Chase Stein

Chase Stein
Chase Stein
RUNAWAYV3008 COV.jpg
Chase Stein
Art by Humberto Ramos.
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance Runaways vol. 1 # 1 (July, 2003) (July, 2003)
Created by Brian K. Vaughan
Adrian Alphona
In-story information
Alter ego Chase Stein
Team affiliations Runaways
Notable aliases Talkback, Neo
Abilities Skilled pilot and mechanic;
Telepathic link to a genetically engineered deinonychus;
Energy-conjuring gauntlets and boots

Chase Stein (also known as Talkback[1]), is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics award-winning series, Runaways. He was created by author Brian K. Vaughan & artist Adrian Alphona, and debuted in Runaways vol. 1 #1 with most of the other main characters.[2] Like every member of the original Runaways, he is the son of evil villains with special abilities; in Chase's case, mad scientists.[2] Chase is often regarded as the "wild card" in the series, due to his often changing role in the group, from being the getaway guy and technical guru to the "loose cannon" after he departed the group for a short while.[3] However, despite his rule-breaking persona, Chase is fiercely loyal to his friends and remains a valued member of the team.[3] Chase is the eldest of the Runaways at age 18.[4] Chase shares a psychic and empathic link with deinonychus Old Lace, granting him the ability to command the dinosaur to do his bidding[4] and also possesses the Fistigons, the world's most powerful gauntlets.[5]

Contents

Fictional character biography

The Pride

The son of Victor and Janet Stein, Chase is first seen taking a punch from his abusive father for getting straight C's and being a "dumb athlete"; after the witnessing of the murder of an innocent girl by their parents ("the Pride"), Chase appears not to be surprised, though blames everyone else's parents for the murder.[6] Chase joins the team in the mass ransack to escape from their respective homes. While going through Chase's parents homes, he discovers that his parents are mad scientists, with many technological advances.[6] Chase steals the Fistigons, which Janet Stein calls "the world's strongest gloves".[7] Able to conjure and mold fire with the gloves, Chase also steals the special x-ray goggles from his parents.[8] The Fistigons are later destroyed, giving Chase the role of "getaway guy".[9] Chase provides the Runaways with their first hideout, a dilapidated caved-in mansion he called "the Hostel," and their first transport, his white, unmarked van with stolen license plates.[10][8] After running off, Chase wishes to take the name Neo, but Gert calls him Talkback, a reference to his defiant nature.[1] It is later revealed Janet's pregnancy with Chase prompted the remaining Pride to have kids, and to give them eternal life in continuing the Pride.[9]

Personality

When Chase first confronts his parents (in their scientific villain-attire), Chase remains defiant and unafraid of his parents, firmly establishing himself as the most rebellious and reckless of the group, a trait he carries for the rest of Brian K. Vaughan's initial run on the title.[11] Chase is portrayed as having a free, reckless spirit, shown when he purposely repeatedly crashes the Leapfrog.[9]

Mr. Stein: You think straight C's are funny Chase? You're becoming a dumb jock. Is that what you want to be, a cliché?
Chase: Well, you're a nerd who punches like a girl, isn't that a cliché?
 
— Chase displays his defiant nature in his first appearance.[2]

Chase is known for having an angry temper;[12] after the death of Gert, Chase departs the team for a time, with the intention of resurrecting Gert in exchange for selling his own life.[13] The search for Victor Mancha ends up being personal for him, to kill the one person who'd be destined to murder Gert.[14] Chase also mentions he had murdered someone in the past, and refuses to talk about it.[15] An associate to the Kingpin describes him as being simple, despite his scientific pedigree.[16]

Chase seems to be a devout Christian - when attacked by Old Lace, he recites The Lord's Prayer, and he later refers to The Devil as a real being. He also called Karolina an angel after her alien origins are revealed. After Gert's death Nico mentions to Victor that Chase may have adopted Gert's agnostic beliefs.

As a fugitive

Since the Fistigons and x-ray goggles were destroyed, Chase resumes his "getaway guy" role as the Leapfrog pilot in the second volume.[14] In a relationship with Gert, Chase is able to comfort Nico over the loss of Karolina;[14] two issues later, Nico kisses him, straining their relationship.[14] When a new incarnation of the Pride reveals Chase and Nico's kiss to Gert, she ends up hurt, angered, and the resulting friction almost tears the Runaways apart and seriously wears on Chase, but the group reconciles in time to rescue Molly. After Gert's death, Chase departs the Runaways for a short period, but he is convinced to return, after turning eighteen.[16] Chase strikes a deal with the Gibborim to exchange one innocent soul for Gert's life and eventually settles on sacrificing himself, viewing his life as worthless compared to Gert's. This deal fails to please the Gibborim, as going through remove Chase's 'innocent' status.[13] Chase is saved from making a dire mistake, and is gratefully allowed to return after learning that his grief nearly destroyed all his friends.[13]

