The Absorbing Man is a fictional character, a supervillain in the Marvel Universe. He was created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby in Journey into Mystery #114. He is mainly an antagonist of Thor.
After his first defeat, the Absorbing Man returned to plague Thor again. Loki transported him to Asgard where the criminal could be used in his scheme to take over the Enchanted Realm. But when the Absorbing Man dared to challenge Odin, lord of the Asgardians, Odin summarily dispatched him into space. Creel eventually managed to return to Earth and soon encountered the Hulk. They battled and Creel was defeated while in the process of absorbing the Hulk's power during his transformation to the human Bruce Banner. The Absorbing Man then challenged Thor again and was defeated when he was tricked into turning into water. A short time later, Thor defeated him again by tricking him into absorbing the properties of a cardboard replica of Thor's hammer. Serving a short prison sentence, Creel managed to escape and was contacted by They Who Wield Power, a cabal of power seekers from El Dorado, who hired him to destroy the Hulk. He failed when he inadvertently absorbed the properties of glass while falling.
Eventually reassembling the shards of his body, the Absorbing Man decided that he was tired of fighting against and losing to superhuman champions. Seeking to flee the country, Creel foolishly took a hostage, thereby causing the Avengers to chase after him. To escape them, he jumped into the ocean and transformed himself into water. When he finally regained his natural form, his mind was addled from his prolonged intermingling with the ocean and he was paranoically frightened of anyone with superhuman power. A chance battle with the Hulk cured him of his paranoia, however. Returning to America, he stalked the mutant Dazzler to acquire her light-powers to use against the Avengers. He was defeated, however, by the Dazzler and the Inhuman Black Bolt. He was abducted from prison by the Beyonder to fight in the "Secret Wars". Following the wars, he was restored to Earth. In later years, he became romantically involved with fellow supervillain Titania (Mary "Skeeter" McPherran) and the two were eventually married.
The Absorbing Man is highly addicted to narcotics, especially pain killers and cocaine and will work for whatever criminal can supply him with narcotics. Creel's addiction has impacted his behavior. While Creel was always a bonafide thug and villain, he was not wholly heartless and usually tried to avoid killing innocent bystanders (although he has never had qualms about threatening or even forcibly incapacitating them). But when he is in need of a high he has demonstrated no concern for the safety of others. Recently, he was tricked into transforming into cocaine and minions operating powerful industrial fans scattered his body in the room he was occupying. His body mass was then collected off of the surfaces and placed into several bags. This all was the doing of The Owl who planned to sell this "Creel cocaine", but after being used as a drug all over New York (all those who used the drug transformed into anything they came in contact with, just like Creel), Creel managed to reassemble himself and was later defeated by Spider-Man.
At some point, his wife's obsession with destroying She-Hulk led to the end of their relationship. Whether they have been formally and legally divorced has not been stated.
Creel also has the ability to mimic the physical strengths of someone he is in physical contact with. This requires Creel's deliberate concentration. Creel's body can also absorb the properties of great amounts of energy in the same fashion it absorbs the properties of solid materials. Creel has proven able to absorb the mystical energies of Thor's enchanted Uru hammer on multiple occasions. In Uru metal form, his strength exceeds Thor's. He is also one of the few beings other than Thor who has been able to lift the hammer itself, though not to prevent it from returning to Thor's hands.
There seems to be no limit to the length of time that Creel can retain the properties of a material he has absorbed. However, this rule varies. For example, during his first confrontation with the Hulk, he managed to absorb the monster's incredible strength. However, when the Hulk reverted to Bruce Banner, Creel's newfound strength began to decline and eventually left him. There are also undefined limits to the amount of power that Creel can absorb. He met one of his first defeats when he exploded while attempting to absorb the power of the entire planet Earth. If the Absorbing Man's body is shattered or dispersed, he has the ability to completely reconstitute his bodily mass without injury to himself, though it may take a great deal of time to do so. However, Creel must remain in whatever form he'd taken upon being shattered until after he has gathered all the pieces of himself. Otherwise, it could potentially kill him. He often has a tendency to accidentally absorb the properties of materials he did not intend to. Perhaps the greatest limitation of the Absorbing Man's powers is his intellect; he is noticeably slow-witted and can often be fooled into transforming himself into substances that can easily lead to his defeat. For instance, when fighting the Hulk one time, he shattered some glass and one shard fell on his body and he inadvertently turned into glass himself. The Hulk took advantage of this development and punched Creel to shatter him.
The ball and chain that he carries is also mystically enchanted and linked to his absorbing power when using it. It too can assimilate the properties and characteristics of whatever he is touching, so long as he is also holding onto the ball and chain while he is doing so (when he absorbed Thor's strength level his weapon simultaneously imitated the hardness of Thor's hammer). The ball and chain essentially function more as an extension of his body rather than a weapon during combat.
It was shown in a Hulk story that Creel developed the power of absorbing the minds of other people, and possessing their bodies. In that particular story, he was shown unusually smart and cunning. This story has since been retconned as a continuity "glitch" from the time when the insane cosmic super hero Captain Marvel III (Genis-Vell) remade the universe under his own power.
Absorbing man also appears as a member of the Masters of Evil in the 6th episode of the animated series United They Stand.
Although Creel never starred in the 2003 Hulk (film) The main villain David Banner played by Nick Nolte acquired powers almost identical to the Absorbing Man's and attempted to absorb the Hulk's power for his own, but was defeated when the Hulk's unlimited power proved too much to abosrb and lost control over his abilities and was then finished off when General Ross blew him up with a Gamma missile.
The pieces of Creel are collected and reassembled by the Tong of Creel, a group of radicals led by Dr. Strange's servant Wong, and an epic battle is fought in New York City, during which he begins to absorb the entire city into himself. In one last heroic act, Creel turns himself into Vibranium, saving the planet. (The Vibranium of this earth had been extracted when Franklin Richards as Galactus consumed the Celestial inside the Earth, causing problems worldwide).
Daredevil villains | Hulk villains | Marvel Comics mutates | Masters of Evil members | Thor villains | fictional immortals
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"Absorbing Man".
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