The Punisher
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Punisher 2099 #1
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance The Punisher 2099 #1 (February 1993)
Created by Pat Mills
Tony Skinner
Tom Morgan
(based upon the original character by Gerry Conway, Ross Andru, and John Romita, Sr.)
In-story information
Alter ego Jake Gallows
Team affiliations Church of Thor
S.H.I.E.L.D. 2099
Public Eye Police Force
Partnerships Doom 2099
Notable aliases Minister of Punishment
Abilities Possesses a cybernetic suit that grants:
Increased agility, durability, and strength
"Face-scrambler" to conceal identity
Ability to upload martial arts programs into the suit
The Punisher 2099
Series publication information
Schedule Monthly
Format Ongoing
Publication date February 1993 – November 1995
Number of issues 34
Main character(s) Punisher 2099
Creative team
Writer(s) Pat Mills
Tony Skinner
Chuck Dixon
Artist(s) Tom Morgan
Simon Coleby

The Punisher 2099 is a comic book series following the account of Jake Gallows (the Punisher) in the year 2099 in an alternate Marvel Universe. The majority of the issues were written by Pat Mills and Tony Skinner, with art by Tom Morgan. The rest were written by Chuck Dixon. The series ran from February 1993 through November 1995 with a total of 34 issues.

Contents

Fictional character biography [link]

Jake Gallows, a member of the Public Eye Police Force (a private police protection service charging money to citizens) and Church of Thor, lost his mother, brother, and sister-in-law (and was himself seriously injured) when they were slain on the orders of Kron Stone, psychotic son of powerful businessman Tyler Stone. After recovering, Jake comes across the original Punisher's war journal, stolen from the archives of the Public Eye. The last page bore the challenge: "You who find this, I charge you to carry on my work." Soon after, he became the new Punisher.[1] Jake would get revenge against Kron Stone, or so he believed. Kron, after threatening the lives of several children, confronts Jake with a device that stops all high-speed projectiles, such as bullets. Jake pulls a knife and slowly stabs Kron, who seemingly dies.[2] Kron would later become Venom 2099 in the pages of Spider-Man 2099.[volume & issue needed]

Jake fought against the unique crimes of the dystopian 2099 future. He kills rogue organ-thieves, those who track down and steal organs from unwilling victims. He tries to protect those who cannot afford their police subscriptions and thus are ignored. Conversely, he also goes after those who use their money to get away with crimes. Jake also deals with a technologically minded partner named Matt Axel, and struggles with the uncaring attitudes of his bosses and colleagues towards the poor and the attentions of a police psychiatrist who believes Jake is up to something. Jake battled such foes as the Street Surgeons,[3] Saucers (who he executed after the death of one of his victims),[4] the Cyber-Nostra,[5] and Multi-Fractor.[6] Over the course of the series, he would deal with a recurring villain who causes grotesque physical transformations with his hand, named the Fearmaster.[7]

For a time, Jake establishes a prison underneath his house (regular prisons have been abolished) and instead years are subtracted from people's lives by injection. Occasionally, he would sentence one to death in a molecular destabilizer if he felt their crimes truly horrific. Jake himself ponders the merits of such a facility. After a carefully planned breakout, most of the prisoners died. The prison was rarely seen again.

Along with other current era heroes, such as Bloodhawk, Spider-Man, and Ravage, the new Punisher would help to bring down the false Norse Gods. He struck the final blows against Thor, his patron deity.

Jake encounters several "versions" of classic heroes where he arrives to protect a poor neighborhood from a Cyber Nostra land grab. The people, celebrating the old heroes by dressing up like them, reject Jake's violent ways, even when the Nostra kill the "Barrio Man", their leader. When all the Nostra are dead, the new Barrio Man, who seems to be someone else with an identical costume, approaches Jake. He expresses gratitude for Jake's help, but asks that he leave.

Unlike his predecessor, Jake is completely unwilling to kill corrupt police officers, no matter how heinous their crimes. In one instance, he refuses after several officers try and kill him with a cyborg gladiator. After Jake manages to kill the gladiator, the officers attempt to kill Jake themselves. He hides, refusing to fire, but his suit is over-ridden by his partner Matt, who kills the cops (ironically, Matt himself is a policeman, and, as a more sensible, charitable man, usually acts as Jake's conscience). Matt would be involved with several more incidents with the Punisher, sometimes teaming up with others to help him.

Jake later confronts illegal hoverboard racers. These races would result in many deaths, as the riders were not averse to tricking each other into fatal obstacles. Oddly, racers would willingly catch any opponents who fell off their board.

