Jump to content

Mercury (Marvel Comics)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mercury
Mercury as depicted in New X-Men: Hellions #3 (July 2005).
Art by Clayton Henry.
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceNew Mutants vol. 2 #2
(August 2003)
Created byNunzio DeFilippis
Christina Weir
Keron Grant
In-story information
Alter egoCessily Kincaid
SpeciesHuman mutant
Team affiliationsJean Grey School Students
Hellions training squad
X-Men-In-Training
Xavier Institute
New X-Men
Notable aliasesMercury
Abilities
  • Mercury mimicry granting:
    • Superhuman strength and durability
    • Ability to cling to solid surfaces
    • Ability to alter her shape
    • Magical resistance

Mercury (Cessily Kincaid) is a character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by Nunzio DeFilippis, Christina Weir, and Keron Grant, the character first appeared in New Mutants vol. 2 #2 (August 2003). Mercury is a teenage member of the student body at the Xavier Institute and a recurring member of the X-Men.

Publication history

[edit]

Mercury debuted in New Mutants vol. 2 #2 (August 2003), and was created by Nunzio DeFilippis, Christina Weir, and Keron Grant.

Fictional character biography

[edit]

Introduction

[edit]

Cessily Kincaid, an Irish American, was raised in Portland, Oregon by her parents Mark and Jill, who, according to DeFilippis, used to dote over her.[1] When Cessily's powers manifested, her parents were disgusted and made her stay indoors to hide her mutation. In response, she was sent to the Xavier Institute, where she befriended Julian Keller and became Laurie Collins' roommate. After the school was rebuilt, she was selected by Emma Frost to be on her Hellions squad.[volume & issue needed]

She's extremely close to Santo Varroco and Julian Keller whom she spends most of her time with and looks upon like big brothers. During that time, she developed a crush on her teammate Wither, but her feelings were not reciprocated.[volume & issue needed]

Hellions Miniseries

[edit]

The Hellions squad won the squad challenge, and during their summer vacation, they travelled with Julian to his home. There they encountered the Kingmaker, from whom they each received a trial wish. Cessily's wish was to have her parents accept and love her, a wish the Kingmaker granted by manipulating her parents with telepathy. When the Hellions eventually refused a permanent deal with the Kingmaker, Cessily's parents reverted to normal and Cessily returned to the institute, defeated.[volume & issue needed]

Decimation

[edit]

Mercury is one of the 198 mutants who retain their powers following M-Day, when the Scarlet Witch depowered most mutants on Earth. Subsequently, Emma Frost selects her to join the X-Men.[volume & issue needed]

Childhood's End and Nimrod

[edit]

In the Childhood's End arc, Cessily and the New X-Men defeated Stryker, Josh killing him. Shortly afterwards the team went to help Forge who had been sought out by Nimrod for repair. During the skirmish X-23 was forced to sever a piece of Mercury's hand to separate her from Nimrod. She later commented she'd "always wanted to lose a few pounds." The team successfully defeated the robot due to combining the powers of Surge, Mercury, and X-23, and Nimrod was sent back in time.[volume & issue needed]

Mercury Falling

[edit]

After learning of Emma Frost's plan to have X-23 leave the school, Cessily takes Laura to Salem Center for coffee to cool Laura down. Just as Cessily realizes that Laura has feelings for Hellion, the coffee shop explodes. Facility agents led by Laura's former handler, Kimura come for one of them. Laura, believing it is her, begs Cessily to leave, but not before Kimura shoots Cessily with an electric bullet, incapacitating her. After capturing Cessily, Kimura leaves before Laura can recuperate from a grenade blast. At the lab, Cessily questions who they are and what they want but is given no answers. When she replies that her friends will come for her, Kimura informs that "The Elephant" (Mammomax) said the same thing while showing a picture of his corpse in a cell. Before dying, Stryker had requested a living weapon be made, a huge beast called Predator X. Mercury's metal skin was needed to give it added powers and durability. The Facility scientists strip some of Mercury's biometal, granting Predator X her powers. The experiments leave her physically and mentally traumatized, forcing her to recuperate for some time at the institute. She eventually regains some of her lost mass.[volume & issue needed]

Quest for Magik

[edit]

Mercury is recovering in bed after what happened to her in the last arc when the students are teleported to Limbo. She is held captive by Belasco but breaks free after he 'kills' X-23. She and Dust go up against Belasco and keep getting beaten down but refuse to give up, as both their mutant bodies are resistant to his magic and fight an inconclusive battle until Darkchylde and the other students arrive, teleported by Pixie. Mercury continues to fight alongside the other students, but can only watch as Belasco fends them off and proceeds to pull Earth into Limbo until he is defeated by Darkchylde and Pixie.[volume & issue needed]

World War Hulk

[edit]

