Uatu (/ˈwɑːtuː/), often simply known as the Watcher, is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, he first appeared in The Fantastic Four #13 (April 1963).[1] He is a member of the Watchers, an extraterrestrial species who in the distant past stationed themselves across space to monitor the activities of other species. Uatu is the Watcher assigned to observe Earth and its Solar System.
The character has been adapted into other media, such as video games, toys, and television. Jeffrey Wright voiced Uatu in the Marvel Cinematic Universe animated series What If…? (2021–2024) on Disney+.
Publication history
The Watcher was created by Jack Kirby.[2] The character first appeared without a name in Fantastic Four #13 (Apr 1963), and periodically reappeared in that title. He then starred in “Tales of the Watcher”, a backup feature that ran in Tales of Suspense #49-58 (Jan 1964-Oct 1965), Silver Surfer #1-7 (Aug 1968-Aug 1969) and Marvel Super-Heroes #23 (Nov 1969). His origin was revealed in Tales of Suspense #53 (May 1964), and his name was revealed in Captain Marvel #39 (Jul 1975).
The character has made many cameo appearances across the Marvel Universe since his debut, including Avengers,[3] Uncanny X-Men,[4] Hulk,[5] Silver Surfer, Quasar,[6] and Marvel Point One. He acts as the narrator in Marvel’s What If? title.
In the 2014 “Original Sin” storyline, the character is murdered, sparking a hunt for his murderer. The core miniseries of that storyline is written by Jason Aaron and illustrated by Mike Deodato.[7]
Fictional character biography
The Watchers are among the oldest and most advanced beings in the cosmos. Eons ago, they sought to spread their knowledge to benefit the lesser races of the Universe. Their first attempt, on the planet Prosilicus, included sharing nuclear technology. When the Watchers returned to Prosilicus, they found the natives had all but destroyed themselves in a nuclear war. The Watchers blamed themselves for the catastrophe and vowed to never again meddle in the affairs of other races.[8] Instead, they passively observe and record events for those who will come after the universe ends.[9]
Uatu is the Watcher assigned to watch over Earth from his home in the Blue Area of the Moon. He is an altruist and has bent or violated his oath on numerous occasions to aid humanity. He revealed himself to the Fantastic Four when they discovered his home, telling them he would leave the Moon to observe humanity from a more distant area.[10] He proceeded to violate his oath several more times to aid the Fantastic Four.[11][12][13] His most notable transgression was in Fantastic Four #48, in which he tried, and failed, to prevent the Silver Surfer from bringing the planet-devourer Galactus to the Earth.[14] For his continuous disregard for the Watchers’ mission, Uatu is once placed on trial by the Watchers. He is found guilty, but is released on his own recognizance.[15]
When the Shi’ar seek to prosecute Mister Fantastic for saving Galactus’ life, Uatu serves as his lawyer and receives help from Odin, Eternity, and even Galactus himself to explain that Galactus is part of the universe’s balance.[16] Uatu is removed from his duty as Watcher of the Earth, but he returns to observe the world of which he has become so fond.[17] During the GLX-Mas Special, Uatu appears in Wisconsin, after Squirrel Girl and her sidekick Monkey Joe defeat Thanos. He confirms that the Thanos she defeated was real, not a clone or copy.[18] Uatu is present when the Dreaming Celestial awakens, but he turns away, unwilling to watch.[19] After scanning him, the Dreaming Celestial reveals Uatu has broken his pact of non-interference almost 400 times.[20]
Uatu later arrived in Death Valley to watch the battle between Hulk and Red Hulk only to be ambushed and knocked out by Red Hulk.[5] Upon sensing the Red Hole of Dargala about to make a new Omegex, Uatu saw to it that its next target was Red Hulk in hopes that Red Hulk would be able to defeat it.[21] Since these events, Uatu has restricted himself to appearing to observe particularly cosmic events in the Marvel Universe, such as visiting the heroes prior to the vote on the Superhuman Registration Act,[volume and issue needed][22] the final battle of the “Secret Invasion” storyline,[volume and issue needed] and the Hood‘s acquisition of the Infinity Gems,[volume and issue needed] reflecting during these appearances that he cannot do any more or he may be taken from Earth altogether.[volume and issue needed]