Corruption [link]

Ultimately, Jake would become the premiere law enforcer under the Doom administration, as the Minister of Punishment, head of the Ministry of Punishment, Federal Law Enforcement for the United States.[volume & issue needed] He creates a new police force with wide-ranging powers. Curfews are enforced. The age of legal responsibility is lowered to seven. Matt Axel joins up with the Punisher again, working out of his mobile base. He literally quits on the spot after believing Jake has gone too far in employing thought-crime devices.[volume & issue needed] In detecting homicidal tendencies in one man, the devices scan the neighbors next door who are simply enjoying spousal activities. It is not confirmed what the activities are, but the Punisher clearly indicates he disapproves of them, that they are not illegal... yet.[volume & issue needed] The homicidal man is confronted and subdued after attacking a S.H.I.E.L.D. officer. The Punisher forces one of his officers to kill the man.[volume & issue needed]

During this time, he confronts an alternate reality version of himself that is much more brutal.[volume & issue needed] Jake Gallows is killed by the Wave Spiders of Herod, after Herod gives an order to kill superheroes as part of his overthrowing of Doom's presidency.[volume & issue needed]

Abilities, equipment, and base of operations [link]

Jake Gallows is an athletic man with no superhuman powers. As a Public Eye Officer, Gallows has received police training in hand-to-hand combat and martial arts and is an expert marksman and motorcyclist. He is also a weapons expert, collecting some of the best weaponry of his time, including smart-targeting grenazers, a plasma gas cannon, and flame sticks; additionally he carries some notable firearms from the past, including a Smith & Wesson .54-caliber Magnum handgun (2015 vintage) and a Stark-Fujikawa .48-caliber Street Pacifier. One of his key weapons is the "power bat" which can vary in density settings from hard rubber to titanium, to either injure or kill an opponent. Jake keeps this set at "soft rubber" as default, a precaution which saves his life on at least one point.

The Punisher also wears a cybernetic suit of body armor of unknown materials with a "heat sink" capability, equipped with multiple technological devices, such as "face-scrambler" circuitry to avoid detection by the many security cameras on the city streets, and turbo kickboots. The armor covers his exo-muscular undersuit, which is equipped with microwave sensors, a computer trajectory mapping system, and bio-synergetic capacity for programming with various martial arts techniques and fighting styles for hand-to-hand combat.

The Punisher also uses a super-sonic motorcycle for transportation, the H.D. Stealth Stinger. This is a unique police motorcycle capable of 800 mph (1,300 km/h) speeds, equipped with an air screen, computer probability mapping system, city traffic system override capability, sound bafflers, inertia brakes, various weaponry, a projection holo-beam, and wrap-around projection holo-image system enabling functional invisibility. He has also used the Black Ambulance, which is equipped with security support systems to prevent prisoner escape.

Jake keeps a secret base in the basement of his home. The base contains a complex prison, which he uses to temporarily detain prisoners. The Punisher interrogates prisoners and when finished he executes them via an electric chair-like molecular disintegrator.

References [link]

  1. ^ The Punisher 2099 #1 (February 1993)
  2. ^ The Punisher 2099 #2 (March 1993)
  3. ^ The Punisher War Journal #50 (January 1993)
  4. ^ The Punisher 2099 #3 (April 1993)
  5. ^ The Punisher 2099 #4 (May 1993)
  6. ^ The Punisher 2099 #5-6 (June–July 1993)
  7. ^ First in The Punisher 2099 #8 (September 1993)

External links [link]


https://wn.com/Punisher_2099

Punisher

The Punisher is a fictional antihero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character was created by writer Gerry Conway and artist John Romita, Sr., with publisher Stan Lee providing the name. The Punisher made his first appearance in The Amazing Spider-Man #129 (cover-dated Feb. 1974).

The Punisher is a vigilante who employs murder, kidnapping, extortion, coercion, threats of violence, and torture in his war on crime. Driven by the deaths of his wife and two children, who were killed by the mob during a shootout in New York City's Central Park, the Punisher wages a one-man war on the mob and all criminals in general by using all manner of conventional war weaponry. His family's killers were the first to be slain. A war veteran of the U.S. military, Frank Castle is a master of martial arts, stealth tactics, guerrilla warfare, and a wide variety of weapons.

The Punisher's brutal nature and willingness to kill made him a novel character in mainstream American comic books in 1974. By the late 1980s, he was part of a wave of psychologically troubled antiheroes and at the height of his popularity, was featured in three monthly publications, including The Punisher War Journal, The Punisher War Zone, and The Punisher Armory. Despite his violent actions and dark nature, the Punisher has enjoyed some mainstream success on television, making guest appearances on Spider-Man: The Animated Series and The Super Hero Squad Show, where the depiction of his violent behavior was toned down for family viewers. In feature films, Dolph Lundgren portrayed the Punisher in 1989, as did Thomas Jane in 2004, and Ray Stevenson in 2008. Jon Bernthal will portray the character in the second season of Marvel's Daredevil, set to premiere in 2016.

