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The Punisher (1998 series)

The Punisher, also known as The Punisher: Purgatory, is a four-issue comic book limited series written by Christopher Golden and Thomas E. Sniegoski, illustrated by Bernie Wrightson, and published by Marvel Comics (through the Marvel Knights imprint) from 1998 to 1999. The series was a departure from typical Punisher stories in that it dealt with supernatural themes.[1][2]

The Punisher
The cover of The Punisher (1998), #3 (January 1999).
Art by Joe Jusko and Bernie Wrightson.
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
Marvel Knights
ScheduleMonthly
FormatLimited series
GenreSuperhero
Dark fantasy
Publication dateNovember 1998 - February 1999
No. of issues4
Main character(s)Olivier
Gadriel
Punisher
Creative team
Written byChristopher Golden
Thomas E. Sniegoski
Penciller(s)Bernie Wrightson
Inker(s)Jimmy Palmiotti
Letterer(s)Richard Starkings
Colorist(s)Brian Haberlin (Issues #1-2)
Elizabeth Lewis (Issues #3-4)
Editor(s)Joe Quesada
Jimmy Palmiotti

Plot edit

After Frank Castle's suicide, the alley where he shot himself became a shrine for all the downtrodden victims of crime. However, a figure with glowing eyes and an arcane sigil on his forehead has been carrying out similar deeds as the Punisher once did. This phantom slowly begins to remember who he is, eventually discovering not only the possession that drives him, but the guardian angel that failed to save his family.

Prints edit

Issues edit

  1. "Purgatory, Part 1: The Harvest"
  2. "Purgatory, Part 2: The Mark of Cain"
  3. "Purgatory, Part 3: A Gathering of Angels"
  4. "Purgatory, Part 4: The Hour of Judgment"

Continuity edit

The angelic rendition of the Punisher reappears in the four-issue miniseries Wolverine/The Punisher: Revelation.[3]

In The Punisher series following this one, the character has gone back to being a mortal vigilante combating mundane criminals; the return to the status quo is explained via the Punisher commenting that he had grown weary of doing Heaven's bidding (referring to the offer made to him at the end of the aforementioned Revelation[4]) and had quit its employ after telling the angels "where to stick it".[5][6]

The Egyptian deity Khonshu expressed interest in the Punisher, but was deterred from anointing him by the Punisher's connection to Olivier, remarking that the vigilante "belongs to another" and that he "flies his lord's banner" (the Punisher's skull insignia).[7] Later, while a member of the Thunderbolts, the Punisher is healed by an angel's feather after being fatally wounded. When Deadpool asks why the feather was drawn to him, the Punisher snaps, "I don't want to talk about it".[8]

The series retcons the events in Marvel Super Action #1, which had the Costa brothers die at the hands of an assassin named Audrey, not the Punisher.[9] Additionally, Olivier insinuates that his own skull-like face inspired the Punisher's emblem, when it had earlier been implied in The 'Nam that the inspiration for the symbol came from a Viet Cong sniper called Monkey.[10]

Reception edit

The comic has been ridiculed for its revamping of the Punisher mythos, with Matt Duarte of The Weekly Crisis musing that it "alienated many readers and made the character toxic until Garth Ennis engineered his revival some years later".[11] Nick Nadel of ComicsAlliance wrote, "Even horror legend Bernie Wrightson's artwork couldn't make Angel Punisher and his weird spiky guns not look completely silly and dated".[12] Cracked.com's Maxwell Yezpitelok opined that the storyline "completely undermined the intent of the character who had the simplest goal of any superhero ever" and that it felt like "the sort of bullshit premise that could have only come from the mind of a coke-fueled TV executive pitching a toy-friendly Punisher animated series where they don't actually show him killing people".[13] Ethan Kaye of Topless Robot succinctly stated in regards to the volume, "Thank God we have Garth Ennis to give us back the Punisher who liked guns and bombs again".[14] 4thletter's Gavin Jasper said, "Purgatory still doesn't get as much hate as it deserves. Angel Punisher isn't a completely unusable idea. As a fan of Franken-Castle, I'd be a hypocrite for suggesting such a thing. If Ennis felt like it, I'm sure he could come up with a way to make it work. Remender and Ostrander (the last guy to write Punisher before this status quo) could make it work. Here, though, there's nothing that redeems such a bonehead concept."[15][16]

