Jigsaw (Marvel Comics)
Jigsaw | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | Cameo appearance: The Amazing Spider-Man #161 (October 1976) Full appearance: The Amazing Spider-Man #162 (November 1976) |
Created by | Len Wein Ross Andru |
In-story information | |
Full name | William Russo |
Species | Human |
Place of origin | Earth-616 |
Team affiliations | Maggia Hood's Crime Syndicate[1] |
Partnerships | Rev Stuart Clarke |
Notable aliases | The Beaut, The Heavy |
Abilities | Experienced street fighter Exceptional strategist and tactician Highly charismatic criminal organizer Wears a special exoskeleton |
Jigsaw (William "Billy" Russo, also known as Billy "The Beaut" Russo before his disfigurement) is a fictional character, gangster, and supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by writer Len Wein and artist Ross Andru, the character made his first full appearance in The Amazing Spider-Man #162 (November 1976).
Jigsaw was portrayed by Dominic West in the 2008 film Punisher: War Zone and Ben Barnes in the Netflix television adaption set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe
Publication history
Jigsaw was created by writer Len Wein and artist Ross Andru. He first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man #162 (November 1976). He returned in The Amazing Spider-Man #188, and The Punisher #1 and #4–5. Jigsaw then allied with the Rev in The Punisher Vol. 2, #35–40, and Gregario in #55–56. Following a cameo appearance in The Punisher War Journal #61, Jigsaw's origin was detailed in Issues #3–4 of the prequel limited series The Punisher: Year One, and he further bedeviled the Punisher in Punisher Vol. 3, #2–4 and #9–10.
Preceding an encounter with the eponymous character in Daredevil Vol. 2, #61–64, Jigsaw appeared in The New Avengers #1–3, #35, #46, #50, #57, and The New Avengers Annual #2; concurrent to his appearances in that title, Jigsaw also starred in Punisher War Journal Vol. 2, #11, #18–20, and #22–23. He was then featured in the five-issue miniseries Punisher: In the Blood, and made a subsequent cameo in the Thunderbolts Vol. 2 Annual.
Jigsaw received profiles in The Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe #6, The Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe Master Edition #10, Marvel Encyclopedia #4 and #5, The New Avengers Most Wanted Files #1, and Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe A–Z #6.
Fictional character biography
Billy Russo was born to a poor Italian-American family, kicked out and abandoned as an orphan by his abusive father at the age of ten,[2] and went on to become a hitman for New York's Italian criminal underworld, where his good looks garnered him the nickname "the Beaut".[3] He also married a woman named Susan, and would beat both her and their son, Henry, once forcing Henry to drown his pet cat's kittens by threatening to shoot Susan.[2] After the botched gangland execution that inadvertently led to the Castle family being massacred, Russo is hired by Frank Costa to assassinate all those connected to the Castles. Russo kills all of his targets but Frank Castle, who survives the bomb that Russo had planted in Castle's home.[4] Hours later, the Punisher (Frank Castle) tracks Russo down to a Maggia nightclub. The Punisher guns down all of Russo's associates, but leaves him alive to send a message to organized crime after knocking him through a glass pane, an act that reduces Russo's face to a jigsaw puzzle-like mess of scars.[3]
Taking advantage of his hideous visage, the formerly handsome gangster adopts the identity of Jigsaw, and attempts to frame the Punisher for murder. However, the plan fails due to the intervention of Spider-Man and Nightcrawler; Spider-Man witnesses one of Jigsaw's murders, and one of his victims is an old friend of Nightcrawler.[5][6] Jigsaw later battled Spider-Man again.[7]
It is revealed in the first Punisher miniseries that Jigsaw was behind a plan to drug the Punisher, causing his enemy to behave erratically and attack any criminals, even for things as minor as littering. Jigsaw also attempts to kill the Punisher in prison. The Punisher confronts and defeats him, and later stops Jigsaw from escaping in a prison riot.[8] Later in the series, Jigsaw is brainwashed by the Trust into serving as a member of a Punisher-style assassination squad. He manages to remember who he is after encountering Castle once again, and attacks the Punisher. He is defeated once more.[9][10]
