Showing posts with label ZOM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ZOM. Show all posts

Saturday, March 28, 2009

The Search for, Nature and History of...
the Sorcerer Supreme :
- SETTING THE STAGE.
What has led up to New Avengers # 51

*** SPECIAL NOTE***
Since this was delayed a day or so, I'm going to make it up to you by doing a VERY in-depth analysis of New Avengers #51 and the back-story involved with how it all got to this point.

If you're looking for a light read... move along.
But, if you're looking for answers to all your questions about HOW Doctor Strange could lose the mantle of Sorcerer Supreme - with lots of scans and specific issue references to follow up upon... then brew a pot of tea and settle in.
(If you've ever noticed that the word "anal" is in analysis... well now you'll understand why.)


THIS post will detail what has led to the issue and the Search for a NEW Sorcerer Supreme.
The NEXT post will handle a review of the issue itself.


---------


New Avengers # 51 "dropped", this week, to an eager and anticipating (super-hero) comics-reading world. It was so desirous an issue, if for no other reason, due to it's starting, in earnest, the long-anticipated "Search for the next 'Sorcerer Supreme' " story-arc (because, really, who truly cares about Norman Osborn and his destined-to-be-short-lived "Dark Reign"?).

To properly address the current story-line, we must first look back several years - for the groundwork of the story therein, by Brian Michael Bendis, has been a long-gestating one, having seeds strewn across the 4-color world of the Avengers since at least as far back as "House of M"...

Don't believe me?
Let's revisit THESE scenes (from House of M # 8 - by Bendis and artist; Olivier Coipel):

*click images to make Supreme-sized*


It was at that point in time where it became painfully obvious, that if Bendis continued his handling of Strange, this would eventually be addressed - to detrimental effect.

As bizarre as it seemed to see his version of Doctor Strange, in the "House of M" world, was a therapist of some sort, this final admission of fault and defeat leaped off of the page as a foreboding harbinger of what was to come.


"I FAILED. COMPLETELY."

With those three words, it became clear that Bendis (and/or Editor-in-Chief; Joe Quesada) felt that Doctor Strange was due to receive some sort of comeuppance. Or more likely, a tear-down.

It was evident in much of his treatment of Strange over time (even starting in that mini-series "event") that sadly, as talented a writer as he could be, Brian Bendis just didn't quite "get" Dr. Strange. I would be hard-pressed to believe that he had performed much in the way of research into the character's past - to garner even a cursory knowledge of Strange's abilities or history of using them.

This next bit from a page later in that same issue proved that:

Uh... what? The magics don't work like that?
Doc mind-wiped people ALL. THE. TIME.
Many an instance he would remove entire chunks of memory from people;
  • Villains whom he felt had dangerous knowledge? - That information erased.
  • Fellow heroes whom he needed to forget his presence? - Memory altered.
  • The entire planet need to think that he's deceased? - One spell does the trick.

Believe me, I am no fan of the "magic-eraser" technique. It's lazy and all-too-convenient (and in canon more times than I care for). I don't disagree that Bendis should have had Doc deny Spidey's request, I just think that since the mind-wipe is a well-known and oft-used ability of Strange's, there should be a better way to NOT do it.

Truly, I can understand if Editorial edict stated that Spider-Man shouldn't lose those memories, but if so, as the writer it befell to Bendis to have found a LOGICAL REASON for Doc being unable to remove them.

Just off the top of my head...

Perhaps, because the spell that caused the "House of M" was created by the Scarlet Witch's unique "brand" of mutant pseudo-magic - which affects REALITY as we know it, that the memories created from living in that world were not something that he, using "real" magic could affect.

Or, he could have stated that since those who remember the event, do so because of his and Emma Frost's combined abilities, those abilities mixed with the instability of the collapsing reality, that any further tampering would be impossible.

See? I didn't even take time to think of anything. Just typed it as I thought it.
And my two half-assed suggestions made far more sense than Bendis' "Magics don't work that way".

However, this bit is merely brought up within this discussion in order to delineate the fact that Bendis wasn't playing by "the rules", he was going to make them up as he went along.

