Twenty years to the month from the first appearance of the vigilante criminal nemesis named the Punisher comes a tale which at first glance has history repeating itself. Except with one important difference:
In this 1994 What If story, writer Chuck Dixon provides a rather gruesome outcome for Peter Parker by the hand of the Punisher, cutting short the hero's life and accomplishing what a host of villains (and the Punisher himself, in our reality) failed to achieve--his attack instigated at the behest of the Jackal, a character who has his own agenda against the wall-crawler. Here, there will be no meeting of the minds between Spider-Man and Frank Castle as we witnessed in their original encounter--only a cold, and fatal, encounter with an assassin.
While the 1990s were a turbulent time for Marvel Comics, that decade did offer the opportunity for comics art aficionados to sample work from a variety of pencillers and inkers that weren't necessarily Marvel Bullpenners (a term which had by this point had had its day). Here, we're seeing the work of Gordon Purcell and Andrew Peopy, who craft a readable and engaging story that allows the Punisher to shine even under such circumstances while also presenting the chain of events slightly out of sequence, allowing the reader to take in a story that for all intents and purposes has already taken place.
As before, the Punisher agrees to act on the Jackal's obvious impetus while also keeping him at arm's length in terms of trust and even compliance. As we'd expect, the Punisher makes his own rules, and approaches his task with a good deal of forethought.
At the point where the two stories deviate, the Punisher this time successfully evades his powerful target who himself has evaded the Punisher's sniper fire--and in the process, he notes a vital defensive power that Spider-Man possesses which can possibly be used against him, a train of thought the Jackal is all too happy to encourage.
And so in a second attempt, the Punisher enacts a plan to fool Spider-Man's ability to detect danger by luring him into a situation that appears dangerous, but where the danger lies not in the apparent foe but in the deadly trap that waits to be triggered.
It's a scene made all the more chilling by the fact that Spider-Man isn't given one word of dialog in this entire story--a dead man walking (er, web-swinging), before falling victim to an attack carried out with remarkable efficiency, given the stark image of its aftermath and taking into account the Punisher's cool detachment and relative unsophisticated means by which he succeeded. Yet once he's learned about Peter Parker and his background, Castle realizes that he's been played by the Jackal, and reacts accordingly--for all the good it does him, given that the Jackal has taken steps to have law enforcement deal with his pawn.
And as if Castle didn't have enough problems with laying low, the associations which Spider-Man had formed with others in the fight for justice come to light, as the Punisher is forced to defend himself against a host of heroes who are conducting their own manhunts to avenge his victim--presented here in a montage by Purcell and Peopy, which I suppose one might call "The Legacy of Marvel Team-Up."
How the Punisher manages to evade each of these costumed pursuers (and likely more) is quite a pill to swallow--Daredevil, Cage, and Captain America, in particular, not exactly unskilled, rank amateurs. But on a positive note, which Castle himself acknowledges, the doors his deed has opened to criminal targets reaps benefits for this determined, driven man who with the deaths of his family resolved to fight a one-man war on crime that would likely never end.
As news media continue to assemble profiles of the life of Peter Parker, a slip on the part of the Jackal--who, in his civilian identity of Prof. Miles Warren, had direct interaction with Peter and as such was sought out and interviewed--has inadvertently led the Punisher directly to him. By this point, Castle is shouldering a level of guilt and regret for his actions toward Spider-Man--but unknown to Warren, or even to the police officers who arrive in force, it won't be just the Jackal who has a reckoning this day.
As opposed to the former volume of What If tales which often ended their alternate reality stories with worst-case scenarios that piled on tragic outcomes to the point of overkill, Dixon ends his tale with more complexity and subtlety as befitting his character's often difficult-to-read nature. As for ourselves, we can all probably agree that we have no difficulty imagining the expression of the shocked professor in his sights.
I suppose Aunt May died of a heart attack on hearing the news that not only was Peter dead but he'd been Spider-Man all along.
ReplyDeleteI really dislike the Punisher. He needs his own universe for his stories against real criminal types, because nothing about him ranks him a cut above any super in the full Marvel world. As you suggest, there is nothing Castle does that Daredevil or Cap cannot equal, or exceed. And those are just two "non-powered" characters.
ReplyDeleteHeroes aside, I even sit back in disbelief that he can mow down the entirety of Spider-Man's rogues gallery. There's some serious veterans of badassery in that crowd. It's farcical that they'd stand around like halfwitted farm animals waiting for the chop.
The only reason he keeps succeeding is because of the Power of Monthly Sales. The distortions and manipulations the writers inflict on Earth 616 in order to have Punisher always win makes me sprain my eyes from rolling them.