Homecoming

In Runaways Vol. 3 #7, the Runaways pay little attention to Chase's opinions, prompting Chase to question his role on the team. In Runaways Vol. 3 #9, the last issue to have been written by Terry Moore, features Chase acting as an older brother to Molly and Klara. Moore had wanted this storyline to heavily focus on Chase's relationship with the team,[17] and identifies him as "a kid who "will grow up to become the next Captain America."[17]

In Runaways Vol. 3 #11, the first issue written by Kathryn Immonen and drawn by Sara Pichelli, Chase, Nico, Victor and Karolina hold a house prom. A outside source manages to send a UAV flying into the Runaways' Malibu home, in the upstairs living room where Klara and Old Lace lie. Nico, Victor and Karolina rush to save Klara and Old Lace - upon arriving at the top, however, it's revealed that Old Lace had shielded Klara, who ends up alive. Old Lace, however, dies. Chase, feeling her death because of their link, falls into a slump and repeatedly mutters an apology for Gert.[18]

In Runaways Vol. 3 #12 Chase encounters a man claiming to be his (paternal) uncle Hunter Stein. Chase believes the man is lying because he remembers killing his uncle and driving off. Not long thereafter, Chase makes the error of following a girl resembling Gertrude, and is hit by a car, ending up in hospital. However, he is shown in S.W.O.R.D. #2 alive and well with the group in Los Angeles.

Powers and abilities

Chase makes a very literal firewall in Runaways volume 1, issue 14.
Art by Adrian Alphona.

Weapons

In the first volume, Chase stole telescopic x-ray goggles and the Fistigons from his parents' secret laboratory.[8] The x-ray goggles allowed Chase to see through clothing, walls, and even through miles of rock.[19] The Fistigons were metal gauntlets with built-in flamethrowers. The gloves allowed the wearer to mentally shape the produced flame into any form the wearer desired.[8] Before the final fight with their parents, Chase nearly drowned and was too weak to go on. He gave the Fistigons and x-ray goggles to Alex, who subsequently betrayed the team to their parents. Nico used the Staff of One to magically destroy the gauntlets while he was still wearing them,[20] and the x-ray goggles were incinerated with Alex by the Gibborim.[13] Chase has been known to use the Leapfrog (a frog-like land & sea transport designed by his parents, but mother's idea.[16]) and a switchblade.[21]

Before Gert's death, she transferred telepathic control of Old Lace to Chase.[22] He now shares an empathic link with the dinosaur, so both suffer from one another's injuries and benefit when the other heals. Chase and Old Lace's minds are also directly connected so the dinosaur can telepathically communicate thoughts and feelings to her master.[22] Old Lace is engineered to follow Chase's every mental command though she can express dissatisfaction; to date, Old Lace has directly disobeyed only one of Chase's orders and was able to only with Karolina's help.[13] Chase has also used Nico's Staff of One against Nico.[13] Chase uses a time machine later in the series to travel through time. He returns shortly afterward with newly built Fistigons of his own design; to protect the team from the Yorkes' by conjuring fire and electricity to defeat them. And then protects the Leapfrog from a barrage of missiles by using the Fistigons to shoot out missiles of their own.[5] In addition it was revealed that most of his father's devices are protected against magic, though obviously the first pair weren't. In promotional art for upcoming Runaways issues, Chase is shown with a pair of rocket boots. In Runaways v3 #5, he calls them "the Footstigons".

Relationship with other Runaways

Gert

Gert dated Chase from Runaways volume 1, issue 16 to Runaways volume 2, issue 18.[23] Their relationship was often defined by bickering - Chase's dim-witted moments often clashed with Gert's sarcastic and intelligent quips. Gert's relationship with Chase softened her somewhat, though she didn't entirely lose her sarcastic edge. Their relationship developed quickly, with a few off-hand comments suggesting that they shared the same bed and were sexually intimate.[24] However, their relationship was threatened when Gert learned that Nico had kissed Chase; though Chase rebuffed Nico's advances, Gert was still hurt that Chase had kept the interaction hidden from her. She revealed her insecurity about her appearance and fear that Chase would eventually leave her for a more conventionally pretty girl.[4] Though implying she was hurt beyond reconciliation, she still ran into a burning building to save Chase from Geoffrey Wilder after their falling out.[4] She bluffed some details about Chase's past to keep Geoffrey from sacrificing Chase and Geoffrey fell for the bluff, but plunged his dagger into Gert's stomach instead.[4] As she lay dying, she transferred control of Old Lace to Chase and died forgiving Chase for Nico's kiss and without finishing saying she loved him.[4]

Molly

Ever since the beginning of the series, Molly and Chase engage in a big brother/little sister relationship: they bicker, call each other names, and joke around.[7] Chase had always stood up to protect Molly.[25] After Gert's death, Chase's relationship with Molly turns into one of pure anger, prompting Chase to say in Civil War: Young Avengers/Runaways "Molly why don't you $&!?ing grow up?!"[12] Their relationship is repaired by the end of the story arc when Chase expresses jealousy over Molly's growing attachment to the Young Avenger Speed, who tells him at the end of the story that no matter what, Molly looks up to him.[12]