Lest it be seen that I find only fault with Bendis' handling of Dr. Strange (although, the bulk of his treatment of Doc has been poor), there had been some shining moments as well.

While the "pig-latin-esque" mystic mumbo-jumbo that he has Strange emit is less than inspiring, a few of the causal effects of those spells have been well received.

Whether causing ninjas to call for their mommies...

Dr. Strange's Ninja Day-Care Center is doomed to failure.
New Avengers # 27 (Brian Michael Bendis - words / Leinil Francis Yu - images)

... or bringing Avengers to soil themselves...

The "Images of Ikonn" will knock you on your ass!
New Avengers # 29 (Brian Michael Bendis - words / Leinil Francis Yu - images)

... Strange's nightmare-fuel was a breath of fresh air from the usual boring spells that he had been relegated to using as of late.

The latter example was even more impressive and appreciated an outing as it was shown that his abilities worked in a power-dampening field - thus acknowledging that what Strange possesses is the ability to harness forces beyond our ken - he does NOT have "powers", and that the mantle of Sorcerer Supreme is not a power-set in and of itself, but a title - earned.

Bendis truly gives Strange some respect with this event, when Iron Man and his government forces recruit Brother Voodoo to try and capture the hiding New Avengers...

Brother Voodoo do that voodoo that he do so well.
New Avengers # 29
Brian Bendis (words)/ Leinil Yu (pictures)

Brother Voodoo creeps everyone out - then tells the creeps to bug out.
New Avengers # 30
Brian Bendis (words)/ Leinil Yu (pictures)


Voodoo states, plainly that Dr. Strange is the Master of the Mystic Arts - and is called such for a reason.

Still, it became clear that in Bendis' hands, the Sorcerer Supreme would certainly be less than "supreme".

Whether it was Strange's inability to prevent Iron Fist's jet from falling from the sky...

Perhaps Doc forgot about the "Winds of Watoomb"
which could have had the plane float with winds at his command.

New Avengers # 32 (Brian Michael Bendis - words / Leinil Francis Yu - images)

...or his claim that the Cloak of Levitation would be unable to allow Strange to fly from the soon-to-be-crashing aircraft...

(red circle added by me to better show who was speaking)
New Avengers # 32 (Brian Michael Bendis - words / Leinil Francis Yu - images)

... Strange's abilities were being dismantled - not with a surgeon's blade, but a reaper's scythe.

Alright. Even taking into account that Doc has survived travel back down to Earth from outer space, I'm willing to give a pass that maybe (maybe) winds that strong would be problematic for the Cloak of Levitation to properly operate. Unlike members of the Avengers or X-Men, to whom it was an almost everyday occurance, Dr. Strange was hardly ever the victim of an aircraft that crashed or exploded mid-flight.
That said, the aforementioned "Winds of Watoomb" (or a conjured protective aura) would allow for Strange to travel safely in any adverse airspace conditions.
It would also have been easily within his ability to open a portal that would have allowed for he and his teammates to simply appear safely on the ground (problematically, leaving the plane to gravity's harsh reality).

Still, the fact that they were even ON a plane is, in itself, somewhat of a departure from Strange's usual power-set of "mystic taxi" wherein he would cast a spell that would allow for long-distance travel for entire teams of heroes. Suddenly, he wasn't able to cast a spell of teleportation anywhere further than the nearest airport where Iron Fist had his jet hangered.

That also can get a "pass", since there had been instances wherein, to conserve energy (or if he was just too tired already) Strange would book a flight on a mundane airplane to travel long distances. It also gets a pass because, quite frankly, it's an annoyingly, habitually overused trope that writers had tacked onto Strange whenever large numbers of characters needed to go from "point-A" to "point-B" (and beyond). It grew to a point where Strange would be useless (or ignored) as anything BUT a shuttle service (or magic-eraser). To that end, I (and I'm sure others) are glad to see Strange stop being used as such.

The tripwire to this situation is that, again, like the mind-wipe, it was never stated WHY Strange suddenly couldn't (or wouldn't) be able to perform these once-everyday tasks. Bendis merely has Stephen's dialogue state; "No. I can not do this." and that was it.


