Ubiquitous
2017-05-05 10:33:05 UTC
Peter Parker forgets MJ in Spider Man One More Day comic 15 Worst
Spider Man Stories Of All Time
Spider-Man is Marvels most acclaimed superhero, and few characters
have had a greater influence on popular culture. Peter Parker, at his
core, is a flawed everyman who tries to do the right thing. Hes
someone who lives a life similar to ours, but at the same time, is
constantly attempting to squeeze in his commitment to being a hero in
tights. One of the things that makes Spider-Man unique among the major
superheroes is the small scale nature of his stories. He goes to high
school, then goes to college, struggles to pay his bills, gets married
his life is filled with the same sorts of events that a regular
person would go through. Even when he suits up as Spider-Man, hes less
likely to stop an alien invasion than he is to rescue a crowd of NYC
bystanders from the latest Doc Ock attack.
At least, thats how its supposed to be. But for such a great
character, the wall-crawler has had a lot of terrible stories. And as
well see, all horrible Spidey stories have a key factor in common: as
soon as they deviate from the regular person narrative, things fall
apart.
Want to know the key indicators that a Spider-Man story is going to be
awful? If you see buzz terms like the story that changes everything,
or biggest ever, or nothing will be the same, then its almost a
sure bet that ugly times lie ahead. And as we trudge down this road,
get ready for some really ugly times, from androids to clones, Mephisto
to corporate CEO Peter. Monstrosities await as we explore the 15 Worst
Spider-Man Stories Of All Time.
15. Peters Parents Come Back From the Dead and Become Androids
The pattern becomes evident early on. Crazy events, twist reveals, and
shocking retcons tend to be very, very bad for Spider-Man. The 1990s
were when these terrible storylines first really began kicking off, and
this was one of the earliest head-scratchers: the running storyline
where Peters parents seemingly came back from the dead.
Peter being an orphan is a pretty important part of the Spider-Man
narrative. The whole Peters parents were government spies storyline
is silly enough, but it was made only worse by this story, which
reveals that theyve secretly been alive this whole time, trapped in
a prison camp.
The heartfelt reunion goes sour when Peters decision to show them his
secret is followed by the shadowy reveal that they are now plotting
their sons death. Later, its revealed that these fake parents are
actually just lifelike killer androids, and that the whole deception
was an evil plot by Harry Osborn and the Chameleon. As goofy as the
androids retcon is, its at least less damaging to the mythos than if
they really had been his parents. However, worse things await
14. Sins Past
If the android parents nonsense should have taught Marvel at least one
lesson, its this: dont drudge up things from Peters past and then
skew them sideways for new storylines. Unfortunately, the lesson was
not learned. Instead, we eventually ended up with the much-hated
storyline where the Green Goblin has sex with Gwen Stacy.
Sins Past reveals that before Gwen got killed, she gave birth to twins
named Gabriel and Sarah. The father is Norman Osborn. Apparently, the
actual reason that he killed her was because she threatened to cut him
off from their children. So yes, this story fundamentally undermines
the entire point of one of the most iconic Spider-Man moments ever. The
children rapidly age to adulthood, have healing factors, and Gabriel
Stacy ends up becoming the Gray Goblin.
The writer, J. Michael Straczynski, intended Peter to be the father of
the twins when he first plotted out the story, but editorial shot this
idea down. In fact, JMS so hated the Osborn is the father twist that
he tried to wipe the whole story from continuity. Marvel also shot this
down, and the Stacy twins narrative continued.
13. Sins Remembered
This is how a bad thing becomes even worse. Sins Remembered was the
follow-up to Sins Past, and it chronicled what happens to Gwens
daughter, Sarah Stacy, after the conclusion of Sins Past sees her
brother transformed into the Gray Goblin. After Peter comes to get her
out of the hospital, where Sarah was evidently waiting for him to
rescue her, it rapidly becomes apparent that Sarah has a massive crush
on him. Yes, the daughter of Gwen Stacy and Norman Osborn has a crush
on Peter Parker, her dead mothers boyfriend, which is more than a
little bit weird.
