Saturday, June 20, 2009

The Plight of the Amazing Spider-Man

Amazing Spider-Man sucks these days. Well no it's cool. Nah it sucks. I don't know anymore. A lot of fans (myself included) were deeply upset about the outcome of the One More Day storyline. J. Michael Straczynzki had brought Spider-Man in new and exciting directions, and for it to end like this seemed like a cop-out of colossal proportions.
Apparently not everyone was happy with JMS's work. Which is understandable, you can't please everyone. But some Marvel bigwigs sent out a memo saying we need to bring Spidey bak to his roots. Completely forgetting the fact that characters need to change and grow in order to stay interesting.
The most significant change was the dissolution of his marriage to Mary Jane. Thus negating about 20 years of history. One of the ideas was that Peter seemed to work better as as single guy. Did these editors just not read a single comic from that 20 year timeline? Peters dialogues with MJ added some real depth to the character. And let us not forget that just a few months earlier, there was a Spider-Man without Mary Jane: due to numerous strains on the relationship, she had left him to pursue her career. Eventually they reconciled, only to be pulled apart one more time, this time through magic.
Now it's been about a year and a half since One More Day, and fans have had some time to get used to this new and “improved” Spidey. Along with the end of the marriage, we have the return of Harry Osborn, a new female goblin type villain known as Menace, and Eddie Brock is now the Anti-Venom.
There have been a lot more changes, some good, others bad, but overall they seem to be alienating most fans on a daily basis.
One particularly troublesome detail lingers: Spidey unmasked himself during Civil War (remember that?)Yet, thanks to Mephisto's machinations, nobody quite remembers who he was. It looked as though Marvel was going to deal with this (at least somewhat) in issues 590-591 where Spidey accompanies the Fantastic Four to the Macroverse. In it, the Human Torch is convinced that he knows Spidey's identity and forces him to unmask, by setting it on fire. Instead of actually dealing with this inconsistency, the writers just have the Fantastic Four automatically remember “Oh yeah Spider-Man is Peter Parker.” without any explanation as to why they all of the sudden do remember when two panels ago they didn't.
Some of the stories in Amazing Spider-Man have been good, but overall, with the events of One More Day hovering over them, most of the time they end up like the aforementioned Fantastic Four adventure, they start strongly, and fizzle out toward the end. Who knows, maybe with issue 600 we'll have a Brand New, Brand New Day.

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