Esplin 9466 Primary | |
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Animorphs character | |
![]() Alloran-Semitur-Corrass, Visser Three's Andalite host body, as illustrated by Romas Kukalis on the cover of Visser. | |
First Episode Appearance | The Invasion (published) The Hork-Bajir Chronicles (chronologically) |
Final Episode Appearance | The Beginning |
Created by | K. A. Applegate |
Character played by | Eugene Lipinski (as Alloran and "Victor Trent") (TV series) Tom Barnett (as "Martin Tessmacher") (TV series, three episodes) |
In-universe information | |
Alias | Sub-Visser Seventeen, Sub-Visser Twelve, Sub-Visser Seven, Visser Thirty-Two, Visser Three, Visser One |
Species | Yeerk |
Gender | "Male" |
Title | Visser |
Occupation | Leader of the Yeerk invasion on Earth |
Family | Esplin 9466 Lesser (twin brother) |
Nationality | Yeerk Empire |
Hosts | Unnamed Gedd Unnamed Hork-Bajir Fet Mashar Gah Fillat Unnamed Hork-Bajir Hedrick Chapman (briefly) Alloran-Semitur-Corrass |
Visser Three, born as Esplin 9466 Primary and later known as Visser One, is a fictional character and the main antagonist of the sci-fi book series Animorphs, written by K.A. Applegate. He is the leader of the Yeerk forces on Earth, having inherited the planet from Edriss 562, who was Visser One at the time. Sadistic and cruel, with a penchant for torture, he mainly inhabits an Andalite body during the whole series.[1]
Visser Three has a personal feud with both Visser One and Elfangor. Several stories in the series feature the Animorphs using the Yeerk political situation to their advantage. However, they try to not let Visser Three look overly incompetent, fearing that he would be replaced by the far more dangerous Visser One. This is due to Visser One (before being replaced) favoring a subtle, quiet infiltration of the human population, while Visser Three favored waging open warfare on the humans in order to bring the campaign to a swift end. The Elfangor feud is revealed and ended in the first Animorphs novel, and its backstory is given in The Andalite Chronicles.
History[]

Visser Three in Alloran-Semitur-Corrass's body as he was portrayed in the Animorphs TV series
Visser Three (who was promoted to Visser One status by the end of the series) was a Yeerk who was born as Esplin 9466 Primary. He had a twin named Esplin 9466 Lesser. Esplin was born along with his twin inside an artificially made Yeerk pool inside one of the spaceships that the Yeerks stole from the Andalites. These were the original Andalites stationed on the Yeerk homeworld (under the guidance of Prince Seerow). During his time in the spaceship, he began studying everything that he could find on the Andalite race, knowing that, as an Andalite expert, he would be so invaluable that he would be promoted and be given one of the limited number of host bodies. During the infestations that were made so as to train the Yeerks without host bodies on how to control their hosts, Esplin in his first infestation fell in love with the sense of sight—not possessed by Yeerks in their natural slug-like, significantly sensory-deprived, and helpless form—and thus desired a host body. Learning all he could about Andalites who he so admired while still without a host body, he fell in love with their body and their agile mind and became obsessed and driven to infest one. His caution and reasoning (which diminished as he became corrupted by power, especially when he became the first and only Visser with an Andalite body) were at that time not appreciated for their value. When the Yeerks first discovered the Hork-Bajir world, and sent off a squadron of fighters to destroy the place an Andalite family (ironically Prince Seerow's family, Seerow having been chastised for his kindness and naiveté and exiled to the Hork-Bajir homeworld), who were studying the Hork-Bajir. Esplin 9466, who is in the squadron, urged patience until the fourth Andalite (four Andalites were initially detected by the sensors of the spaceships) came into view, knowing from his studies that the Andalites are an exceptionally claustrophobic species who never stay inside structures unless they have to. His superiors ignore him and destroy the dwelling, leaving the only surviving Andalite, Aldrea, alive. This mistake would lead to a stubborn and ingrained resistance from Aldrea and her fellow Hork-Bajir allies. During his time in that homeworld, Esplin 9466 became Sub-Visser Seventeen, and was extremely career-minded, cunning and ruthless in relation to the average Yeerk—he aimed as highly as possible and ambitiously sought to infest the surviving Andalite; he had fallen in love with her. However, his attempts to infest her end in failure.