The story delves into Sarah and Gabriels back story a bit, and its
generally just uncomfortable from start to finish, particularly when
Sarah tries to kiss Peter in front of his wife, Mary Jane. While Sarah
Stacy has disappeared since this storyline, Gabriel Gray Goblin Stacy
has, unfortunately enough, reared his head in subsequent appearances.
12. Trouble
No, thats not Mary Jane or Gwen Stacy. Its, um Aunt May.
Trouble, the 2003 comic created by Bill Jemas and Joe Quesada, was a
story about teen pregnancy that was supposed to resurrect the long-dead
genre of romance comics. It tells a story about four hormonal
teenagers, who just so happen to be named Ben, May, Richard, and Mary,
and their romantic exploits. Theres a plot twist when May cheats on
Ben, her boyfriend, with Bens brother Richard. May gets pregnant with
Richards son, and is so afraid to reveal the truth to her parents that
Mary saves the day, by pretending to the world that the child belongs
to her and Richard, and that May was never pregnant.
Obviously, the names are no coincidence. This story was written with
the intention of revising Peters origins so that Aunt May was really
his mother, having cheated on Uncle Ben with Richard Parker. This twist
didnt fly with the fans, who immediately rejected the story, and
pointed out its numerous contradictions with established continuity.
Trouble was quickly buried in the backyard, and has never been
referenced since.
11. Changes
This bizarro little tale sees Spider-Man face off against this new
telepathic, insect-powered villain named the Queen, until she lays a
giant kiss on the wallcrawler, which then causes him to start
experience some, uh changes.
First, he grows a couple of extra arms, some eyes, and some fangs. No
big deal. Then, his transformation completes when he is changed into a
giant spider. The Queen then announces that Peter is pregnant (despite
the fact that Peter is still male, but whatever). The Queen gets all
excited that the Spider-Man-turned-giant-spider is going to give birth
to her offspring, but instead, he just dies, causing her to weep at the
tragedy of it all. But wait! From the spiders carcass, the child is
born, and its a very-human Peter Parker, back from the dead, but with
a couple of random new powers like insect telepathy and organic
webbing.
So yeah, this story was basically an excuse to give comic Peter the
organic webbing of movie Peter. If that was really necessary, there was
probably a less weird way to do it.
10. Mary Janes Fake Death
The strange and pathological hatred that Marvel editorial has for
Spider-Mans marriage to Mary Jane is a terrible saga unto itself.
Since the 1990s, multiple editors tried to destroy the Spider-marriage,
leading to many of the awful storylines on this list. One of these
kill the marriage attempts was this storyline, where a huge mystery
played out about someone stalking (and then killing) Mary Jane. One
would think that Peters wife would immediately tell her spider-powered
husband about such a thing, but instead, the story makes her keep it a
secret (why?), until she boards an airplane which then blows up in a
ball of fire, killing her.
Of course, shes not actually dead. Sometime later, its revealed that
her stalker has been holding her captive, and that hes a psychic
supervillain who wants to steal Peters life. After Mary Jane is
rescued, the subsequent reunion is filled with more weird and out of
character beats, like the fact that she decides to separate from Peter
shortly after getting home.
The whole thing doesnt line up with how either of these characters are
supposed to act, and this whole stalker/death/captive mystery took two
entire years to play out.
9. The Gathering of Five/The Final Chapter
Basically, this whole storyline involves Norman Osborn putting together
some arcane ritual involving magical relics, called the gathering of
five, where five individuals must gather willingly so that each can
receive magical gifts. But to understand just how much this story
sucks, some additional context is needed. Some years before this, Aunt
May had died in Amazing Spider-Man #400, a heartbreaking comic where
she reveals that she knew Peters identity the whole time. Some more
backstory: Mary Jane suffered a miscarriage. Something weird was
implied to have happened with the remains of the stillborn Parker
child, who would have been named May. Fans were buzzing for years about
whether Baby May was alive, and if Osborn had her.
