Typeface (Gordon Thomas) is a fictional character appearing in
American comic book
An American comic book is a thin periodical originating in the United States, on average 32 pages, containing comics. While the form originated in 1933, American comic books first gained popularity after the 1938 publication of ''Action Comics'' ...
s published by
Marvel Comics. He first appeared in ''
Peter Parker: Spider-Man'' vol. 2 #23 (November 2000), and was created by
Paul Jenkins and
Mark Buckingham.
Fictional character biography
What little is known about Typeface's past is seen in
flashback. In his civilian life as Gordon Thomas, he fights in an unknown war for the US Army in which he loses his brother Joey. Upon his return to America, Gordon's wife leaves him and takes their son with her.
Feeling outcast, Gordon becomes a signsmith. He is happy for a time until a man named George Finch buys the company he is working for, Ace Signs, and Gordon is
laid off. Gordon starts to hate everything that went wrong in his life and decides to become a super-villain, calling himself Typeface. He uses a
grease pencil to write letters on his face, including a large, red "R" on his forehead, for "retribution". He begins committing vandalism throughout the city, and while attacking local thugs, he catches the attention of
Spider-Man
Spider-Man is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by writer-editor Stan Lee and artist Steve Ditko, he first appeared in the anthology comic book '' Amazing Fantasy'' #15 (August 1962) in the ...
. Typeface uses his giant letters as weapons and manages to defeat the webslinger. After successfully escaping and returning to his apartment, he replaces the "R" letter on his head with an "A" for "Annihilation".
Thomas later seeks revenge against George Finch, but is stopped by Spider-Man. Typeface wants to kill Spider-Man for intervening, but when he sees the webslinger being attacked by the Spider-Hybrid, he has a flashback to the words his brother Joey once gave him: "Just live, man." Typeface decides to help Spider-Man defeat the Spider-Hybrid, and renounces his desire to kill Finch. However, Finch decides to exact revenge on Typeface for humiliating him, and finds the bombs Thomas would have used to kill him. Finch sets them off and demolishes an entire building, killing himself, and for a time it was believed that Typeface died in the explosion.
When the police arrive, they declare Typeface responsible for the explosion.
Mysterious reappearance
Having survived the explosion, Typeface becomes a vigilante. He wages war against a gang called the "Penny-Ante Brigade". After taking out the gang (and another vigilante, Spellcheck, inspired by Typeface), Typeface mimics Spider-Man's note to police, left when he apprehends criminals: "Compliments from your friendly neighborhood Typeface."
Civil War
Returning in Marvel's ''
Civil War: Front Line'', Typeface has chosen to side against the
Superhuman Registration Act
Discrimination against superheroes is a common theme and plot element comic books and superhero fiction, usually as a way to explore the issue of superheroes operating in society or as commentary on other social concerns. Often in response to ...
. He joins a small resistance cell that includes
Battlestar,
Gladiatrix, and
Solo. During a visit by the reporter
Sally Floyd, he talks about how he had held his brother who had died in a foreign country, Typeface feels his brother had died in the cause of freedom and this had motivated him to oppose the act. Iron Man and S.H.I.E.L.D. agents attack, capturing many members of the group. Floyd and others escape.
The prisoners are taken to a maximum security prison built in the
Negative Zone called "Fantasy Island". While transferring, Typeface befriends Robbie Baldwin, otherwise known as
Speedball. Both are concerned over the fate of a fellow prisoner adversely affected by the very nature of the Negative Zone.
According to writer
Paul Jenkins, he "may not survive the series," but when he dies his eyes will be covered by "little
X's". In ''
Civil War: Frontline'' #10 he is slammed into a bus by
Venom during the final battle. A quick examination of Typeface by a fleeing
Ben Urich leads the ''
Daily Bugle'' reporter to believe he is dead.
Sally Floyd also witnesses the murder. Post-death, Typeface's eyes were not seen.
In ''
Civil War: Frontline'' #11, he is carried away in a stretcher, with the sheet pulled over all but his letter-covered arm.
A recovered Typeface is later shown among the patrons of an underground casino that Spider-Man,
Deadpool, and
Saturn
Saturn is the sixth planet from the Sun and the second-largest in the Solar System, after Jupiter. It is a gas giant with an average radius of about nine and a half times that of Earth. It has only one-eighth the average density of Earth; h ...
visit on Christmas.
Reception
* In 2020, ''
CBR.com'' ranked Typeface 10th in their "Marvel: 10 Famous Villains From The 2000s To Bring Back" list.
References
External links
*
Typeface on the Marvel Universe Character Bio Wiki
{{DEFAULTSORT:Typeface (comics)
Comics characters introduced in 2000
Fictional Vietnam War veterans
Fictional United States Army personnel
Marvel Comics military personnel
Marvel Comics superheroes
Marvel Comics supervillains
Vigilante characters in comics