Hammer and Anvil (comics) explained

Hammer and Anvil
Publisher:Marvel Comics
Debut:Hulk #182 (December 1974)
Creators:Len Wein (writer)
Herb Trimpe (artist)
Base:Deterrence Research Corporation
Members:Hammer
Anvil
Subcat:Marvel Comics
Villain:y

Hammer and Anvil are supervillains appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.

Publication history

Hammer and Anvil first appeared in Hulk #182 (December 1974), and were created by Len Wein and Herb Trimpe.[1]

Fictional character biographies

Leroy "Hammer" Jackson was an African-American prisoner said to hate everyone and everything. As part of a chain gang, he was chained to a white racist named Johnny Anvil. The two begrudgingly work together to escape prison and later inadvertently save a metal-eating alien who replaces their chain with a device that grants superhuman powers. The two returned to prison seeking revenge, but wound up battling the Hulk instead.[2] [3]

Hammer and Anvil were hired as field operatives by the Deterrence Research Corporation. They encountered and battled Spider-Man and the Guardians of the Galaxy.[4] [5] [6] They also encountered the Freaks.[7] Hammer and Anvil kidnapped Amanda Sheridan for the DRC, and fought Spider-Woman.[8]

During one fight with the Hulk, Hammer is shot through the head by the Scourge of the Underworld. Due to his link to Hammer, Anvil dies soon afterward.[9] [10]

Powers and equipment

Hammer and Anvil are linked at the wrist by an energy chain that gives them the ability to absorb kinetic energy and convert it into strength. However, this also causes them to share pain.

Other versions

Alternate universe variants of Hammer and Anvil from Earth-1610 appear in Ultimate Fantastic Four #49. These versions are Russian and missing opposite arms, with bolts of energy linking them on their limbless sides like a diode.[11]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Rovin, Jeff . Jeff Rovin

    . . 1987 . Facts on File . 0-8160-1356-X . New York . 153 . Jeff Rovin. https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofsu0000rovi_h5r9/page/152/mode/2up

  2. Hulk #182
  3. Web site: Patton . Ben . May 13, 2020 . Hulk: 10 Most Pathetic Villains In His Rogue's Gallery, Ranked . September 27, 2024 . CBR . en.
  4. Marvel Team-Up #86
  5. Web site: Motwani . Nishid . January 16, 2021 . 10 Strongest Marvel Characters Spider-Man Couldn’t Beat Alone . September 27, 2024 . CBR . en.
  6. Web site: Karbank . Octavio . May 8, 2017 . Spider-Man's 15 Most Bizarre Team-Ups . September 27, 2024 . CBR . en.
  7. Marvel Tales #256
  8. Spider-Woman #34
  9. Marvel Fanfare #29
  10. Web site: Cronin . Brian . September 20, 2014 . Knowledge Waits: Every Supervillain Death by the Original Scourge of the Underworld! . September 27, 2024 . CBR . en.
  11. Ultimate Fantastic Four #49 (February 2008)