Character Name: | Painkiller Jane |
Converted: | y |
Publisher: | Event Comics Marvel Comics Dynamite Entertainment |
Debut: | 22 Brides #1 (March 1996) |
Creators: | Jimmy Palmiotti Joe Quesada |
Full Name: | Jane Vasko, Jane Browning |
Powers: | Healing factor, expert fighter and markswoman skills |
Cat: | super |
Hero: | y |
Painkiller Jane is a fictional superheroine created by Jimmy Palmiotti and Joe Quesada for Event Comics in 1995. Originally a five-issue mini-series, the character went on to star in numerous crossover titles with the likes of the Punisher, Vampirella, and Hellboy.
After Event comics, the character was exclusively written by Jimmy Palmiotti and drawn by various artists as it jumped from publisher to publisher. The series relaunched at Dynamite Entertainment with the first mini-series selling out. After that Marvel Comics published two mini-series under its Icon brand. The character then came back to PaperFilms, a company owned by Jimmy Palmiotti and Amanda Conner where it is currently published. Painkiller Jane has been published all over the world in at least 8 languages to date. The comics have been the basis for a television film and series.
Jane Vasko begins as an undercover police officer attempting to infiltrate the Fonti Mob. After gaining the trust of mob boss Joey Fonti, she is given the assignment of passing a message on to rival gang member Adam, not realizing that an explosive device has been planted on her. As she meets her target, the explosion causes significant injuries, but Adam is uninjured. Through mysterious means, he manages to revive Jane, giving her superhuman regenerative powers in the process. Leaving her life as a police officer behind, she becomes the vigilante Painkiller Jane.
The validity of this origin is unclear, as a completely different origin has been presented in the first Painkiller Jane miniseries, and the Dynamite Comics' miniseries contain references to both versions of the characters' origin.
Jane Vasko is virtually indestructible; her exceptional regenerative abilities mean that minor injuries heal in seconds and do not even slow her down while more major ones tend to take a few minutes. She has recovered from multiple gunshot wounds, explosions, chemical weapons, axes buried in her spine, even a shotgun blast to the face (which simply knocked her off her feet for a bit). However, her healing factor does not protect her nerve endings from registering the pain like a normal human, which is where her new name came from. On the offensive side, she has no real powers except for being a tough woman to kill. Other than that, she is a skilled fighter and master of undefined martial arts, as well as a master marksman with her weapons of choice, a brace of semiautomatic pistols.
Crossover Gallery #1 (September 1997) (pin-up only)
See main article: Painkiller Jane (film).
See main article: Painkiller Jane (TV series).