As the youngest member of Marvels first family, the Fantastic Four, Johnny Torch, aka Human Torch, has long been portrayed as an immature showoff the superhero equivalent of Peter Pan, the boy who wouldnt grow up. During his acclaimed run on Fantastic Four in the late 2000s, writer Jonathan Hickman finally forced Johnny to grow up. In Fantastic Four #587, Johnny sacrifices himself and protects his teammates from a wave of invading aliens and is presumed dead. Storm is revived eight months later in Fantastic Four #600. In this issue, we learn that Johnny was kept alive by insect-like creatures that were implanted in his body by the villain Annihilus as means to open up a portal to the Negative Zone. Johnnys resurrection wasnt poorly conceived as much as it was painfully obvious and anti-climatic. It came at a point where Marvel was seemingly killing off and reviving a new character every month. Additionally, because Fantastic Four ended at issue #588 and a new series, FF, took its place, many readers assumed something related to Johnny would happen within 12 issues in time for FF to be renumbered as Fantastic Four #600. It made the whole storyline come across as a cynical stunt by Marvel to rekindle interest in the Fantastic Four franchise.