thieves are Avalanche and Pyro. In the fourth issue, she appears as Anna/Rogue's mother, a voodoo priestess.[volume & issue needed]
In other media
Television
- Mystique was a recurring character in the 1990s X-Men animated series, voiced by Randall Carpenter (seasons one and two),[citation needed] and by Jennifer Dale (subsequent appearances).[citation needed] This version was the Brotherhood of Mutants' leader and a close ally of Apocalypse, Mister Sinister and Magneto.
- Mystique plays a prominent role in X-Men: Evolution, voiced by Colleen Wheeler.[citation needed] The birth mother of Nightcrawler (Kurt Wagner) and the adoptive mother of Rogue, this version is an initial follower of Magneto throughout season one, and is featured sparingly in subsequent seasons where she disguises herself as Risty Wilde (voiced by Nicole Oliver) for a majority of this time before being turned into a Horseman of Apocalypse in the series finale.
- Mystique appears in the Wolverine and the X-Men animated series, voiced by Tamara Bernier.[citation needed] This version is an Acolyte of Magneto and has a romantic history with Wolverine. She is seen in the episodes "Greetings from Genosha", "Battle Lines", "Stolen Lives" and "Foresight" [Parts 1 & 2].
- Mystique is featured in The Super Hero Squad Show, voiced by Lena Headey in a British accent.[104] In the episode "Deadly is the Black Widow's Bite", she poses as Black Widow in order to gain the Super Hero Squad's trust.
- Mystique appears in Marvel Disk Wars: The Avengers.[citation needed]
Film
- Mystique is played by Rebecca Romijn in the 2000 film X-Men.[citation needed] She is a member of Magneto's Brotherhood of Mutants. She reprises the role in the 2003 sequel X2, where for most of the film she impersonates Sen. Robert Kelly, whom Magneto accidentally killed in the previous film. She frees Magneto from the plastic cell in which he is being held, and together they help the X-Men infiltrate William Stryker's base at Alkali Lake when they discover that he intends to use a duplicate Cerebro and a brainwashed Xavier to kill all mutants. Romijn reprises her role one more time in 2006's X-Men: The Last Stand.[citation needed] Magneto frees her, alongside Juggernaut, Pyro, and the Multiple Man, from a moving prison van, but when she dives in front of a series of shots meant for Magneto, the mutant cure within the ammunition turns her into a normal human, and Magneto abandons her to leaving her in safety as she is no longer one of them. Magneto's rifiute to take her with him after she becomed an human leads to her revealing the location of the Brotherhood to the U.S. government.
- Jennifer Lawrence portrays a younger version of the character in the 2011 prequel X-Men: First Class. Morgan Lily briefly plays Mystique as a child while Rebecca Romijn makes a cameo as a transformation Mystique takes to seduce Magneto.[105][106] She is raised as Charles Xavier's foster sister, and helps found the X-Men, but eventually defects to Magneto as she is dissatisfied with Xavier's constant attempts to ask her to hide where Magneto encouraged her not to fear her true appearance. Lawrence reprises her role in the 2014 film X-Men: Days of Future Past.[107] In the film, it was her assassination of Bolivar Trask that leads to the man's martyrdom, resulting in the fruition of the Sentinel program. Mystique was subsequently captured and experimented upon, leading to the Sentinels' unstoppable shapeshifting abilities and a dystopian future. The film revolves around Wolverine's attempts to stop her assassination of Trask and avert the dark future after he is sent back in time by Kitty Pryde projecting him into his younger self. The group stops Mystique's attempt to kill Trask, but the altercation exposes mutants to the world for the first time earlier than in the previous timeline, prompting President Nixon to approve the Sentinel program while Trask studies a blood sample Mystique left behind during the attack. While Trask Industries ships the Sentinels to Washington, D.C. for their national presentation, Magneto secretly surrounds the Sentinels in steel, allowing him to control them. He subsequently commandeers the Sentinels to attack the crowd and hold off Wolverine, Xavier, and McCoy, but before he can kill what he believes to be Nixon (really a disguised Mystique), McCoy suppresses his mutation with a serum causing a Sentinel to turn on Magneto. Magneto quickly disables it, but the distraction allows Mystique to shoot him with a plastic gun, wounding him and releasing his control of the Sentinels. After Xavier convinces Mystique to let Trask live, the world sees that a mutant saved the President and the Sentinel program is shut down. Trask is arrested for selling military secrets to foreign powers, erasing the dystopian future seen earlier in the film. Mystique remains a rogue agent, disguising herself as William Stryker to retrieve Wolverine from the Potomac River. Lawrence reprise her role as Mystique in X-Men: Apocalypse.