Even before all that, starting the trend of being incompetent with his magics, was Strange's failure to determine that the "body" of Captain America was a fake (something the Eye of Agamotto should have been able to do "blindfolded")...

Uh... Doc? That hub-cap you're wearing at your neck?
You might want to give THAT a try.

New Avengers # 28 (Brian Michael Bendis - words / Leinil Francis Yu - images)

Really, it was as far back as this that the writing began to form on the wall.
Whether it was an attempt to lay red-herrings about the possibility that Doc was a "damn, dirty Skrull" (otherwise coined as "skrulliness"), or just tiny seeds of ineptitude that would later grow into a giant "Titan Arum" plant... for die-hard Strange-fans... things were staring to "stink".

The warning signs were clear.

Eventually, Bendis stopped pussyfooting and hinting about it and made it obvious; Strange's tenure was soon to end.
This scene from New Avengers # 34 lays it all out quite clearly.

Dr. Strange : Foreshadower Supreme
New Avengers # 34 (Brian Michael Bendis - words / Leinil Francis Yu - images)

So, it simply became a case of waiting for the other shoe to drop.

At that same time, the true mystical nail in the supreme sorcerer's coffin came not from a Bendis-penned title (although, I have no doubt that he was in the brain-trust at the pitch-meetings), but from the "World War Hulk" event, written by then-Hulk-scribe; Greg Pak.

Here's where it gets complicated...

Due to having his hands crushed by the Hulk (although, it really made little sense how it happened, since Strange was in his astral form at the time even if it was within the "reality" of Hulk's mind - and I don't care that Doc stated that they were "inside [Hulk's] mind, his dreams, his rules"... yadda yadda... that doesn't enter into it, since a "physical" psychic attack on an astral form should have no lasting effect upon the physical form - unless possibly the attack was mystical in nature - or if just a psychic attack, then perhaps physically manifested mental damage may occur. But since Hulk isn't a mystic and it was all in his mind, the physical damage makes little sense beyond the need to incapacitate Strange... ,) Strange becomes desperate to find a way to combat the many fronts from Hulk and the green goliath's fellow "warbound" ally, and powerful mystic - the Shadow-Priest; HIROIM.
As such he consumes the essence of ZOM, an eons-old mystical menace whom he had only been able to defeat - and literally put back in the bottle - by the aid of the Living Tribunal -waaaay back in Strange Tales # 156 - 157 - (although he did have a brief altercation with a tiny aspect of Zom's essence - a "Zomling" - much later in Doctor Strange; Sorcerer Supreme #20 -but the less spoken about that rediculous story the better)...

For the benefit of conservation of space (yeah, I know... too late for that), I'll just go over this next point briefly, - mostly utilizing page-scans - but I recommend with the highest level that you read my previous entry that dealt with the ZOM incident in great detail, as a part of a different series of posts *
(I'll post the link at the end of this entry for your convenience - Trust me. Good stuff there).

Hands crushed, power waning, death imminent; Doc is forced to take drastic measures.

Desperate times call for desperate measures, when a Red-Bull just isn't enough.
World War Hulk # 3
Greg Pak(words)/ John Romita Jr. (pencils)/ Klaus Jans0n (inks)

Strange ingests a portion of the very essence of the ancient demonic entity; ZOM, and is transformed into a demonic godling of giant stature and berzerker, destructive fury!

Doctor ZOM : Master of Disastrous Arts!
World War Hulk # 4
Greg Pak(words)/ John Romita Jr. (pencils)/ Klaus Jans0n (inks)



After the Hulk War was over, and the heroes went back to their regular routine, so did the villains. When the Hood started making his play for power, Strange and the New Avengers were there to put him down.
It was then that Doctor Strange got up close and personal with the Hood's demonic benefactor and barred his path.
This was the last of Brian Michael Bendis' "cool moments" for Doctor Strange, few and far between as they were.