Jigsaw is broken out of Ryker's Island by the Rev who has him supervise the importation of a sterility-inducing Venezuelan drug that the Rev intends to test in New York City. When the drug shipment is destroyed by the Punisher, Jigsaw sics a street gang on him, and flees to Venezuela with the Rev. After Jigsaw's face is healed by the Rev's powers, he is shot by the Punisher, but resurrected by the Rev, with the assistance of Belasco. Jigsaw's restored face is destroyed, and he is left for dead in the jungle in a later battle with the Punisher.[11][12][13][14][15][16] Jigsaw recovers, and subsequently attempts to illegally reenter the United States, but is arrested and returned to Ryker's Island. When the Punisher is captured by the authorities and sent to same prison, Jigsaw disfigures and tries to kill him, but the Punisher survives, and escapes from Ryker's.[17][18]
After the Punisher is arrested and sentenced to death, Jigsaw dons a stylized copy of his costume and embarks on a homicidal rampage, targeting all those connected to the execution.[19][20] When the Punisher is revealed to still be alive, an overjoyed Jigsaw attempts to kill him, but the Punisher overpowers him with the assistance of Daredevil.[21] Jigsaw later partners with various syndicates, and lays siege to the estate of the Geraci crime family, of which the Punisher had become the reluctant underboss.[22] Jigsaw and his allies abduct the Geracis, but they are saved by the Punisher, who shoots Jigsaw in the head.[23]
Jigsaw next establishes a gunrunning operation, which is broken up by Daredevil and Black Widow. When his attempt at negotiating with Daredevil (who had declared himself the new Kingpin) fails, Jigsaw seeks revenge by breaking into Daredevil's home, where he is subdued by Black Widow.[24] Jigsaw is remanded to the Raft, an island supervillain prison, which he escapes from (breaking Spider-Man's arm in the process) when the facility is attacked by Electro.[25] Once free, Jigsaw tries to rob a bank, but is beaten by Tigra. This humiliation leads to his forming an alliance with the self-proclaimed "super-villain Kingpin" the Hood; together, Jigsaw and the Hood film themselves threatening and torturing Tigra.[1] Later, Jigsaw takes part in the Hood's attack on the Sanctum Sanctorum, where he attempts to snipe Jessica Jones and Danielle Cage, only to be foiled by Spider-Man.[26]
Jigsaw has resumed his vendetta against the Punisher, in the pages of Punisher: War Journal. Now wearing a color-inverted mockup of the Punisher costume, Jigsaw arranges for the brainwashing of a young auxiliary police officer in the NYPD. Exploiting the naive cop's pathological "hero-worship" complex, Jigsaw and his new psychiatrist girlfriend turn the young man into a new version of the Punisher.[27]
After a battle on the Brooklyn Bridge where the Punisher once again spares Jigsaw's life, Jigsaw is taken into S.H.I.E.L.D. custody. While imprisoned he is seemingly shot dead by the man that he and his girlfriend (who was actually undercover S.H.I.E.L.D. agent Lynn Michaels) had brainwashed.[28] Jigsaw survived the attempt on his life, and was transferred to a "reprogramming asylum" by H.A.M.M.E.R.[29] He returns to the Hood's Gang in Secret Invasion to assist in fending off the invading Skrulls, and rejoins again in Dark Reign to help attack the New Avengers.[30][31]
Jigsaw then partners with the similarly disfigured Stuart Clarke. Together, the "Jigsaw Brothers" hire Lady Gorgon to impersonate Maria Castle while they manipulate Henry, the Punisher's ally and Jigsaw's son, into helping them capture and kill the Punisher. After betraying and murdering Clarke, Jigsaw battles the Punisher on top of his own burning headquarters, only to fall through the roof of the building and into the fire below.[29]
Jigsaw resurfaced when the pictures of he and Spider-Man were shown enjoying ice cream cones together while under the thrall of fairy king Oberoth'M'Gozz.[32]
A recovered Jigsaw afterward appears in the Civil War II storyline as one of the criminals that the Kingpin has assembled to help him rebuild his New York empire.[33]
During the "Search for Tony Stark" arc, Jigsaw rejoined Hood's gang and assisted in the attack on Castle Doom.[34]
Powers and abilities
Jigsaw is an athletic man with no superhuman powers. During his time in prison, he was able to hone his physical strength to a level comparable to the Punisher. He has extensive experience with street-fighting techniques, and familiarity with a variety of weapons and criminal techniques. He carries various handguns as needed. He has been known to wear a special exo-skeleton in his outfits.