Nico

Nico provides the motherly and leadership foil for Chase's rule-breaking persona. The pair maintain a strong respect for each other despite often disagreeing over major group decisions, including Gert's burial site and allowing Victor Mancha to join the team. Chase cares for Nico's safety and well-being, as evidenced from when he comforted Nico after Karolina's departure and later when he took the Staff of One from Nico to destroy it (along with himself) and give her a normal life. Nico and Chase shared a kiss after Chase bluffed their way out of a potentially fatal encounter with inter-dimensional drug lord Pusher Man and managed to get a customer's name from the drug lord. Chase rejected the kiss but did not make a huge deal of it, even though Nico treated him more as an employee instead of a friend after the incident. After Gert's death, Chase and Nico's friendship strained as he allowed anger and grief to isolate him (both physically and emotionally) from the group's support. Nico was also the only person that Chase bid farewell before leaving to sacrifice himself for the Gibborim, which Nico interpreted as a cry for help, and is presumably a signal of the level of trust and respect Chase holds for Nico. In Joss Whedon's current stint on Runaways , Chase and Nico's friendship appears more stable now that Chase seems to have moved past grieving for Gert.

Victor Mancha

Victor's alternate future self, Victorious, managed to fatally wound an alternate version of Gert before she came to the past and warned the Runaways of the looming threat; the future Gert died in Chase's arms. Her death made locating Victor personal for Chase, as he sought to prevent his current girlfriend's murder. He disagreed vehemently with Nico about letting Victor stay with the team, even after Nico stated she was prepared to kill Victor if necessary. As such, Chase has tried to distance himself from Victor, despite the cyborg's attempts to prove himself. Chase did admit to Victor that he envies Victor more than hates him, primarily because Victor is the son Chase believes his parents wanted (he even has the same name as Chase's father). By the end of Brian K. Vaughan's stint on Runaways, Chase and Victor had switched roles: Victor stood by the team without hesitation while a grief-ridden Chase carried out his own agenda without regards to the team's safety. Victor even questioned Nico when she admitted Chase back into the group as Chase questioned Victor's membership earlier, yet Nico's response remained the same as it was when Victor asked it: if Chase went rogue again, she would not hesitate to kill him.

Victor Stein

The first time the Stein family appears, Victor Stein punches Chase in the face and berates him for getting bad grades. A few issues later, it is implied that Chase's father regularly hits him--when Alex informs Chase that Victor attacked Chase with one of his inventions, Chase replies "What else is new? I probably had it coming."

In volume two, Chase tells Nico that he's evil, and implies that he once killed someone who tried to carjack his van(this as it turns out is his uncle Hunter, whom he accidentally hit and killed with his car). However, after Gert's death Chase realizes he isn't evil. He admits that his mother allowed his father to abuse him, and because none of his dad's reasons for hitting him ever seemed good enough, Chase started making up reasons and convincing himself they were true.

Conceptual changes

In Brian K. Vaughan's original pitch for the series, Chase was originally called John. The relationship Chase has with Molly in the comics was also originally given to Gert.[26]

References

  1. ^ a b Runaways: Volume 1, #6
  2. ^ a b c Runaways: Volume 1, #1
  3. ^ a b Runaways: Volume 2, #21
  4. ^ a b c d e f Chase Stein
  5. ^ a b Runaways: Volume 2, #30
  6. ^ a b Runaways: Volume 1, #2
  7. ^ a b Runaways: Volume 1, #7
  8. ^ a b c d Runaways: Volume 1, #4
  9. ^ a b c References: Volume 1, #13
  10. ^ Runaways: Volume 1, #3
  11. ^ Runaways: Volume 1, #5
  12. ^ a b c Civil War: Runaways/Young Avengers
  13. ^ a b c d e f Runaways: Volume 2, #23
  14. ^ a b c d Runaways: Volume 2, #1
  15. ^ Runaways: Volume 2, #14
  16. ^ a b c Runaways: Volume 2, #25
  17. ^ a b Vaneta Rogers (2008-08-25). "Humberto Ramos: Revitalizing Runaways". Newsarama. http://www.newsarama.com/comics/080825-RamosRunaways.html. Retrieved 2008-09-18. 
  18. ^ Runaways #11
  19. ^ When the old Hostel caves in, Chase uses the goggles to tell Molly which way to break them out.
  20. ^ Runaways: Volume 1, #17
  21. ^ Runaways: Volume 1, #18
  22. ^ a b Runaways: Volume 2, #18
  23. ^ Runaways: Volume 1, #16
  24. ^ In Vol.2, Gert makes a sly suggestion that gets a reminder that Molly is in the room.
  25. ^ Runaways: Volume 2
  26. ^ Runaways Vol. 1 Hardcover

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