Savage Land Explained

Savage Land
Blank Label:Publisher
Blank Data:Marvel Comics
First:The X-Men #10 (March 1965)
Creator:Stan Lee
Jack Kirby
Type:Prehistoric Earth
People:Ka-Zar
Shanna the She-Devil
Zabu
Sauron
Garokk
Zaladane
Savage Land Mutates
Devil Dinosaur
Moon-Boy
Chtylok
Dinah Soar
Races:Aerians
Ape-Men
Awakilius
Bhadwuans
Cat People
Cliff Forest People
Disians
Durammi
Ethereals
Fall People
Golden People
Gondorans
Gorankians
Gwundas
Hauk'ka
Hill-Forest People
Jeriens
Kantos
Karems
Klantorr
Lemurans
Lizard Men
Locot
Man-Apes
Neo-Men
N'Galans
Nhu’Ghari
Nowek
Palandorians
Pterons
Reptile Men
Rock Tribe
Saurians
Snowmen
Sun-People
Swamp Men
Sylandans
Tandar-Kaans
Tokchis
Tordon-Naans
Tree People
Tribe of Fire
Tubanti
Uruburians
Waidians
Water People
Zebra People
Locations:Antarctica

The Savage Land is a fictional prehistoric land that features in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. It is a tropical preserve, hidden in Antarctica.[1] It has appeared in many story arcs in Uncanny X-Men as well as other related books.

Savage Land makes a brief appearance in the 2022 Marvel Cinematic Universe live-action film, Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness.

Publication history

The Savage Land first appeared as 'The Land Where Time Stands Still' in Marvel Mystery Comics #22 (Aug. 1941), in the tale "Khor, the Black Sorcerer" by Joe Simon, Jack Kirby, and Syd Shores.[2] It gained its familiar form and moniker in X-Men #10 (March 1965), courtesy of Stan Lee and Jack Kirby.

Fictional history

In the X-Men series of comics, the Savage Land was created by the alien Nuwali at the behest of the other-dimensional, nigh-omnipotent aliens known as the Beyonders who sought to observe the process of evolution under relatively controlled conditions. In order to accomplish this, they had the Nuwali set up a number of game preserves on several planets. One of these planets was Earth during the Triassic period where the Nuwali chose a valley in Antarctica surrounded by active volcanoes. They proceeded to install a number of advanced technological devices in order to maintain a tropical climate. The aliens then stocked the area with all manner of Earth life over the following several millennia such as dinosaurs and prehistoric mammals. They also brought over the Man-Apes, earlier hominid ancestors of Homo sapiens.

The Beyonders eventually grew bored with the experiment, and the Nuwali stopped maintaining the Savage Land during the Late Pleistocene era (the Ice Age era). However, the self-maintaining technology that allowed the pocket of tropical climate was left running, and many species which became extinct in other areas of the Earth continued to thrive within the Savage Land.

Later on, a group of human survivors from Atlantis sailed to Antarctica before the "Great Cataclysm" which sank Atlantis into the ocean. There, they discovered a cavern where they found an immense climate-controlling device and harnessed the technology used to keep the Savage Land's volcanoes working. They named their location "Pangea", which is Atlantean for "paradise".

They mastered genetic engineering, which had been used on the Man-Apes when the Nuwali were still maintaining the Savage Land area. They used their genetic engineering techniques to transform other Savage Land inhabitants like the Golden People, the Lizard Men, the Reptile Men, the Tubantis, and others. The Atlanteans then forced them to work for them until these animal people revolted. After a time of war, the animal people demanded civil rights and the Atlanteans used technology to expand the Savage Land's surface area for the animal people to live in. When the Great Cataclysm struck, the Atlantean empire fell and thanks to the machines, the Savage Land locations were spared from sinking into the sea.

In more recent years, the Savage Land was rediscovered by Lord Robert Plunder, who took back a sample of the metal known as "anti-metal" or "Antarctic vibranium" with him. This mysterious metal had the ability to produce vibrations which would liquefy all other metals. Fleeing from those who sought to steal this discovery, Plunder took his eldest son Kevin with him for a second trip into the Savage Land. The elder Plunder was killed by a local tribe of Man-Apes.