Though lacking any formal, military training, Jigsaw is an exceptional strategist and tactician. His unorthodox pattern of operation makes him more difficult for the Punisher to anticipate than the majority of Punisher's enemies. Before Jigsaw was disfigured, he was a highly-charismatic leader and criminal organizer, but after the accident, only the latter trait remained.[35]
Other versions
2099
A cyborg and the under-capo of a crime syndicate called Cyber-Nostra, Multi-Fractor is the one to inform the group's leader, Fearmaster, of the existence of the new Punisher, who Multi-Fractor encounters for the first time while attempting to illegally demolish a decrepit neighborhood inhabited by "Decreds".[36][37][38] Multi-Fractor survives his initial run-in with the Punisher, who he encounters again while extorting protection money from a Grav-Ball Stadium.[39] When the Punisher gains the upper hand in the ensuing fight, a trio of corrupt police officers come to Multi-Fractor's aid, providing him with a power-enhancing device, which kills him when the Punisher rams the machine into Multi-Fractor's chest.[40]
A mortician and a veterinarian resurrect Multi-Fractor as Jigsaw 2099, a Frankenstein's monster-like being made of machinery and body parts taken from animals. Jigsaw attempts to get revenge on the Punisher, but is temporarily flash frozen by the crime fighter, psychologically tortured for information, and then imprisoned in the Punisher's "Punishment Hotel".[41][42] Jigsaw is located and freed by Fearmaster, and together the two try to execute the Punisher with his own Molecular Disintegrator. When the machine is turned on, its fail-safes activate, and blast Jigsaw.[43] Jigsaw is later discovered, taken captive, and further augmented by a gang, which he massacres and escapes from before rejoining Fearmaster.[44]
Crossovers
Jigsaw appears in both Batman/Punisher intercompany crossover books. In the first crossover, Jigsaw allies with the Joker and they both fight the Punisher and Batman (Jean Paul Valley).[45] In the sequel, Jigsaw's face is repaired by one of the world's foremost plastic surgeons, extorted by the Joker, whom Jigsaw allies with again to take over Gotham. At the end of this crossover, Jigsaw's reconstructed face is destroyed by one of the Punisher's fragmentation grenades, and he is knocked out and left for the police by Batman (Bruce Wayne).[46] Jigsaw and the Punisher's activities in Gotham are later recounted by Azrael, and Nightwing.[47][48]
When the Amalgam Universe came into being as a result of the events of DC vs. Marvel, Jigsaw was merged with Wonder Woman foe Cheetah to form "Pelt-Man"; cursed by an ancient ritual to resemble a big cat, Billy Minerva took his anger over his condition out on beautiful people, mutilating their faces until he was located and subdued by Trevor Castle and Diana Prince.[49][50]
Earth X
At some point, Jigsaw died, and was sent to the Realm of the Dead. When Captain Marvel and Thanos destroyed Death and created Paradise, Jigsaw was among the many who came to realize that they were actually deceased. Jigsaw rejected Paradise and remained in the Realm of the Dead, where he and the Jackal took to tormenting the Punisher, who had committed suicide, and was living in blissful ignorance with his equally unaware family. Jigsaw and the Jackal's actions cause the Punisher to remember his death, and drive a wedge between him and his disbelieving loved ones, who only come to accept that they are dead much later. Captain America, who had been sent by Paradise to bring others to it, punishes Jigsaw and the Jackal by banishing them to a desolate region of the Realm of the Dead.[51]
Marvel MAX
Jigsaw, operating under the alias The Heavy, appears in the "Girls in White Dresses" storyline of The Punisher MAX. An American drug lord, Jigsaw expands his empire to Mexico, and has his affiliates within the country kidnap women from border towns for use as disposable slave labor in meth labs. When the families of the abducted and murdered women seek aid from the Punisher, Jigsaw drives the crime fighter to suicidal despair by tricking him into believing he had accidentally shot an innocent girl, though a last minute epiphany prompts the Punisher into exhuming and performing an amateur autopsy on the child, leading to the discovery that the bullet that ended her life was not one of his own. The Punisher proceeds to destroy Jigsaw's Mexican operation and free his captives, and during a subsequent fight between the two archenemies the Punisher knocks Jigsaw out a window and onto the boxcar of a passing train, leaving his fate ambiguous.[52]