Chuck Dixon, writer of various Punisher comics throughout the early 1990s, criticized the alterations made to the character's backstory, asserting, "I don't think origins like Batman's or Punisher's should be visited over and over again with everyone adding their two cents until the sum of all added details don't fit any more" and "Punisher's origin has been similarly screwed up, changing in the identities of his family's killers, making it a purposeful rather than random act".[17]

References edit

  1. ^ Bradley Mengel (2012). Serial Vigilantes of Paperback Fiction: An Encyclopedia from Able Team to Z-Comm. McFarland & Company. p. 217. ISBN 978-0-7864-4165-5. Archived from the original on April 4, 2015. Retrieved March 26, 2015.
  2. ^ Sims, Chris (July 29, 2011). "Ask Chris #66: Superman, Batman and the World's Finest Friendship". ComicsAlliance. Retrieved December 1, 2023.
  3. ^ Tom Sniegoski and Christopher Golden (w), Pat Lee (p), Alvin Lee (i), Pat Lee and Angelo Tsang (col), Richard Starkings and Comicraft Letters (let), Joe Quesada and Jimmy Palmiotti (ed). Wolverine/The Punisher: Revelation, vol. 1, no. 1-4 (June 1999 - September 1999). United States: Marvel Comics.
  4. ^ Arcturus: One final thing, Castle. We have vowed not to interfere with you. But there may be times when we have need of your special... talents. If you were to aid us, it might well speed you on your way to redemption.
  5. ^ Garth Ennis (w), Steve Dillon (p), Jimmy Palmiotti (i), Chris Sotomayer (col), Richard Starkings and Comicraft's Wes Abbott (let), Joe Quesada and Jimmy Palmiotti (ed). "Welcome Back, Frank" The Punisher, vol. 5, no. 1 (April 2000). United States: Marvel Comics.
  6. ^ Frank Castle: I caught a glimpse of heaven once. The angels showed me. The idea was I'd kill for them. Clean up their mistakes on Earth. Eventually redeem myself. Tried it. Didn't like it. Told them where to stick it. So they brought me up to heaven, to see what I'd be missing. A wife. A son. A daughter. I hadn't seen them since they bled out in my arms. Then I was cast down. Back to a world of killers. Rapists. Psychos. Perverts. A brand new evil every minute, spewed out as fast as men can think them up. A world where pitching a criminal dwarf off a skyscraper to tell his fellow scum you're back is a sane and rational act. The angels thought it would be hell for me. But they were wrong.
  7. ^ Charlie Huston (w), Mico Suayan (p), Mico Suayan (i), Frank D'Armata (col), VC's Rus Wooton (let), Axel Alonso (ed). "Midnight Sun, Chapter Four: His Lord's Banner" Moon Knight, vol. 3, no. 10 (June 2007). United States: Marvel Comics.
  8. ^ Charles Soule (w), Carlo Barberi (p), Carlo Barberi (i), Israel Silva (col), Joe Sabino (let), Jordan D. White (ed). "No Mercy: Part 3" Thunderbolts, vol. 2, no. 22 (February 26, 2014). United States: Marvel Comics.
  9. ^ Archie Goodwin (w), Tony DeZuniga (p), Rico Rival (i). "Accounts Settled... Accounts Due!" Marvel Super Action, vol. 1, no. 1 (January 1976). United States: Marvel Comics.
  10. ^ Roger Salick (w), Mike Harris (p), James Palmiotti (i), Ed Lazellari (col), Jade Moede (let), Don Daley (ed). "The Long Sticks: Part Two" The 'Nam, vol. 1, no. 53 (February 1991). United States: Marvel Comics.
  11. ^ Duarte, Matt (November 25, 2009). "Punisher: Grim vs. Goofy". theweeklycrisis.com. The Weekly Crisis. Retrieved March 25, 2015.
  12. ^ Nadel, Nick (November 19, 2009). . comicsalliance.com. ComicsAlliance. Archived from the original on March 31, 2015. Retrieved March 25, 2015.
  13. ^ Yezpitelok, Maxwell (December 20, 2011). "The 6 Most Unintentionally Hilarious Superhero Reinventions". cracked.com. Cracked. Retrieved March 25, 2015.
  14. ^ Kaye, Ethan (December 15, 2009). "The 10 Worst '90s Comic Character Revamps". toplessrobot.com. Topless Robot. Retrieved March 25, 2015.
  15. ^ Jasper, Gavin (May 14, 2012). "The Many Deaths of Frank Castle". 4thletter.net. 4thletter!. Retrieved November 25, 2015.
  16. ^ Sims, Chris (September 8, 2016). "Electric Bluegaloo, Act 15: Superman Forever". ComicsAlliance. Retrieved December 1, 2023.
  17. ^ Giles, Keith (April 19, 2001). "Chuck Dixon Interview". comicbookresources.com. Comic Book Resources. Retrieved March 25, 2015.

