Damnation (comics)

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"Damnation"
Doctor Strange's full body is visible in the bottom 2/3 of the image inside a protective pink bubble. A giant Mephisto is behind him, leaning on the bubble. Demons approach Doctor Strange in the foreground and the background is a fiery hell. The logo is in the upper left corner.
Variant cover to Damnation #1
Art by Ron Lim
PublisherMarvel Comics
Publication dateFebruary 2018
Title(s)
Doctor Strange: Damnation #1-4
Doctor Strange #386-390
Scarlet Spider #15-17
Iron Fist #78-80
Damnation: Johnny Blaze - Ghost Rider
#1
Main character(s)Doctor Strange
Midnight Sons
Scarlet Spider
Mephisto
Creative team
Writer(s)Donny Cates
Nick Spencer
Artist(s)Rod Reis
Letterer(s)Travis Lanham
Colorist(s)Rod Reis
Editor(s)Nick Lowe

Damnation is a comic book limited series written by Donny Cates and Nick Spencer, illustrated by Rod Reis, and published in 2018 as four monthly issues by Marvel Comics. It was the main story in a crossover event with some plot elements occurring in tie-in issues of related ongoing series also published by Marvel.

Publication history[edit]

Damnation builds on events depicted in the 2017 crossover Secret Empire by Nick Spencer and various artists and the Doctor Strange ongoing series written by Donny Cates. The series was announced as a five-issue limited series on November 16, 2017,[1] but later details reduced the count to four.[2] The first issue was released February 21, 2018.

The crossover plot includes tie-in issues from some of Marvel's other contemporary ongoing series. These include Ben Reilly: Scarlet Spider #15–17, Doctor Strange #386–389, Iron Fist #78–80, and Johnny Blaze: Ghost Rider #1.[3]

Damnation is Cates' last story with Doctor Strange. When the limited series concluded, he left the monthly title,[4] later going on to write his run of Venom from 2018 to 2021.

Plot[edit]

Main plot[edit]

In the 2017 crossover event Secret Empire, Las Vegas was destroyed when HYDRA Helicarriers were dispatched to raze the city. After reclaiming his Sorcerer Supreme status from Loki, Doctor Strange uses his magic to restore it and resurrect the people who died. He is opposed by Mephisto, the ruler of Hell who has already claimed their souls as his own. He orchestrates events that causes his demons to bring Doctor Strange to his recently created Hotel Inferno. Mephisto claims that the remnants of Las Vegas were in his realm before it was restored. Hotel Inferno starts to have an effect on the people of Las Vegas. It also had an effect on Black Panther, Captain Marvel, Falcon, Hawkeye, and Jane Foster's Thor form where they were all turned into Ghost Rider-like creatures. The ghost of Doctor Strange's talking dog Bats sought out Wong so that he can help Doctor Strange. To help Doctor Strange, Wong summoned Blade, Doctor Voodoo, Moon Knight, Elsa Bloodstone, Ghost Rider, Iron Fist, Scarlet Spider, and Man-Thing to form the latest incarnation of the Midnight Sons.[5][6]

Mephisto has turned Doctor Strange into a Ghost Rider-like creature. While Wong has assembled the Midnight Sons, they were overpowered by the demons roaming around Las Vegas. This attack got Wong and Bats' ghost separated from the rest. While the Midnight Sons were saved from the Ghost Riders by Scarlet Spider, Wong and Bats' ghost ran into Doctor Strange's Ghost Rider form.[7]

Bats' ghost is able to possess the soulless body of Doctor Strange. While the Midnight Sons and Scarlet Spider fight the demons, Ghost Rider rides his motorcycle to the top of Hotel Inferno to confront Mephisto. After Mephisto removes the Ghost Rider from Johnny Blaze, he throws Blaze from the roof.[8]

