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词条 List of Marvel Comics characters: J
释义

  1. J'son of Spartax

  2. J2

  3. Jack Flag

  4. Jack Frost

     Jack Frost (superhero)  Gregor Shapanka 

  5. Jack O'Lantern

     Jason Macendale  Steven Mark Levins  Daniel Berkhart  Levins' brother  Unnamed 

  6. Jack of Hearts

  7. Jackal

     Miles Warren  Ben Reilly 

  8. Jackdaw

  9. Jackhammer

  10. Jackpot

  11. Brent Jackson

  12. Jade Dragon

  13. Sajani Jaffrey

  14. J. Jonah Jameson

  15. John Jameson

  16. Jann of the Jungle

  17. Janus

  18. Jarella

  19. Edwin Jarvis

  20. Jason

  21. Javitz

  22. Jerry Jaxon

  23. Jazinda

  24. Jester

     Jonathan Powers  Jody Putt  Unnamed 

  25. Jetstream

  26. Jigsaw

  27. Jimmy-6

  28. Joan

  29. Jocasta

  30. John the Skrull

  31. Johnny Dee

  32. Otis and Adina Johnson

     The Johnsons in other media 

  33. Jolen

  34. Jolt

  35. Charlotte Jones

  36. Gabe Jones

  37. Hugh Jones

  38. Jessica Jones

  39. Piranha Jones

     Piranha Jones in other media 

  40. Rick Jones

  41. Joseph

  42. Josiah X

  43. Joystick

  44. Jubilee

  45. Jude the Entropic Man

  46. Juggernaut

  47. Junior Juniper

  48. Junta

  49. Justice

     Vance Astrovik  John Roger Tensen 

  50. References

{{A-Z multipage list|List of Marvel Comics characters}}

J'son of Spartax

{{Main|J'son (comics)}}

J2

{{Main|J2 (comics)}}

Jack Flag

{{Main|Jack Flag}}

Jack Frost

Jack Frost is the name of two unrelated fictional characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.

Jack Frost (superhero)

The first Jack Frost was published by Marvel's 1940s forerunner Timely Comics during the period fans and historians call the Golden Age of comic books.

Marvel Comics' first character named Jack Frost outwardly recalls the folklorish spirit of winter Jack Frost. First appearing in U.S.A. Comics #1 (cover-dated August 1941), from Marvel predecessor Timely Comics, he was one of the first creations of future Marvel editor-in-chief and publisher Stan Lee,[1] who collaborated with penciler Charles Wojtkoski. In Marvel Premiere #29 (April 1976), he was retconned to have been a member of the stateside World War II-era superhero team the Liberty Legion.

Gregor Shapanka

{{Main|Blizzard (comics)#Gregor Shapanka}}

Jack O'Lantern

{{main|Jack O'Lantern (Marvel Comics)}}

Jason Macendale

{{Main|Jason Macendale}}

Steven Mark Levins

{{Main|Steven Mark Levins}}

Daniel Berkhart

{{Main|Jack O'Lantern (Mad Jack)}}

Levins' brother

{{Main|Jack O'Lantern (Marvel Comics)#Steven Levins' brother}}

Unnamed

{{Main|Jack O'Lantern (Marvel Comics)#Crime Master's Jack O'Lantern}}

Jack of Hearts

{{Main|Jack of Hearts}}

Jackal

Miles Warren

{{Main|Jackal (Marvel Comics)}}

Ben Reilly

{{Main|Ben Reilly}}

Jackdaw

{{Comics character list header
|name = Jackdaw
|Marvelwiki =
|CBDBid = 6514
|GCDid =
}}{{for|the supervillain formerly known as Jackdaw|Blackbird (Femizon)}}

Jackdaw is a fictional character featured in the Marvel Comics universe. He was created by Dez Skinn, Steve Parkhouse, Paul Neary and John Stokes, and first appeared in The Incredible Hulk Weekly #57 (April 1980).