Dr. Strange, like Gandalf before him; "YOU SHALL NOT PASS!"
New Avengers # 37 (Brian Michael Bendis - words / Leinil Francis Yu - images)

It was this confrontation with the Hood that caused the retaliatory strike against the Sanctum, by the Hood and his forces. During the melee, Dr. Strange was effectively "killed" in a hail of gunfire. The residual ZOM-energies, and darker magicks, that Strange had still maintained to counter the damage to his hands (damage that he was hiding), kicked in and caused Strange to go berzerk - effectively decimating the Hood's forces.


Zomtor Strange - Tormentor Supreme!
New Avengers - Annual # 2
Brian Bendis (words)/ Carlo Pagulayan (pictures)

After this incident, Strange knew that he was done, and departed the company of his fellow heroes, so that he could take stock of his abilities and his position as a mystic master.

Taking Strange off the chessboard.
New Avengers - Annual # 2
Brian Bendis (words)/ Carlo Pagulayan (pictures)


The most tragic aspect of this departure is that it is hinted at, but never followed up on, that Strange will wander the Earth, searching for himself and a way to atone for his transgressions against the magicks and his role as Sorcerer Supreme.

As I had detailed in a previous post ** about New Avengers # 50, there was ONE LINE in that whole book shone out as a BEACON of hope for Bendis' plan for Doc.

When asked where Dr. Strange is, Bendis has Luke Cage (natch) say:

"Walking the Earth like Caine in Kung Fu".

F#@%-YEAH!

That's a story I'd like to see.
And a way of TREATING Doctor Strange that, while not completely original, is dire missed lo' these last 15 - 30 years. Doctor Strange as spiritualist and MYSTIC!

Contemplative and seeking.
Learning as well as learned.

However, that potential story seems to have been wasted (as many of Bendis' big-picture plot points tend to do - intriguingly suggested, but ultimately left on the "cutting-room floor").

While the recap page for New Avengers # 51 states that Strange hadn't been seen since his departure after the events of his Zom-fueled outburst in New Avengers Annual # 2, that's not entirely accurate.
Within a few months of that event he did make one appearance in Last Defenders # 3.


The Sorcerer and Satan's Son - Defenders and "friends".
Last Defenders # 3
Joe Casey (story) , Jim Muniz (pencils), Cam Smith (inks)

That (apart from a few cameo appearances in other titles - which present a bit of a time-line delemma), was the last time that Strange was seen acknowledging the events that led to his departure.

In the meanwhile, the HOOD, defeated by Strange and his allies, slinks back to his lair to determine just WHAT or WHO is the power behind his enchanted garment.
"Mirror, mirror - on the wall... whose is the power behind it all..."

DORMAMMU!
New Avengers # 46 (Bendis - writer / Billy Tan - art)

He may well wish he never asked.

That is where things have been left off...as New Avengers # 51 begins with Strange in mid-search for a replacement!


-------------

--- In the next installment of

The Search for, Nature and History of...the Sorcerer Supreme
series, we can look, in earnest into NEW AVENGERS # 51 ---
-------------


*
The ZOM incident, as well as the events surrounding it (Civil War, Registration Act, Skrulls, World War Hulk) are dealt with as one of a series of posts dealing with the many times the Sanctum Sanctorum had been destroyed. (HERE).


**
As mentioned above, I go into the wonderful case of Doctor Strange's spiritual journey and what was and could have been (HERE- check it out, it's another good one)

Sunday, November 30, 2008

HOUSING CRISIS :
SANCTUS INTERRUPTUS - Part ∞ -
A look in the mirror before heading out:
- The Alternate Universes of the Sanctum

* Part VII in this series: here *
* Part VI in this series: here*
* Part V in this series: here*
* Part IV in this series: here*
* Part III in this series: here*
* Part II in this series: here*
* Part I in this series: here*

-------------
*Updated 06-27-09*
(see the last entry)
-------------
*Updated 01-06-12*
(announcing a new entry to the series
see the end of the post)
-------------
*Updated 08-04-12*
Given NEW "numbering" of
to avoid confusion
(too late)
-------------
(So... if you've come to THIS post FROM "PART VI", you need to quickly go to a new addendum before you read this.)

