Marvel Multiverse

Tag Area: Conglomerate
Comic Book

Fantastic Four #5

Prisoners of Doctor Doom!


The Marvel Comics Brand began in 1939 with the first edition of Marvel Comics. Throughout the ’40s and ’50s, some of the Timely and Atlas comics had the slogan “A Marvel Magazine,” ”Marvel Comic,” or a small “MC” on the cover. As for me personally, I was hooked when Marvel started publishing the Fantastic Four in 1961. During the sixties, I devoured as many Marvels as I could as they arrived at the local Rexall Drug Store or swapping comcs with my pals, and this is the first of those Marvel issues in the ’60s involved superhero time travel.

Nowadays, we all know that Doc Doom is far too smart to think the most profitable way to use his time platform is by sending three of the FF into the past with orders to bring back Blackbeard’s treasure (while keeping the fourth member of their team captive). And yet, the story has a charm that stems from the causal loop of Ben Grimm’s presence in the past actually causing the legend of Blackbeard, which in turn caused Doom to send the loveable lunk back.
And now I shall send you back. . . hundreds of years into the past! You will have forty-eight hours to bring me Blackbeard’s treasure chest! Do not fail!
Through a large, round portal in an air-tight chamber, Doctor Doom threatens to
                destroy the F F, who helpless struggle as they run out of air.
  • Eloi Gold Medal
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Journey into Mystery #86

On the Trail of the Tomorrow Man


Zarrko, a mad time-machine-building scientist from 2262, believes that our nuclear weapons will enable him to take over the world of his time. He comes back to 1962 to steal one, and the Mighty Thor pursues him back to 2262.

The plot suffers from Alpha Centauri syndrome, where the time traveler might as well be from Alpha Centauri as from the future, but seeing the emergence of Kirby’s high-perspective artwork gives this issue a boost. In addition, the story provides a powerful image of the pre-Vietnam cold war era and its prevailing assumptions about the roles of women in society. —Michael Main
Ahhh—an ancient explosion of a nuclear bomb! The perfect device with which to conquer the twenty-third century!
The Mighty Thor flies through a fading time machine with the Tomorrow Man
                inside.
  • Eloi Honorable Mention
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Strange Tales #111

Face-to-Face with the Magic of Baron Mordo!


Steve Ditko’s second-ever story of the master of the mystic arts includes one panel that, based on Stan Lee’s caption, involves time travel. Even though it was just one panel, it got me wondering whether the phrase race through time could possibly have a meaning. What would it mean for one time traveler to arrive at the final destination before another? Isn't the whole set up kind of like Doc Strange saying to Baron Mordo, “I’ll bet I can think of a number bigger than you can.” —Michael Main
Unseen by human eyes, the two mighty spirit images race thru time and space . . .
Doctor Strange and Baron Mordo sit entranced beside the Ancient One,
                while above them, their spirit images battle.
  • Eloi Honorable Mention
  • Fantasy
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Cameo Time Travel
Comic Book

Tales of Suspense #44

The Mad Pharoah!


Iron Man’s suit changes from grey to gold, and the golden Avenger is kidnapped and taken back to ancient Egypt where he upsets the plans of the consistently misspelled Mad Pharoah by winning the throne back for Cleopatra. —Michael Main
For though I do not know your real identity . . . I, Cleopatra, have lost my heart to you!
Carrying a smiling and waving Cleopatra in one arm, Iron Man flies over
                chariots and ancient Egyptians.
  • Eloi Honorable Mention
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Fantastic Four #19

Prisoners of the Pharoah! [sic]


Hoping to find a cure for Alicia’s blindness, the FF travel back to ancient Egypt where they meet the time traveler Rama-Tut for the first time. —Michael Main
At the conclusion of that adventure, Doom’s castle was abandoned by him, but there is still a chance that the machine he used to send us into the past may still be operational!
Standing beside Rama Tut and dressed in red finery, Sue Storm thinks,
                "Rama Tut
  • Eloi Honorable Mention
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Fantastic Four #23

The Master Plan of Doctor Doom!