A now-deceased hero, the sidekick of Captain Britain, Jackdaw was an Otherworld elf. Jackdaw had been mortally wounded earlier in his adventures, but was revived by Merlyn and given new powers and a new costume.

He was permanently slain later on Earth-238 by The Fury. Jackdaw was literally torn in half by one of the Fury's energy bolts and expired shortly thereafter in Captain Britain's arms. Jackdaw expressed a belief that Merlyn would resurrect him. Saturnyne had abandoned them (and her assistant Dimples, who loved her deeply) to escape.[2] Merlyn did not resurrect Jackdaw as it would have damaged his chances of rescuing Captain Britain, who was killed as well by the Fury after Dimples and Jackdaw, and resurrected by Merlyn back on Earth-616.[3]

Jackhammer

{{Main|Jackhammer (comics)}}

Jackpot

{{Main|Jackpot (Marvel Comics)}}

Brent Jackson

{{Main|Brent Jackson}}

Jade Dragon

{{Main|Jade Dragon}}

Sajani Jaffrey

{{main|List of Spider-Man supporting characters#Parker Industries}}

J. Jonah Jameson

{{Main|J. Jonah Jameson}}

John Jameson

{{Main|John Jameson (comics)}}

Jann of the Jungle

{{Main|Jann of the Jungle}}

Janus

{{Main|Janus (Marvel Comics)}}

Jarella

{{Main|Jarella}}

Edwin Jarvis

{{Main|Edwin Jarvis}}

Jason

{{main|Pantheon (Marvel Comics)}}

Javitz

{{Main|Javitz (Marvel Comics)}}

Jerry Jaxon

{{Main|Jerry Jaxon}}

Jazinda

{{Main|Jazinda}}

==Jemiah the Analyzer==

{{main|Celestial (comics)#Members}}

Jester

{{main|Jester (Marvel Comics)}}

Jonathan Powers

{{Main|Jester (Jonathan Powers)}}

Jody Putt

{{Main|Jester (Jody Putt)}}

Unnamed

{{Main|Jester (Crazy Gang)}}

Jetstream

{{Main|Jetstream (comics)}}

Jigsaw

{{Main|Jigsaw (Marvel Comics)}}

Jimmy-6

{{Main|Jimmy-6}}

Joan

{{main|Joan (comics)}}

Jocasta

{{Main|Jocasta (comics)}}

John the Skrull

{{Main|John the Skrull}}

Johnny Dee

{{Main|Johnny Dee}}

Otis and Adina Johnson

Otis Johnson and Adina Johnson are the parents of Tyrone Johnson in Marvel Comics. The characters, created by Bill Mantlo and Rick Leonardi, made their sole appearance in Cloak and Dagger #4 (January 1984).

While their names have never been revealed in the comics, for the convenience of this section they will be referred to by their names in the TV series with their son renamed Otis Jr. Michael and Adina had four children, Tyrone, Otis Jr., Anna and an unnamed daughter. The Johnsons met with Tyrone's teacher when they discovered that despite Tyrone being a gifted basketball player, he had a stutter which worried the Johnsons. Beyond that not much is known about them, but it is assumed that they have been in grief due to Tyrone having run away which may have further affected them by the death of their daughter and imprisonment of Otis Johnson Jr.[4]