[108][109] The film is set in the 1980s, with Mystique now the 'public face' of the idea of heroic mutants, and not aligned with Magneto as she did in the original timeline after the events of the last film. Despite being idolized by other mutants as a hero, she rejects the notion while focusing simply on getting the oppressed to safety. Younger mutants like Ororo Munroe, Scott Summers, and Jean Grey see her as an inspiration, and some have begun trying to use their powers for heroics or vigilantism based on her examples. After she sees a news report about the death of Magneto's family while she is trying to help Nightcrawler, she has him take her back to Xavier's mansion so that Xavier can help her find Erik. In the process, she unintentionally alerts the powerful new foe Apocalypse to their existence, prompting him to abduct Xavier. After briefly being held captive by Colonel Stryker, Raven and the other adults are rescued by Scott, Jean, and Nightcrawler, prompting Raven to accompany them on the mission to rescue Xavier from Apocalypse. At the film's conclusion, Mystique returns to the X-Men as one of Xavier's lieutenants (along with Beast) and field commander.
- Lawrence will reprise her role in 2019's Dark Phoenix.[110]
Video games
- In the X-Men arcade game, she appears, first disguised as Professor X between stages 5 and 6.[citation needed] She is the boss of stage 7, Asteroid M, where she takes the form of Magneto; she attacks players with punches and kicks curiously more quickly than the real Magneto.
- Mystique appears in the 2000 fighting game, X-Men: Mutant Academy,[citation needed] and its 2001 sequel, X-Men: Mutant Academy 2, as a playable character.[citation needed]
- Mystique is a playable character in X-Men: Next Dimension, voiced by Julianne Grossman.[111] In the game she does not utilize her shapeshifting abilities, relying instead on her martial arts skills and weaponry.
- Mystique appears as a boss in X-Men Legends, voiced by Grey DeLisle.[citation needed]
- Mystique appears as an NPC X-Men Legends II: Rise of Apocalypse.[citation needed] In a mission that takes place in the Savage Land where the players look for Destiny, Mystique helps the players fight Garokk. She has special dialogue with Rogue.
- Mystique appears in 2009's movie tie-in X-Men Origins: Wolverine, voiced by Anna Graves.[citation needed] She masquerades as a CIA operative working with Major William Stryker's Team X.
- Mystique appears in the Nintendo DS version of the Marvel Super Hero Squad video game.[citation needed]
- Mystique appears as a villain character in Marvel Super Hero Squad Online.[citation needed]
- Mystique is available as downloadable content for the game LittleBigPlanet, as part of "Marvel Costume Kit 1".[112]
- Mystique appears in Lego Marvel Super Heroes,[113] voiced by Laura Bailey.[114]
Collected editions
- Essential Ms. Marvel Vol.1 (Ms. Marvel Vol.1 #1-23; The Avengers Vol.1 Annual #10; Marvel Super-Heroes #10-11; 512 pages, February 2007, ISBN 0-7851-2499-3)
- Mystique Vol.1: Dead Drop Gorgeous (Mystique #1-6; 160 pages, August 2004, ISBN 0-7851-1240-5)
- Mystique Vol.2: Tinker, Tailor, Mutant, Spy (Mystique #7-13; 170 pages, November 2004, ISBN 978-0-7851-1555-7)
- Mystique Vol.3: Unnatural (Mystique #14-18; 120 pages, January 2005, ISBN 0-7851-1556-0)
- Mystique Vol.4: Quiet (Mystique #19-24; 150 pages, April 2005, ISBN 0-7851-1475-0)
- Mystique By Brian K. Vaughan Ultimate Collection (Mystique #1-13; 312 pages, May 2011, ISBN 0-7851-5511-2)
- Mystique By Sean McKeever Ultimate Collection (Mystique #14-24; 256 pages, June 2011, ISBN 0-7851-5521-X)
- Wolverine: Get Mystique (Wolverine Vol.3 #62-65; 96 pages, August 2008, ISBN 978-0-7851-2963-9)
References
- ^ Avengers & X-Men #6
- ^ Wolverine vol. 5 #12
- ^ Sabretooth and Mystique #1
- ^ a b Sabretooth #3: "My morphing powers continually revitalize my body cells and DNA memory. That's why I can look just like I did all those years ago."