Punisher (disambiguation)

The Punisher is a Marvel comic book character.

Punisher or The Punisher may also refer to:

Marvel Comics "The Punisher" franchise

  • Frank Castle, lead character in the The Punisher frachise
  • Jake Gallows, from Punisher 2099
  • Cassondra Castle, from Marvel Knights 2099, see Alternative versions of the Punisher
  • Sosumi Brown, from the Marvel Mangaverse, see Alternative versions of the Punisher
  • The Punisher Frank Castle titles, see List of The Punisher titles
  • The Punisher 2099, Marvel Comics comics title in the 2099 universe
  • The Punisher (1990 video game), a 1990 video game based on the Marvel Comics character.
  • The Punisher (arcade game), a 1993 arcade game based on the Marvel Comics character
  • The Punisher (2005 video game), a 2005 video game based on the Marvel Comics character
  • The Punisher: No Mercy, a 2009 video game
  • The Punisher: The Album, the album for the 2004 film
  • The Punisher: Soundtrack, the soundtrack for the 2004 film, see The Punisher (2004 film)#Soundtrack
  • The Punisher Original Motion Picture Score, the 2005 soundtrack album to the 1989 film, see The Punisher (1989 film)#Soundtrack
  • The Punisher (2000 series)

    The Punisher (also known as The Punisher: Welcome Back, Frank) is a twelve-issue comic book limited series written by Garth Ennis with art by Steve Dillon and published under the Marvel Knights imprint of Marvel Comics. The series features the vigilante anti-hero the Punisher and ran from April 2000 to March 2001.

    Publication history

    The story continued in Ennis' The Punisher vol. 5 ongoing series.

    Plot

    Frank, still depicted as a Vietnam War veteran, reestablishes himself in New York City by taking on the Gnucci crime syndicate. Detective Soap is assigned to "catch" the Punisher; it is purely a P.R. move as the police do not really want Frank caught as they secretly condone his actions. Frank turns the hapless Soap to his side, getting him to pass information on local crime syndicates.

    Against his will, Frank gains three loyal friends in his neighbors, Joan the Mouse, Mr. Bumpo, and Spacker Dave. All end up helping him in his crusade against the Gnuccis. Some of this is self-defense as the Gnuccis learn where Frank lives and stage an attack. Spacker himself suffers torture at the hands of the Gnuccis, his piercings ripped out in a fruitless attempt to gain intelligence on Frank.

    The Punisher (2011 series)

    The Punisher is a Marvel comic book series featuring the character Frank Castle, also known as the Punisher. This volume of Punisher continues the tradition of Matt Fraction's War Journal series and Rick Remender's previous Punisher series and places the character firmly in the ongoing Marvel Universe inhabited by superheroes such as the Avengers and Spider-Man.

    Although the series' first issue was released at the time of the Fear Itself event, Rucka stated his intent to focus the series solely on the Punisher's exploits without having larger Marvel U events interfere with the flow of the series, although because the series takes place within the shared universe, it allows him to interact with the super heroes and villains that inhabit it.

    Story

    The series, although being a self-titled Punisher ongoing, does not have many internal monologues, nor does Castle speak often throughout the series. It's instead focused on the impact that the Punisher's actions have on those around him, and the repercussions those actions create for other characters involved in the story. In the first arc, Castle is committed to taking down a criminal organization known as "The Exchange," and is later joined by a former Marine whose husband was murdered on the couple's wedding day.

    Punisher video games

    The Marvel Comics' anti-hero Punisher has made several appearances on numerous electronic and gaming platforms.

    1990 (console)

    A Punisher game for the Nintendo Entertainment System was produced by LJN Toys in 1990. The player controls the Punisher character from an over-the-shoulder perspective through various New York City locations, shooting thugs and battling supervillains as bosses (the final boss was the Kingpin).

    The game was also ported to the Game Boy in 1991. It plays in a manner similar to Operation Wolf and features a cameo appearance by Spider-Man. The Kingpin was the final boss in all versions except for Game Boy, which used Jigsaw.

    1990 (computer)

    Also in 1990, MicroProse produced a Punisher computer game for DOS and Amiga. It features three different modes of gameplay: driving the Punisher's "Battle Van", walking through NYC's streets and select buildings, and scuba diving.