Uatu later visited Red Hulk at the time when he was on an asteroid helping Thor to close a black hole. He does tell Red Hulk of his impending doom, but cannot describe it due to the Watchers’ vow to not interfere. Uatu then watched Red Hulk fail at jumping across other asteroids until he was rescued by Thor. Uatu temporarily abandoned his post to travel to the Red Hole of Dargala. His absence was noticed by the other Watchers who sent the Watcher Uravo to find him. After being unable to find him, Uravo informed Yruku and the other Watchers that he thinks Uatu has become unhinged ever since Red Hulk attacked and absorbed some of his powers. When Uravo finally caught up to Uatu at the Red Hole of Dargala, Uatu tells Uravo that they should not have come together. They witnessed Omegex emerge from the Red Hole of Dargala as it heads towards Earth to target Red Hulk. Uatu and Uravo later tracked Omegex’s trail as it gets closer to Earth.[23]
During the “Fear Itself” storyline, Uatu appeared next to Odin as Thor assists the Avengers. Aware that Uatu is there to witness the rise of the Serpent‘s daughter Skadi, Odin called Uatu a “titanic mute baby too dumb to be of use.” Uatu later left while Odin kept boasting about himself.[24]
Uatu later watched Red Hulk’s fight with Omegex. Noticing Uatu, Red Hulk shouts to him that he finally got his closure. Upon Red Hulk regressing back to Thunderbolt Ross when Zero/One neutrilized the nano-mines that General Reginald Fortean had placed in Red Hulk’s brain, Uatu watches as Omegex ceased to exist upon it being unable to find Red Hulk.[21]
Hoping to procreate, Uatu began seeing the Watcher Ulana who moved in with him. After an unrevealed amount of time, Ulana became pregnant.[25]
Original Sin and death
The 2014 “Original Sin” storyline reveals that Uatu’s father was the Watcher who originally gave nuclear technology to the Prosilicans, and that Uatu’s observation of parallel universes is motivated by a desire to find the one world where his father’s act of charity was proved to be the right thing to do.[26] In the beginning of the story, Uatu is murdered, and his eyes are gouged out, setting off a search by the Avengers and their allies for his killer.[27] It is discovered that Uatu was killed by giant gamma-irradiated bullets, as were a number of varying giant monsters discovered by the Avengers’ investigation in outer space, beneath the Earth’s surface, and in other dimensions.[28] Nick Fury eventually reveals that he has spent decades in a secret one-man mission to single-handedly confront and kill alien, subterranean, and extra-dimensional beings that threaten the Earth, and that, with the Infinity Formula having been depleted from his body, he has experienced rapid aging and wishes one of the superhuman investigators who have confronted him to take his place before his imminent death.[29] It is shown in flashback that, weeks before Uatu’s death, he came to witness Fury as his Infinity Formula began to fail,[30] with subsequent flashbacks revealing that Orb, Doctor Midas, and Exterminatrix attacked Uatu and took one of his eyes, although Uatu survived the injury he received from Orb. Fury arrived soon after to talk to Uatu,[31] but Uatu refused to identify his attacker and share the location of his missing eye due to it risking his oath. As Uatu began to gather his power for an apparent attack, Fury kills him, taking the other eye as he realizes that Uatu “records” everything he watches in his eyes. Following a fight with Orb that blew up Uatu’s house, Fury subsequently inherits Uatu’s power and position after using the power of one of Uatu’s eyes to kill Doctor Midas and becomes known as “The Unseen”, chained and watching events unfold on Earth, while the Orb merges with Uatu’s other eye, which appears on his chest. From a distance, a teary-eyed Ulana said goodbye to Uatu even though his body has not been found.[32]
Revival