Bullseye later researches Jigsaw and other enemies of the Punisher, such as Barracuda, Finn Cooley, and General Nikolai Zakharov.[53]
Jigsaw's role in "Girls in White Dresses" was regarded as generic and anticlimactic, and his inclusion in the MAX imprint criticized as obtrusive and gratuitous, by Jesse Schedeen of IGN, who felt that the character was "planted in this story mainly to appeal to fans of the recent movie".[54][55]
Marvel Noir
Jigsaw is Al Capone's top assassin in Punisher Noir. He, Barracuda, and the Russian are hired to kill Frank Castelione, a grocer who had defied mob boss Dutch Schultz.[56] Years later, Frank's son, the Punisher, tries to ambush Jigsaw, but is shot unconscious, and has his skull-face mask removed. Jigsaw takes the Punisher to his lair, and tortures him by carving a skull into the Punisher's chest. After Jigsaw mentions who helped him and Barracuda murder Frank, the Punisher escapes his bonds, and kills Jigsaw by garroting.[57]
In other media
Television
This section's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed. (December 2017) |
- Billy Russo appears in The Punisher, portrayed by Ben Barnes.[58] Russo is Castle's former best friend who served alongside him in the Marine Corps Force Reconnaissance as a Scout Sniper, with 129 confirmed kills. After he left the Marines, Russo started Anvil, his own private military contracting firm.[59] In his youth, his mother was a meth addict and he was put in a foster home. Russo was nearly molested as a child, but he managed to defend himself.[60] He joined the Marine Corps and befriended Castle, who nicknames him "Billy the Beaut" due to his good looks and his womanizing habits. In reality, Russo and Castle are working for an illegal black ops program set up by William Rawlins. After a botched mission results in the deaths of several of their squadmates, Russo transfers out of the unit and suggests that Castle do the same.[61] In the present day, DHS agent Dinah Madani begins interviewing and questioning Russo about his association with Frank Castle.[62] Russo seduces Madani and enters a relationship with her,[63] but is irked when he learns that she is investigating Frank and that he is still living. He reunites with Castle and tries to persuade him to start a new life, but Castle refuses. However, Russo is revealed to be in league with Rawlins.[64] Russo and Rawlins plot to get rid of Castle and anyone who could link them to Kandahar.[65] Russo and several Anvil contractors are then tricked by Dinah into following a false lead on Castle with the intent to execute him, resulting in a shootout in which several SWAT officers and several of Russo's men are killed. Russo escapes after stabbing Dinah's partner Sam Stein to death.[60] Dinah, having learned the contractors were all working for Anvil, realizes Russo's complicity in Stein's murder.[66] Russo and Rawlins later capture Castle, but Russo double crosses Rawlins and leaves him at Frank's mercy.[67] He later has a showdown with Castle at the carousel where the latter's family died. The fight ends with Castle repeatedly slamming Billy's face into a carousel mirror, maiming him and disfiguring his face. Russo is last seen in a hospital bed with his head wrapped in bandages, with Castle being informed that Russo has suffered severe head trauma and blood loss, and may suffer serious memory loss if he ever wakes up.[68]
Film
- Jigsaw was included in one of Michael France's early drafts of The Punisher.[70] Actor Thomas Jane, who portrayed the Punisher, reveled that, if the film was successful, Jigsaw was going to be the main villain in the sequel,[71] which, ultimately, never was produced.
- Jigsaw appears in Punisher: War Zone, portrayed by Dominic West. In the film, the character's name is Billy "The Beaut" Russoti. Russoti is introduced attending a mob dinner, which the Punisher attacks. Russoti escapes the ensuing massacre, but is pursued to his recycling plant, where he falls into a glass crusher, and is mangled when the Punisher turns the machine on. Billy survives, but his plastic surgeon is unable to restore his mutilated visage, stating that Russoti's facial muscles, tendons, skin, and bone structure were damaged beyond repair. After killing the surgeon, Russotti rechristens himself "Jigsaw". He then breaks his brother, James "Loony Bin Jim" Russoti, out of an asylum, to assist him in getting revenge on the Punisher. In the final battle at the Brad Street Hotel, Jigsaw is impaled and thrown into a fire by the Punisher.[72]
Video games
- Jigsaw appears as a boss in The Punisher.[73].