Got it? Okay.
After Osborns mystical ceremony, Mary Jane hears that May is alive.
Spider-Man desperately tries to find his daughter, fighting his way
through the Green Goblin, only to find out that this living May is
actually Aunt May. The retcon here involved plastic surgery, a hired
actress, DNA infusion lets not go into it, but it definitely ruins
#400 for no good reason whatsoever.
8. The Clone Conspiracy
Dont worry, folks, the Clone Saga will be coming up soon. But The
Clone Conspiracy, a recent follow-up story, is also pretty rotten.
The Clone Conspiracy has Spider-Mans old villain the Jackal reemerge
in an interesting new Anubis-inspired costume, and with an all new
cloning plot: reviving dead people. Theres also a whole thing where
the Jackal is set to cause global devastation by unleashing the Carrion
Virus upon the population. Taken on their own, these story ideas have
potential. But then, Jackal takes off his mask and reveals himself to
be Ben Reilly, the former Scarlet Spider.
This is an act of pure character assassination on Reilly, and for no
reason whatsoever. Ben Reilly died at the end of the Clone Saga as a
hero. Hes continued to be a fan-favorite character ever since his
death in the 1990s, with many clamoring for his return. But no one
wanted him to come back as a villain, betraying all of his values, and
acting like an entirely different character than the hoodie-wearing
rebel from the 1990s. In the end, this story takes the few good things
that came out of the Clone Saga and rubs them in the dirt.
7. The Other
This is the one where Morlun eats Spider-Mans eye.
Though fan opinions on the totem era vary, one thing that most can
agree on is that Morlun is one of the most effective new Spider-Man
villains of the 2000s. His original storyline, by JMS and John Romita
Jr., is cinematic in scope, and could easily be adapted into a great
Spider-Man movie.
The same cant be said for The Other, another of these obnoxious huge
events that litter this list, loaded with tag lines like everything
changes forever again and lots of noisy press releases that hyped it
up (ever wonder why fans hate big events these days?). To be clear, The
Others problems have little to do with Morlun. The story starts with
Peter finding out that hes dying, leads to a blowout fight with Morlun
with the whole eye-eating episode, and then concludes with Peter
getting reborn (again) by shedding his old skin and regenerating, or
something. It all ends with him conversing with some mystical spider-
being, a potentially cool story element in say, a Doctor Strange
comic, but which has no business in a web-slinging adventure.
6. Doc Ock Almost Marries Aunt May
Not all of the terrible Spider-Man stories come from the last few
decades. Most of them, yes. But even the classic era had at least a few
stinkers.
Doctor Octopus has had many devious and intelligent plans, but this one
was not one of his shiniest. The whole thing happens because Octavius
discovers that Peters Aunt May is about to inherit a major nuclear
plant. For whatever reason, Octavius determines that the best way to
steal the inheritance from her is to get married to her, a proposition
which Peter is obviously not too excited about. Luckily, the wedding
gets interrupted by Hammerhead. Not so luckily, this story still
occasionally gets referenced, which means it must still be part of
continuity. Can we just pretend that this story didnt happen, please?
5. Corporate Peter
Spider-Man is the everyman. Its the whole nature of his appeal. Except
this plot element, which is still running in the comics today, totally
destroys that appeal by turning Peter Parker into a second-rate Tony
Stark ripoff.
Sure, by the time Peters in his late 20s, he shouldnt be working
freelance at the Daily Bugle anymore. The comics of the 2000s solved
that problem by placing him as a high school science teacher at his old
school. But now, as the CEO of Parker Industries, Peter Parker is
suddenly this cocky billionaire playboy who flies to different Parker
Industries branches all over the world, and uses the Spider-Man
identity as both his bodyguard and as the mascot of his company.
Basically, the whole thing changes Peter from a working class hero into
an annoying 1% percenter.
In general, the whole thing is so far removed from what Spider-Man
storylines are supposed to be about that it feels as if one is reading
about another character altogether. Like, say, Iron Man.