After the Hork-Bajir world, he was sent to the Taxxon world, where he was put in charge of a major space-port; at the time he had a Hork-Bajir host. Sometime between his time on the Hork-Bajir world and the events depicted in The Andalite Chronicles, Esplin 9466 is promoted to Sub-Visser Seven. During this journey, Elfangor defies his prince, Alloran-Semitur-Corrass, by refusing to kill roughly ten thousand helpless Yeerks. This sudden rebellion allows Esplin 9466 to infest Alloran; due to this victory and the information it gives the Yeerk Empire, he is promoted to Visser Thirty-Two. Elfangor, stricken with guilt, is horrified. However, the ship that Elfangor and Esplin 9466 are on has lost all power and is slowly drifting towards a black hole. Both work together to use the Time Matrix to escape. However, as the two of them (along with Loren) attempt to use the Matrix, it sends them to an invented universe created from their own minds, based on a combination of their memories of Earth, the Andalite homeworld and the Yeerk homeworld, which soon collapses shortly after Elfangor and Loren escape. Elfangor assumes that Esplin 9466 is dead, but the Ellimist later reveals that he is alive.
Later, Elfangor runs away from the Andalite-Yeerk war and settles on Earth via the Time Matrix, marrying Loren after becoming a human nothlit. However, he was eventually approached by the Ellimist and reluctantly agreed to restore the damaged timeline. Elfangor is transported back into a major battle, surprising the Andalite fleet with his sudden presence. He opens communications with Visser Thirty-Two and bravely rams his fighter into the bridge of the Blade Ship, turning certain defeat for the Andalite fleet into victory. The maneuver gives Andalite reinforcements enough time to rush in and prevents the Yeerks from winning the battle.
Sometime between the Time Matrix battle and the formation of the Animorphs, Esplin 9466, still using Alloran as his host body, is promoted to Visser Three. In the events of #1: The Invasion, the first Animorphs book, he confronts an injured Elfangor. He morphs and eats him, but Elfangor has already secretly given the morphing power to five youths: Jake, Marco, Tobias, Rachel, and Cassie. Although Elfangor was uncertain of his choice to break Seerow's Kindness, these five would eventually prove to be a major obstacle in Visser Three's attempt to infest Earth. Throughout the entire 54-book series, the five Animorphs repeatedly thwart Visser Three's plans. Visser Three believes that they are "Andalite bandits" who survived the destruction of the original Dome ship, and grows increasingly frustrated as the book series wears on. The Council of Thirteen becomes unhappy with his lack of progress in the war on Earth.
Visser Three also has a fierce political rivalry with Edriss 562, who is Visser One for the majority of the series; in particular, he flaunts his superiority over her due to his Andalite host body when compared to her human body, although Visser One feels that her host gave her excellent insight into human culture. In #5: The Predator, Visser One arranges to have the Animorphs released from Visser Three's captivity so that they could continue to hamper his attempts to conquer Earth. In #30, Marco (whose mother is Visser One's host body) uses their rivalry in an attempt to kill them both by apparently arranging to hand the free Hork-Bajir colony over to Visser One, but is unsuccessful. During the events of Visser, Visser One and Three are both on trial in the underground Yeerkpool for crimes that could result in the death of both. During the extensive trial, Visser Three creates a facade and releases some earth-based animals including a starving tiger and some bears into the trial, fights them skillfully to the ecstatic cheers of the Council Members who are enjoying the spectacle, and with Visser One tagging along by grabbing a weapon of a dead guard although extensively hampered by her damaged host body. Once the animals are killed, he tries to convince the Council of Thirteen that the animals were the "Andalite bandits" who apparently wanted to assassinate the two primary Vissers who were on trial on Earth. Visser One realizes that this is a trick and manages to contact the son of her host body, Marco. The Animorphs invade the trial, upsetting Visser Three's cover and uncovering his attempt to deceive the Council of Thirteen. After rescuing her, the Animorphs and a tearful Marco then decide to return the unconscious Visser One. Both Vissers are sentenced to death by Kandrona starvation, but the Council of Thirteen suspend both sentences. Instead, they order Visser Three to conquer Earth, and give Visser One the opportunity to conquer another planet.