In the aftermath of the “Empyre” storyline, the Unseen uses his powers to bring the Cotati‘s weapons to him so that he could learn how a pacifistic race like the Cotati had gained them. Once he began analyzing them, the Unseen realizes the weapons were created by the First Race and is overcome with energy as the one-eyed Uatu is brought back to life. When the Unseen asks how he is back from the dead and to at least say something, all Uatu says is “There shall be…a reckoning.”[33]
While reconstructing his home, Uatu learns of how Nick Fury became Unseen by tapping into the Cyclopedia Universum. It revealed that three of Uatu’s brothers and sisters broke their non-interference vow by judging Fury and fusing what is left of Uatu with Fury. After viewing some of the good things that Unseen did and the weapons used by the Cotati which caused Uatu to be revived, he states that the technology did not belong to the Cotati. While he cannot commute Fury’s sentence, he does release him from his punishment by removing the chains on him since he needs an operative to get the job done and makes Fury his herald. The first war is coming and Uatu states that everything is in peril as Fury accepts his offer to aid him.[34]
During the “Reckoning War” storyline, Uatu attempts to appeal to the other Watchers for help against the Prosilicans, but they reject his warnings, to the extent that his father forces Uatu to watch what he describes as the “What If” scenario he has never looked at himself; “What If Uatu Had Never Interfered?” Watching a world where he never alerted the Fantastic Four to the coming of Galactus, Uatu sees the team suffer various injuries in battle with Galactus. However, Mister Fantastic creates a weapon that destroys Galactus with energy that is harmful to him, subsequently harnessing this energy as a power source. Uatu is horrified at this apparent proof that he broke his vow for nothing, and his father then leaves him to watch this alternate universe for the rest of his existence as punishment for his interference, while the rest of the Watchers remain resolved not to get involved in the coming war (unaware that Nick Fury is watching them and plans to take action himself).[35] Fury is later able to release Uatu from the chair after showing him that his vision was incomplete, with Mister Fantastic’s energy generator overloading and destroying the universe. Uatu is shaken, but assured that his interference was right after all.[36] Revealing that the Prosilicans’ weapons were based on Watcher technology and they were responsible for the devastation of the Great Barrens, Uatu absorbs the power of the Apex- the center of all power and knowledge of the Watchers- becoming the personification of his race’s power, allowing him to restore the Barrens to lively space called the Borderlands. After Reed Richards uses the Ultimate Nullifier to kill the Reckoning’s leader Wrath, Uatu recreates the M’Kraan Crystal to trap Wrath’s co-leaders Rapture and Ruins as well as Emnu the Watcher as punishment.[37]
Powers and abilities
As a member of the race of Watchers, Uatu possesses vast psionic abilities which have been further developed through training. These abilities include flight, telepathy, energy-manipulation powers, power-negating force-field projection, illusion casting, the ability to psionically alter his appearance at will, and highly advanced cosmic senses allowing him to be aware of countless events of Earth. His superhumanly complex intelligence enables him to monitor activities throughout Earth’s solar system simultaneously. Uatu can convert his body into an unknown form of energy while still retaining his sentience for travel through hyperspace, and then return to his physical form. Bolstered by treatment with “delta-rays”, Uatu possesses virtual immortality, although he can die by losing the will to live. He has shown he is able to transport himself and others through time,[13] and in one issue he claims he can send someone to Limbo.[38]
Watchers can augment their strength with cosmic psionic energy if they choose to; however, they tend to minimize their physical activities. The 1985 edition of the Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe compared Uatu’s scale of power to that of Galactus, the Stranger, Odin, and Zeus.[volume and issue needed]