4. Spider-Man: Chapter One
Since Spider-Man was created in the 1960s, a lot of those early comics
do show their age, so the notion of updating them for the present day
isnt a bad one. In fact, the same idea led to the highly successful
Ultimate Spider-Man comic. But here, it didnt work so well.
Like Batman: Year One, the series Spider-Man: Chapter One was supposed
to a retelling of the original Spider-Man comics by Stan Lee and Steve
Ditko, modified to suit more contemporary sensibilities. But the
problem is that unlike, say, Sam Raimis rather faithful Spider-Man
retelling, this version changes things just for the sake of changing
things. For example, the iconic radioactive spider-bite scene is
rewritten from a small incident into a catastrophic radioactive
explosion, which kills almost everyone in the building except Peter. On
top of that, Otto Octavius is also caught in the devastation, and its
this explosion that bonds those metal arms to him.
Its just too much. Suddenly, Norman Osborn and the Sandman are
cousins. Norman is responsible for everything in Peters life. It goes
on. Luckily, this one is no longer in continuity.
3. The Clone Saga
Few storylines are so infamous. We could go on for hours about all of
the problems in the Clone Saga and have, actually but the best way
to put it is this: not only does it fit all of the criteria for crappy
Spidey stories (Shocking events! Twists from the past! Everything has
changed forever!) But, arguably, this is the bad story that set the
mold for everything bad that followed.
Once again, the story begins with an interesting concept, involving the
idea of a Spider-Man clone who may or may not be the real Peter. But
thanks to editorial interference, this whole thing got dragged out for
three years. Three years of clone issues will eventually make anyone
sick of clones, especially when the storyline keeps introducing new
twists, new turns, and new characters every two seconds.
But then, the ending just makes it all worse. As famed Black Panther
writer Ta-Nehisi Coates has pointed out, the true greatest sin of the
Clone Saga was that it resurrected Norman Osborn. The dead Norman was a
complex figure, and his legacy in death held a looming presence over
Peters life; after the Clone Saga, Norman has often been written more
like DCs Lex Luthor.
2. One Moment in Time
After the ugly reception that the One More Day retcon led to (hang
tight, were almost there), editorial refused to backtrack, but they
wanted to somehow make things better. To that end, the story One
Moment in Time was created, to offer a revised explanation for why
Peter and Mary Jane never got married, and why everyone has
conveniently forgotten Spideys identity after he outed it in Civil
War. Basically, theres a whole shebang about how the marriage was
canceled because the web-head missed it, and the forgotten identity
reveal is chalked up to Doctor Stranges magic.
None of this fixes the problem.
One Moment in Time is a half-hearted editorial attempt to make excuses
for One More Day without actually fixing any of the problems that One
More Day created. The whole thing reads like an act of self-
justification, as if the story knows its wrong, it knows that it
messed up, but it wants you to pretend otherwise. Even if there are
alternate explanations for why the non-marriage happened in this new
continuity, they still only happened because Spider-Man did a deal
with the devil. Which brings us to our final entry, the worst Spider-
Man story of all time
1. One More Day
Seriously, could there be any doubt that this is the single worst
Spider-Man story of all time? Really, nothing else compares. JMS may
have been stuck as the writer for this one, but none of the blame falls
on him; JMS basically had a gun to the back of his head, and he even
wanted his name removed from the comic. One More Day is forced
editorial lunacy at its absolute worst. It was Marvels attempt to
rectify Spider-Man, by betraying everything that makes the character
worthwhile.
For any who havent heard of this story, lets put it in black and
white: Peters Aunt May is dying, and nobody can save her. So Peter
meets up with Mephisto the Marvel equivalent of Satan and strikes
up a deal. Yes, thats right. This story has Spider-Man literally make
a deal with the devil. And the terms? For May to be saved, Peter
Parker and Mary Janes marriage will be wiped off the face of reality,
as if it never happened.
The concept here is utterly childish, because theres probably not a
person on the planet who would make such a dumb deal, much less Mr.