Darn that Johnny Storm! Doc Doom’s time platform. But look what popped outta Doc Dooms time platform while Johnny wasn’t watching! Just a comedy relief for the rest of the story, which has no time travel. —Michael Main
A baby dinosaur!! Don’t just stand there! Grab him!
Doctor Doom stands at the controls of a Kirby-esque machine, watching the
                Fantastic Four at the edge disappearing floor with outer space below.
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Cameo Time Travel
Comic Book

Journey into Mystery #101–102

Zarrko Rides Again!


As scared people race away, the Mighty Thor spins his hammer, preparing to
                throw it at Zarrko, who is descending on a big, blue hand.
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Journey into Mystery #102

Death Comes to Thor!


Eighteen-year-old Thor seeks out the three prophetic Fates for the answer to whether he shall ever be awarded Odin’s enchanted hammer. —Michael Main
You can win Odin’s enchanted hammer—but you will have to meet death first!
Young Thor, without his hammer, climbs a grassy hill toward a rock outcrop
                where three cloaked figures stir a caldron.
  • Superhero
  • Folklore and Mythology
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Time Phenomena
Comic Book

Strange Tales #123

The Challenge of Loki!


A split cover with the Torch, the Thing, and the Beetle (on the left), and
                Doctor Strange, Thor, and Loki (on the right).
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Fantastic Four Annual #2

The Final Victory of Dr. Doom!


At the end of FF #23, Doc Doom was left floating in space. But of course, he’s too good a villain to not have someone rescue him, and that someone is Rama-Tut, fresh from FF #19 in his time ship. —Michael Main
Pen-and-ink splash page of the Fantastic Four facing motor trouble
                while riding over the city in their world-famous Fantastic-Car.
  • Eloi Gold Medal
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Avengers #8

Kang, the Conqueror!


Kang the Conqueror stands behinda wall of energy balls as all five of the
                Avengers attack in vain.
  • Eloi Silver Medal
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Strange Tales #124

The Lady from Nowhere!


The new menace of Paste-Pot Pete plasters the Human Torch and the Thing
                to a wall.
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Avengers #10

The Avengers Break Up!


In his purple cloak and tall hat, Immorus stands defiantly, controlling Captain
                America, who fights the other four Avengers.
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Journey into Mystery #122

Where Mortals Fear to Tread!


A majestic Odin, sitting in his regal throne, dominates the scene, while the
                Mighty Thor approaches from behind and the Absorbing Man approaches from the front
                with his ball and chain.
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Avengers #11, December 1964

The Mighty Avengers Meet Spider-Man


This story is as close as Spidey ever got to time traveling in the Silver Age. He didn’t travel himself, but he did meet and battle Kang’s time traveling Spider-Man robot. On top of that, Don Heck gave us his interpretations of Ditko art taken from the pages of the Amazing Spider-Man Annual #1. Can you tell which is which?
Spider-Man! Well, much obliged to you, fella! I never knew you were so . . . cooperative!
Spider-Man perches on one side of a large web that has trapped the five
                Avengers.
  • Eloi Honorable Mention
  • Superhero
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Fantastic Four #34

A House Divided!


A bald man sits at an ornate desk, calmly watching as the Fantastic Four attack
                one another.
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Strange Tales #129

Beware . . . Tiboro! The Tyrant of the Sixth Dimension!


A mesmerized Doctor Strange levitates three crystal balls containing
                two images of Tiboro the tyrant and one of an idol.
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Strange Tales #134

The Challenge of . . . the Watcher!


A giant Watcher looms over a castle and a heated battle between a mass of
                medieval people and two members of the F F: the Human Torch and the Thing.
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Fantastic Four Annual #3

Bedlam at the Baxter Building!