- Jigsaw appears as the final boss in The Punisher: The Ultimate Payback!.[74]
- Jigsaw is a target in one of the missions in The Punisher. Before the mission, Microchip informs Castle that Jigsaw and his accomplice, Mark Ruffknuckles, have escaped from Ryker's Island prison and were last seen at a seedy bar. The Punisher interrogates the bartender, who says Jigsaw and Ruffknuckles are hiding at the Kingpin's former apartment. Castle kills Jigsaw's bodyguards at the apartment and confronts Jigsaw, who insults the Punisher: "I haven't forgot what you did to my face, Punisher. Now you will suffer worse than I did. I'm gonna carve you up so bad, I'll look like Mel Gibson compared to you!" The Punisher guns down Jigsaw, then Ruffknuckles, who is hiding in the bathroom. The Trust pays Castle well for killing Jigsaw.[75]
- Jigsaw appears in The Punisher. He is a sub-boss in the game's sixth and final stage, where he is fought inside of a moving elevator within the Kingpin's hideout, and is armed with an M16 rifle.[76]
- A different version of Jigsaw appears in The Punisher, voiced by Darryl Kurylo. In the game, the character is John Saint, the son of Howard Saint (the primary antagonist of the 2004 film and the man responsible for the death of Frank Castle's family). The explosion at the end of the film did not kill him, but instead launched him through a window and disfigured his face. Under the name Jigsaw, he takes up his father's old business, and vows revenge on the Punisher. He is also the lieutenant of a Yakuza-offshoot called the Eternal Sun, and is the final boss of the game, using stolen Stark Armor to attack the Punisher on Ryker's Island. Upon being defeated, Jigsaw is thrown out of a helicopter by the Punisher.[77]
- Jigsaw appears as a playable character in The Punisher: No Mercy.[78]
Toys
- In 2006, Jigsaw was one of the figures in the second wave of the Marvel Legends "Face-Off" series. He was paired with the Punisher and came in two versions, one with a business suit and one with a Punisher costume. The two-pack was released in December 2006.[79]
- In 2008, a minimates boxset was announced that is based on the Punisher: War Zone film. The boxset features civilian Frank Castle (the Punisher), Jigsaw, and Loony Bin Jim, Jigsaw's mental, cannibalistic killer brother. The toys also come with mini weapons. They are sculpted and designed by Art Asylum and feature 14 points of articulation as well as accessories from the film.[citation needed]
- In 2009, Hasbro released a Jigsaw figure in its Mighty Muggs toy line, which came with a silver pistol.
References
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- ^ Pat Mills and Tony Skinner (w), Enrique Villagran (p), Enrique Villagran (i), Ian Laughlin (col), Janice Chiang (let), Joey Cavalieri (ed). "Playing God" The Punisher 2099, vol. 1, no. 29 (June 1995). United States: Marvel Comics.
- ^ Dennis O'Neil (w), Barry Kitson and James Pascoe (p), Barry Kitson and James Pascoe (i), Matt Hollingsworth (col), Ken Bruzenak (let), Archie Goodwin (ed). "Lake of Fire" Batman/Punisher, vol. 1, no. 1 (June 1994). United States: DC Comics.
- ^ Chuck Dixon (w), Klaus Janson and John Romita, Jr. (p), Klaus Janson and John Romita, Jr. (i), Christie Scheele (col), Comicraft's Richard Starkings (let), Don Daley (ed). "Deadly Knights" Punisher/Batman, vol. 1, no. 1 (October 1994). United States: Marvel Comics.
- ^ Doug Moench (w), Mike Manley (p), Dick Giordano (i), Adrienne Roy (col), Ken Bruzenak (let), Dennis O'Neil and Jordan B. Gorfinkel (ed). "KnightsEnd, Part 1: Spirit of the Bat" Batman, vol. 1, no. 509 (July 1994). United States: DC Comics.