Power-and-Responsibility Peter Parker. Furthermore, this story also
demonstrates incontrovertible proof that Marvel Comics editorial does
not understand Peter Parker, whatsoever. The Clone Saga may have been
terrible, but it didnt fundamentally undermine the character like this
story did. Until the day that this story is somehow reversed,
retconned, or wiped off the map and no, One Moment in Time doesnt
count then the comic book version of Spider-Man will forever have a
black mark on his name.
Spider Man Stories Of All Time
Spider-Man is Marvels most acclaimed superhero, and few characters
have had a greater influence on popular culture. Peter Parker, at his
core, is a flawed everyman who tries to do the right thing. Hes
someone who lives a life similar to ours, but at the same time, is
constantly attempting to squeeze in his commitment to being a hero in
tights. One of the things that makes Spider-Man unique among the major
superheroes is the small scale nature of his stories. He goes to high
school, then goes to college, struggles to pay his bills, gets married
his life is filled with the same sorts of events that a regular
person would go through. Even when he suits up as Spider-Man, hes less
likely to stop an alien invasion than he is to rescue a crowd of NYC
bystanders from the latest Doc Ock attack.
At least, thats how its supposed to be. But for such a great
character, the wall-crawler has had a lot of terrible stories. And as
well see, all horrible Spidey stories have a key factor in common: as
soon as they deviate from the regular person narrative, things fall
apart.
Want to know the key indicators that a Spider-Man story is going to be
awful? If you see buzz terms like the story that changes everything,
or biggest ever, or nothing will be the same, then its almost a
sure bet that ugly times lie ahead. And as we trudge down this road,
get ready for some really ugly times, from androids to clones, Mephisto
to corporate CEO Peter. Monstrosities await as we explore the 15 Worst
Spider-Man Stories Of All Time.
15. Peters Parents Come Back From the Dead and Become Androids
The pattern becomes evident early on. Crazy events, twist reveals, and
shocking retcons tend to be very, very bad for Spider-Man. The 1990s
were when these terrible storylines first really began kicking off, and
this was one of the earliest head-scratchers: the running storyline
where Peters parents seemingly came back from the dead.
Peter being an orphan is a pretty important part of the Spider-Man
narrative. The whole Peters parents were government spies storyline
is silly enough, but it was made only worse by this story, which
reveals that theyve secretly been alive this whole time, trapped in
a prison camp.
The heartfelt reunion goes sour when Peters decision to show them his
secret is followed by the shadowy reveal that they are now plotting
their sons death. Later, its revealed that these fake parents are
actually just lifelike killer androids, and that the whole deception
was an evil plot by Harry Osborn and the Chameleon. As goofy as the
androids retcon is, its at least less damaging to the mythos than if
they really had been his parents. However, worse things await
14. Sins Past
If the android parents nonsense should have taught Marvel at least one
lesson, its this: dont drudge up things from Peters past and then
skew them sideways for new storylines. Unfortunately, the lesson was
not learned. Instead, we eventually ended up with the much-hated
storyline where the Green Goblin has sex with Gwen Stacy.
Sins Past reveals that before Gwen got killed, she gave birth to twins
named Gabriel and Sarah. The father is Norman Osborn. Apparently, the
actual reason that he killed her was because she threatened to cut him
off from their children. So yes, this story fundamentally undermines
the entire point of one of the most iconic Spider-Man moments ever. The
children rapidly age to adulthood, have healing factors, and Gabriel
Stacy ends up becoming the Gray Goblin.
The writer, J. Michael Straczynski, intended Peter to be the father of
the twins when he first plotted out the story, but editorial shot this
idea down. In fact, JMS so hated the Osborn is the father twist that
he tried to wipe the whole story from continuity. Marvel also shot this
down, and the Stacy twins narrative continued.