24 Marvel super-heroes of the nineteen-sixties face off against 25
                supervillians.
  • Eloi Gold Medal
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Avengers #23–24

The Epic of Kang vs. the Avengers Quartet!


Hawkeye, Quicksilver, Wanda, and Cap prepare to launch an attack at a giant,
                looming Kang, the Conqueror.
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Tales to Astonish #75–78

Hulk, against a World!


An angry Hulk charges a troop of machine-gunning soldiers with the capitol
                building andd General Ross in the background.
  • Eloi Bronze Medal
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Avengers #28

Among Us Walks a Goliath!


Goliath, in his new purple and gold costume, looms large behind the
                four other Avengers.
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Strange Tales #148—150

Kaluu!


When Kaluu triumphantly sends the all-powerful Book of Vishanti back to the time of its origin, it falls to Doc Strange and the Ancient One to banish it to a timeless period so that it will never again fall into the wrong hands. —Michael Main
We approach the time-space continuum of ancient Babylonia— It is there that the book which we seek was created milenniums [sic] ago!
A worried Doctor Strange looks over his shoulder at an evil sorceror who
  • Fantasy
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Thor #140

The Growing Man


Citizens of New York City flee as the giant Growing Man in purple armor topples
                a building while the Mighty Thor attacks.
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Not Brand Echh #2

Magnut, Robot Biter!


Cartoonish Spidey-Man (with his yo-yo on a spidey-web), Ironed Man,
                Gnatman, and others emerge from a grey-walled cave.
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Avengers Annual #2

. . . and Time, the Rushing River . . .


After the Scarlet Centurion waylays the Avengers on their way back from the 1940s, they find themselves in an alternative 1968 where the five original Avengers stayed together under the thumb of the Scarlet Centurion.

The story includes flashbacks and previously unknown explanations of the team’s previous trip to the ’40s in Avengers #56, and at the end of the story, Goliath uses Dr. Doom’s Time Platform to banish the Scarlet Centurion back to his time—and we think this is the only time travel that actually appears in the story (apart from the flashbacks). We don’t know what happens to the alternative 1968 (now known as Earth-689, but the traveling Avengers return to the universe that we all knew and loved in the 1960s (a.k.a. Earth-616), with their memory of the whole affair wiped by the Watcher. —Michael Main
Time is like a river! Dam it up at any one point . . . and it has no choice but to flow elsewhere . . . along other, easier routes!
Five Avengers from 1968, led by Goliath and the Wasp, face off against the five
                Avengers as they were in early 1964, led by Giant Man and the Wasp.
  • Eloi Silver Medal
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Avengers #56

Death Be Not Proud!


Using Doc Doom’s time platform, the tag-3743 } Wasp sends Cap and the other three 1968 Avengers back to observe Bycky Barnes’s death at the hands of Baron Zemo. —Michael Main
That’s just what’s begun to torure me! How can I be sure he’s dead? I saw only a single searing blast! If I somehow survived it . . . couldn’t he have, too?
Standing over Bucky Barnes’s body, an anguished Captain America beseeches a
                higher power.
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Iron Man #5

Frenzy in a Far-Flung Future!


The Mandarin, in his green-horned helmut, blasts a seemingly helpless Iron
                Man.
  • Eloi Silver Medal
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Marvel Super-Heroes #18

Earth Shall Overcome!


The four original Guardians of the Galaxy morch toward us over a green planet,
                with a grey moon hanging in the sky behind them.
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Marvel Super-Heroes #20

This Man . . . This Demon!


A full-page Doctor Doom raises his arms in triumph over a backdrop of dozens of
                red, orange, and yellow moons and stars.
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

tag-3934 Silver Surfer #6

Worlds without End!


The Silver Surfer swoops out of an orange fire toward a golden armored guard
                and the head of a gaping pink-and-purple demon.
  • Eloi Gold Medal
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Comic Book

Avengers #69–71

The Epic of Kang vs. the Avengers Nonet!


