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Last Updated on
Wednesday, March 10, 2004
FIRST APPEARANCE:
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Assemblers JLA (first series) #87 (February 1971)
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Extremists JLE #15 (June 1990)
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Justifiers JL Quarterly #3 (Summer 1991)
THANKS: Thank you to John Mason and others for the IDs
of the Marvel counterparts to Dreamslayer and Carny.
The Assembers
All most every long term fan of comics has
heard about the Squadron Supreme, the Marvel homage to the Justice League that
existed on a parallel Earth as allies to the Avengers. Introduced in Avengers
#85, cover dated February 1971, the Squadron would star in their own
mini-series by Mark Gruenwald in 1985. Slowly they moved away from being
carbon copies of the JLA to become a complex and well developed group in their
own right. The homage was even repaid in the 1992 "Destiny's Hand" arc by Dan
Jurgens in JLA (Vol 2) #72-75 that propelled the modern League into a dream
reality that was a bizarre blend of Conway-era JLA and Gruenwald Squadron
Supreme. However there had been a previous and more tongue-in-cheek parallel
to the Squadron Supreme in JLA (Vol 1) #87. Cover dated the very same month as
the first appearance of the Squadron this was the debut of the Champions of
Angor.
In a story written by Mike Friedrich and the legendary Julius
Schwartz we learn of the distant world
Can-Nam-Loo which has sent robots to two worlds to plunder their natural
resources. Those worlds were unsurprisingly Earth and
Angor. The heroes of each
world, namely the JLA and the Assemblers (later called the Justifiers but I'll
get on to that one) defeated the robots and tracked them down to the sourse.
Upon arriving both sets of heroes mistakenly assumed the others were the
senders of the threats and promptly indulged in the ubiquitous hero versus
hero battle. Peace eventually broke out when
Zatanna healed the injured
Blue Jay.
The four heroes from the planet Angor were clear homage's to
the Avengers. A fact that was made implicit when Keith Giffen and Gerard Jones
gave then the team name of the Assemblers after the Avengers battle cry of
"Avengers Assemble." The leader of the group was Wandjina who was patterned
after Marvel's Thor. The rest of the group was made up of
Jack B. Quick (Quicksilver), Silver Sorceress
(Scarlet Witch) and the aforementioned Blue Jay (Yellowjacket/the Wasp). The
Assemblers would have remained a minor footnote in League history until Giffen
reintroduced them in the 1980's.
The Assemblers next appeared in JLA (Vol 2) #2 where we find
Wandjina and co. assaulting a Bialyian
nuclear missile base. They are quickly introduced to
Rumaan Harjavti who bumblingly
tries to sweet talk them around to his side. It turns out that Angor has
suffered an undisclosed nuclear disaster wiping out the entire population
including Jack B. Quick. Quick here is given the name Harry Christos, "the
fastest man on two legs" and strangely the new alias of Captain Speed.
More of the personalities of the remaining three Assemblers
are revealed. Wandjina is seemingly the most powerful and the leader, easy to
anger and to an extent rash. He is balanced by the calm advise of the Silver
Sorceress. We see Wandjina show abilities in parallel with Thor as a Thunder
God, i.e. weather control, lightning, super strength, flight, etc. Of the
other two Blue Jay is the least developed, he grows wings as he shrinks and
the Mayfair Justice League Sourcebook suggests that he has some technical
ability. That same book also lists the Sorceress power as some form of
probability/luck manipulation while later interpretations of her seem to
favour more traditional mystical powers.
The trio had come to Earth to rid it of nuclear weapons and to
stop what happened to Angor happening ever again. It is however not clear if
Earth is the first planet that they have visited since they left Angor.
Ultimately Wandjina gives his life to stop a nuclear meltdown at a power
station in Russia. The remaining two Assemblers were captured by the Russian
forces. We see Wandjina one last time when the
Queen Bee II used his reanimated corpse
to take control of Bailya before being destroyed permanently by
Captain Atom.
The Extremists
The nature of the nuclear disaster that
befell Angor and the fate of the final two Assemblers is fully fleshed out by
the five part "Extremist Vector." Blue Jay and the Silver Sorceress had been
held for months in a Russian laboratory complex until they managed to escape.
The Silver Sorceress returned to Angor while Blue Jay sought diplomatic asylum
from the Justice League International.
The back history of Angor is revealed. It was a planet much
like the DC Earth, full of heroes and villains. The inhabitants saw it as more
peaceful and innocent that other worlds. The main hero group, the Assemblers,
would round up the bad guys and spent the rest of their time posing for the
media. Comprised of Wandjina, the Bowman, Johnny Quick
(alias Captain Speed alias Jack B. Quick - what is it with this guy and
codenames?), Silver Sorceress and Blue Jay. Bowman is a new character, he
seems to be a cross between Hawkeye and Hercules.