The Johnsons in other media

Otis and Adina Johnson, appear in the Freeform series Marvel's Cloak & Dagger portrayed by Miles Mussenden and Gloria Reuben respectively.[5] Earlier promotion had Otis named Michael, but it was changed shortly before filming.[6] Otis has a desk job at an unknown place while Andina works at Roxxon Gulf. Otis and Andina work to have their son Tyrone grow up to a better future even after the death of their other son Billy.[7] In the episode "Call/Response," it is revealed that Otis has an association with a group of Mardi Gras Indians called the Wild Red Hawks and that Otis had Billy do work with them on an earlier occasion.[8] In the episode "Ghost Stories," Otis and Adina are shown to be at loss on the anniversary of Billy's death. While Otis has the Wild Red Hawks over, Adina's work ID is borrowed by Tandy Bowen so that she can confront Peter Scarborough.[9] In "Back Breaker," Police Chief Duchamp informs Otis and Adina that Detective Connors has been suspended pending investigation. Neither Otis or Adina react to it. At her job, Adina is shown having an unheard conversation with one of the workers. Later that night, Adina tells Tyrone that she wanted to protect him from the police. When the police arrive outside their home to arrest Tyrone for supposedly killing Officer Fuchs, Adina tells Tyrone to run.[10] Otis hears about what happened. When he confronts Tyrone who is looking for his cloak at the Wild Red Hawks' meeting place, Otis gives him the cloak and tells him to get far away from here and to stay out of contact with them. After the Terrors' crisis is over, Otis and Adina are later seen with the police and Father Delgado as Adina later finds something that Tyrone left for her.[11]

Jolen

{{Main|Jolen (comics)}}

Jolt

{{Main|Jolt (comics)}}

Charlotte Jones

{{Main|Charlotte Jones (comics)}}

Gabe Jones

{{Main|Gabe Jones}}

Hugh Jones

{{Main|Hugh Jones (comics)}}

Jessica Jones

{{main|Jessica Jones}}

Piranha Jones

Raymond "Piranha" Jones is a supervillain who appears in Marvel Comics, primarily as a foe of Luke Cage.

The character first appeared in Luke Cage, Power Man #30 (April 1976), created by writer Don McGregor and artists Rich Buckler, Arv Jones and Keith Pollard. Ray Jones grew up in poverty and lost all of his teeth by the age of 15. Jones became a criminal at an early age, eventually rising to the level of crime boss where he gains an alliance with Dontrell "Cockroach" Hamilton. He had his missing teeth replaced with long, sharpened steel spikes. These, and his habit of using them on his enemies, gained him the nickname, "Piranha."

Piranha Jones in other media

  • A different version of Piranha appears on Earth's Mightiest Heroes. As seen in the episode "To Steal an Ant Man", this version has had not just his teeth, but his entire mandible replaced with a mechanical metal jaw. He is one of the henchmen of gangster William Cross. Jones bites Luke Cage's arm, only to break his teeth on Cage's impervious flesh.
  • Raymond "Piranha" Jones appears in Luke Cage, portrayed by Chaz Lamar Shepherd. The son of one of Mama Mabel Stokes's prostitutes, he is a Wall Street broker who is trying to help Mariah Dillard sell her gun-dealing business through helping her invest in Atreus Plastics through insider trading. Because of this, the origins of his nickname are changed, with him explaining that it comes from considering himself the sort of "little fish you don't see coming" in the cutthroat world of stock trading. When Luke gets sued for beating up Cockroach, he is encouraged by Foggy Nelson to attend a party hosted by Piranha, who is a big fan of Luke and keeps a lot of his memorabilia in his office. The party is attacked by members of Bushmaster's gang, and Luke flees with Piranha,[12] hiding him out in an abandoned theater. During this time, Luke gets Piranha to open up and reveal his role in the insider trading, and he also reveals a bit about his childhood, giving Luke the realization that he should consider making amends with his father, whom he has been at odds with since the start of the season. Bushmaster's men attempt to capture him, but Luke thwarts them the first few times. Luke tries to deposit Piranha at his father's church, but Piranha leaves while Luke goes to a showdown with Bushmaster on the High Bridge.[13] He is subsequently snatched by Bushmaster's men. Bushmaster forces him to bankrupt Mariah, then has him shot in the head, and then has his head severed and placed in a fish tank of piranhas for Luke and Misty to find.[14]

Rick Jones

{{main|Rick Jones (comics)}}

Joseph

{{Main|Joseph (comics)}}

Josiah X

Josiah X is a fictional character, the son of Isaiah Bradley, the black Captain America, and the uncle of Elijah Bradley, the Patriot.[15] The character was created by Christopher Priest and Joe Bennett, and debuted in The Crew #1.

