Who Is The Hood?
Associates: John King, Madam Masque, Jigsaw, Chemestro, Jonas Harrow, Crimson Cowl, Wizard, Blackout, as well as various other super-villains
First Appearance: The Hood #1 (2002)Powers & Abilities: The Hood has no natural abilities. His hood and boots give him limited invisibility, flight and demonic powers, which can manifest through increased strength, electrical discharges and demonic transformation.
Origin
Parker Robbins was recruited by his cousin, John King, to break into a warehouse, with light security, rumoured to be housing unknown, but highly valuable goods, and took the job in order to make some money to help move his mother, who suffers from an undisclosed degenerative mental illness, to a better health care facility.
Later, after being accosted by several gang members, Robbins flees. As he runs, he puts on the Nisanti boots and discovers that he can levitate with them on. Further exploration of the demonic items reveals the hood's ability to turn the wearer invisible, provided they hold their breath.
Why Should I Care About Him?
Regardless of what you think of his current role in Brian Bendis' New Avengers, The Hood's original Marvel MAX mini-series by BKV was one of the best works to come out of that imprint and somehow managed to get lost in the shuffle for whatever reason when it first launched back in 2002.
Recent New Avengers issues has Robbins working with his cousin, King, to establish his super villain empire. Many minor villains have fallen under Hood's sway, including Madam Masque, Crimson Cowl, Jigsaw and a number of others.
Various exploits by The Hood under Bendis' care include going toe-to-toe with Wolverine, with The Hood coming out victorious, apparently killing The Owl for operating without The Hood's permission, reprogramming Deathlok and using him to steal over 4 billion dollars in cash and, finally, acquiring detailed information on several heroes working under the Super-Hero Registration Act and using that knowledge to send a message to other heroes by brutally beating Tigra as well as showing the villains that he can protect them from said heroes if they ever become a problem.
The Tigra beating by The Hood has been a major source of controversy and even required an interview with Bendis by Newsarama, which you can read here. Whether you believe the scene was an misogynistic 'women in fridges' moment or not, the scene has put a major focus on The Hood and elevated him from a simple villain and helped establish his rule over the other super-villains. So, while you might hate the character after this, the scene has given the viewers a much more vested interest in seeing the New Avengers get their eventual pay back on the fledgling, would-be 'godfather of super-villains'.What Does The Future Hold For The Hood?
Conclusion
As I said earlier, with Bendis pushing him, The Hood has no where to go but up as the biggest creative driving force in the company pushes him into the spotlight in Marvel's biggest and highest profile book, The New Avengers. Combined with the strength of his debut mini-series, which was recently re-released in hardcover format to coincide with his introduction in New Avengers, The Hood is set to become one of the biggest players in the Marvel Universe.
Personally, I'm curious to see if Bendis will bring in the various back story elements from The Hood's original series. Will we see a retaliation for the attack on Tigra on Robbin's girlfriend or child, who was recently born, in some form or another? Will the White Fang or Golem be re-introduced to throw a wrench into his plans? The character has a lot of potential with the excellent work Vaughan did establishing him and I hope we get a chance to see Bendis expand upon it as he builds his criminal empire.
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