Kevin survived, thanks to the timely intervention of the orphaned sabretooth tiger later known as Zabu. He grew to adulthood in the Savage Land, becoming the adventurer known as Ka-Zar. Ka-Zar had many team-ups with the X-Men, who first revealed the Savage Land's existence, Spider-Man, and many other superheroes who had visited the Savage Land. He later met and married Shanna the She-Devil.

The Savage Land's existence is common knowledge throughout the world. At one time, there were press junkets, sponsored by the oil company Roxxon. Daily Bugle photographer Peter Parker was sent and helped uncover Roxxon's unethical and dangerous manipulation of the local resources.

At one point, Spider-Man teamed up with Ka-Zar to save Gwen Stacy from Kraven the Hunter and Gog at the time when her class and J. Jonah Jameson were visiting the Savage Land.[3]

Many villains have threatened the Savage Land, including Sauron, Garokk, Magneto, and Thanos.

The Savage Land was decimated by an evil alien named Terminus (or one of his pawns) when he destroyed the machines that maintained the tropical climate. Many of the Savage Land's native people were saved from the ensuing destruction by M'rin: The Warlord of The Skies who took them into her own native dimension to safety. Ka-Zar, Shanna, and Zabu wandered until the High Evolutionary (with help from the X-Men, M'rin, and Garokk) restored the region and its creatures, allowing them to return to the Savage Land with their newborn son. The other natives who had taken refuge in M'rin's dimension returned as well.[4]

Sometime after that, Spider-Man had Devil Dinosaur and Moon-Boy emigrated to the Savage Land after rescuing them from Ringmaster.[5]

Evidence in the pages of the New Avengers suggests that S.H.I.E.L.D. is operating in the Savage Land, mining vibranium while using the indigenous population as slave labor, but these operations have been classified, and the operation was apparently decimated by a missile strike from the Helicarrier during an attack by the New Avengers. The team only survived thanks to Iron Man's force field.

The Savage Land is featured in the limited series Claws, serving as a place of revenge for Wolverine and Black Cat on Arcade and White Rabbit. After defeating the two villains, the heroes left them stranded.

In , Cyclops and Emma Frost were vacationing there until Archangel contacted them about San Francisco looking like the 1960s.[6]

Alyosha Kravinoff fled to the Savage Land after Punisher sabotaged his zoo.[7]

During the "Secret Invasion" storyline, Ka-Zar and Shanna discover Skrulls mining for vibranium. The New Avengers and the Mighty Avengers head toward the Savage Land where a downed Skrull ship was sighted. Luke Cage opens the downed Skrull ship and a large group of Marvel superheroes with older appearances and costumes come out, speaking as if they believe themselves to be authentic.[8] They soon break out into a fight where the Spider-Man from the ship is killed by a Tyrannosaurus and regresses to a Skrull. The Hawkeye from the ship is killed by Ronin and regresses to a Skrull. This causes the superheroes from the ship to scatter into the jungle.[9] The New Avengers' Spider-Man is knocked away by a Tyrannosaurus and ends up confronting Ka-Zar, Shanna, Zabu, and Sauron as well as some of the other locals (ranging from the Man-Apes, the Sun People, the Swamp Men, the Tree People, and the Zebra People). At the point where Spider-Man accuses Ka-Zar and Shanna for being Skrulls, the Captain America from the ship attacks who thinks the same thing for Spider-Man.[10] When the Captain America is hit by a dart coated in some type of poison by one of the Swamp Men, it regresses to a Skrull named Pit'o Nilli and is then killed by Shanna.[11] The ship's Beast is trapped underground with Wonder Man. The two try to escape together, but Beast betrays Wonder Man as the two are about to return to the surface. During this, Iron Man uses an abandoned scientific facility nearby to try and recreate his original armor.[12] When it came to the confrontation with both Avengers teams, the Savage Land natives, and the heroes from the ship, Mister Fantastic and Abigail Brand used a laser to identify the heroes from the ship as Skrulls. Ka-Zar joined the Avengers teams into fighting the Skrulls in New York while Shanna and the other Savage Land natives hunted down the remaining Skrulls hiding out in the Savage Land.[13]

After the events of Second Coming during the Heroic Age storyline, Cyclops takes some time off to go hunting in the Savage Land during which he encounters Steve Rogers. Steve Rogers suggests to Cyclops that he brings the X-Men out of the shadows and into the light as heroes. Steve Rogers also arranges to have the president award Scott the Presidential Medal of Freedom which sways the people of San Francisco to welcome the X-Men back.

