The comic history of The Void, the villainous dark side of The Sentry, Lewis Pullman's potential Thunderbolts MCU character
Lewis Pullman's♏ apparent Thunderbolts characte🦩r The Sentry may have a connection to another MCU concept

In the MCU, The Void is ♋a place beyond time and space where things that have been "pruned" or eliminated from reality go to be destroyed into nothingness by the monstrous Alioth. It's played a major role in the Loki streaming series as well as in the recent Wolverine and Deadpool, with several characters who were trapped in the void potentially escaping.
But with the official debut of the new Thunderbolts* trailer, which seems to confirm the casting of Lewis Pullman as Bob Reyno🍌lds/The Sentry, new questions are being raised about what that could mean for The Void, because in comics, The Void is also the name of The Sentry's villainous dark side, who is powerful enough to challenge the entire Avengers and more.
What is The Void in comics?
In comics books, The Void is a being of dark energy who is connected inextricably to , a superhero who has "the power of a thousand exploding sꦇuns" with an equally powerful opposite, evil persoꦕnality - that being The Void.
Years later, however, Reynolds' memories and powers resurfaced, and with them came The Void. Though he was able to rꦗally Earth's heroes and stop The Void once more, once again being forgotten by all, this didn't last long, and The Sentry began reappearing regularly, ev🃏en becoming associated with the Avengers again.
Of course, this in itself proved to be a tragedy following the events of in which Norman Osborn, a key character in preventing Earth from being conquered by Skrulls, is named the leader of HAMMER, a more aut🌠horitarian version of SHIELD. Osborn creates his own '' comprised of villains taking o🍒n the identities of known heroes such as Spider-Man, Hulk, Hawkeye, and more, all while operating according to Osborn and HAMMER's whims.
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For his powerhouse, he recruits The Sentry - beginning a series of manipulations and subversions on the hero to bring back The Void as Osborn's secret weapon. Here's where the Thunderbolts movie connection may come in, with Julia Louis-Dreyfus' Contessa Valentina Allegra deꦫ Fontaine potentially taking Osborn's place.
All the while, Osborn is also working with Loki as part of a scheme to return Asgard, which was then located on Earth, back to its own realm 🌸with Loki as the leader.
Here's where things get even worse.
Osborn's time as leader of HAMMER culmin🔯ates in the story , in which Osborn, Loki, and the Dark Avengers launch their assault on Asgard. But much to Loki's horror, Osborn has been manipulating him all along as well, with a plan not to send Asgard home but to destroy it.
As the Avengers and other heroes intervene, Loki seizes the Norn Stones, reality-altering Asgardian artifacts, to empower the heroes and save Asgard - he can't rule rubble, after all. But The Void, now fully in control of the Sentry, manages 𝐆to send Asgard crashing to the ground before attacking Loki and killing him.
This s🌄ets off the chain of events in which Loki is reborn as Kid Loki, and starts on a journey toward heroism and self-discovery that's reflected in the Loki streaming show. And though Sentry/Void is defeated again, this isn't the end of his association with Loki.
Years after his death and rebirth, Loki (now a young adult and once again engaging i🦩n some cosmic mischief with a bit more of an altruistic motive) tricks Doctor Strange into ceding the mantle of Sorcerer Supreme to him in the story , under th🍌e belief that he is better poised to take on an impending magical threat than Strange.
Things take a serious turn when Loki accidentally kills Strange's dog, Bats (don't worry, Loki later brings him back in his astral form), leading Strange to seek out The Sentry, who's in isolation after being separated from The Void. Sentry confronts Loki, who escalates the conflic🌟t by releasing The Void from its magical prison inside The Sanctum ꩵSanctorum, inadvertently setting up the very threat that Loki was initially trying to fight.
In the end, Loki and Strange team up to defeat the magical threat that is bigger than both of them, and The V꧃oid is recaptured and imprisoned once again in the Sanctum Sanctorum.
The Void in the MCU
In the MCU, The Void is a place rather than a being. And while Loki does indeed have a histoꦰry with T🅠he Void in the MCU, it's very different from their arch-enemy relationship in comics thanks to the change in what "The Void" actually is.
But that doesn't mean The Sentry's Void is off the table for 😼the MCU. For one thing, Thunderbolts* could establish a connection between The Sentry and its versio🗹n of The Void. It doesn't seem totally out of the question for a being of ultimate destruction to have a connection to a place where things go after they're destroyed.
There's also the chance that The Sentry's dark side will simply be rolled into his core being, with noℱ transformation into "♚The Void" to speak of. And of course, there's also the possibility that The Sentry's villainous half will have a different name in the MCU.
Whatever the case, with The Sentry on the board in Thunderbolts*, it's hard to imagine The Void (or somဣething like it) won't come into play in the story.
We'll find out when Thunderbolts* releases in sꦬummer 202𓆏5.
The Sentry played mind games with comic fans, but Thunderbolts #1 is still the greatest trick Marvel Comics ever pulled.
I've been Newsarama's resident Marvel Comics expert and general comic book historian since 2011. I've also been the on-site reporter at most major comic conventions such as Comic-Con International: San Diego, New York Comic Con, and C2E2. Outside of🌃 comic journalism, I a❀m the artist of many weird pictures, and the guitarist of many heavy riffs. (They/Them)