There's little doubt she would be inconsolable, Colin. As for whether it would have led to a heart attack of the sort she frequently suffered in ASM's earlier stories, I think the character had grown a little stronger by the mid-'90s, if memory serves. That said, frankly I'm surprised that her demise wasn't added to this tale's story, since it would be right up this book's alley.
ReplyDeleteMurray, I'm reminded of a similar scene where Scourge pretty much does the same against a roomful of villains as our friend the Punisher. Even villains can be caught flat-footed, I guess.
In the Scourge scene I feel obligated to point out that most of them were non-powered villains who relied on weapons or gadgetry and it was established that they were required to surrender them as they entered the bar. I did wonder about Mind Wave however, who was a mind reader and should have been able to detect Scourge and warn the others
DeleteI tend to agree with Murray, I'm not a big fan of the Punisher (his duel with Ulik not withstanding) or the Scourge. The idea of there being a bar where all the supervillains hang out is brilliant, and fertile ground for a lotta interesting stories.
ReplyDeleteWhy waste it for the sake of ratcheting up the violence in this comic or that? Maybe I'm old-fashioned, a "Bronze-Age" comic guy, but having some lunatic mowing down dozens of third-rate villains with a machine gun doesn't strike me as good writing.
It's like the writers were taking their cue from the movies back then. Stallone, Schwarzenegger, like that.
Yeesh. I'm not saying the Punisher isn't an interesting character, he is, but keep him in his own yard.
M.P.
Probably the way to handle it, M.P., is to have two or three heavy hitters present in the bar when the attacker makes his move to make it more realistic, taking out the shooter with only a minimum of casualties. I think Ock and/or the Scorpion would have taken the lead here (along with Electro, assuming he didn't go down first thing), while the Beetle could have initially shielded himself with his armored wings. (And what was the Vulture doing just standing there, when he was in a position to attack Castle from behind?) Otherwise, we're getting the impression that a S.W.A.T. team could cope with any "super-villain" that's vulnerable to ammunition.
ReplyDeleteNow you've got my mind racing with these scenarios, C.F.
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot! Good night!
M.P.
My feeling on Mind-Wave, Anon, is that while his ESP ability may have alerted him to something being up at the Bar With No Name (Marianne Rodgers' ESP talent operates along similar lines, albeit more erratically), he had no way of confirming his suspicions unless he decided to telepathically probe the clientele one by one (assuming he'd even suspect the bartender). Maybe we can chalk it up to the dude deciding to take the night off to relax and have a brew.
ReplyDeleteThat sounds like as good an explanation as any, Comicsfan. Plus, since Mind Wave was defeated by Uri Gellar, of all people in his only previous appearance, perhaps he simply was as good an “esper” as he thought he was! 😆
DeleteI meant “wasn’t “. Sorry!
DeleteContinuing the fan-boy discussion:
ReplyDeleteScourge (the original concept) was an ambush killer, all about the disguises and sneak attacks. And, despite how the text of the stories tried to pump their reputation up, the villains Scourge killed were pretty "B-List" (on their best days).
In this Punisher What If, we are to presume that Spidey's A-List rogues had a conversation something like:
"Who is this Punisher guy, anyway?"
"A right piece of work. Loves his guns and is deadly with them."
"Contract hit-man, then?"
"Not that I've heard. A man with a mission. 'Obsessed' with a side-helping of 'fanatic'."
"He'll fit in with this crowd, then. Ha-ha!"
"Ha-ha! Good one."
"Obsessed with what? What's his game?"
"Seems to be on a hunt to shoot all the criminals."
"Hmm..."
"He does have a sharp costume, I must say."
"Does he? Someone should offer to take that bulky trench coat, so we can all see it properly..."
I think it is OK for the Punisher to be in the Marvel Universe. It is a big setting, and all sorts of stories can be told there. You just don't tell the same stories you do with Daredevil as you do with Iron Man, Thor, or the Silver Surfer. But I do agree that he works best in a non-powered (or low-powered) context, and his interactions with superheroes should be limited to low powered street crime fighting heroes (Punisher works much better with Daredevil than even with Spider-Man.) Marvel has not always handled this deftly.
ReplyDeleteThe entire point of super-powered villains is that they are beyond normal means of law enforcement. So the Punisher just shooting Doctor Octopus or the Vulture to death is the wrong way to go about it. However, What If stories have always been written with less quality than the actual continuity stories. You have to shoehorn in a lot of things to make it work in the limited page count, and the appeal of the What If is the high concept not the quality of implementation.
Also, there is a category of "ordinary" humans that owe more to the pulps than reality. There is definitely a role for Batman and his rogues gallery in a superhero setting even though most of those characters are essentially non-powered. If ordinary people can have the intelligence of a Reed Richards, Tony Stark, or Victor Von Doom, then people with non-super powered strength, agility, etc. should be able to transform those pulp-level abilities into a superhero or supervillain.
Chris