External links edit

punisher, 1998, series, punisher, also, known, punisher, purgatory, four, issue, comic, book, limited, series, written, christopher, golden, thomas, sniegoski, illustrated, bernie, wrightson, published, marvel, comics, through, marvel, knights, imprint, from, . The Punisher also known as The Punisher Purgatory is a four issue comic book limited series written by Christopher Golden and Thomas E Sniegoski illustrated by Bernie Wrightson and published by Marvel Comics through the Marvel Knights imprint from 1998 to 1999 The series was a departure from typical Punisher stories in that it dealt with supernatural themes 1 2 The PunisherThe cover of The Punisher 1998 3 January 1999 Art by Joe Jusko and Bernie Wrightson Publication informationPublisherMarvel Comics Marvel KnightsScheduleMonthlyFormatLimited seriesGenreSuperhero Dark fantasyPublication dateNovember 1998 February 1999No of issues4Main character s Olivier Gadriel PunisherCreative teamWritten byChristopher Golden Thomas E SniegoskiPenciller s Bernie WrightsonInker s Jimmy PalmiottiLetterer s Richard StarkingsColorist s Brian Haberlin Issues 1 2 Elizabeth Lewis Issues 3 4 Editor s Joe Quesada Jimmy Palmiotti Contents 1 Plot 2 Prints 2 1 Issues 3 Continuity 4 Reception 5 References 6 External linksPlot editAfter Frank Castle s suicide the alley where he shot himself became a shrine for all the downtrodden victims of crime However a figure with glowing eyes and an arcane sigil on his forehead has been carrying out similar deeds as the Punisher once did This phantom slowly begins to remember who he is eventually discovering not only the possession that drives him but the guardian angel that failed to save his family Prints editIssues edit Purgatory Part 1 The Harvest Purgatory Part 2 The Mark of Cain Purgatory Part 3 A Gathering of Angels Purgatory Part 4 The Hour of Judgment Continuity editThe angelic rendition of the Punisher reappears in the four issue miniseries Wolverine The Punisher Revelation 3 In The Punisher series following this one the character has gone back to being a mortal vigilante combating mundane criminals the return to the status quo is explained via the Punisher commenting that he had grown weary of doing Heaven s bidding referring to the offer made to him at the end of the aforementioned Revelation 4 and had quit its employ after telling the angels where to stick it 5 6 The Egyptian deity Khonshu expressed interest in the Punisher but was deterred from anointing him by the Punisher s connection to Olivier remarking that the vigilante belongs to another and that he flies his lord s banner the Punisher s skull insignia 7 Later while a member of the Thunderbolts the Punisher is healed by an angel s feather after being fatally wounded When Deadpool asks why the feather was drawn to him the Punisher snaps I don t want to talk about it 8 The series retcons the events in Marvel Super Action 1 which had the Costa brothers die at the hands of an assassin named Audrey not the Punisher 9 Additionally Olivier insinuates that his own skull like face inspired the Punisher s emblem when it had earlier been implied in The Nam that the inspiration for the symbol came from a Viet Cong sniper called Monkey 10 Reception editThe comic has been ridiculed for its revamping of the Punisher mythos with Matt Duarte of The Weekly Crisis musing that it alienated many readers and made the character toxic until Garth Ennis engineered his revival some years later 11 Nick Nadel of ComicsAlliance wrote Even horror legend Bernie Wrightson s artwork couldn t make Angel Punisher and his weird spiky guns not look completely silly and dated 12 Cracked com s Maxwell Yezpitelok opined that the storyline completely undermined the intent of the character who had the simplest goal of any superhero ever and that it felt like the sort of bullshit premise that could have only come from the mind of a coke fueled TV executive pitching a toy friendly Punisher animated series where they don t actually show him killing people 13 Ethan Kaye of Topless Robot succinctly stated in regards to the volume Thank God we have Garth Ennis to give us back the Punisher who liked guns and bombs again 14 4thletter s Gavin Jasper said Purgatory still doesn t get as much hate as it deserves Angel Punisher isn t a completely unusable idea As a fan of Franken Castle I d be a hypocrite for