Uatu received a highly extensive education in his youth on his home world. He has devoted himself to the study of Earth’s solar system and its sentient beings for millions of years. His home on the Blue Area of the Moon contains an enormous array of weaponry, artifacts, and technology created by various alien races from throughout the universe.[volume and issue needed]
Uatu also studies the Earths of alternate realities. With permission from the Timekeepers, he possesses a portal through which he can observe alternate realities. He has acquired extraordinary knowledge of the history of both the sentient beings on “mainstream” Earth and the numerous alternate Earths.[6]
Other versions
Several alternate universe versions of Uatu have appeared throughout the character’s publication history. In Earth X, Uatu is portrayed as nihilistic due to his knowledge that Earth contains an unborn Celestial and that the humans inhabiting it are mere “antibodies”, a natural line of defense. Uatu was blinded by Black Bolt, furthering his nihilism.[volume and issue needed] In the Marvel 2099 reality, Uatu was blinded by his fellow Watchers for his constant breaking of the Watcher’s oath and later sacrificed himself to destroy a barrier around Earth.[39] In Marvel Apes, Uatu is a gorilla who usually tells stories that entertain him.[40] In Marvel Zombies Return, Uatu is beheaded by Giant-Man, but survives as pure energy.[41] In Powerless, a series with no superpowered characters, Uatu’s counterpart is psychiatrist William Watts.[42] In the Ultimate Marvel universe, Uatu is an advanced alien computer resembling a totem.[43]
In other media
Television

- Uatu appears in Fantastic Four (1967), voiced by Paul Frees.[44][45]
- Uatu appears in “The Incredible Hulk” segment of The Marvel Super Heroes.[citation needed]
- Uatu makes a cameo appearance in the X-Men: The Animated Series episode “The Dark Phoenix Saga (Part 3): The Dark Phoenix”.[citation needed]
- Uatu appears in Fantastic Four (1994), voiced by Alan Oppenheimer.[44]
- Uatu appears in Silver Surfer, voiced by Denis Akiyama in his first appearance and by Colin Fox in his second.[44]
- Uatu appears in The Super Hero Squad Show, voiced by Dave Boat.[44]
- Uatu appears in the Robot Chicken episode “Tapping a Hero”, voiced by Tom Root.[44]
- Uatu appears in Avengers Assemble, voiced by Clancy Brown.[44]
- Uatu appears in the Hulk and the Agents of S.M.A.S.H. episode “The Trouble with Machines”, voiced again by Clancy Brown.[44]
- Uatu, simply called the Watcher, appears in TV series set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), voiced by Jeffrey Wright.[47][44]
- First appearing in the Disney+ series What If…?, this version serves as the series’ narrator while observing alternate realities where major events in the MCU occur differently.
- The Watcher appears in the I Am Groot episode “Groot and the Great Prophecy”, voiced again by Wright.[48]
- The Watcher makes a cameo appearance in the Daredevil: Born Again episode “Gloves Off“.[49]
Video games
- Uatu appears in Spider-Man's “What If…?” mode, voiced by Laurence Fishburne.[citation needed]
- Uatu appears in Marvel: Ultimate Alliance, voiced by Phil LaMarr.[44]
- Uatu appears in the opening of Marvel Heroes, voiced by Vic Mignogna.[44]
- Uatu appears in Super Hero Squad Online.
- Uatu serves as the narrator for Marvel Avengers: Battle for Earth, voiced by Steve Blum.[44]
- Uatu appears in Marvel Cosmic Invasion, voiced by Isaac C. Singleton Jr.[44]
Miscellaneous
- Uatu appears in Planet X, written by Michael Jan Friedman.
- A parody of Uatu appears in PvP, in which he comes to Earth to observe the trial of the lawsuit put forth by Marvel Comics against the creators of City of Heroes and Galactus devouring Earth.
Merchandise
In 2004, Bowen Designs released a bust sculpture of Uatu sculpted and designed by the Kucharek Brothers.
References
- ^ DeFalco, Tom; Sanderson, Peter; Brevoort, Tom; Teitelbaum, Michael; Wallace, Daniel; Darling, Andrew; Forbeck, Matt; Cowsill, Alan; Bray, Adam (2019). The Marvel Encyclopedia. DK Publishing. p. 387. ISBN 978-1-4654-7890-0.
- ^ Cohen, Jason (May 29, 2017). “The Mad King: 15 Jack Kirby Creations That Are Absolutely BANANAS”. CBR. Retrieved October 3, 2024.