Around the same time following their defeat after the hunt for "spiders" in the Grim Hunt storyline, the Kravinoff Family are also currently residing in the Savage Land.[14]

It is later revealed that Miek and the other Imperials and Natives from Sakaar that came back with Hulk in "World War Hulk" had settled in the Savage Land. There they constructed a village called New Imperia.[15]

During the "Avengers vs. X-Men" storyline, Captain America ends up fighting Gambit in the Savage Land.[16]

As part of the "Marvel NOW!" event, some of The Garden's evolution seeds had fallen into the Savage Land. While working to get it under control, the Avengers find that A.I.M. is also there where they test the extracted formula from one of the pods and tests it on their intern Dr. Jema. The formula puts a strain on Dr. Jema just as the Avengers arrive.[17]

As part of the "All-New, All-Different Marvel", Magneto led a new team of X-Men to protect mutant-kind at all costs with their base in the Savage Land.[18]

During the "Empyre" storyline, the Cotati have invaded the Savage Land.[19]

Conservation status

The United Nations considers the Savage Land an international wildlife preserve and forbids any commercial exploitation of its resources.[20] Areas of the Savage Land are tame enough that the X-Men visit for recreation, including having a vacation home there.

Points of interest

There are some famous locations in the Savage Land:

Wildlife

The fauna of the Savage Land consists of prehistoric creatures which are extinct in rest of the world. The Nuwali created the Savage Land and stocked it with many kinds of extinct animals from the Triassic to the Pleistocene until they stopped maintaining the Savage Lands.

Savage Land races

There are many types of races in the Savage Land and Pangea. The Nuwali transported primitive man now known as the Man-Apes, which unlike the rest of the world thrived until the 21st century. The next arrivals were the Ancient Atlanteans who added the region as part of their empire. They used the Nuwali technology to mutate the Man-Apes into various Beast-Men to perform certain tasks. These slaves rebelled after the great Cataclysm and made Pangea their home. Many Atlanteans remained and their descendants became the various human tribes, with some clinging to the old ways and technology but most forget and resort to more primitive hunter-gatherer societies.

Since then, the different races of the Savage Land have been sorted between the human tribes, the early hominids, the Beast-Men, and the miscellaneous.

Human tribes

The following are the human tribes of the Savage Land:

Primitive hominids

The following are the primitive hominids of the Savage Land:

Beast-Men

The following are the Beast-Men of the Savage Land:

Others

The following don't fit in the categories above:

Other versions

Squirrel Girl volume 8

In the Squirrel Girl reality, the Savage Land was created by an unknown race of aliens that created dinosaurs as an experiment on earth biology. Eventually, the experiment was eventually abandoned, and all dinosaurs, except the ones in the Savage Land were left to die. In modern times it belongs to scientists, who protect it as a Nature Reserve. The Savage Land harbors no other intelligent creatures, except Ultron, who has rebuilt himself in the form of a dinosaur and resides in the Savage Land.

Age of Apocalypse

In the Age of Apocalypse reality, the Savage Land houses Avalon, a secret haven for humans and mutants. A method to reach it exists, but it will only cost the refugee everything they own and even then, there is no guarantee of arriving alive. It is led by Destiny, a pacifist Juggernaut and Douglas Ramsey, the latter of whom provides a field that allows everybody to understand each other despite speaking different languages. Avalon was eventually found by Apocalypse forces and destroyed by the Shadow King who mind-controlled its inhabitants into killing each other. He was defeated, but casualties were high.

Age of Ultron

During the "Age of Ultron" storyline, the superhero resistance against Ultron had relocated to the Savage Land to come up with a plan to defeat Ultron.[54]

Marvel Zombies Return

In Marvel Zombies Return, the Savage Land, like everywhere else on Earth, has been eaten by the superhuman zombies, with the surviving zombies musing that the Savage Land was their 'number one' meal in the aftermath, as it contained such an abundance of food that they were actually full for a full hour after eating there, as opposed to the usual ravenous hunger they feel. It is also the location of the final battle between the zombies and 'New Avengers' - three zombies who have beaten their hunger and the cyborg James Rhodes - at the storyline's conclusion, with Rhodes using one of his fingers to lure the zombies into an ambush.

Earth X

In the Earth X universe, the Savage Land is where Magneto built his sanctuary called Sentinel City.

