Alias (comics)

This article is about the Marvel series. For the comic book publisher, see Alias Comics. For the 1990 comic book series, see NOW Comics.
Alias

Promotional art for cover of Alias #23
Art by David Mack and Mark Bagley
Publication information
Publisher MAX
Schedule Monthly
Format Ongoing series
Genre
Publication date November 2001 – January 2004
Number of issues 28
Main character(s) Jessica Jones
Creative team
Writer(s) Brian Michael Bendis
Artist(s) Michael Gaydos
Letterer(s) Oscar Gongora
Richard Starkings
Cory Petit
Colorist(s) Matt Hollingsworth
Creator(s) Brian Michael Bendis
Michael Gaydos
Editor(s) Nanci Dakesian
Kelly Lamy
Stuart Moore
Joe Quesada
Collected editions
Omnibus ISBN 0-7851-2121-8

Alias is a comic book series created by writer Brian Michael Bendis and artist Michael Gaydos. It was published by Marvel Comics under Marvel's MAX imprint for a total of 28 issues from 2001 to 2004.

The protagonist of Alias is Jessica Jones, a former costumed superhero named Jewel who left that life behind to become a private investigator. The running thread is Jessica's character development, as the layers of her past and personality are revealed to the reader while, simultaneously, she tries to come to terms with them herself.

Characters from the series moved to Bendis' subsequent series The Pulse.

Alias became the basis of the first season of the Netflix series Jessica Jones, which premiered in November 2015.

Publication history

Alias was written by Bendis and illustrated for most of its run by Michael Gaydos, with covers by David Mack.

Alias was one of the titles that launched Marvel's "R-Rated" MAX imprint, and was reported[1] to have been one of the reasons the imprint was created. Marvel Publishing President Bill Jemas read a draft of the script for the first issue of Alias (which, characteristically, starts with the word "fuck") and exclaimed "Why couldn't we publish this?"[1]

Being under the MAX imprint imposed certain other limitations on what the creators could do in the series. Bendis gave this as one reason for ending the series and moving the characters to The Pulse.[2]

Story arcs

Alias (#1-9)

Asked to look for a missing woman, Jessica finds herself caught in a conspiracy involving Captain America and the president of the United States. Subsequently she is hired to find the recently missing Rick Jones.

Other characters appearing in the arc include Daredevil (as Jessica's attorney Matt Murdock) and second-tier villain Man Mountain Marko.

Come Home (#11-15)

Jessica Jones is assigned to look for a missing girl rumoured to be a mutant in a small, prejudiced town.

The Underneath (#10, 16-21)

J. Jonah Jameson asks Jessica to uncover Spider-Man's identity. Later, Mattie Franklin, the latest Spider-Woman, goes missing and Jessica is asked to find her. When she does, she discovers a criminal underworld that sells the drug known as the Mutant Growth Hormone. Along the way, Jones meets an unexpected ally in Jessica Drew, the original Spider-Woman, who is also investigating Franklin's disappearance.

The Secret Origins of Jessica Jones (#22-23)

Jessica's origins, including the source of her powers and how she became a superhero, are revealed.

Purple (#24-28)

Family members of those murdered by the Purple Man ask Jessica to find evidence of those murders that he never confessed to. Jessica's history with the Purple Man is revealed. After confronting the Purple Man in prison, he escapes and Jessica is forced to deal with him and her past trauma.

Collected editions

The series was collected into a number of trade paperbacks:

Awards

The series won the Comics Buyer's Guide Award for "Favorite Comic Series" in 2003, and the Harvey Award for "Best New Series" in 2002.

The series was also nominated for two Eisner Awards in 2004: "Best Continuing Series" and "Best Serialized Story" (for "The Secret Origin of Jessica Jones" & "Purple" in Alias #22-28).[3]

In other media

Alias was adapted into the 2015 Netflix TV series Jessica Jones, which was developed by Melissa Rosenberg for ABC Studios and Marvel Television. The name change was needed due to the unrelated ABC series Alias.[4]

References

General references

Inline citations

  1. 1 2 Alias #28, letter page
  2. Bendis, Brian Michael. "Afteword," Alias #28 (Jan. 2005).
  3. 2004 Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards, Comic Book Awards Almanac
  4. Schneider, Micheak (December 17, 2010). "Screenwriter Sets Marvel Adaptation for TV". Variety. Archived from the original on February 6, 2014. Retrieved December 17, 2010.

External links

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