By #45, Visser One (Edriss 562) has failed in her mission. The Council of Thirteen orders her execution, and Visser Three is promoted to Visser One. With his new-found power, Visser One decides for an all-out war on Earth, as opposed to the subtle infiltration that had been carried out up until this point. However, this is stopped by the Animorphs, who manage to capture the Pool Ship. Esplin 9466 is forced to abandon Alloran's body, and detained by the Animorphs as a prisoner of war, and subsequently handed over to the U.S. Government — although a few of the Animorphs wish to execute him extra-judicially. The Andalite military had failed to take the trophy prisoner from the victorious human guerrillas.
One year after the Yeerks are defeated, Esplin 9466 is put on trial in a special United Nations court, convicted of numerous counts war crimes and crimes against humanity and is sentenced to life in a specially constructed prison—as a hostless Yeerk, deprived of the sense of sight (the ultimate punishment for Visser Three).
Character[]
Visser Three is a cruel and unforgiving character. He has a short temper, and often shows extreme arrogance. At times, this works as an advantage to his enemies, as they can exploit this weakness in his character by predicting his actions.
Due to his dangerous temper and lack of tolerance for what he sees as insolence, Visser Three's subordinates constantly live in fear of his wrath and are careful to avoid questioning his orders or beliefs. Early on, some of his subordinates believed that the "Andalite bandits" (the Yeerks' term for the Animorphs) may in fact be humans, due to such clues as a pair of jeans floating in the sea after a confrontation by a beach. However, due to their fear of the Visser's intolerance and possible wrath, they choose not to question his beliefs (he believed that the Animorphs could only be Andalites given his belief that the Andalites would never pass on technology, especially the morphing capability, to other life-forms, especially after "Seerow's Kindness" that unleashed the Yeerk Empire), which possibly prolonged the time that the Animorphs were able to pass undetected in plain view as their human selves. Visser One once commented on Visser Three's reputation for killing subordinates, saying that he had killed them "by the poolful."
Visser Three is also a vastly ambitious character. From the very beginning as a Sub-Visser he dreamed of perhaps one day becoming Visser One, or even having a spot on the Council of Thirteen. He was the only Yeerk ever to have taken an Andalite host body, which resulted in his inevitable rise through the ranks as he became best known as Visser Three. His ability to manipulate his superiors and survive any situation gave him the power necessary to achieve his ambitions.
Visser Three can be very aggressive, blindly running into battles, while alternating at times by being passive and thoughtful. During the first part of his life, he studied the Andalites in meticulous detail. When the Yeerk squadron were flying over Seerow's house in the Hork-Bajir homeworld, the then Sub-Visser told them not to fire until the fourth Andalite (Aldrea) was within the vicinity, knowing from his studies that Andalites never stay inside structures unless they have to. The impatient Yeerks fire, however, leading to Aldrea's resistance that ultimately slows down the Yeerks' invasion of the planet. Esplin becomes obsessed with possessing the last Andalite; he'd fallen in love with her. He takes it upon himself to attain her, culminating in his downfall.
He has been known to work with his enemies when the situation calls for it, such as when he and the 'Andalite bandits' had been shrunk by the Helmacrons (#24) and when they were trapped in the underwater Nartek city and dependent upon a Yeerk submarine to escape when all of the Yeerk crew were dead (#36), although each side knew that they could not trust the other and ignored their temporary alliance once the situation turned one way or the other. However, Visser Three underestimates the humans, often favouring brutal force instead of a careful and studied approach, which ultimately leads to his downfall and the loss of the Earth invasion.
Visser Three is highly arrogant, believing in his own power and constantly using new morphs to somewhat "show them off" when he battles the Animorphs when he already has plenty of other useful morphs for combat. Despite this, he also has shown some respect for the Animorphs, complimenting Jake in particular on his tiger morph and enjoying the simultaneous beauty and lethality of the creature. When the Animorphs attack an Inspector reporting on Visser's Three invasion of Earth, Visser Three challenges the Inspector to kill them himself, and watches patiently as they kill the Inspector and makes no attempt to stop them as they escape.
At the end of the book series, Visser Three accepts his defeat with relative grace, deciding to let the Animorphs capture him ("any punishment you inflict would be nothing compared to what the Council of Thirteen would do"). He cooperates with their demands and does not deny their accusations, abandoning his host body and submitting to a trial by the United Nations and hostless incarceration in the United States.
