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Mystique appears in LittleBigPlanet via the "Marvel Costume Kit 1" DLC. [196] Mystique appears in Marvel: Avengers Alliance as a member of Magneto's Brotherhood of Mutants. Mystique appears in Lego Marvel Super Heroes, [197] voiced by Laura Bailey. [citation needed] This version is a member of Magneto's Brotherhood of Mutants.
The series, conceived by Ellis as a parody [1] of the Marvels series by Kurt Busiek and Alex Ross, is set in a dystopian version of the Marvel Universe. Like Marvels , the comic features reporter Phil Sheldon as the main character and was published in prestige format , with fully painted artwork and acetate covers, further creating the ...
Mystique is a fictional character appearing in the X-Men film series, beginning with the film X-Men in 2000. Based on the comic-book character of the same name, she was portrayed in the first three X-Men films by actress Rebecca Romijn, in her first major acting role, while in four prequel and soft reboot films, starting with X-Men: First Class, she was played by actress Jennifer Lawrence.
She is known for her role as Mystique in the original trilogy (2000–2006) of the X-Men film series, as Joan from The Punisher (2004) (both based on Marvel Comics), the dual roles of Laure Ash and Lily Watts in Femme Fatale (2002), [4] [5] [6] and Una Chin-Riley on Star Trek: Discovery (2019) and Star Trek: Strange New Worlds (2022–present
Shepard is a mutant who attempted to manipulate Mystique into turning against Professor X, possessing inexplicable knowledge of her location.It was later revealed he was helping Shortpack to track down the murderer of Prudence Leighton and had insight into all of Mystique's endeavors.
Mystique then assumes Val's identity, passing Cooper's injured body as her own corpse, and later aids the X-Men and X-Factor as a "mole" among the Shadow King's servants. Without Mystique, the remaining Freedom Force members are sent on a disastrous mission in Kuwait during the first Gulf War , in which Super Sabre is killed and Crimson ...
Created by writer Chris Claremont and artist/co-writer John Byrne, the character first appeared in The Uncanny X-Men #141 (Jan. 1981). [1]As far back as 1981, Claremont had intended Destiny to be the lover of Brotherhood of Mutants teammate Mystique, and for them to be Nightcrawler's biological parents, with Mystique taking the form of a man for the conception.
Confronted by a shape-shifted Mystique, a disguise he easily sees through, Azazel is asked to join Mystique to the realm of Hell to fight the newly resurrected William Stryker, who has become demonic. Weapon X-Force is close in proximity, and Sabertooth grows agitated with the lack of progression towards the mission's goal, eventually having ...