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Mentac (Mutant from the Russian Exiles, possessed a fifth-level brain capable of computer-like analysis, deceased) Mikhail Nikolaievitch Rasputin (A mutant who was the older brother of Colossus of the X-Men and Magik of the New Mutants. He was a former Russian cosmonaut, a superhero, a supervillain, and a presumed messiah. Deceased.)
Russia portal Soviet Union portal This category is for Fictional characters from Russia or of Russian descent; including characters from the commonwealth , federal subjects , states and territories from all major eras of its existence ( Great Russia , Russian Empire , Soviet Union , and Russian Federation ).
This is a list of female Heroes of the Russian Federation; of the over 1,000 people awarded the title, 19 are women. ... Moscow: Russian Knights Foundation, Museum of ...
The parallel female figure, Baba Yaga, as a rule does not appear in the same tale with Koschei, though exceptions exists where both appear together as a married couple, or as siblings. [15] Sometimes, Baba Yaga appears in tales along with Koschei as an old woman figure, such as his mother or aunt.
List of female action heroes and villains; List of American Girl characters; B. ... List of female detective characters; List of dominatrices in popular culture; F.
The character was portrayed as a seductress who was spying on Tony Stark for the Soviet government, [3] making her one of several Soviet villains who faced Iron Man in the 1960s. [4] This version of Black Widow was infatuated with Tony Stark's looks and wealth, and she was easily distracted by jewelry. [ 3 ]
This is a list of female supervillains that can be found in American comic books and associated mediums. They are a counterpart to the superheroine , just as the villain is the counterpart to the hero.
Klebb was also included in a list of the top ten Bond villains by The Times in 2008. [1] [failed verification] Lisa Funnell described her as one of "the most dangerous female villains of the decade". [3] Elisabeth Ladenson wrote that she is one of "two memorable lesbians" from Fleming's Bond novels (the other being Pussy Galore). Ladenson notes ...