While the heroes were consorting with the media, the villains,
led by a core group called the Extremists,
took control of Angor's nuclear stockpile. They offered the choice "Surrender
or Die!" In a major ret-conning of the Assembler's first appearance it is
suggested that they were actually looking for help from the JLA. However there
was a misunderstanding and they returned alone to Angor to discover the entire
civilisation destroyed. This would seem to imply that the JLA was responsible
for the destruction of Angor due to lack of understanding. Captain Speed
eventually died of radiation and the remaining three Assemblers left Angor to
seek other worlds which leads us back to their JLA (Vol 2) #2 appearance.
Meanwhile on Angor only the Extremists survived.
The Extremists, like most Angor characters, are homage's to
Marvel characters. The leader Lord Havok I is a highly intelligent man in an
advanced suit of armour (Dr Doom). Doctor Diehard (Magneto) is a master of
magnetism, incredibly powerful it was he who magnetically took control of the
nukes. Gorgon (Doctor Octopus) is a hideous mutant with tentacles growing from
behind his head. Tracer (Sabertooth) is a savage, blood sensing animal who has
blades attached to his forearms. It was Tracer that killed the last living
human on Angor (it has been conjectured that this was the Bowman, the fifth
Assembler). The final Extremist is
Dreamslayer (Dormammu) is a strange sorcerer with a cloud of energy where
his head should be. There is an "unofficial" sixth Extremist seen later in the
story called Carny, in appearance he could be the King
Pin while other elements point to the X-men villain Arcade.
The "Extremist Vector" revolves around the Extremists
capturing the Silver Sorceress and using her to gain access to Earth. Once
here they pull the same stunt as they did on Angor by taking control of all
nuclear missiles. Along the way the European branch of the JLI gets exiled by
Dreamslayer to Angor. The JLE discover that the only structure standing on the
planet is an amusement park called Wackyworld run and maintained by human like
robots. The entire scenario plays out like the film "West World", but on a
larger scale.
The robot systems had maintained their original programming
after the nuclear conflagration. They had even devised and created new rides.
One of these rides was the Assemblers Vs. the Extremists ride (from which I
pick up the group name of the heroes), but the android reconstruction's had
been too perfect. The Extremist robots destroyed the others and went on the
rampage. It turns out that the real Extremists were killed in the nuclear
holocaust they caused. It is their robotic dopplegangers that were holding
Earth to ransom.
If the twist about the robot Extremists was not enough the
final twist in their down fall is even stranger. The creator of Wackyworld,
the inventor and entertainer "Uncle Mitch"
Wacky was actually still alive. He was frozen in cryogenic storage under
Wackyworld. This is based on an old urban myth that Walt Disney has been
cryogenically frozen beneath the Magic Kingdom. Wacky ends up defeating his
creations by just pressing the off button. It was left to the Silver Sorceress
to dispatch Dreamslayer who was the only real Extremist left. He survived the
holocaust because he wasn't human.
As a note of interest Mitch Wacky was suffering from influenza
which was considered terminal by doctors on Angor necessitating him being
cryogenically frozen to save his life. Once on Earth he was cured by our own
doctors. As for the deactivated Extremist robots they were put on display at
Madam Clouseau's Wax Museum (with a security force field just in case).
The Justifiers
With the conclusion of the "Extremist
Vector", Silver Sorceress and Blue Jay joined the JLE seemingly tying up all
loose ends with relation to Angor. Apart from the name of Captain Speed there
seemed to be no major holes in the history of Angor. That was until Justice
League Quarterly #3 by the same writers that brought us the "Extremist
Vector." Entitled "When you wish..." the story is a morality play on trying to
change the past and an expansion of the Extremist's origin. However during the
course of the story more homage characters are cameoed including Spiderman,
the Punisher and Cyclops.
The story revolves around Mitch Wacky and
Kilowog using a time machine to
go into the past of Angor. They try and stop the creation of the Extremists
and therefore the nuclear holocaust that destroyed that world. Along the way
they blunder through super-battles, more Avenger jokes and a new team called
the Justifiers. While the underlying story is serious much of the detail, and
the homage for that matter, is definitely tongue-in-cheek.
Throughout this story the superteam from Angor is called the
Justifiers which brings up the question: are the Assembers and the Justifiers
really different superhero teams?
-
We know that main group was the
Justifiers initially and then at the time of the nuclear holocaust it was
the Assemblers.
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Under DC's ten year continuity the could only have been four
years (allowing one year for them to help survivors and then another year
until they reached Earth) between the two groups.
-
Wandjina seems to be the leader of both groups.
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Captain Speed and the Bowman were also members of both
teams.