Josiah is a Muslim minister. He replaced his last name Bradley with the letter "X". He has had many names including "Justice", the one he used as a hero. The "X" apparently symbolizes his allegiance to the Lost Tribe of Shabazz. Josiah runs a Muslim Mission in the "Mog" (Little Mogadishu) in Brooklyn, New York.{{issue|date=April 2013}}

As depicted in the series Red, White & Black, the World War II Super Soldier program of 1942, operated by "Reinstein", used African American test subjects in a beta phase. The clandestine experimentation that empowered Josiah's father Isaiah Bradley held similarities with the Tuskegee Experiments. After a failed suicide mission to destroy the Super-Soldier efforts of the Nazis, Isaiah was court-martialed and imprisoned. While he was in prison, the government attempted to use his altered DNA to create another Super-Soldier. After 39 attempts they had a single success, which was Josiah. His surrogate mother smuggled him out from the government's watchful eye.

Josiah grew up alone in a Catholic orphanage outside of Boston. His powers revealed themselves when he lashed out at one of the orphanage nuns while in his early teens. Believing he had accidentally killed Sister Irenia, he fled. Under the assumed name of Josiah Smith he entered the U.S. Army.{{issue|date=April 2013}}

Josiah served several tours in the Vietnam War, becoming a seasoned and experienced veteran. His unit, made up of primarily black soldiers, were nearly killed on a mission by an inconsiderate and racist officer's order to bomb the area while they were still on patrol. His assault on the heartless officer was rewarded with a court martial. Josiah was sent back to the States to serve out his sentence in Fort Leavenworth, a stateside military prison.{{issue|date=April 2013}}

Blood tests at a secret research facility in Berkeley, California proved he was the missing Super-Soldier baby. His surrogate mother was brought in to confirm a genetic match, and she again helped him to escape. She also told him the truth about his past and the real first names of his genetic parents.{{issue|date=April 2013}}

It was a long four years later before he could act on this knowledge. He came across a list of African-American individuals abused by the Super-Soldier project, and used it to find his parents' full names and their location.{{issue|date=April 2013}}

After meeting his real parents, Josiah left the US and traveled abroad as a private military contractor and adventurer; he eventually ended up on the continent of Africa. It was in Africa that Josiah discovered the Islamic faith and decided to use it to find a purpose for his life.{{issue|date=April 2013}}

Josiah became involved with James Rhodes' clandestine "Crew" after they were tricked into believing he was a criminal. After the usual superhero fight, Josiah joined them in order to seek out those who had not only framed him, but had also turned his neighborhood into a war zone.{{issue|date=April 2013}}[16]

When Iron Lad forms the Young Avengers, he attempts to recruit Josiah, but instead recruits his nephew Elijah Bradley when Josiah is unavailable.{{issue|date=April 2013}}

Due to his unique genetic makeup, Josiah has aged very slowly. Although he is well over fifty years old, he appears to be twenty-five. His genetic code was manipulated with great precision to compensate for the side effects of unrefined Super Soldier serum. Josiah is extremely strong (able to bench press over 1100 pounds) and his body possesses phenomenal endurance. Because of his many years on the run from the U.S. government, Josiah has experience and training as both a soldier and mercenary. He also has decades of experience with a variety of martial arts styles, languages and weapons.

Josiah carries the scarred battle shield belonging to his father and predecessor Isaiah, similar to one used by Steve Rogers before receiving his vibranium-steel shield. It is an unpainted concave triangular metal shield with the Double V for Victory design. For protection he wears a loose chain mesh shirt over light padding.{{Issue|date=October 2018}} This mesh shirt is capable of blunting the impact of most small arms fire.