suggesting such a thing If Ennis felt like it I m sure he could come up with a way to make it work Remender and Ostrander the last guy to write Punisher before this status quo could make it work Here though there s nothing that redeems such a bonehead concept 15 16 Chuck Dixon writer of various Punisher comics throughout the early 1990s criticized the alterations made to the character s backstory asserting I don t think origins like Batman s or Punisher s should be visited over and over again with everyone adding their two cents until the sum of all added details don t fit any more and Punisher s origin has been similarly screwed up changing in the identities of his family s killers making it a purposeful rather than random act 17 References edit Bradley Mengel 2012 Serial Vigilantes of Paperback Fiction An Encyclopedia from Able Team to Z Comm McFarland amp Company p 217 ISBN 978 0 7864 4165 5 Archived from the original on April 4 2015 Retrieved March 26 2015 Sims Chris July 29 2011 Ask Chris 66 Superman Batman and the World s Finest Friendship ComicsAlliance Retrieved December 1 2023 Tom Sniegoski and Christopher Golden w Pat Lee p Alvin Lee i Pat Lee and Angelo Tsang col Richard Starkings and Comicraft Letters let Joe Quesada and Jimmy Palmiotti ed Wolverine The Punisher Revelation vol 1 no 1 4 June 1999 September 1999 United States Marvel Comics Arcturus One final thing Castle We have vowed not to interfere with you But there may be times when we have need of your special talents If you were to aid us it might well speed you on your way to redemption Garth Ennis w Steve Dillon p Jimmy Palmiotti i Chris Sotomayer col Richard Starkings and Comicraft s Wes Abbott let Joe Quesada and Jimmy Palmiotti ed Welcome Back Frank The Punisher vol 5 no 1 April 2000 United States Marvel Comics Frank Castle I caught a glimpse of heaven once The angels showed me The idea was I d kill for them Clean up their mistakes on Earth Eventually redeem myself Tried it Didn t like it Told them where to stick it So they brought me up to heaven to see what I d be missing A wife A son A daughter I hadn t seen them since they bled out in my arms Then I was cast down Back to a world of killers Rapists Psychos Perverts A brand new evil every minute spewed out as fast as men can think them up A world where pitching a criminal dwarf off a skyscraper to tell his fellow scum you re back is a sane and rational act The angels thought it would be hell for me But they were wrong Charlie Huston w Mico Suayan p Mico Suayan i Frank D Armata col VC s Rus Wooton let Axel Alonso ed Midnight Sun Chapter Four His Lord s Banner Moon Knight vol 3 no 10 June 2007 United States Marvel Comics Charles Soule w Carlo Barberi p Carlo Barberi i Israel Silva col Joe Sabino let Jordan D White ed No Mercy Part 3 Thunderbolts vol 2 no 22 February 26 2014 United States Marvel Comics Archie Goodwin w Tony DeZuniga p Rico Rival i Accounts Settled Accounts Due Marvel Super Action vol 1 no 1 January 1976 United States Marvel Comics Roger Salick w Mike Harris p James Palmiotti i Ed Lazellari col Jade Moede let Don Daley ed The Long Sticks Part Two The Nam vol 1 no 53 February 1991 United States Marvel Comics Duarte Matt November 25 2009 Punisher Grim vs Goofy theweeklycrisis com The Weekly Crisis Retrieved March 25 2015 Nadel Nick November 19 2009 The Punisher s Most Ridiculous Moments Ever comicsalliance com ComicsAlliance Archived from the original on March 31 2015 Retrieved March 25 2015 Yezpitelok Maxwell December 20 2011 The 6 Most Unintentionally Hilarious Superhero Reinventions cracked com Cracked Retrieved March 25 2015 Kaye Ethan December 15 2009 The 10 Worst 90s Comic Character Revamps toplessrobot com Topless Robot Retrieved March 25 2015 Jasper Gavin May 14 2012 The Many Deaths of Frank Castle 4thletter net 4thletter Retrieved November 25 2015 Sims Chris September 8 2016 Electric Bluegaloo Act 15 Superman Forever ComicsAlliance Retrieved December 1 2023 Giles Keith April 19 2001 Chuck Dixon Interview comicbookresources com Comic Book Resources Retrieved March 25 2015 External links editThe Punisher at the Comic Book DB archived from the original The Punisher at the Grand Comics Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Punisher 1998 series amp oldid 1187804561, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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