- ^ Chuck Dixon (w), Patrick Zircher (p), José Marzan, Jr. (i), Patricia Mulvihill (col), John Costanza (let), Bob Schreck and Joseph Illidge (ed). "The Stalkers" Nightwing, vol. 2, no. 44 (June 2000). United States: DC Comics.
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{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ Michael, Ausiello. "Ben Barnes' Punisher Role Revealed". TVLine. Retrieved October 28, 2016.
- ^ a b Campos, Antonio (director); Bruce Marshall Romans (writer) (November 17, 2017). "Cold Steel". Marvel's The Punisher. Season 1. Episode 8. Netflix.
- ^ Goddard, Andy (director); Steve Lightfoot (writer) (November 17, 2017). "Kandahar". Marvel's The Punisher. Season 1. Episode 3. Netflix.
- ^ Shankland, Tom (director); Steve Lightfoot (writer) (November 17, 2017). "Two Dead Men". Marvel's The Punisher. Season 1. Episode 2. Netflix.
- ^ Walsh, Dearbhla (director); Michael Jones-Morales (writer) (November 17, 2017). "Gunner". Marvel's The Punisher. Season 1. Episode 5. Netflix.
- ^ Webb, Jeremy (director); Christine Boylan (writer) (November 17, 2017). "The Judas Goat". Marvel's The Punisher. Season 1. Episode 6. Netflix.
- ^ Goddard, Andy (director); Bruce Marshall Romans (writer) (November 17, 2017). "Crosshairs". Marvel's The Punisher. Season 1. Episode 7. Netflix.
- ^ O'Hanlon, Jim (director); Ken Kristensen (writer) (November 17, 2017). "Virtue of the Vicious". Marvel's The Punisher. Season 1. Episode 10. Netflix.
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- ^ Surjik, Stephen (director); Steve Lightfoot (writer) (November 17, 2017). "Memento Mori". Marvel's The Punisher. Season 1. Episode 13. Netflix.
- ^ Andreeva, Nellie; Petski, Denise (February 26, 2018). "'Marvel's The Punisher': Josh Stewart, Floriana Lima & Giorgia Whigham Join Cast of Netflix Series For Season 2". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on February 26, 2018. Retrieved February 26, 2018.
{{cite web}}
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- ^ Keck, William (13 April 2004). "Rebecca is quiet at Punisher premiere". usatoday30.usatoday.com. USA Today. Retrieved 30 June 2015.
{{cite web}}
: Italic or bold markup not allowed in:|publisher=
(help) - ^ Lexi Alexander (Director) (5 December 2008). Punisher: War Zone (Motion picture). United States: Lions Gate Entertainment.
- ^ Krome Studios Melbourne (November 1990). The Punisher (Nintendo Entertainment System) (1.0 ed.). LJN.
- ^ Krome Studios Melbourne (1991). The Punisher: The Ultimate Payback! (Game Boy) (1.0 ed.). Acclaim Entertainment.
- ^ Paragon Software (1990). The Punisher (MS-DOS, Amiga, and Atari ST). MicroProse.
- ^ Capcom (22 April 1993). The Punisher (Arcade) (1.0 ed.). Capcom. Level/area: 6.
- ^ Volition (16 January 2005). The Punisher (PlayStation 2, Xbox, and Microsoft Windows) (1.0 ed.). THQ.
- ^ Zen Studios (2 July 2009). The Punisher: No Mercy (PlayStation 3) (1.0 ed.). Sony Computer Entertainment.
- ^ "Marvel Legends Face-Off: Punisher/Jigsaw Review". OAFE.net.
External links
- Jigsaw at Comicvine
- Billy Russo at Marvel Wikia
- Jigsaw at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
- Jigsaw at The Appendix to the Handbook of the Marvel Universe
- Characters created by Len Wein
- Characters created by Ross Andru
- Comics characters introduced in 1976
- Crime film characters
- Fictional American people of Italian descent
- Fictional assassins
- Fictional characters with disfigurements
- Fictional crime bosses
- Fictional mobsters
- Fictional murderers
- Marvel Comics supervillains
- Marvel Comics television characters
- Punisher characters
- Superhero film characters