Exclusive First Look: Diamond Select Toys Avengers Infinity War Corvus Glaive

10/15/2018 07:46 am EDT

Soon, you will be able to own a high-quality PVC diorama of one of the creepiest members of Thanos's already-pretty-creepy brood of kids to keep on your desk from Diamond Select Toys -- and DST has provided ComicBook.com with a first look at the piece.

Corvus Glaive, who appeared in Avengers: Infinity War, was one of Thanos's children and a member of the Black Order. He joined his father in his quest for the six Infinity Stones, initially attacked the Statesman with his siblings and helped to kill the Asgardians aboard and retrieve the Space Stone.

This is one of the guys who Vision and Scarlet Witch, almost killing them until the arrival of Captain America, Falcon and Black Widow. Widow wounded him and he and Proxima Midnight were forced to flee, but eventually came back for a rematch. Corvus Glaive was a dangerous and merciless warrior who was loyal to Thanos...but his single-mindedness came at a cost.

In the Infinity War directors' commentary track, co-director Joe Russo revealed that Proxima Midnight (Carrie Coon) and Corvus Glaive (Michael James Shaw), two members of Thanos' Black Order, were actually married to each other. According to Russo, the initial goal was to explore the Black Order's various histories, but those plot threads were ultimately cut for time.

"There were earlier drafts of the script with the Black Order, in a more stylized draft where we did backstories for each of them." Russo explained. "Ultimately the movie was getting too crowded, too hard to follow. In the books, there's a backstory between Proxima and Corvus, that they're married. Only hinted at in the slightest way here by the fact that they are paired up to retrieve a stone and the way that she responds when Corvus gets stabbed by Natasha."

For those who are familiar with the comic incarnations of the Black Order, this is probably a pleasant surprise, as the pair were also married within the comics. Granted, Infinity War may not have strongly suggested that bond outright, but it sounds like the Russos definitely meant for the subtext to be there.

Even though Infinity War introduced the Black Order to a whole new legion of fans, a few had their gripes about how little the team factored into the film. But according to Russo, there was ultimately a good reason for those changes.

"I think people have been waiting 10 years to have the Marvel heroes together in a 2-and-a-half hour film," Russo explained back in May. "So if I started to go into the history of them — that's a whole other movie all together. I felt like they did their jobs in the film. And the audience got enough of them in the film — as much as they needed them in the film. As much as I like those characters, and as much as I like the comic books, I feel that if I started delving into their backstory it would become unwatchable. [There are] only so many characters you can keep in your head."

"The Black Order, in particular, we worked hard to adjust them to the Marvel Cinematic Universe," Russo later explained in the commentary track. "In the [Jonathan] Hickman run, I thought the characters were too powerful. And nobody wants the sub-villain to outshine the villain. And we adjusted their power sets so that they lined up in a way that was more interesting with our heroes. Which is why Maw's a 'wizard.'"

You can find details on pre-ordering the diorama in Wednesday's issue of Previews.

(Photo: Diamond Select Toys)
(Photo: Diamond Select Toys)
(Photo: Diamond Select Toys)
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