- ^ a b c Mystique Marvel Directory. Retrieved October 23, 2008.
- ^ Ms. Marvel, No.16 (April 1978)
- ^ Stated in her solo series (#17), "I wasn't born last night, or even last century, for that matter..."
- ^ Brian Cronin. (September 1, 2005) Comics Should Be Good! Comic Book Resources. Retrieved October 23, 2008.
- ^ WENN (May 10, 2006) 'X-Men's' Rebecca Romijn Aims to Please Male Fans Starpulse. Retrieved October 23, 2008.
- ^ Jennifer Lawrence Confirms ‘Apocalypse’ Is Her Last X-Men Film, Variety
- ^ Jennifer Lawrence on returning to the X-Men series: 'I kinda f---ed myself', Entertainment Weekly
- ^ Mystique is number 18, IGN.
- ^ CHRIS CLAREMONT, UNTIL THE BITTER END Archived January 3, 2010, at the Wayback Machine Protein Wisdom. Retrieved October 23, 2008.
- ^ UNCANNY DAVE COCKRUM TRIBUTE #1 Archived May 16, 2008, at the Wayback Machine Retrieved October 23, 2008.
- ^ Ingro, Cheryl. "The Bisexual Mystique," After Ellen: News, Reviews & Commentary on Lesbian and Bisexual women in Entertainment and the Media (July 12, 2006). Accessed Aug. 2, 2014.
- ^ Nyberg, Amy Kiste. Seal of Approval: The History of the Comics Code (Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1998), pp. 143, 175–176, ISBN 0-87805-975-X.
- ^ Bartilucci, Vinnie. "One Thin Dime an' Two Thick Pennies" (Jim Shooter interview), Thwack!.
- ^ Mystique comics – Destiny Archived April 24, 2010, at the Wayback Machine Retrieved October 23, 2008.
- ^ Sabretooth #3
- ^ X-Factor #130
- ^ X-Men Forever (2001 series) #2
- ^ Ms. Marvel #17
- ^ Marvel Super Heroes Vol. 2 #11
- ^ Uncanny X-Men #141–142 (January–February 1981)
- ^ Avengers Annual #10 (1981)
- ^ Uncanny X-Men #158 (June 1982)
- ^ Dazzler #22–23 (December 1982-January 1983)
- ^ Uncanny X-Men #170–171 (June–July 1983)
- ^ Uncanny X-Men #177–178 (January–February 1984)
- ^ Uncanny X-Men #199
- ^ Avengers Annual #15; West Coast Avengers Annual #1
- ^ X-Factor #8–10
- ^ Uncanny X-Men #223–227
- ^ X-Factor #40
- ^ New Mutants #78
- ^ New Mutants #80, 82
- ^ Uncanny X-Men #254–255
- ^ Uncanny X-Men #266
- ^ X-Factor #60
- ^ X-Factor #69
- ^ X-Factor #70
- ^ X-Factor Annual #6
- ^ Wolverine #51–53
- ^ Uncanny X-Men #289–290
- ^ X-Factor 108
- ^ X-Men Prime, July, 1995
- ^ X-Factor #121
- ^ X-Factor #136
- ^ X-Factor #130
- ^ X-Factor #127
- ^ X-Factor #136
- ^ a b Mystique #2
- ^ a b Mystique #24
- ^ a b c Mystique #23
- ^ Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe A to Z, vol. 13 (2010)
- ^ X-Men #171–174
- ^ X-Men #172
- ^ X-Men #173–174
- ^ X-Men #174
- ^ Wolverine (vol.3) #62
- ^ Wolverine (vol.3) #63–65
- ^ Wolverine (vol.3) #65
- ^ X-Men: Manifest Destiny #1
