Firebrand is the codename of three supervillains in the Marvel Comics universe. All three were normal humans inside powered armor and relied on fire-based weapons. The first and third Firebrands, Gilbert and Dennison, both of whom were enemies of Iron Man, are much better known than the second Firebrand, Broxtel, who made only a handful of appearances.
Contents |
| Firebrand | |
|---|---|
![]() Firebrand (Gary Gilbert) |
|
| Publication information | |
| Publisher | Marvel Comics |
| First appearance | Iron Man vol. 1 #27 (Jul 1970) |
| Created by | Archie Goodwin Don Heck |
| In-story information | |
| Alter ego | Gary Gilbert |
| Abilities | Powered armor
grants; Thermal blasts, Flight, Superhuman physical resistance |
Firebrand first appeared in Iron Man vol. 1 #27 (July 1970), and was created by Archie Goodwin and Don Heck.
The character subsequently appeared in Iron Man #48 (July 1972), #59 (June 1973), #74-75 (May-June 1975), #77 (August 1975), #80-81 (November-December 1975), #172 (July 1983), and was killed by the Scourge of the Underworld in Captain America #318-319 (June-July 1986).
Firebrand received an entry in the Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe Deluxe Edition #17.
Gary Gilbert was born in Detroit, Michigan. A superpowered enforcer for corrupt industrialist Justin Hammer, as Firebrand he is a former radical activist saboteur who turned to violence after believing peaceful protest produced no results.
Firebrand accidentally killed his own father. He also won the Black Lama's "war of the supervillains". He fell to alcoholism and gave up political activism only to work for other villains because he "needed the work". He later gave up his costumed identity and became a "supervillain agent", brokering employment for other costumed villains.
When news of the Scourge of the Underworld's initial wave of supervillain murders spread among the criminal community, Gilbert took it upon himself to gather several costumed criminals for a meeting to determine what should be done about this menace. The meeting, held at an abandoned tavern in Medina County, Ohio, known among the criminal underworld as "The Bar With No Name", turned out to be a massacre, as Scourge infiltrated the event disguised as a bartender; a few minutes into the meeting, Scourge slaughtered every criminal present, including Gilbert, with machine gun fire.
Firebrand was later among the seventeen criminals, all murdered
by the Scourge, to be resurrected by Hood using the power of Dormammu as part of a squad
assembled to eliminate the Punisher.[1] His
fire powers are augmented, and he can melt through concrete or
metal.[2] After
the Punisher is captured, he is present at the ritual where the
Hood intends to resurrect the Punisher's family. Microchip shoots
G. W. Bridge in
the head, which activates the ritual using Bridge's life force to
resurrect Microchip and Punisher's families. The Punisher refuses
to accept this, and forces Firebrand to burn them alive, and then
shoots Firebrand in the back of the head.[3]
| Firebrand | |
|---|---|
![]() Firebrand (Broxtel) |
|
| Publication information | |
| Publisher | Marvel Comics |
| First appearance | Web of Spider-Man Vol 1 #77 (June, 1991) |
| Created by | Archie Goodwin Don Heck |
| In-story information | |
| Alter ego | Russ Broxtel |
| Abilities | Powered armor
grants; Thermal blasts, Flight, Superhuman physical resistance |
After Gilbert's death, a man named Russ Broxtel was seen acting as the new fire-themed member of the eco-terrorist group known as the Force of Nature. He made only a handful of appearances and fought Spider-Man, Cloak and Dagger, and the New Warriors.
Firebrand was later hired by R.A.I.D and helped into London by Fasaud. The Arabian Knight confronted Firebrand who struck back with a wall of flame. Protected by his magic uniform, the Knight stopped Firebrand.
After Civil War, Firebrand returned to the United States. Donning a new suit, he attempted to rob a gas station. He was stopped by Hawkeye and Patriot.
Firebrand escaped and was later seen along with King Cobra, Mauler and Mister
Hyde, who attacked Yellowjacket, Constrictor and other
Initiative staff and trainees.[4]
| Firebrand | |
|---|---|
![]() Firebrand (Rick Dennison) |
|
| Publication information | |
| Publisher | Marvel Comics |
| First appearance | Iron Man Vol 3 #4 (May, 1998) |
| Created by | Kurt Busiek Sean Chen |
| In-story information | |
| Alter ego | Rick Dennison |
| Team affiliations | The Flaming Sword Terra Tactics |
| Notable aliases | Project:Firebrand |
| Abilities | Heat rays of thousands of degrees. Cybernetic harness which could reconfigure itself into different modes. Flight. |
Richard L. "Rick" Dennison was the third Firebrand. He was an anti-capitalist eco-terrorist who worked with a group called the Flaming Sword, and he fought Iron Man on several occasions.
After he recovered, Firebrand returned with the Flaming Sword
and kidnapped Osborn Chemical vice-president Charles Standish. They
were confronted by the Avengers and they were defeated.
Gary Gilbert wore a suit with an armored exoskeleton that gave him superhuman strength and resistance to fire. It also housed flamethrowers (which allowed him to fire thermal blasts from his hands), one mounted on each wrist, and flying jets that gave him the ability to fly. Broxtel uses a modified version of the Firebrand suit. Dennison was actually a mutated human being whose body temperature was up in the high hundreds; he could project heat rays of thousands of degrees. He was equipped with a cybernetic harness which could reconfigure itself into different modes if he mentally commanded it to do so.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|