Conclusion: the Justifiers were actually an earlier
incarnation of the Assemblers, so I'll stick to the name of the Assemblers
(partially because it sounds better than the Justifiers).
Of this earlier version of the Assemblers we find the team
comprising the familiar Wandjina (looking more relaxed having not encountered
the Extremists yet), Captain Speed (a repeated use of the same identity for
this character, a first) and Bowman (here seen looking more like Hawkeye than
the bare chested version that cameoed before). The three new team members are
a woman only known by the initials T.A. (seems to have metal wings, A. could
stand for angel), an unnamed Giant Man clone and an Ironman clone called the
Tin Man. This group even have their own English butler.
In this story the time travelling Mitch and Kilowog try and
enlist the help of the Justifiers in stopping the theft of a nuclear devise by
a criminal gang. When the device accidentally exploded that criminal gang was
transformed into the Extremists. The laboratory where the device was developed
was called the Timely Research Facility. Timely was one of the Golden Age
names used by the publisher that was later known as Marvel Comics. Due to the
rather "jumpy" nature of the Justifiers they destroy the robot Mitch had sent
to recruit them before it can get their help. The duo then steal a rocket
powered boot as transport (they were only an inch high due to a malfunction
with the time machine) to the bomb site.
At the site Mitch accidentally falls on the remote detonate
button of the bomb, setting it off just as the criminal gangs tries to steal
it. By his actions Mitch had created a circular time paradox. The Extremists
existed so he went back in time to stop them, he created the Extremists
therefore they exist, ergo later he goes back in time to stop/create them,
etc., etc. The JLI task force eventually catches up with the duo and find that
Kilowog did not create a way back, he figured that if they succeeded then
there would be no need to go back in time and therefore they wouldn't have
come back in time in the first place. The team manage to return home by
transferring to Earth and then using parts from the
Secret Sanctuary (time for an
original JLA cameo) to build a new time machine.
Later Appearances
The later appearances of Silver Sorceress,
Blue Jay and the Extremists more or less dealt with them as normal characters
and any further references to Angor or Marvel were generally ignored or down
played. The last major involvement of the JLA with the Assemblers was when
Maxwell Lord was shot out
side the New York embassy. The new JLI head (a Queen Bee plant) put Blue Jay
as head of the JLE and fired Captain Atom. Eventually Maxwell Lord returned
but it was revealed that it was actually Dreamslayer controlling Max's body.
Dreamslayer kidnapped Mitch and forced him to repair the Extremist robots, the
Lord Havok robot was seeming destroyed by the Blue Beetle using the back wash
from the JLI shuttle. Later the Silver Sorceress gave her life to seemingly
destroy Dreamslayer and freeing Max. With the JLI disbanding Blue Jay just
flew off into the sun set and has not been scene since.
Dreamslayer would reappear as the controller of a cult in
the run up to the Judgement Day saga, he was rejected by the
Overmaster as a member of the
Cadre because he was too power hungry. The
Extremist robots have recently guess starred in an issue of SUPERGIRL and Lord
Havok II (actually Maxwell Lord working for the
Kil%gre) was introduced in the final
issues of Gerard Jones run on JLA before it was cancelled.
Angor Who's Who:
Official
BLUEJAY (the Wasp) - First
seen in JLA (Vol 1) #87. He was a member of the Assemblers and at current is
the only surviving hero from Angor. It has been stated in a letter column that
he was gay. He served with the JLE and replaced Captain Atom as leader for a
time. He has not been seen since the events of Breakdowns.
BOWMAN (Hawkeye)
- First seen in the "Extremist Vector" he was introduced as the fifth
Assembler. Previous to that he seems to have been a member of the Justifiers.
Initially he seems a very insecure man who relies on his analysis for support.
Later he seems to have under gone a "rebirth" becoming a more macho Hercules
looking archer. He was the prisoner of the Extremist robots and was
accidentally killed by Tracer while under torture.
CAPTAIN SPEED
/ Johnny Quick/ Jack B. Quick (Quicksilver) - Harry Christos, "the fastest
man on two legs." First seen in JLA (Vol 1) #87. Originally we are told him
name is Jack B. Quick but by the time of JLQ #3 the writers seem to have
settled on Captain Speed. He was a member of the Assemblers and the
Justifiers. A copy of Quicksilver due to the fact that Marvel seems to only
have one speedster. He was killed by the radiation absorbed by his hyperfast
metabolism after the nuclear holocaust.
CARNEY (King
Pin/Arcade) - The forgotten Extremist. He ruled Wacky World until the JLE
showed up. It seems that he was a King Pin style villain but his robotic
double lacked the powers of the true Extremists. They turned him into an
object of ridicule, dressed him in clown clothes and kept him around as a
"pet."