- ^ New Avengers: Illuminati #2 (March 2007)
- ^ Uncanny X-Men #473 (August 2006)
- ^ a b Hulk (vol. 2) #4 (August 2008)
- ^ a b Quasar #30 (January 1992)
- ^ Meylikhov, Matthew (January 7, 2014) “The Watcher is Murdered in Upcoming Event “Original Sin” by Jason Aaron and Mike Deodato Archived 2014-01-11 at the Wayback Machine“, Multiversity Comics (accessed January 22, 2014)
- ^ Tales of Suspense #53 (May 1964)
- ^ Quasar #13-16 (1989)
- ^ Fantastic Four #13 (April 1963)
- ^ Fantastic Four #20 (November 1963)
- ^ Fantastic Four Annual #3 (October 1965)
- ^ a b Strange Tales #134 (July 1965)
- ^ Fantastic Four #48 (March 1966)
- ^ Captain Marvel #39 (July 1975)
- ^ Fantastic Four #262 (January 1984)
- ^ Tales of Suspense #49-58 (January – October 1964)
- ^ GLX-Mas Special #1 (Dec. 2005)
- ^ Eternals (vol. 2) #6 (January 2007)
- ^ Eternals (vol. 3) #3 (October 2008)
- ^ a b Hulk (vol. 2) #41 (November 2011)
- ^ Millar, Mark; McNiven, Steve (2016). Civil War. New York, NY: Marvel Worldwide, INC. p. 25. ISBN 978-0-7851-2179-4.
- ^ Hulk (vol. 2) #26 – 31 (December 2010 – May 2011)
- ^ Fear Itself #1 (June 2011)
- ^ FF (vol. 2) #13 (December 2013)
- ^ Original Sin #0 (June 2014)
- ^ Original Sin #1 (July 2014)
- ^ Original Sin #2-3 (July–August 2014)
- ^ Original Sin #5 (September 2014)
- ^ Original Sin #6 (September 2014)
- ^ Original Sin #7 (October 2014)
- ^ Original Sin #8 (November 2014)
- ^ Empyre: Fallout Fantastic Four one-shot (November 2020)
- ^ Fantastic Four (vol. 6) #25 (December 2020)
- ^ The Reckoning War: Trial of the Watcher
- ^ Fantastic Four (vol. 6) #43 (July 2022)
- ^ Fantastic Four (vol. 6) #45 (September 2022)
- ^ Fantastic Four #18
- ^ 2099: Manifest Destiny one-shot (March 1998)
- ^ Marvel Apes #1 (September 2008)
- ^ Marvel Zombies Return #5 (November 2009)
- ^ Powerless #1-6 (August 2004 – January 2005)
- ^ Ultimate Origins #1-4 (August–November 2008)
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l “Uatu the Watcher Voices (Fantastic Four)”. Behind the Voice Actors. Retrieved August 17, 2014.
- ^ “Marvel Super Hero Squad Voice Cast”. Comics Continuum. July 28, 2009. Archived from the original on July 31, 2009.
- ^ George, Joe (April 10, 2024). “X-Men ’97 Episode 5 Has a Hidden Marvel Cameo You Missed”. Den of Geek. Retrieved April 16, 2024.
- ^ Studios, Marvel (July 20, 2019). “Just announced in Hall H at #SDCC, Marvel Studios’ WHAT IF…?, the first animated series in the MCU, with Jeffrey Wright as the voice of The Watcher and many actors from across the MCU reprising their roles as voice talent. Streaming exclusively on Disney+, Summer 2021.pic.twitter.com/el6etc3xZH”. Twitter.com.
- ^ Babb, Tiffany (September 1, 2023). “I Am Groot season 2 cameo adds a cosmic heavyweight to MCU”. PopVerse. Archived from the original on September 3, 2023. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
- ^ https://www.cbr.com/marvel-boss-confirms-the-watcher-cameo-in-daredevil-born-again/
External links
- Uatu the Watcher at Marvel.com
- Uatu the Watcher at Marvel Appendix
- 1 of 2 comic strips featuring Uatu on pvponline.com Archived 2016-06-23 at the Wayback Machine
- 2 of 2 comic strips featuring Uatu on pvponline.com Archived 2016-05-23 at the Wayback Machine