This Wednesday
saw the release of the 700th issue of the Amazing Spider-Man and the
ending of the series. Writer Dan Slott has been teasing for months of the big
reveal ending of this issue since it leads into the new series the Superior
Spider-Man whom readers has known for months NOT to be Peter Parker. A week ago
I read the issue myself, but waited to voice my opinion to prevent spoilers.
Here’s the kicker though; there are no spoilers. Spoilers are something that
occurs when you don’t know what’s gonna happen; anyone with half a brain would’ve
seen this outcome. I’m just gonna go right out and say it before going any
furtherer: Doctor Octopus, Otto Octavius is the new Superior Spider-Man!!!
.cbr-048.jpg)
.cbr-049.jpg)
I will
admit it, I’m an old school Spidey fan so of course I prefer Peter Parker to be
Spider-man, but that’s not the main reason I’m unsatisfied with this turn of
events. It’s just really bad storytelling. I won’t really loose anything
because of these changes since I haven’t been reading Spider-Man ever since Dan
Slott took over as writer. I gave the man a shot, found it terrible and decided
not to go on reading it. But since this would be the last issue of the Amazing
Spider-Man and it was well known somebody would replace Parker, I had to check
it out. It was as bad as the rest of Slott’s writing and most of all, it simply
made me appreciate that I hadn’t spent any money on Amazing Spider-Man issues
for the past 2 years. The fact that Peter Parker dies isn’t really that
significant; comic book characters die every now and then and returns as well
and I find it doubtful we won’t see PP again one day. It might be a while, my
money is on somewhere between 1-2 years, but we’ll see. Should it happen that
the new Superior Spider-Man becomes a complete failure the status quo could be
reversed sooner than planned. In any case, it’s not as if anything is ever
truly permanent in the comic industry, no matter what the writers or companies
might say. All of this can also be attributed to the value of shock. The “oh
NO, they did NOT” effect is a good way of increasing sales and it’s been seen
before in comic books.
According
to Slott, one of the exciting things of this new Superior Spider-Man is that we
get to see a more dark and gritty Spider-Man, although still a hero; a more
Batman-like Spidey. My answer to that is if I want to read Batman I’ll read
Batman. Which, I might add, I do and do you know why? Because it’s actually
worth reading. We already have a VERY Batman-like comic; it’s called Batman and
there’s only one. Spider-Man is and has
always been a more light-hearted comic. Somehow, this seems sort of as an
attempt to make Spidey appeal more to older readers, but GOD I hope that’s not
the case. Simply because an awesome writer already did that with the character
and he did it with the real Spider-Man, Peter Parker, and that man was Joe
Michael Straczinsky. And some idiot boss at Marvel decided to erase all of that
and have Dan Slott and a bunch of other mediocre writers do the Brand New Day
stories which basically saw Peter Parker reduced to the nerd/looser he used to
be as a teenager. Of course, it’s a matter of taste in these things, but if the
desire is to have a more mature audience read the comic, why the fuck would you
go along with this new lame approach? “Archenemy takes over hero’s
mind/memories and hero dies in archenemy’s body”? Wow, that’s really a weak
move in my opinion, simply because it seems to depend on the reader finding it
believable that a villain changes his life perspective in a matter of mere
minutes. How is this a better way of going about it than having the original
hero character, in this case Peter Parker, evolve as a person/hero/character? That’s
exactly what Straczinsky did and it was awesome.
What
bothers me the most though, and I should properly say that I really am pissed
at how shitty a story issue 700 was, is something the writer said about writing
Dr. Octopus as Spider-Man:
"Doc is kinda like me: He's
short and schlubby. This is a guy who now gets to be in the body of Peter
Parker.”
Read more at http://www.comicbookmovie.com/fansites/JoshWildingNewsAndReviews/news/?a=71777#MvB1tJDvauXcyFOO.99
Read more at http://www.comicbookmovie.com/fansites/JoshWildingNewsAndReviews/news/?a=71777#MvB1tJDvauXcyFOO.99
.cbr-052.jpg)
In the end, no matter how long Slott
or anyone else claims this new stat quo will last, I will at this moment swear
to you on my life: Peter Parker will be back.
Ingen kommentarer:
Send en kommentar