The Midnight Sons have been fighting the possessed Avengers for hours. Mephisto appeared on the battlefield and gloated on them sending Johnny Blaze to attack him. Just then, the possessed Avengers attack Mephisto as Wong revealed that Mephisto rendering his throne vacant has enabled Ghost Rider to become the new ruler of Mephisto's realm. After Doctor Strange returned from the Realm Between, he assisted the Midnight Sons and the Avengers into preventing Mephisto from returning to his realm to reclaim his throne. Though Doctor Strange defeated him, Mephisto fled back to his realm where he was defeated by Johnny Blaze and the different Ghost Riders from across the Multiverse. After Johnny Blaze sent Mephisto back to Earth, he was kept at the top of Hotel Inferno in countless restraints as Hotel Inferno remained on Earth. As Doctor Strange, the Avengers, and the Midnight Sons left upon Las Vegas returning to normal, Wong remained behind to keep an eye on Hotel Inferno's casino.[9]

Tie-ins[edit]

Doctor Strange[edit]

As Hotel Inferno starts to affect the people of Las Vegas, Doctor Strange fought Mephisto in a game of blackjack. The deal is that Mephisto had to return the souls to Las Vegas if Doctor Strange won and that Doctor Strange's soul would be claimed if Mephisto won. Though Doctor Strange won by cheating, Mephisto found out and had Doctor Strange tortured.[10] After being tortured, Doctor Strange is rescued by Scarlet Witch, Clea and Loki and jump into action when they see the Avengers fighting demons. It's later revealed that the rescue was all an illusion and that Clea was a possessed Captain Marvel who posed as her to trick Doctor Strange. While inside Doctor Strange's body, Bats' ghost and Doctor Strange's mind find themselves in the Realm Between where they find the souls of those that Mephisto has trapped while he controls their bodies. It is here where Doctor Strange finds the souls of the Avengers that Mephisto is controlling as well as Dormammu. With the souls of the Avengers, Doctor Strange's soul plans to find a way out of the Realm Between.[11] Doctor Strange then manages to find a way to escape the Realm Between and helps the souls of the Avengers return to their bodies.[12]

Ben Reilly: The Scarlet Spider[edit]

During the rise of Hotel Inferno, Ben Reilly sees the effect that the hotel has caused on the citizens of Las Vegas and springs into action. While fighting demons alongside the Midnight Sons, Scarlet Spider gets separated from the group and faces Mephisto, who tries to trick him into giving up his path to redemption. When Ben refuses, he sends a possessed Kaine Parker after him. After a long fight, Ben manages to free Kaine from his possession and convinces him to help defeat Mephisto.[13]

Iron Fist[edit]

After being separated from the Midnight Sons, Iron Fist is found by Fat Cobra, who takes him to a fight tournament where the star fighter is Orson Randall, a former Iron Fist who died some time ago. After discovering what forces him to fight, Danny decides to help Orson escape by fighting in the tournament. During this time, the demon fight promoter brings in Danny's long-lost sister Miranda Rand-Kai, who is sent to fight Orson, as well as Fat Cobra's deceased mother. After fighting 12 monster demons, Danny and his friends are able to escape, though Orson dies during the fight. After sending Miranda, Fat Cobra and his mother to his place, Danny heads out to rejoin the Midnight Sons to defeat Mephisto.[14]

Johnny Blaze: Ghost Rider[edit]

After Johnny was thrown off the roof, he passes away. This is all part of Wong's plan. In Hell, Johnny Blaze finds the now-independent Spirit of Vengeance and persuades him to help reach Mephisto's throne. The two of them combine together and make their way through the circles of Hell until they reach Mephisto's throne. After fighting through demons, Johnny manages to claim the throne and becomes the new King of Hell.[15]

Reception[edit]

The series debuted to a mixed critical reception. The first issue received an average score of 6.9 out of 10 according to review aggregator Comic Book Roundup.[16] Because the central premise is based on an event that occurred a year earlier, Comicbook.com found the plot immediately felt dated.[17] Although Jesse Shedeen felt the issue was too much setup and too little story, he said it captured the charm of the Cates' monthly Doctor Strange series. His review for IGN concludes that the plot may have worked better if dealt with exclusively within Doctor Strange instead of in a crossover.[18] Bleeding Cool was less impressed, calling it a "shocking misfire from the top-downwards" that makes the reader hate Doctor Strange.[19] The second issue was received more favorably by Pierce Lydon, who called it "fairly delightful" in a review for Newsarama.[20] David Brooke praised the artwork in his review for Adventures in Poor Taste.[21]