House of M

In the House of M reality created by an insane Scarlet Witch, the Savage Land was known as "Pangea". It is also known that Kevin Plunder has been granted political asylum in the United States for his human rights activism in this prehistoric land.

Marvel 2099

In the alternate future depicted in Marvel 2099, an alien attack floods much of the earth rendering the Savage Land the only habitable space. Thousands of refugees (including Miguel O'Hara and most of X-Nation and X-Men) make new homes here. It is not without its own dangers.

The Transformers

In the Transformers Marvel comics continuity, shortly after the Ark spacecraft crashed on Earth 4 million years before the present day, the computer aboard the Ark detected Shockwave landing on the prehistoric Savage Land. The Ark used the last of its capabilities to revive five Autobot warriors and rebuild them into the Dinobots, based on scans of the Savage Land's dominant lifeform: dinosaurs. The Dinobots fought Shockwave, a battle that ended in stalemate when Snarl brought down the mountain that Shockwave stood upon, knocking all of them into a tar pit. They remained deactivated until the year 1984. Since the Dinobots' alt-mode forms resemble creatures that were long-extinct by 4 million years ago, the Savage Land provided author Bob Budiansky a way to explain this within the canon timeline.

Spider-Geddon

During the "Spider-Geddon" storyline, an alternate unidentified Earth has a version of Spider-Man that lives in the Savage Land and was raised by a tribe of giant spiders following an airplane crash. It was mentioned by Ka-Zar the Hunter to Wilson Fisk that his father killed the last of the Man-Apes.[55]

Ultimate Marvel

In the Ultimate Marvel universe, the Savage Land is a large island somewhere in the southern hemisphere. It was originally stated in Ultimate Origins to have been created by Magneto, using theories and methods developed by Professor X, as the site for genetic experiments. Magneto's goal there was to create a new human race who would be less trouble to rule than the current one. He decided to restart evolution from scratch, and control the process to his own specifications. As a result of this, at its current level of advancement it has dinosaurs, but Magneto has shown no further interest in advancing the evolution of the Savage Land.[56] It has remained in its dinosaur state since the departure of Professor X. This story is later revealed as false.

Magneto's original base was on the Savage Land, but when it was destroyed in the first arc of Ultimate X-Men,[57] the computer controlling the base gained self-awareness, and hijacked the genetic experiment project to create an army of nanotech-enhanced, zombie-like thralls. It planned to take over the world, but was stopped by Wolverine, Cyclops, and Kitty Pryde.

The Savage Land is now the home of Longshot, who managed to get there in a small boat which launched from Genosha. Longshot recently aided Magneto in breaking out of prison, and the two were alluded to be planning something, but Magneto later killed Longshot.[58]

In Ultimates 3, it is revealed that the dinosaurs were conjured by Scarlet Witch as a result of her reality warping abilities and not by Magneto's creation. The aboriginal inhabitants were wiped out and only a small tribe of survivors including Ka-Zar and Shanna remain.[59]

The inhabitants help the Ultimates remove the last of Magneto's forces as of Ultimatum.

What If?

The Savage Land appears in a What If story where the Savage Land was terraforming and has taken over New York. Both Ka-Zar and Parnival sacrifice themselves to return New York to normal, with Shanna the only survivor of his "family".[60]

Additionally, in the What If issues involving alternative outcomes to the Age of Ultron, a group composed of Wolverine, the Hulk, Peter Parker and a Ghost Rider venture to the Savage Land in order to prevent a Master Mold under the control of a future version of Ezekiel Stane from unleashing a wave of Stark armors on the world.[61]

New Ultimate Universe (Earth-6160)

The Savage Land was destroyed when corporations like Roxxon harvested its natural resources which has turned it into a polluted wasteland filled with corpses of prehistoric animals.