DOCTOR DIEHARD (Magneto) - It
was Diehard that used his magnetic powers to control the nukes on Angor. His
robotic duplicate did the same on Earth. The nature of the magnetic powers
invites the comparison with Magneto.
DREAMSLAYER (Dormammu) - The most powerful of the
Extremists. When the bomb detonated creating the Extremists he was catapulted
into other dimensions and transformed into an inhuman sorcerer. When the other
Extremists were resurrected as robots he stuck around for the company. On
Earth he tried to take revenge on the JLI and it took the sacrifice of the
Silver Sorceress to stop him. Dreamslayer is a good villain and always pops up
again, while definitely more powerful than his comrades he seems little match
for any truly powerful being such as the Overmaster.
GORGON (Dr Octopus) - A hideous warped being with five
tentacles growing from the back of his neck. Single handed he almost decimated
the Rocket Red Brigade.
LORD HAVOK I (Dr Doom) - The leader of the Criminal
Gang that tried to steal the experimental nuclear device on Angor which turned
him and his comrades into the Extremists. This robotic version was also the
leader for that incarnation of the Extremists and even Dreamslayer deferred to
him. Highly intelligent and powerful his armour was needed to contain his
rapidly expanding mind and body. He was seemingly destroyed by the
Blue Beetle using the
backwash from the JLI cruiser but later resurfaced with the other Extremists
to fight Supergirl.
MITCH WACKY (Walt Disney) - He was the creator of the
robotic amusement park, Wackyworld that would create the Assemblers Vs
Extremists ride from where the robotic Extremists escaped When he later tried
time travelling back to stop the nuclear accident that created the Extremists
he found that it was he who created the accident.
SILVER
SORCERESS (Scarlet Witch) - First seen in JLA (Vol 1) #87. A sorceress
she initially use technology and magic to create the dimensional doorways
between Earth and Angor that she later learned to create on her own. She was
Wandjina's right hand tempering him anger with her advise. When the Extremists
were defeated she joined the JLE and gave her life to defeat Dreamslayer. She
is buried on the island of Kooey Kooey Kooey.
TIN MAN
(Ironman) - First seen on page 28 of JLQ #3. He seems to a copy of the
early Ironman. References are made to him having to wear a chest plate all the
time, this would correspond to the younger Tony Stark that needed to wear his
armour to keep his heart alive. The miniaturised Kilowog and Mitch Wacky stole
one of his rocket boots to get to the nuclear test site.
TRACER (Sabertooth) - This
savage animal had the ability to sense blood from extreme distances. His
robotic double was responsible for accidentally killing Bowman while he was
torturing him.
WANDJINA (Thor) - The leader of the Assemblers and the
Justifiers as first seen in JLA (Vol 1) #87. A passionate man he found the
easy life of the Justifiers dull and was transformed fully into a warrior by
the nuclear holocaust. It was his driving personality that kept the Assemblers
together as they wandered dimensions seeking to rid worlds of nuclear weapons.
His anger and emotion was only kept in check by the compassion and advice of
the Silver Sorceress. He died saving a large part of Russian from the nuclear
melt down in Russian but his body was later animated by the Queen Bee. It was
finally destroyed in a mercy killing by Captain Atom.
Unofficial (those that appeared in JLQ #3 but
were given no names)
Eagle (the Punisher) - seen posing
on page 18 of JLQ #3. The name of the Eagle is suggested from the red chest
logo. This is clearly the Punisher due to the guns, hand grenades and general
look of the character.
Herakles (Hercules) - seen posing on page 18 of JLQ #3.
The name of Herakles is suggested because it was the Greek name for the Roman
god Hercules.
Massive Man (Giant Man) - first seen on page 28 of JLQ
#3. An obvious mutant in a world of normals. He had to live with the mental
agony of growing to over twenty feet tall. A member of the Justifiers.
Q-Spider (Spiderman) - seen posing on page 18 of JLQ
#3. As shown appears to have a costume with a Q motif were the body of the
spider should be.
The Rat (Wolverine) - seen battling an unnamed
supervillain on page 15 of JLQ #3. A Wolverine clone because of the claws, the
name of the Rat suggested because of his Micky Mouse like ears.
T. Angel (?) - first seen posing on page 18 of JLQ #3.
A member of the Justifiers who seems to have metallic wings allowing her to
fly.
Uni-beam (Cyclops) - seen posing on page 18 of JLQ #3.
The name of Uni-beam suggested because of the similarities to Cyclops and the
number one on his uniform.
unnamed superhero (?) - flies past Kilowog and Mitch on
page 16 of JLQ #3.
unnamed supervillain (?) - seen battling the Rat on
page 15 of JLQ #3.

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