Hulk 2099 (John Eisenhart) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character was created by Gerard Jones and Dwayne Turner and first appeared in 2099 Unlimited #1. As with many other Marvel 2099 characters, Hulk 2099 was a futuristic re-imagining of the original Hulk.
Hulk 2099 | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | 2099 Unlimited #1 (Sept. 1993) |
Created by | Gerard Jones Dwayne Turner (based upon the original character by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby) |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | John Eisenhart |
Species | Human mutate |
Place of origin | Marvel 2099 (Earth-928) |
Team affiliations | Lotusland Productions The Defenders 2099 |
Abilities |
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Publication history
editHulk 2099's first regular appearances were in 2099 Unlimited #1-6, as one of several different stories in the anthology. The character later starred in his own series, Hulk 2099, which ran for 10 issues (starting in Dec. 1994). After the series ended, the character was one of several heroes killed in the 2099 A.D. Apocalypse one-shot, which concluded the "One Nation Under Doom" storyline and changed the Marvel 2099 setting.
A version of the character later appeared in the comic book series Exiles, with a further reimagining of the character as a pack of feral gamma-powered creatures appearing in Timestorm 2009–2099.[1]
Fictional character biography
editJohn Eisenhart was a studio executive for Lotusland Productions, researching the Knights of Banner, migrant worshipers of the Hulk. The Knights of Banner had been experimenting with gamma rays, hoping to create a new Hulk. After the Knights refused to sell their story to him, Eisenhart reported them to the police. As the police arrived, a battle ensued, leading to the capturing and slaughter of many Knights. Eisenhart, wracked with guilt, joined the Knights in their fight. A young Knight the studio exec had befriended named Gawain tried to end the violence by killing everyone by setting off the gamma devices, only to have his new ally caught in the blast. The blast transformed Eisenhart into a new Hulk, who quickly ended the battle. Upon returning to Lotusland, the studio executive was assigned to investigate a new desert creature (himself).[2]
Lotusland, as a company, continued to have much trouble, including nearly everyone going mad due to outside influences.[3]
During his investigation, Eisenhart/Hulk met a singer/songwriter named Quirk. She would join Eisenhart/Hulk in his search for Gawain, who had been captured during the initial battle. The search would take them to multiple locations, including a mall that is dozens of miles long and has many abandoned areas. The Hulk would deal with multiple foes in multiple spots while his human side, which he is liking less and less, has to deal with the backstabbing at his workplace. This plot would last for the duration of the Hulk's 2099 Unlimited appearances, with the young knight being rescued.[4]
Gawain's salvation would be short-lived, as he would die at the hands of the villain Draco at the start of the Hulk 2099 series, fueling Eisenhart/Hulk with guilt and remorse throughout the rest of the series over his broken vow to protect the young Knight. In addition to Draco, the Hulk would face other villains throughout the series like Golden One, Cybershaman, Dr. Apollo,[5] and Anti-Hulk.[6] He then went searching for his ex-wife, but instead ran into his demise. The Hulk would meet his demise at the barrels of guns of the post-Doom S.H.I.E.L.D., dying after being shot by an unspecified energy in 2099 A.D. Apocalypse.[7]
Exiles
editThe Exiles later visited the Marvel 2099 universe. After being resurrected and escaping the House of M, Proteus took over the body of this version of Hulk 2099, looking for a suitable host body that would not expire quickly due to his vast energy. Although physically powerful, the Hulk's body was not enough to sustain Proteus, who transferred himself into the body of Morph in the Future Imperfect universe.[8]
The appearance of Proteus early in the year 2099 caused a timeline divergence from the original Marvel 2099 continuity, and the new timeline is identified as Earth-6375 in the All-New Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe A-Z #5.
Timestorm 2009-2099
editIn Timestorm 2009-2099, the Hulk of 2099 is not just a singular individual, but an entire species of mutant creatures that were created when a gamma bomb was dropped on Washington, D.C., mutating all residents there and reducing the city to a desert wasteland.[9]
Secret Wars 2099
editDuring the Secret Wars storyline, a variation of Hulk 2099 resides in the Battleworld domain of 2099. John Eisenheart is seen pursuing a criminal wanted by Alchemax's Avengers. When the Avengers arrive, Eisenheart warns them not to interfere and transforms into the Hulk after they refuse to leave. After battling the heroes, the Hulk is revealed to be a member of the Defenders 2099.[10]
Earth-2099
editOn the unified 2099 reality known as Earth-2099, Hulk was among those recruited by Moon Knight 2099 to join the 2099 version of the New Avengers after the 2099 version of the Avengers (including a 2099 version of Grey Hulk) were killed by the 2099 version of the Masters of Evil. He engaged the 2099 version of Radioactive Man and defeated him.[11]
Powers and abilities
editThe Hulk 2099 is one of the strongest beings in his future timeline. Like the original, he possesses immeasurable strength, stamina, durability, speed, and healing, as well as the ability to leap great heights (he could easily leap hundreds of feet in height or miles while in an enraged state). His strength would increase due to anger. John Eisenhart can willingly transform himself into the Hulk 2099, the process adds 5' 9" in size and 1,423 lbs to his mass. Unlike his predecessor, this Hulk has natural weapons, which he utilizes for combat, such as tearing through steel. He was a skilled attorney and formidable unarmed combatant.[12]
Personality
editThe most distinctive contrast of the Hulk 2099 was his psyche. Initially, when he turns into the Hulk, Eisenhart retained his intellect and personality (although significantly more aggressive, due possibly to his current emotional stress). He is able to control his transformations at will. However, they developed two alternate personalities: Eisenhart ruthless, while the Hulk heroic. As the mental separation became farther distant, these changes would only occur during moments of rage.
In other media
editVideo games
edit- Hulk 2099 appears in Lego Marvel Super Heroes 2.[13]
References
edit- ^ Reed, Brian (November 2009). Timestorm 2009/2099. Marvel Comics. ISBN 978-0-7851-3922-5.
- ^ 2099 Unlimited #1 (Sept. 1993). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Hulk 2099 #5 (June 1995). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Hulk 2099 #7-8 (June–July 1995). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Hulk 2099 #6 (May 1995). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Hulk 2099 #9-10 (Aug.–Sept. 1995)
- ^ 2099 A.D. Apocalypse (1995). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Exiles #80 (July 2006). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Timestorm 2009-2099 #1-4. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Secret Wars 2099 #2. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Spider-Man 2099: Exodus #3. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe A to Z Vol 1 #5 (November 2008)
- ^ "Characters". IGN Database. Retrieved 7 February 2018.