In other media

Television

Film

The Savage Land appears in the Marvel Cinematic Universe live-action film, Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness (2022). This version is an alternate universe that Stephen Strange and America Chavez pass through while falling through several universes within the multiverse. A Tyrannosaurus rex is seen fighting a Triceratops in a jungle forest.[62] [63]

Video games

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Perine . Aaron . April 2, 2020 . Scientists Suggest Marvel's Savage Land Was Actually Kind of Real . 2024-02-01 . . en.
  2. Book: Kirby, Jack. The Collected Jack Kirby Collector. 2004. TwoMorrows Publishing. 9781893905023. Morrow. John. Raleigh, N.C. 35. en. 38577305.
  3. The Amazing Spider-Man #103-104. Marvel Comics.
  4. The Avengers #257. Marvel Comics.
  5. The Amazing Spider-Man Annual 1998. Marvel Comics.
  6. The Uncanny X-Men #495. Marvel Comics.
  7. Punisher War Journal vol. 2 #13-15. Marvel Comics.
  8. Secret Invasion #1. Marvel Comics.
  9. Secret Invasion #2. Marvel Comics.
  10. The New Avengers #41. Marvel Comics.
  11. The New Avengers #43. Marvel Comics.
  12. Secret Invasion #3. Marvel Comics.
  13. Secret Invasion #4. Marvel Comics.
  14. The Amazing Spider-Man #637. Marvel Comics.
  15. The Incredible Hulk vol. 2 #622. Marvel Comics.
  16. AVX Vs. #2. Marvel Comics.
  17. The Avengers vol. 5 #4. Marvel Comics.
  18. The Uncanny X-Men vol. 4 #1-19. Marvel Comics.
  19. Empyre: Avengers #1-2. Marvel Comics.
  20. Book: Sanderson, Peter . The Marvel Comics Guide to New York City . . 2007 . New York City . 64–73 . 978-1-4165-3141-8.
  21. Ka-Zar vol. 2 #8. Marvel Comics.
  22. Ka-Zar vol. 3 #16. Marvel Comics.
  23. Ka-Zar Vol. 4 #1
  24. Ka-Zar #1. Marvel Comics.
  25. Savage Tales #10. Marvel Comics.
  26. Savage Tales #8. Marvel Comics.
  27. The Incredible Hulk vol. 2 #454. Marvel Comics.
  28. Savage Tales #7. Marvel Comics.
  29. Ka-Zar vol. 2 #6. Marvel Comics.
  30. Ka-Zar vol. 2 #10. Marvel Comics.
  31. Wolverine: Jungle Adventures #1. Marvel Comics.
  32. X-Men #62. Marvel Comics.
  33. Ka-Zar vol. 2 #12. Marvel Comics.
  34. Amazing Adventures #3. Marvel Comics.
  35. Ka-Zar vol. 3 #32. Marvel Comics.
  36. X-Men #10. Marvel Comics.
  37. Ka-Zar vol. 3 #2. Marvel Comics.
  38. Ka-Zar vol. 3 #1. Marvel Comics.
  39. Ka-Zar vol. 3 #20. Marvel Comics.
  40. Savage Tales #9. Marvel Comics.
  41. Astonishing Tales #3. Marvel Comics.
  42. Astonishing Tales #8. Marvel Comics.
  43. Ka-Zar vol. 3 #13. Marvel Comics.
  44. Ka-Zar vol. 3 #30. Marvel Comics.
  45. Ka-Zar vol. 3 #11. Marvel Comics.
  46. Ka-Zar vol. 4 #2. Marvel Comics.
  47. Marvel Super-Heroes vol. 2 #19. Marvel Comics.
  48. The Uncanny X-Men #445. Marvel Comics.
  49. Ka-Zar of the Savage Land #1. Marvel Comics.
  50. X-Men: The Hidden Years #2. Marvel Comics.
  51. Ka-Zar Vol. 4 #1. Marvel Comics.
  52. Ms. Marvel #20. Marvel Comics.
  53. Ka-Zar vol. 3 #28. Marvel Comics.
  54. Age of Ultron #4. Marvel Comics.
  55. Vault of Spiders #1. Marvel Comics.
  56. Ultimate Origins #3
  57. Ultimate X-Men #6
  58. Ultimatum #3
  59. Ultimates 3 #3-4
  60. What If? vol. 2 #112. Marvel Comics.
  61. What If? Age of Ultron #2. Marvel Comics.
  62. Web site: Burton . Carson . 2022-05-26 . 'Doctor Strange 2' VFX Artists on Creating 20 Multiverses in 40 Seconds . 2022-05-28 . Variety . en-US.
  63. Web site: Milheim . Russ . 2022-05-27 . Kevin Feige Wanted X-Men's Magneto Location In Doctor Strange 2 . 2022-05-28 . The Direct . en.
  64. Web site: Exclusive – Justin Woods Of Marvel: Avengers Alliance Talks Spec Ops And The Savage Land. September 26, 2014.