Kang the Conqueror stands on the shoulder of a giant, grey, robotic man, as
                seven Avengers attack.
  • Eloi Bronze Medal
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Feature Film

Marvel Cinematic Universe 14

Doctor Strange


After his career is destroyed, a brilliant but arrogant surgeon gets a new lease on life when a sorcerer takes him under her wing and trains him to defend the world against evil. —from publicity material
Dormammu, I’ve come to bargain.
Benedict Cumberbatch (as Doctor Strange) casts a spell with two outstretched,
                transparent fingers.
  • Eloi Silver Medal
  • Fantasy
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Feature Film

Marvel Cinematic Universe 19

Avengers: Infinity War


Given that the Time Stone is a key element to Thanos’s master plan, you’d think that time travel would play a major part in this movie, but not so. Doc Strange does use the stone to view a slew of possible futures, but we know that’s not actually time travel. So where does the time travel come into play? Pay close attention to the final thirteen minutes of the film, after Strange announces “We’re in the end game now,” and you’ll spot one definite time travel moment and a second possible moment. —Michael Main
Tony, there was no other way.
A giant Josh Brolin (as Thanos) stands proudly behind a determined Robert
                Downey Junior (as Iron Man) and the rest of the Avengers.
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
TV Episode

WandaVision


I don't understand this power, but I will.
No image currently available.
  • Eloi Gold Medal
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Debatable Time Travel
TV Episode

Loki, Season 1


Hang on to your Tesseracts! Apparently, in Endgame, when the Avengers traveled back in time to swipe various things from the 2012 Avengers, they inadvertantly started a branch in time where Loki ended up with the Tesseract. Of course, once that occurred, the Time Variance Authority spotted him as a Variant and quickly recruited him to help in their fight against even more variant Variants. —Michael Main
Appears to be a standard sequence violation. Branches growing at a stable rate and slope. Variant identified.
Tom Hiddleston (as Loki) stands with his arms crossed and an annoyed look on
                his face, in front of a large analog clock with multiple hands.
  • Eloi Bronze Medal
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Cartoon

What If  . . . ? (s1e01)

What If . . . Captain Carter Were the First Avenger?


The Watcher tells us of a universe where a change in a single decision made Peggy Carter (rather than Steve Rogers) become the Allies’ super-soldier. Like Steve, Peggy also manages to find her way into modern times via a technique that’s related to time travel. —Michael Main
Agent Carter, wouldn’t you be more comfortable in the booth?
A mash-up drawing of Hayley Atwell (as Captain Carter, the first super-soldier)
                with parts of Captain America mixed in.
  • Eloi Bronze Medal
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Time Phenomena
Cartoon

What If  . . . ? (s01e04)

What If . . . Doctor Strange Lost His Heart Instead of His Hands?


As we all know, when the world’s formost surgeon, Doctor Strange, lost the use of his hands in a car wreck, it prompted him to search out mystic treatments and eventually become the Master of the Mystic Arts. But what if he had lost something else in that wreck? —Michael Main
The Ancient One: Her death is an Absolute Point in time.
Dr. Strange: Absolute?
A.O.: Unchangable. Unmovable. Without her death, you would never have defeated Dormamu and become the Sorcerer Supreme—and the guardian of the Eye of Agamotto. If you erase her death, you never start your journey.
A computer animated cartoon drawing of Benedict Cumberbatch (as Doctor Strange)
                casting a spell.
  • Eloi Silver Medal
  • Fantasy
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Definite Time Travel
Feature Film

Marvel Cinematic Universe

Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse


Miles Morales and Gwen Stacy (as Spider-Man and Spider-Gwen) swing through various spider-verses, become close to each other, struggle to stave off the Spot, and learn of the thoughse of spider-heroes, some of who exhibit technology to reconstruct the past and possibly predict the future. —Michael Main
Well, maybe some things are supposed to be just for us.
No image currently available.
  • Superhero
  • Audience: YA and Up
  • Time Phenomena