Housing Crisis : Sanctus Interruptus - Part VII- The Rebuilding [HERE]

Then come back here and continue.
Sorry for any confusion.
---
/
/
/
/
-------------

Before we take our leave of this review of the many rises and falls of the Sanctum Sanctorum, let us stride through the Chamber of Extrospection; an impossibly long hallway (surely, longer than the outside of the house would lead you to believe possible) illuminated by intermittently-spaced lighting sconces which emit jets of flame.

Between each flaming light are portals, heavily draped with plush green velvet curtains, bordered with rich wood framework, and replete with ornate carvings (runes? wards? Apotropaic magic?).

Pull up a chair to one of the portals, part the curtains and gaze into the mirror within.

What do you see?

No. Not yourself.
Look at the mirror and not what it shows.
See beyond the surface... gaze deeply into the pool.

Now... what do you see...?


Alternate realms of reality.
Scenes of "what might be".
Incidental happenstance.

Causal drops in a large cosmic ocean, ripples arching outward into waves of effect which then fade again into the surface of the waters of time and space.

Some experiences as real as your own heartbeat.
Others; a fever dream of a slumbering supreme being.
All, however, as lasting as your image, when you walk away from the mirror.
(A mirror here in the Chamber of Extrospection might remember your face, long after you have departed it's presence - a persistence of memory likened to that of what occurs when one reads a comic book story of a possible alternate reality. The incident is temporary, but still someone, somewhere remembers it... However, a normal, mundane mirror most likely does not have that rare quality, and you are quickly forgotten.)

It is within this realm of grand possibility and minor reality that we take our final tour with today's entry in the history of the many rises and falls of the Sanctum Sanctorum.

So, make sure you have everything before we go.
Got your keys? Bag? Phone? Good. Let's take a final look in the mirror before we head out the back door.

-------------

This past week we have seen nearly every incident of major destruction of the Sanctum Sanctorum, ignoring or omitting most of the minor occurrences and most that were only "interior" damage - caused, most likely by battles being waged within it's very walls (let's face it; The Hulk and Sub-Mariner trashed the place practically every time they gathered there for DEFENDERS meetings).

However, there have been interior battles and invasions that have transpired. While we can't possibly look at even a fraction of them, I did pull out a few: one at random and one specifically.

-------------

The specific incident was a time when ZOM came very close to returning to Earth.
While he was an all-powerful, malefic entity in his original form, after re-trapped within his confining amphora, Zom was more an essence than a physical being. (It was this essence that Dr. Strange ingested during the World War Hulk incident - as seen at the end of my last post: *here*).

However, in this situation, in Doctor Strange : Sorcerer Supreme # 20, the amphora was accidentally broken, and the essence of Zom escaped.
Growing by ingesting and absorbing the mystical energies within the Sanctum, this "Zom-ling" ran rampant throughout the Sanctum, causing destruction and mayhem at every corner.

He was only defeated in the nick of time, by... a vacuum cleaner.

It seems, that he absorbed as much dust and such as he did magical energy, and so his body was comprised of quite a lot of dust and debris that was susceptible to the vacuum's pull.

Vacuum made by Watoom : the "Vacoomb"
Doctor Strange : Sorcerer Supreme # 20
Roy & Dann Thomas (story) / Butch Guice (art)


(Good thing he didn't attack MY "sanctum". With all the dust-bunnies in MY place, Zom would be the size of Detroit)

-------------

The other (randomly chosen) incident was in the pages of Crystar # 3.
Warring brothers and their factions (one brother made of living crystal, the other, out of living magma) cross the dimensional divide between their world and ours, via mystical means, to materialize within the Sanctum.
What happens next is obvious; men made out of magma burn everything they touch. A fight ensues, resulting in more damage. Doc waves his hands. Everything is fixed.

Actually, while the issue has several pages of panel-by-panel continuity showing these events, nothing inside is better than the issue's cover, by Michael Golden.

So, I'm just showing that.

The Saga of Crystar : Crystal Warrior # 3
Just LOOK at that awesome cover by Michael Golden.
No need to see anything else.

-------------

Also, worth mentioning, but impossible to explore in depth are the many times that the sigil-window was smashed, crashed into, breaching the mystical seals that keep invaders at bay.