However, the entire event received mixed reviews from critics. According to Comicbook Roundup, Doctor Strange Damnation received an average rating of 6.9 out of 10 based on 419 reviews. [22]

Collected editions[edit]

Title Material collected Published date ISBN
Doctor Strange: Damnation - The Complete Collection Doctor Strange: Damnation #1-4, Johnny Blaze: Ghost Rider #1, Doctor Strange #386-389, Iron Fist #78-80, Ben Reilly: Scarlet Spider #15-17 July 2018 978-1302912604
Doctor Strange: Damnation Doctor Strange: Damnation #1-4 October 2018 978-1302913922
Ben Reilly: Scarlet Spider Vol. 4: Damnation Ben Reilly: Scarlet Spider #15-20 October 2018 978-1302911164
Doctor Strange by Donny Cates Doctor Strange: Damnation #1-4 and Doctor Strange #381-390, April 2019 978-1302915292

References[edit]

  1. ^ "What Happens In Vegas… Will Be In Doctor Strange: Damnation," Bleeding Cool. Retrieved February 26, 2018
  2. ^ (December 4, 2018), "Doctor Strange: Damnation Gets a Bunch of Tie-ins," Bleeding Cool. Retrieved February 26, 2018
  3. ^ Van As, Trevor (February 18, 2018), "Doctor Strange: Damnation Reading Order Checklist," How To Love Comics. Retrieved February 26, 2018
  4. ^ (February 22, 2018), "Marvel Rumours Spilling Out of ComicsPRO," Bleeding Cool. Retrieved February 26, 2018
  5. ^ "Doctor Strange's Damnation Explained". Newsarama. 21 June 2016. Retrieved February 23, 2018.
  6. ^ Doctor Strange: Damnation #1 (February 21, 2018). Marvel Comics.
  7. ^ Doctor Strange: Damnation #2 (March 7, 2018). Marvel Comics.
  8. ^ Doctor Strange: Damnation #3 (March 21, 2018). Marvel Comics.
  9. ^ Doctor Strange: Damnation #4 (April 25, 2018). Marvel Comics.
  10. ^ Doctor Strange #386. Marvel Comics.
  11. ^ Doctor Strange #387-388. Marvel Comics.
  12. ^ Doctor Strange #389. Marvel Comics.
  13. ^ Ben Reilly: Scarlet Spider #15-17
  14. ^ Iron Fist #78-80
  15. ^ Damnation: Ghost Rider - Johnny Blaze #1. Marvel Comics.
  16. ^ "Doctor Strange: Damnation #1 Reviews (2018) Archived 2018-02-27 at the Wayback Machine," Comic Book Roundup. Retrieved February 26, 2018
  17. ^ (February 21, 2018), "Review: 'Doctor Strange: Damnation' #1 Is Comic Book Purgatory," Comicbook.com. Retrieved February 26, 2018
  18. ^ Shedeen, Jesse (February 21, 2018), "Doctor Strange: Damnation #1 Review," IGN. Retrieved February 26, 2018
  19. ^ (February 22, 2018), "Doctor Strange Damnation #1 Review," Bleeding Cool. Retrieved February 26, 2018
  20. ^ Lydon, Pierce (March 8, 2018), "Best Shots Review," Newsarama. Retrieved March 22, 2018
  21. ^ Brooke, David (February 21, 2018), "Doctor Strange: Damnation #1 Review," Adventures in Poor Taste. Retrieved February 26, 2018
  22. ^ "Doctor Strange: Damnation Complete Collection Reviews". ComicBookRoundup.com. Retrieved 2023-11-29.