Phases of the Moon Knight: How Marvel’s Mentally Ill Vigilante Became its Best Character
Main Art by Greg Smallwood
Moon Knight, the Marvel vigilante who suffers from Dissociative Identity Disorder (or does he?), has endured a good creative run in the last few years. Ever since his 2014 “reactivation” from writer Warren Ellis, artist Declan Shalvie and colorist Jordie Bellaire (with editors Nick Lowe and Ellie Pyle), the character has enjoyed newfound relevance and a sustained series of mind-bending adventures. Under the new stewardship of indie darling turned Big Two stalwart Jeff Lemire, and returning Moon Knight artists Greg Smallwood and Bellaire (with new editors Jake Thomas and Kathleen Wisneski), what might have once been an anomaly for Moon Knight is now an established pattern of excellence.
Moon Knight Interior Art by Declan Shalvey & Jordie Bellaire
Ellis’ Moon Knight arc—a 6-issue, ghost-punching, tower-ascending action masterclass—was arguably the best superhero comic to come out in 2014. Ellis boldly announced himself in his first issue by dividing the character into a clear trinity of split personalities, while Shalvey and Bellaire gave each facet of the hero a visual identity all their/his own. The personality triptych’s first persona consists of the Moon Knight familiar to the Marvel Universe since his creation in 1975, a brutal vigilante who likes his adversaries to see him coming—hence the stark-white outfit. Ellis then honed in on a second aspect, a more refined, vaguely British Mr. Knight, a semi-detective dressed to the nines in an all-white three-piece suit. Finally, the book presented the bird-skeleton-wearing Fist of Khonshu—a mascot for an Egyptian (possibly alien) deity, and puncher of the aforementioned ghosts.
Moon Knight Interior Art by Declan Shalvey & Jordie Bellaire
Each issue featured Moon Knight donning the appropriate garb for the task at hand, which varied along the street-crime-to-supernatural-crisis spectrum. Our hero threw down with a spectral band of punks, investigated a brutal murder, went one-on-one with a malformed S.H.I.E.L.D. combat castoff, battled a fungal-dream monster (you read that right) and finally faced off against a dark mirror of Moon Knight himself. Nothing truly great ever lasts, and after six issues of bone-crunching madness, Ellis and Shalvey left the title to work on Injection, their creator-owned sci-fi collaboration at Image. Writing duties transferred over to Brian Wood with Greg Smallwood on visuals, and the series finally ended with a five-issue arc by writer Cullen Bunn. After the concluding 17th issue, eight months would pass before Moon Knight returned to the stands.
Moon Knight Interior Art by Declan Shalvey & Jordie Bellaire
The three-characters-as-one schtick goes back to the very beginning of Moon Knight’s publishing history, and originally consisted of retired mercenary Marc Spector (the “anchor” personality), cab driver Jake Lockley and millionaire playboy Steven Grant. But Ellis and co. were not the first to upend the triplet model. In 2012, Brian Michael Bendis—master of the talking-heads superhero subgenre—and frequent collaborator Alex Maleev attempted to recast the Moon Knight personalities as a troika of A-level Avengers mimics (Captain America, Iron Man and Wolverine). Though born of an interesting concept, the book never took hold of audiences.