I'll point out two such instances;


Infinity Gauntlet # 1 saw the Silver Surfer, who had been racing to warn the Earth of the threat of Thanos, smashed through the window and landed in a heap within the Sanctum, meditation chamber.

Stephen Strange asks why Norrin has yet to learn how to use a door!
Infinity Gauntlet # 1
Jim Starlin (story) / George Perez (art)

However, just so show that Strange can compensate for damage to the Sanctum, even after the sigil-window has been removed, the next issue, in Infinity Gantlet 2, saw the entirety of the Earth suffer an "earthquake", and only via Strange's quickly cast protection spell was the Sanctum the only structure that was spared.


"There goes the neighborhood... literally!"
Infinity Gauntlet # 1
Jim Starlin (story) / George Perez (art)

One other, more drastic incident was within Uncanny X-Men Annual # 7.
The Impossible Man ran rampant throughout Earth looking for items for some intergalactic "Scavenger Hunt".
One item on the list? Just the Sanctum's window. Not much.


It's like dropping a mystical Mentos in a cauldron of Cola! FWOOSH!
Uncanny X-Men Annual # 7
Chris Claremont (story) / Michael Golden (pencils) / Terry Austin (inks)

Mystic wards disrupted, magic explodes from the house. As impossible as it seems, Strange can be caught completely off-guard by attacks of such randomness.

-------------

There occurred, a more recent instance of such an attack.
A carefully planned and precisely executed surprise attack is exactly what disabled Doctor Strange, in Fantastic Four # 498, when Doctor Doom sought to remove him as a threat to his own mystical attack upon the Fantastic Four.

"I'm sorry, but my brain can't come to the phone right now..."
Fantastic Four # 498
Mark Waid (story) / Mike Wieringo (art)

Devilish imps maintain control over a mesmerized Sorcerer Supreme, all the while wreaking more havoc upon his already battle-ravaged Sanctum.

Later, further destruction was made manifest during the follow-up battle between Doom and the Four.

Afterwards, it is safely assumed that Strange simply cast a spell that repaired his ransacked home.

Still, that incident really "occurred", and as such counts as a destruction / restoration incident. However, it didn't happen within the pages of Doc's own title, which is why it was left off of the master list.

-------------

What selections we'll visit now are the stuff of "what if?" (but NOT from actual issues of the comic titled; "What If?" Seriously, that way leads to madness)...

The first instance DID occur within the pages of Doctor Strange's own comic - the truly EPIC Master of the Mystic Arts # 55!

A mirror to the classic film; "It's A Wonderful Life", Strange is shown what life would be like if he had never learned the ways of magic.

In the instance of the Sanctum Sanctorum, it's either the artist's studio where his comic is produced or simply a set in the dream-sequence of his warped and twisted imagination.


At least this "Clarence" can drive.
"TED TEVOSKI" & "LES TANE", heh heh


"Doc Keem" ahh.....

Zhu Zhu's petals!
Doctor Strange : Master of the Mystic Arts # 55
Roger Stern (story) / Michael Golden (pencils) / Terry Austin (inks)

Still, it was all a shadow-play by the fear-lord; D'Spayre. It happened... and didn''t happen all at the same time.
(Illusions are funny that way.)

While this issue's event might seemingly have been one for the "Part III - Shadows on the Wall" post, however, since the Sanctum wasn't destroyed, per se - just re-purposed and then dismantled as a theatre backdrop, it doesn't quite count, and falls within the purview of this post.

-------------

A similar piece of "what if-ery" were the events of Ms. Marvel v2 # 5.
TIme&space-displaced madman-turned-mystic; Warren Traveler played a game of cat-and-mouse with the titular heroine in and out of the time-stream.

Having been a prisoner within the Sanctum, Traveler gained possession of the Wand of Watoomb, which greatly increased his abilities. So much so, that he was able to successfully threaten Doctor Strange, and then... blow up the Sanctum!





Being transported to yet another reality, one where everyone on Earth is killed by a marauding swarm of flesh-eating alien insects, Ms. Marvel & Traveler continue their struggle.