Mercury is one of the students that intercepts the Hulk. Mercury helps in keeping Hulk pinned down in the first attack but is knocked away. When X-23 blinds him she joins in taking him down alongside Surge, Beast and X-23 but they are all knocked away when Hulk's eyes grow back. Mercury gets back up and attacks him from behind but Hulk grabs her and squishes her against the ground. Later while the rest of the X-Men are still defeated from the Hulk's attack, Mercury tries one more time to defeat the rampaging green goliath. During the course of the battle, the Hulk was shown the recent graveyards of all of the deceased mutants that died after M-Day. Mercury then describes in detail the deaths of Laurie Collins and Brian Cruz, causing the Hulk to understand his self-righteous tantrum is wrongly directed towards Xavier's affiliation with the Illuminati. Seeing these graveyards reminds the Hulk of his fallen companions on Sakaar, and with that understanding, he leaves Xavier unharmed.[volume & issue needed]

Children of X-Men

[edit]

Cessily still maintains her disapproval and distrust of Emma Frost after overhearing her conversation with X-23 during the "Mercury Falling" arc. She also feels that Emma has carelessly "lost" track of Wither and constantly reminds her of the fact that Kevin is no longer in the school or under her surveillance.[volume & issue needed]

Mercury has also been deeply affected by the events of Decimation, as depicted in the "Endangered Species" miniseries. She is distraught by the death of a teenage civilian mutant and is one of the students at the institute trying to determine the youngest mutant, as she believes that the youngest mutant always tends to be killed.[volume & issue needed] Mercury later comforts X-23 after she ran off and wrecked the woman's restroom in rage due to Surge kissing Hellion, and is later seen hanging out with her and Dust.[volume & issue needed]

Messiah Complex

[edit]

Mercury is one of the New X-Men led by Surge that launch a strike against the Purifiers to incapacitate them and rescue the mutant baby. After Hellion is critically wounded by Lady Deathstrike, Pixie panics and blindly teleports the entire team out of the Purifiers' base, spreading them out between Washington and New York. It does not appear that Cessily suffered any lasting injuries as a result. Iceman arrives with the X-Jet to bring them back to the mansion. She helps to stabilize Hellion in the X-Jet on the way back to the mansion. Later, she goes with Dust and Rockslide to visit the graveyard, and they discover that Predator X has entered the mansion grounds. Mercury battles the monster with the rest of the students and is transported by Pixie, along with the other New X-Men, to the battle between the X-Teams and Sinister's forces on Muir Isle.[volume & issue needed]

Secret Invasion

[edit]

Cessily is among the several X-Men helping to fight off Skrulls during their invasion of San Francisco.[2]

Manifest Destiny

[edit]

Mercury and X-23 are walking down Fisherman's Wharf when X-23 realizes Mercury is upset. Mercury misses her parents and feels like a freak because they were disgusted when her powers manifested. While playing with Silly Putty, she comments:

I'm like this stuff... A blob of malleable goop. Doesn't matter, metal or clay... We're one and the same. You fool yourself and think it's like magic. You can change shape at will. There's freedom in making yourself into anything you can imagine. Until you realize that no matter what... You're still a metal freak. You don't have skin, you don't have... You're not... A person. You're not... Human.

— Cessily Kincaid, X-Men: Manifest Destiny #4

They are then attacked by three members of the Hellfire Cult and Mercury takes them all out. X-23 points out she is more than just lifeless metal, she is a person and a hero and to put her past behind her and look at who she is now. She just might like what she sees.[volume & issue needed]

X-Infernus

[edit]

Mercury and Rockslide are watching a training session between Pixie and Nightcrawler when Pixie stabs Kurt with her soul dagger. They run in and move Pixie away from Kurt's unconscious body, Beast enters and Pixie regains her senses. When she removes her dagger, Magik's soulsword emerges from his chest and Magik teleports in ready to reclaim her sword.[3]

Mercury engages Magik in combat and manages to stab her in the shoulder; Illyana responds by blowing her up, noting that she has some immunity to magic, but is not invulnerable. After she reforms, she is placed on a team of X-Men being sent to Limbo along with Rockslide due to their resistance to magic.[4]

Upon entering Limbo, the team fights their way through many demons. Pixie senses the darkness within her suddenly growing and she teleports off to Belasco's castle by herself.[volume & issue needed]

Hearing the screams from the castle, Kurt teleports the X-Men into the throne room. Once there, Witchfire turns Colossus and Wolverine against Mercury and Rockslide who get taken out, leaving Kurt the last X-Man standing.[5]

Utopia

[edit]

Mercury, along with fellow students Onyxx and Loa, was tasked with keeping peace at the riots on Telegraph Hill after the mutant-hate group "Humanity Now!" marched from Sacramento to San Francisco to promote "Proposition X", displeasing many citizens of San Francisco, mutant and non-mutant alike. After the riots subsided on Telegraph Hill, Cyclops came and picked them up, taking them to City Hall.[6] During the final battle against Norman Osborn's forces, along with Iceman and many of the other x-students, she takes on Mimic.[7]