    1993

    A coin-operated arcade game titled The Punisher was released in 1993 by Capcom. The game is a side-scrolling beat-'em-up in the vein of Capcom's Final Fight, where the player can control the Punisher or Nick Fury on their quest to kill The Kingpin, and would engage on various foes in a hand-to-hand combat, occasionally drawing firearms in lieu of melee combat. A single home version was released for the Mega Drive/Sega Genesis in 1994.

    Punisher (1995 series)

    Punisher (1995 series) is the third eponymous comic book series starring the fictional Marvel Comics vigilante the Punisher. The series begins with Frank Castle on death row for the murder of Nick Fury, with the mafia staging Castle's electrocution in order to recruit him into their rankings, which he eventually accepts.

    Throughout the series, he is later betrayed by the mob boss, and survived numerous attempts on his life. He is also recruited by SHIELD to provide protection to a pastor who preaches equality for both humans and mutants alike. The series concludes with Castle, now suffering from amnesia, living in an abandoned Catholic Church. He does remember bits of his violent life, and seems to believe he has a mission.

    Publication history

    This series followed The Punisher (1985 limited series) and The Punisher (1987 ongoing series), just without the "The" of the previous two. It is the fourth ongoing series to feature the Punisher after the 1987 series, The Punisher War Journal (1988–1995), and The Punisher War Zone (1992–1995). The series was published by the Marvel Comics imprint Marvel Edge and ran for 18 issues from November 1995 to April 1997, all written by John Ostrander.

    Podcasts:

    Punisher

    Punisher

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    The Punisher

    by: Eric B. Rakim

    Kill him again
    Try to identify the man in front of ya
    But it ain?t the role, the gear or the money, the
    Swift intellectionist with plenty ya
    Bite, if it?s dark I?ll spark every one of ya
    I throw a mic in the crowd it?s a question
    I got the answer it includes directions
    Go manufacture a mask show me after
    A glass of a master that has to make musical massacre
    Attack your wack ?till it?s handicapped
    You?ll never hold the mic again, try to hand it back
    'Cuz every rapper that comes I cut off his thumbs
    Put a record to his neck if he swallows it hums
    Slice from ear to ear so till can hear better
    Before he bleed to death here, hear every letter
    And you can see quick and thick the blood can get
    If you try to change the style or the subject
    As I get deep in the rhyme I?m becomin? a
    Emcee murderer before I?m done, I?m a
    Prepare the chamber the torture?s comin? up
    Trip through the mind at the end you?ll find
    It?s the punisher
    Kill ?em again
    I hold the mic as hostage, emcees are ransom
    Rhymes?ll punish ?em 'cuz they don?t undertsand ?em
    I heat up his brain, then explain then I hand him
    A redhot microphone that?s how I planned ?em
    Rhymes call information unite midnight
    Like a platoon putting bullet wounds in the mic
    If ya curse me, it ain?t no mercy
    Give him a autopsy, killed by a verse of me
    I took a kid and cut off his eyelid
    Kill him slow so he could see what I did
    And if he don?t understand what I said
    I?m pushing his eyeballs way to the back of his head
    So he can see what he?s getting into
    A part of the mind that he never been through
    A journey is coming 'cuz ya getting sent to
    A place harder to find but it?s all in the mental
    I ran a brain scan to locate his game plan
    When I?m through with his brain he ain?t the same, man
    Did he lose his mind or lost in his mind
    But this ain?t the lost and found because ya can?t find
    Your foundation coasting, your mind is
    Drifting, in slow motion frozen
    Looks like another murder at the Mardi grass, B
    Too late to send out a search party
    Once ya out of ya head then ya can?t get back
    I give ?em a map, but he still get trapped, so
    Prepare the chamber, the torture?s coming up
    Trip through the mind, at the end you?ll find it?s the punisher
    Kill ?em again
    Dangerous rhymes performed like surgery
    Cuts so deep you?ll be bleeding burgundy
    My intellect wrecks and disconnects your cerebral cortex
    Your cerebellum is next
    Your conscience becomes sub-conscious
    Soon your response is nonsense
    The last words are blurred mumbled then slurred
    Then your verbs are no longer heard
    You get your lung fried so good you?re tongue-tied
    He couldn?t swing or hang so he hung ?till he died
    Reincarnate him and kill him again again and again gain and again
    I leave him in the mausoleum so you can see him
    I got a dead M Cing museum
    When I create ?em, I cremate ?em and complicate ?em
    You can?t save ?em there?s no ultamatum
    Mic?s lay around full of ashes with the victim?s name in slashes
    Got a long list and I?m a get every one of ya
    Beware of the punisher
    Then I?m a kill ?em again




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