Only by a time-jump by the two was Ms. Marvel able to aid Strange to rebuke the initial attack - retroactively - effecting either a temporal anomaly - or - a new alternate reality... thusly saving the Sanctum from further destruction.


I did say "further" destruction. Who knows how bad it would have become if she was not brought back to that slightly earlier point in time?



Strange has another wand in his pants.
Entire sequence from
: Ms Marvel v2 # 5
Brian Reed (story) / Roberto De La Torre (art)

(Also effected were "spacial relations" between the two heroes.)

There HAVE been other situations where a "possible future" has shown the Sanctum to be a smoldering ruin or abandoned derelict.

The Guardians of the Galaxy title from the 1990's had a disciple (Talon) learning from the Sorcerer Supreme (the batwing-headed, worm-like alien; Krugarr) within the gutted walls.

"Strange 2099" inherits a ramshackle and ivy-overgrown and flood-water-logged Sanctum Sanctorum as well.

But frankly, those are even too far out for ME to include here.
Maybe one or two other readers even remember those characters...

To that end, I'm sure I could add the "Days of Future Past" timeline as well.

You see, the possible "post-apocalyptic" futures in the Marvel "history" are legion.

-------------

The ultimate "dream" storyline saw the merging of the Marvel universe with that of DC. The Amalgam Universe - and comics line - saw several "amalgamations" of both universe's characters.

Doctor Strangefate being the most powerful entity to emerge from that joining, created his own dark and powerful version of the Sanctum Sanctorum.


Everything about this is awesome.
Doctor StrangeFate # 1
Ron Marz (story) / José Luis Garcia-Lopez (pencils) / Kevin Nowlan (inks)

Later, however, when that merged universe was threatening to return via the hidden movings of Strangefate's machinations, a battle came to a head within the walls of the Sanctum Sanctorum.

Batman had burst through the ornate window, and soon thereafter was joined by other combatants, from both realities; Marvel and DC alike: The X-MEN and JLA!





Doc throws a wicked kegger. The jocks get out of hand.
DC / Marvel : All-Access # 4
Ron Marz (writer) / Jackson "Butch" Guice (pencils) / Joe Rubinstein (inks)

The Sanctum suffered some structural damage from the altercation, until Strangefate emerged to take a more personal hand in the outcome.


Enter : StrangeFate! Exit : reality!
DC / Marvel : All-Access # 4
Ron Marz (writer) / Jackson "Butch" Guice (pencils) / Joe Rubinstein (inks)

Doing so, he immediately restructured the Sanctum into his own dark tower once more.

"Oh. No. You. Didn't."
DC / Marvel : All-Access # 4
Ron Marz (writer) / Jackson "Butch" Guice (pencils) / Joe Rubinstein (inks)

This, of course, did not go over well with Doctor Strange, who reversed the spell and preserved the Amalgam Universe as it's own separate, but equal reality.


And our universe is on a dust-mote on a giant's eyelash.
DC / Marvel : All-Access # 4
Ron Marz (writer) / Jackson "Butch" Guice (pencils) / Joe Rubinstein (inks)

However, just when you thought I couldn't get more random with this exercise (especially after that "Zom-ling" selection), I will prove that I can.

-------------

Not a dream, not an imaginary tale... oh wait. It's TOTALLY an imaginary tale...
Stan Lee Meets Doctor Strange. A "one-shot" issue wherein Stan "the Man" tells new (wacky) takes on his favorite classic characters (Spider-Man, the Thing, SIlver Surfer, Dr. Doom - and - Doctor Strange).

Stan pays a visit to his old friend Stephen Strange's Sanctum Sanctorum and it isn't quite the way he remembers it (although, I for one would love to get in there just for a few moments).


No. I'm sorry.
Between the awesome artwork and the theoretical possibility that such a store might exist...
I can't make any comments here.

Stan Lee Meets : Doctor Strange # 1
Stan Lee (writer) / Alan Davis (art)

While there, Stephen tells Stan a tale of his recent financial woes, and the times that the Sanctum Sanctorum is destroyed.

Alan Davis...




...NEEDS to draw...