After Osborn's defeat by the X-Men and the official creation of Utopia, Mercury is involved in a media tug of war between Norman Osborn, her biological father and their claims that she is being held captive against her will. Although she confronts her father over the phone, during a live television broadcast, and disputes his claims going as far as to call him a bad father her situation gets more complicated as Deadpool intervenes.[volume & issue needed]

Believing that he is doing them a favor he attempts to kill Mr. Kincaid on live television only to be stopped by Domino. However Deadpool is still attempting to follow through and kill Mercury's father. In the meantime, the X-Men plan on having Mercury declared an emancipated minor to counter Osborn. Kincaid is later saved from sniper fire in front the media by Wolverine, thus restoring the X-Men's damaged reputations. He confesses in an interview to the aforementioned witnesses that Osborn put him up to everything.[8]

The following storyline created some continuity errors as it was implied that Mr. Kincaid had been an absentee father for most of Mercury's life, and it also implied that he was divorced/separated from Mercury's mother. This is in direct conflict from the Hellion's mini-series which showed both Mercury's parents living together happily. Furthermore, in a New X-Men flashback during the Mercury Rising storyline it showed a concerned father discovering Cessily during the onset of her mutation.[volume & issue needed]

Regenesis

[edit]

Cessily left with Wolverine and returned to the school.[9] In the first issue of Wolverine and the X-Men: Alpha & Omega, she is seen at school.[volume & issue needed]

Powers and abilities

[edit]
Mercury in her liquid form.
Mercury solidifying her arm into a weapon.

Mercury's body is composed of metal resembling her namesake.[10] She can reshape or solidify it at will.[11] Her molecular adhesion power grants her the ability to cling to solid surfaces and move her body at will. She has demonstrated superhuman strength by supporting huge slabs of concrete. She also possesses superhuman durability owing to her mercury form. Mercury does not require food or drink due to her composition. She is one of the few people who can touch Wither as her body is not organic. Her inorganic body also made her immune to the pheromone based powers of Wallflower and was placed as her roommate. She can also control pieces of her liquid mercury and has the potential to bring it back to her. It usually forcefully separated from her body, her liquid mercury turns into dead flesh, as demonstrated during the Facility's experiments. Additionally, she has some resistance to magic due to her transient form.[4][12]

Reception

[edit]

Critical response

[edit]

Deirdre Kaye of Scary Mommy called Mercury a "role model" and a "truly heroic" female character.[13][disputeddiscuss] Aparna Ukil of Sportskeeda ranked Mercury 5th in their "5 Coolest Comic Book Characters With Elastic Abilities" list.[14] Alyssa Gawaran of MovieWeb ranked Mercury 7th in their "8 LGBTQ+ Marvel Comics Characters That Need to Be in the MCU" list.[15]

Other versions

[edit]

An alternate universe variant of Mercury from Earth-58613 appears in House of M.[16]

In other media

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Comixfan Forums - Question And Answers Thread!". www.comixfan.com. Archived from the original on 2007-09-27.
  2. ^ Secret Invasion: X-Men #1
  3. ^ X-Infernus #1
  4. ^ a b X-Infernus #2
  5. ^ X-Infernus #3
  6. ^ Dark Avengers / Uncanny X-Men: Utopia #1
  7. ^ Dark Avengers/Uncanny X-Men: Exodus #1
  8. ^ Deadpool vol. 4 #16-18 (2010)
  9. ^ X-Men: Regenesis #1
  10. ^ Watanabe, Tommy Bobby (July 17, 2014). "10 X-Men Who Looks Like Monsters". WhatCulture. Retrieved June 5, 2023.
  11. ^ Stay, Grant (April 20, 2020). "X-Men: The 10 Most Powerful Members Of The Hellions, Ranked". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved June 5, 2023.
  12. ^ New X-Men vol. 2 #39
  13. ^ Kaye, Deirdre (November 16, 2020). "Looking For A Role Model? These 195+ Marvel Female Characters Are Truly Heroic". Scary Mommy. Retrieved October 16, 2022.
  14. ^ Ukil, Aparna (March 23, 2022). "5 Coolest Comic Book Characters With Elastic Abilities". Sportskeeda. Retrieved June 5, 2023.
  15. ^ Gawaran, Alyssa (June 20, 2022). "8 LGBTQ+ Marvel Comics Characters That Need to Be in the MCU". MovieWeb. Retrieved June 5, 2023.
  16. ^ New X-Men: Academy X #16–19
  17. ^ "Simon Kinberg: X-Men: Apocalypse Completes the First Class Trilogy". September 26, 2014. Archived from the original on September 29, 2014. Retrieved September 27, 2014.
[edit]