(Photo: ABC / Marvel TV) SPOILERS Ahead for Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. season 3 episode 5, "4,722 hours!" Back out now to avoid them! Well, that was quite an episode tonight of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. wasn't it? We now know just what Jemma went through in her time away from Earth, stranded on an alien world. She wasn't alone, though, with an astronaut companion named Will who had been stranded there for much longer helping her survive until Fitz and the team was able to save her. But it wasn't just Jemma and Will on that faraway planet in another system. There was also some...one? Some...thing? else there - a mysterious entity they only sad was "it" or "something evil." For simplicity's sake, we're calling it The Evil for now. So who or what was it? We have a few ideas. Here's all we actually know about it: - It's stranded on this planet - in fact, it doesn't even seem to attempt to leave through the portal, and might be stuck in one part of the planet, the so-called "no fly zone." - It has the ability to either shapeshift or project an illusion - it appears as a cloaked figure, as an astronaut, and seems to play some kind of psychological games, meaning it might also have some form of telepathy. - It appears in a sand storm And that's really it. So who could it be? Well, here are some possibilities.

Wraith (Photo: Marvel Comics) There have been many people in the Marvel universe called "Wraith," but one of those in particular is linked directly to the Kree, a character named Zak-Del. He's the son of a Kree scientist. He was banished to a barren planet (sound familiar?). Now here's where we get a little creative - combine that back story with the alien race known as the Dire Wraiths, who are another shapeshifting, dark magic using race in the Marvel Universe. Now, they're a little tough, because we don't know if Marvel owns the film rights to those characters (they've had links to both Skrulls, who belong to Fox, and the X-Men, who belong to Fox), but it's intriguing. The Marvel Cinematic Universe has mixed and matched characters a bit before, so some combination of these could make a lot of sense. prevnext

Ebony Maw (Photo: Marvel Comics) "It's all connected," remember? That's the favorite three-word answer of Marvel TV head Jeph Loeb whenever asked about how the shows connect to each other, or how they connect to the films. Well, the film word is all moving, eventually, to Thanos. Unfortunately, that's a hard thing to tie-in to something like Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. Unless, of course, you just go with one of Thanos's lieutenants. Ebony Maw, one of the Mad Titan's "Black Order," is a character with psychological abilities, who has helped Thanos raze entire planets, and has multiple direct links to Inhumans (including manipulating Thanos's son Thane, on the left, who frankly is a bit of a possibility, too!). His connections there would certainly help the character make the connection; when we look at the Black Order, this is the one that would make the most sense, and they certainly have the ability to live the hundreds of years needed to be consistently killing human visitors since at least 200 years ago. Conveniently, this character also has ties to Dr. Strange, so he'd really be great setup for the whole of MCU phase 3. prevnext

Death (Photo: Marvel Comics) Speaking of connections to Thanos, there's always the simple manifestation of Death, who can easily exhibit all of the abilities we described in the intro. The biggest problems here are being restricted to one place (um, people are still dying, after all), and the fact that Death really prefers manipulating people (like Thanos) into doing her bidding, rather than getting hands on and eating astronauts. prevnext

Another Out-There Cosmic Threat (Photo: Marvel Comics) Some quick one-liners and housekeeping guesses: Beyonder - Because all MCU speculation (see: Star-Lord's MCU dad) has to include the Beyonder in it at least once. Why he'd be stuck on a desolate Kree planet we have no idea. Nightmare - Connection to Dr. Strange, ability to psychically manipulate. Mephisto - similar to above, and they did pointedly say that world was "hell." Abraxas - Yeah, pretty sure this is considered a Fantastic Four villain, but he is the embodiment of destruction, and so he gets a brief mention. prevnext