Brother[]
Like all Yeerks, Visser Three has many brothers and sisters. He is one of the rare few to have a twin, a brother named Esplin 9466 Lesser. The double six indicates they are twins. Since Visser Three is the dominant one, however, his twin gets a low-ranking host, Joe Bob Fenestre. However, Esplin 9466 Lesser uses his Yeerk knowledge to create Web Access America (a parody of America Online) and becomes a multi-billionaire. Enraged, Visser Three cuts off his twin's access to Kandrona rays. However, Esplin 9466 Lesser discovers a way to survive without Kandrona rays; he becomes a cannibal, consuming a fellow Yeerk every three days. Esplin 9466 Lesser is the centerpiece of #16 The Warning and makes a minor appearance in The Hork-Bajir Chronicles.
Esplin 9466/Alloran-Semitur-Corrass's morphs[]
Visser Three has a predilection for morphing into large and terrible monsters, which he has acquired from many planets.
- Antarean Bogg, the giant monster in the first book; it killed Elfangor
- Vanarx, a Yeerkbane from the Yeerk planet; it eats yeerks
- Mardrut, a seamonster from Andalite planet moon
- Human (in the TV show the human morph was specifically named as 'Victor Trent', but it is unspecified whether there was ever an original Victor Trent or if Visser Three simply assumed the alias after combining the DNA of others to allow himself to better blend in. The appearance was never clearly described in the book series)
- Anteater (Acquired along with the Animorphs when shrunk by the insect-like Helmacrons)
- Kafit Bird, a bird from Andalite Planet, maybe the first morph of Alloran
- Luminar, a fire-giant-like Humanoid
- Bievilerd, described as a living stealth bomber, it can fly without much effort; it doesn't have to flap its wings all the time and the Visser expects its razor sharp teeth to shred just about anything.
- Lerdethak, a bio-engineered monsters of the Hork-Bajir Homeworld; it looks like tree with fangs.
- Lebtin Javelin Fish, something of a cross between a pufferfish, a stingray, and a crossbow, the Lebtin Javelin Fish is apparently safe enough of a creature to be put in alien zoos and aquariums.
- Human (Tim, the White House Chief of Protocol; acquired when the Yeerks needed to infiltrate a conference)
- Dule Fansa,
- Human (Aria) (Again, unclear whether Aria was acquired from a specific human or from multiple humans via a Frolis Maneuver combination)
- Taxxon (Alloran morphs one in The Andalite Chronicles)
- Hork-Bajir (Alloran also morphs one in The Andalite Chronicles).
- Fire Creature, Visser Three's second alien morph. No name is given, but the Visser kindly states he got it from "the 4th moon of the 2nd planet of a dying star." It has 8 heads, 8 legs, and 8 arms. Each mouth can lauch fireballs.
External links[]
K. A. Applegate's Animorphs series | ||
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Main series | 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 • 11 • 12 • 13 • 14 • 15 • 16 • 17 • 18 • 19 • 20 • 21 • 22 • 23 • 24 • 25 • 26 • 27 • 28 • 29 • 30 • 31 • 32 • 33 • 34 • 35 • 36 • 37 • 38 • 39 • 40 • 41 • 42 • 43 • 44 • 45 • 46 • 47 • 48 • 49 • 50 • 51 • 52 • 53 • 54 | |
Megamorphs | The Andalite's Gift • In the Time of Dinosaurs • Elfangor's Secret • Back to Before | |
Chronicles | The Andalite Chronicles • The Hork-Bajir Chronicles • Visser • The Ellimist Chronicles | |
Alternamorphs | The First Journey • The Next Passage | |
Animorphs | Jake • Rachel • Tobias • Cassie • Marco • Aximili-Esgarrouth-Isthill • David • Auxiliary Animorphs | |
Television series | Animorphs | |
Video games | Animorphs: Know the Secret • Animorphs: Shattered Reality • Game Boy Color game | |
Secondary characters | Aldrea • Crayak • Drode • Elfangor • Ellimist • Erek King • Visser One • Visser Three | |
Minor characters | Andalites • Hork-Bajir • Humans • Ketrans • Yeerks • Other minor characters | |
Species | Andalite • Arn • Chee • Gedd • Helmacron • Hork-Bajir • Howler • Human • Iskoort • Ketran • Leeran • Mercora • Nartec • Nesk • Pemalite • Skrit Na • Taxxon • Yeerk • Other species | |
Related articles | Chronological list of Animorphs books • Time Matrix • Animorphs (toy) • Controller • Nothlit • Escafil device • Leera |
References[]
- ↑ Applegate, Katherine A. The Hork Bajir Chronicles. United States: Scholastic, 1998. Print.