Joystick

{{Main|Joystick (comics)}}

Jubilee

{{Main|Jubilee (comics)}}

Jude the Entropic Man

{{Main|Jude the Entropic Man}}

Juggernaut

{{Main|Juggernaut (comics)}}

Junior Juniper

{{Main|Junior Juniper}}

Junta

{{Main|Junta (comics)}}

Justice

Vance Astrovik

{{Main|Vance Astrovik}}

John Roger Tensen

{{Main|Justice (New Universe)}}

References

1. ^Stan Lee at the Lambiek Comiclopedia
2. ^Marvel Super-Heroes (July 1982)#387
3. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.comicvine.com/jackdaw/29-32268/|title=Jackdaw (Character) - Comic Vine|website=Comic Vine}}
4. ^Cloak and Dagger Vol. 3 #4
5. ^{{cite web|url=https://news.marvel.com/tv/59699/additional-cast-for-highly-anticipated-series-marvels-cloak-dagger/ |title=Additional Cast for Highly Anticipated Series 'Marvel's Cloak & Dagger' Announced |last=Dinh |first=Christine |publisher=Marvel.com |date=February 14, 2017 |accessdate=February 14, 2017 |archiveurl=https://www.webcitation.org/6oHFV56YG?url=https://news.marvel.com/tv/59699/additional-cast-for-highly-anticipated-series-marvels-cloak-dagger/ |archivedate=February 14, 2017 |deadurl=no |df= }}
6. ^{{cite web|url=http://ew.com/tv/2018/04/16/marvels-cloak-dagger-jaime-zevallos-and-emma-lahanas-father-delgado-brigid-oreilly/|title=Marvel's Cloak & Dagger: Jaime Zevallos and Emma Lahana's characters are revealed|last=Highfill|first=Samantha|work=Entertainment Weekly|date=April 16, 2018|accessdate=April 16, 2018|archiveurl=https://www.webcitation.org/6yjhrVqoD|archivedate=April 16, 2018|deadurl=no}}
7. ^{{cite episode|title=First Light|series=Marvel's Cloak & Dagger|credits=Prince-Bythewood, Gina (director); Joe Pokaski (writer)|network=Freeform|airdate=June 7, 2018|season=1|number=1}}
8. ^{{cite episode|title=Call/Response|series=Marvel's Cloak & Dagger|credits=Mann, Ami Canaan (director); Christine Boylan & Marcus J. Guillory (writer)|network=Freeform|airdate=June 21, 2018|season=1|number=4}}
9. ^{{cite episode|title=Ghost Stories|series=Marvel's Cloak & Dagger|credits=Lopez, Alex Garcia (director); Christine Boylan & Jenny Klein (writer)|network=Freeform|airdate=July 20, 2018|season=1|number=8}}
10. ^{{cite episode|title=Back Breaker|series=Marvel's Cloak & Dagger|credits=Woolnough, Jeff (director); Niceole R. Levy & Peter Calloway (writer)|network=Freeform|airdate=July 26, 2018|season=1|number=9}}
11. ^{{cite episode|title=Colony Collapse|series=Marvel's Cloak & Dagger|credits=Yip, Wayne (director); Joe Pokaski (writer)|network=Freeform|airdate=August 3, 2018|season=1|number=10}}
12. ^{{cite episode|title=All Souled Out|series=Marvel's Luke Cage|credits=Lemmons, Kasi (director); Ian Stokes (writer)|network=Netflix|airdate=June 22, 2018|season=2|number=5}}
13. ^{{cite episode|title=The Basement|series=Marvel's Luke Cage|credits=Shelton, Millicent (director); Aïda Mashaka Croal (writer)|network=Netflix|airdate=June 22, 2018|season=2|number=6}}
14. ^{{cite episode|title=On and On|series=Marvel's Luke Cage|credits=Green, Rashaad Ernesto (director); Nicole Mirante Matthews (writer)|network=Netflix|airdate=June 22, 2018|season=2|number=7}}
15. ^Young Avengers #8.
16. ^{{cite web |url=http://phonogram.us/comics/crew/start.htm |title=digital-priest.com: The Crew |publisher=Phonogram.us |date= |accessdate=2011-01-11 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110525134513/http://phonogram.us/comics/crew/start.htm |archivedate=2011-05-25 |df= }}

1 : Lists of Marvel Comics characters

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