- ^ X-Men: Manifest Destiny #5
- ^ Uncanny X-Men #513
- ^ Dark X-Men #1
- ^ Wolverine (vol.4) #9
- ^ Wolverine #300
- ^ Wolverine #302
- ^ Avengers & X-Men: AXIS #2
- ^ Avengers & X-Men: AXIS #4
- ^ Avengers & X-Men: AXIS #6
- ^ Amazing X-Men (vol.2) #14
- ^ Avengers & X-Men: AXIS #8
- ^ Avengers & X-Men: AXIS #9
- ^ a b Daken Dark Wolverine #3
- ^ a b Astonishing X-Men #62
- ^ X-Men: Manifest Destiny #4
- ^ Uncanny X-Men #177
- ^ Wolverine v4 #9
- ^ Wolverine #304
- ^ Mystique #5
- ^ Ms. Marvel #50
- ^ Mystique #4
- ^ Wolverine #303
- ^ Wolverine & the X-Men #20
- ^ Wolverine #12
- ^ X-Men(1991) #200
- ^ Wolverines #1
- ^ X-Men Legacy #224
- ^ X-Men Chronicles #1 (1995)
- ^ X-Calibre #2-4 (1995)
- ^ All New X-Men #27
- ^ X-Men (vol. 2) #192
- ^ Brian Michael Bendis (w), Jim Cheung (p), John Dell, Jay Leisten (i). New Avengers, no. 45 (November 2008). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Ultimate X-Men #62
- ^ Ultimate X-Men #63-65
- ^ Ultimate X-Men #65
- ^ Ultimate X-Men #81
- ^ Ultimate X-Men Annual #2 (2006)
- ^ Ultimates 3 #1-5
- ^ Ultimate X #1-5
- ^ X-Men: The End (book two) #6
- ^ "Comics Continuum". Comics Continuum. July 28, 2009. Retrieved December 5, 2013.
- ^ Wells, Jeffrey (October 24, 2010). "Lawrence on the Line". Hollywood elsewhere. Archived from the original on October 28, 2010. Retrieved November 22, 2010.
{{cite news}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
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suggested) (help) - ^ Dorn, Alex (August 16, 2010). "Oliver Platt will be The Man In Black in 'X-Men: First Class'". HitFix.com. Retrieved August 17, 2010.
- ^ Malkin, Marc (February 26, 2013). "Jennifer Lawrence: "I'm Sinking Into a Bit of Depression"". E! Online. Archived from the original on March 3, 2013. Retrieved March 3, 2013.
{{cite web}}
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- ^ Jennifer Lawrence & Bradley Cooper Talk ‘Serena’ & Working Together Again | MTV
- ^ Jr, Mike Fleming (June 14, 2017). "Fox Formalizes Simon Kinberg To Helm 'X-Men: Dark Phoenix'; Jennifer Lawrence, Michael Fassbender, James McAvoy Back, Jessica Chastain In Talks". Deadline. Retrieved July 24, 2017.
- ^ "X-Men: Next Dimension". Behind The Voice Actors.
- ^ "Marvel Costume Kit 1". Sony. Archived from the original on December 29, 2012. Retrieved December 30, 2012.
{{cite web}}
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{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Lego Marvel Super Heroes Full Cast & Crew
External links
- Mystique at Marvel.com
- Mystique at UncannyXMen.net
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