The Clandestines From Clandestine (2008) #2. Image: Marvel Comics.

‘Ms. Marvel’ Brings in Obscure Supervillain Family ClanDestine

Episode three of Ms. Marvel revealed a lot about the direction of the season. We learned that the side conversation about the mess left behind by the British occupation of India wasn’t just added in to sprinkle in some real-world history. The moment Kamala’s family broke up after the war, they left some secrets behind. This includes the lineage of a family that’s been mostly relegated to one-shots and were pretty obscure, until this recent introduction in Ms. Marvel on Disney+—in an episode named “Destined” might I add!

Recommended Videos

*** Spoilers for Ms. Marvel episodes 1-3 ***

The Clandestine (a.k.a. Clan Destine or Destines) is a family of supervillains. Introduced in the summer of 1994, they got their first solo issue by creator Alan Davis later that year. They’re a whole group with a rotating door depending on story need. (This is not a slight. All big families do this in comices, including found families like the X-Men.) However, there is a family hierarchy. The main two leaders of the family include the patriarch Adam and matriarch Elayth. In the show, if Najma (played by Nimra Bucha) isn’t lying, Kamala (Iman Vellani) is considered a descendant of them through her great-grandmother Aisha.

While Elayth is a very powerful djinn, she has no real origin because her story was written for Adam. Adam was born in a Saxon village in 1160s England. After Adam had a dream (which can only be described as Paul seeing Chani in Dune) about a beautiful woman, he traveled to join the crusades somewhere between the second and third waves. Then, he did some orientalist fantasy adventuring and freed her, where they fell in love. (That’s a yikes from me.) She gave him the power of immortality, and they’ve been having evil babies and traveling the world since. In 2008, Marvel released a loose ClanDestine family tree.

Clandestine family tree. Image: Marvel.

As the show stated, djinns are pre-Islamic beings of folklore (sometimes referred to as spirits) recognized in cultures across the Middle East and North Africa (a.k.a. MENA or Arab regions), and South Asia today. People who didn’t grow up with these stories probably recognize the other names like “marid,” “ifrit,” and “genie.” Genie became popularized by outside cultures when Antonine Galland did a French translation of (and added to) One Thousand and One Nights in the 1700s. The compilation of stories (700 BC) built on folklore from many places, similar to the way The Odyssey (700 BCE) and Brothers Grimm (1810s) did.

How does this play into Ms. Marvel’s comic changes?

Kamala Khan on the cover of "Ms. Marvel" #13, drawn by Marguerite Sauvage

In the comics, Ms. Marvel is a descendent of the Inhumans. When a Terrigen Mist is released into the atmosphere and activates the dormant Inhumans gene of some people on Earth, Kamala Khan is one of those people. To call the Inhumans’ introduction in the Marvel Cinematic Universe a disaster is an understatement. In addition to delays and reshoots, the show was universally panned. Between the Inhumans failure and the super late introduction of Captain Marvel, Ms. Marvel is put in a weird place.

In the show, she has the powers in her, and an external force activates them, but the actual details are very different. In addition to how Kamala gets her powers, the powers themselves are changed. Instead of the power of “embiggening,” she has energy power that can mimic aspects of this and do much more, in theory, considering how it mirrors both Photon (Monica Rambeau) and Captain Marvel. Needless to say, these changes, and the introduction of ClanDestine, are a very big shift from the comics lore that will have major ramifications moving forward.

(featured image: Disney+)

The Mary Sue has a strict comment policy that forbids, but is not limited to, personal insults toward anyone, hate speech, and trolling.—


The Mary Sue is supported by our audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn a small affiliate commission. Learn more
related content
Read Article The Show That Completely Rewrote the Chemistry of My Brain Is Finally on Netflix
Toby Stephens as Captain James Flint in Black Sails
Read Article Every Broken Engagement With ’90 Day Fiancé’s Big Ed Is a Bullet Dodged
Ed with Liz, moments before Rose exposes Ed during a call in 90 Day Fiance
Read Article ‘Fire Country’ Maybe Set Us Up for a Spinoff and We Can’t Wait for Episode 7!
The cast of Fire Country all standing outside
Read Article You’ve Seen the End of ‘Fallout’ Season One … but What Does It All Mean?
Kyle MacLachlan as Hank in the Fallout TV show.
Read Article Here’s Why Fans Think Bluey and Jean-Luc Get Married
Bluey, reading under a tree, smiles at a black labrador retriever named Jean-Luc.
Related Content
Read Article The Show That Completely Rewrote the Chemistry of My Brain Is Finally on Netflix
Toby Stephens as Captain James Flint in Black Sails
Read Article Every Broken Engagement With ’90 Day Fiancé’s Big Ed Is a Bullet Dodged
Ed with Liz, moments before Rose exposes Ed during a call in 90 Day Fiance
Read Article ‘Fire Country’ Maybe Set Us Up for a Spinoff and We Can’t Wait for Episode 7!
The cast of Fire Country all standing outside
Read Article You’ve Seen the End of ‘Fallout’ Season One … but What Does It All Mean?
Kyle MacLachlan as Hank in the Fallout TV show.
Read Article Here’s Why Fans Think Bluey and Jean-Luc Get Married
Bluey, reading under a tree, smiles at a black labrador retriever named Jean-Luc.
Author
Alyssa Shotwell
(she/her) Award-winning artist and writer with professional experience and education in graphic design, art history, and museum studies. She began her career in journalism in October 2017 when she joined her student newspaper as the Online Editor. This resident of the yeeHaw land spends most of her time drawing, reading and playing the same handful of video games—even as the playtime on Steam reaches the quadruple digits. Currently playing: Baldur's Gate 3 & Oxygen Not Included.