...NEEDS to draw...

...Dr. Strange!

Sorry. Drooling over the art. Wong, please mop that up, while you're at it.
Stan Lee Meets : Doctor Strange # 1
Stan Lee (writer) / Alan Davis (art)

However, Strange and Wong do whatever they can to keep the Sanctum in top running order. Lest Stephen lose his security deposit

-------------

*UPDATED ENTRY*
06-27-09
-------------

This next and thus-far last (for now, but probably not "the" last) instance of Sanctum's destruction took place in the
Marvel "Ultimate Universe".
For those unfamiliar with the Ultimate M.U., it is/was/will be Marvel's offshoot universe which was to be the alternative comics' line for those who didn't want to get bogged down with the mainstream ("616" as it is known in geek culture) Marvel universe's 40+ years of continuity.
(This seems to have been mostly unsuccessful in it's initial goal since in a mere 9 years, they bogged themselves down plenty, or else they wouldn't be hitting the reboot-button already.)

Anyway, this situation takes place, specifically, at the seeming END of the Ultimate Universe (or at least the point where the "reboot" is to happen)... given the catchy name of "ULTIMATUM", which ran through all of the individual titles as well as a special mini-series.
In this cataclysmic "end of days" storyline, Magneto; the mutant master of magnetism, is out to destroy all mankind because his children; Quicksilver and the Scarlet Witch were killed (at the stinking paws of damned, dirty humans - a plan set in motion by Dr. Doom to be precise).

To this extent, he altered the magnetic fields of the planet and caused tidal waves that destroyed American cities, ice ages to befall parts of Europe and other disastrous after-effects.

In the midst of the carnage, in New York City, superheroes were all trying to save as many people as they could.
However, they couldn't save everyone or account for everything.

In fact, several super heroes were among the death toll (can't make a New Universe Omelet without breaking a few heads, right?).
In the midst of the receding waters that, at their height, had covered many tall buildings, the "flotsam and jetsam" of such a 'watershed' included such things as NYC TAXI CABS.

Ultimate Spider-Man # 131
Brian Bendis (words), Stuart Immonen (pencils), Wade Von Grawbadger (inks)


A cab lodged in the sigil window of the Sanctum Sanctorum is all that is needed to disrupt the major protective spells that kept the magic from escaping into the world around it.

"Who ya gonna call?"

However, this wasn't the end of the destruction.
Far from it.

For inside the Sanctum was a mystic orb that acted as dimensional barrier to the Dark Dimension. But nothing short of an "act of God" could disrupt the protective spells that protected it.
Or so the young Stephen Strange Jr. (son of the former Sorcerer Supreme) thought, as he once told Spider-Man in confidence.

This is what is known as "Tempting fate".

However, as these things tend to happen... never say never.

The usual Greenwich Village nightlife.

For after this first explosion, the body of Stephen Strange, possessed by the demonic entity NIGHTMARE, caused the Spider-Man and the Hulk to battle visions that dwelt within their psyches... visions taken form.
One such phantasm led the Hulk into the breached Sanctum and caused him to smash open the dimensional orb.

This isn't good.
It's like that episode of Bugs Bunny where the gremlin is testing warheads with a hammer.


The ensuing explosion totaled the neighborhood and resembled an atomic detonation.


"Boom"

It also let free DORMAMMU, Lord of the Dark Dimension, who in short order KILLED the young Doctor Strange.

But that is a subject of it's own entry [HERE].

-------------


This wraps up the intensive, exhaustive (and frankly, intensely exhausting) look through the varied examples, throughout published comic history, of the multiple rises and falls of the Sanctum Sanctorum.


I hope you found it to be entertaining and informative.
Please make sure the door is locked on your way out.

But feel free to stop by again - soon.

------------------------------------------

*UPDATE 01-06-2012*
Don't miss the NEWEST additions to this exciting and informative series:
Housing Crisis : Sanctus Interruptus - Part VII- The Rebuilding [HERE]


------------------------------------------
Then, feel free to join me in wrapping this series up - HERE - in:
Housing Crisis : Sanctus Interruptus -
* Addendum *
------------------------------------------