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Showing posts with label Asgardians. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Asgardians. Show all posts

Resist Ragnarok Like There's No Such Thing as a Broken Heart: Leir's 9th appearance

The Mighty Thor #425 (OCT 1990)

Today we come to the ninth appearance of Leir in the Marvel canon.  Not surprisingly, once again we find our crimson-maned champion within the pages of The Mighty Thor.  This particular issue tries to wrap up a number of threads.  First, we see the resolution of the impending threat of Ragnarok.   Ragnarok was supposed to be the final battle between the powerful Elementals Surtur (the Fire Demon) and his counterpart Ymir (the Frost Giant).  In previous issues is was revealed that Odin had possessed Surtur the Fire Demon in an attempt to use his power to forestall the prophesied End. As this story begins, the two Elementals are engaged in a ruinous battle in Asgard.

Meanwhile, Thor, Hercules, and Eric  Masterson are wrapping up a cosmic sojourn in which they witnessed the birth of a new celestial, met the High Evolutionary's New Immortals, saw Hercules "restored", the High Evolutionary made comatose, and Thor and Eric finally separated.  After everyone has said their obligatory goodbyes, the poignant moment is interrupted by a dimensional warp out of which comes Lady Sif, Caber, and our man in Avalon--Leir!




After updating Thor on the current threat to Asgard, Sif and the Celts transport Thor & co. back to the Realm Eternal.

 

While the Asgardians fight a futile rear-guard action to save their home, the Vizier tells Thor the last remaining hope--isn't there always just "one last chance"?--to save Asgard will be for the Prince of Asgard to retrieve the Twilight Sword from the Dimension of Death.

Naturally, the attempt to do so will threaten Thor's very life, but he doesn't hesitate to go.  At this point we have the dramatic "I'm going off to war" scene between Thor and Lady Sif.  Given their passionate kiss and Leir's obvious distaste for the spectacle, I can only assume that the good Lady finally admitted to Leir that she'd just been using him all along and wouldn't really marry him.  (Regardless of how arrogant Leir can be at times, ya gotta feel some sympathy for the guy here.  He basically went on an inter-dimensional jaunt and got roped into fighting Elementals for a girl who dropped him like a hot potato for her old flame.)

Not cool, Sif...not cool at all.


After breaking the seal between his lips and Sif's, Thor heads into the Dimension of Death where he promptly gets old and has to fight a bunch of bat demons...or something.  Meanwhile, back in Asgard, Leir doesn't get much opportunity to lick his emotional wounds.  Fortunately for him, Leir is more 1930s alpha male than 2000+ hipster.  Does he sit around crying in his mead?  Heck no!  He picks himself up, dusts himself off, and jumps right into the middle of life-threatening battle!

 

This page gave me an epiphany about why Leir may not have caught on.
Essentially, he was Hercules' classic character, mixed with Thor's power,
a few extra inches, and a handlebar moustache.  I guess it made sense
when Marvel was trying to "mature" Hercules.

Despite their bold (or foolhardy?) actions, fortunately for Herc and Leir someone on the battlefield had the sense to recognize, "the better part of valor."



While Caber's busy keeping his buddy alive, Thor triumphs over the Death Dimension's bat demons thanks to the timely assistance of mere mortal Eric Masterson.  (I know...don't ask questions, just go with it.)

Thor and Eric successfully retrieve the Twilight Sword and return to Asgard. The Sword turns out to be little more than a macguffin, as it really isn't the mechanism for defeating Ymir and Surtur that we've been led to expect (but I won't spoil that aspect of the story for you, in case you want to read it yourself).

Everything wraps up nice and tidy, complete with the obligatory celebration panel.

 

(On a side note:  I think this was a missed opportunity to make the otherwise annoying Eric Masterson a compelling and sympathetic character.  Allowing Eric to die in order for Thor to complete his mission would've made a nice wrap-up...but that's a topic for another day).




Leir (Marvel): part 3



The third appearance of Marvel's Leir, came in The Mighty Thor #400 (FEB 1989)This wrapped up the arc that saw the Egyptian death god Seth threatening all life.

As issue #400 begins, Thor (to whom Odin had previously imparted the Odinforce) is engaged in a cosmos-spanning battle against the All-Father's eternal enemy, Surtur the Fire Demon.  As for Odin himself, the true liege of Asgard has returned to his shattered home to rally its defenders.

Leir is...well...he's being Leir.  But at least his Caber finally said what we've all been thinking:




While Caber is launching his one-man intervention, the Earth Force in a final act of rebellion attacks their creator Seth.  Sadly, despite their nobility, none of the three possess anywhere near the power necessary to defeat the death god.

With the Earth Force dispatched, Odin steps into the gap to tackle Seth in a mano-a-mano fight, proving that even without the Odinforce, the old guy's nothing to sneeze at.   Nevertheless, the sudden appearance of the dimension-hopping battle betwixt Thor and Surtur momentarily distracts Odin, allowing Seth to seize the upper-hand and potentially kill the Lord of Asgard.

At this dramatic apex, DeFalco does a great job (IMHO) of supplying deliverance from very unexpected sources.  The Black Knight, who has been struggling against the slow advance of the ebony blade curse--which has been turning him into an extension of that mystic blade--is completely paralyzed.  Hogun the Grim, who we've been repeatedly reminded is "marked for death" by Seth, decides to accept his fate by launching one last assault on Seth in an effort to save Odin.
Hurling the paralyzed Knight like a spear, the mystic properties of the ebony blade are able to pierce Seth's head, killing the death god.


 Following the defeat of Seth, and the (momentary) knocking out of Surtur, the Thor returns the Odinforce to his father.  Odin, in turn, serves as the deus ex machina by "absorbing the very essence" of Surtur into himself, so as to imprison the fire demon forever.  (Of course, if defeating Surtur was this easy, it begs the question why Odin didn't do it millennia ago.)

Note the largely tertiary Leir positioned behind Fandral, while Caber is on the other side of the panel.  Maybe the "lord of lightning and god of the spear" didn't appreciate being reprimanded?



Other sources on The Mighty Thor #400