13. Sins Remembered
This is how a bad thing becomes even worse. Sins Remembered was the
follow-up to Sins Past, and it chronicled what happens to Gwens
daughter, Sarah Stacy, after the conclusion of Sins Past sees her
brother transformed into the Gray Goblin. After Peter comes to get her
out of the hospital, where Sarah was evidently waiting for him to
rescue her, it rapidly becomes apparent that Sarah has a massive crush
on him. Yes, the daughter of Gwen Stacy and Norman Osborn has a crush
on Peter Parker, her dead mothers boyfriend, which is more than a
little bit weird.
The story delves into Sarah and Gabriels back story a bit, and its
generally just uncomfortable from start to finish, particularly when
Sarah tries to kiss Peter in front of his wife, Mary Jane. While Sarah
Stacy has disappeared since this storyline, Gabriel Gray Goblin Stacy
has, unfortunately enough, reared his head in subsequent appearances.
12. Trouble
No, thats not Mary Jane or Gwen Stacy. Its, um Aunt May.
Trouble, the 2003 comic created by Bill Jemas and Joe Quesada, was a
story about teen pregnancy that was supposed to resurrect the long-dead
genre of romance comics. It tells a story about four hormonal
teenagers, who just so happen to be named Ben, May, Richard, and Mary,
and their romantic exploits. Theres a plot twist when May cheats on
Ben, her boyfriend, with Bens brother Richard. May gets pregnant with
Richards son, and is so afraid to reveal the truth to her parents that
Mary saves the day, by pretending to the world that the child belongs
to her and Richard, and that May was never pregnant.
Obviously, the names are no coincidence. This story was written with
the intention of revising Peters origins so that Aunt May was really
his mother, having cheated on Uncle Ben with Richard Parker. This twist
didnt fly with the fans, who immediately rejected the story, and
pointed out its numerous contradictions with established continuity.
Trouble was quickly buried in the backyard, and has never been
referenced since.
11. Changes
This bizarro little tale sees Spider-Man face off against this new
telepathic, insect-powered villain named the Queen, until she lays a
giant kiss on the wallcrawler, which then causes him to start
experience some, uh changes.
First, he grows a couple of extra arms, some eyes, and some fangs. No
big deal. Then, his transformation completes when he is changed into a
giant spider. The Queen then announces that Peter is pregnant (despite
the fact that Peter is still male, but whatever). The Queen gets all
excited that the Spider-Man-turned-giant-spider is going to give birth
to her offspring, but instead, he just dies, causing her to weep at the
tragedy of it all. But wait! From the spiders carcass, the child is
born, and its a very-human Peter Parker, back from the dead, but with
a couple of random new powers like insect telepathy and organic
webbing.
So yeah, this story was basically an excuse to give comic Peter the
organic webbing of movie Peter. If that was really necessary, there was
probably a less weird way to do it.
10. Mary Janes Fake Death
The strange and pathological hatred that Marvel editorial has for
Spider-Mans marriage to Mary Jane is a terrible saga unto itself.
Since the 1990s, multiple editors tried to destroy the Spider-marriage,
leading to many of the awful storylines on this list. One of these
kill the marriage attempts was this storyline, where a huge mystery
played out about someone stalking (and then killing) Mary Jane. One
would think that Peters wife would immediately tell her spider-powered
husband about such a thing, but instead, the story makes her keep it a
secret (why?), until she boards an airplane which then blows up in a
ball of fire, killing her.
Of course, shes not actually dead. Sometime later, its revealed that
her stalker has been holding her captive, and that hes a psychic
supervillain who wants to steal Peters life. After Mary Jane is
rescued, the subsequent reunion is filled with more weird and out of
character beats, like the fact that she decides to separate from Peter
shortly after getting home.
The whole thing doesnt line up with how either of these characters are
supposed to act, and this whole stalker/death/captive mystery took two
entire years to play out.
9. The Gathering of Five/The Final Chapter
Basically, this whole storyline involves Norman Osborn putting together
some arcane ritual involving magical relics, called the gathering of
five, where five individuals must gather willingly so that each can
receive magical gifts. But to understand just how much this story
sucks, some additional context is needed. Some years before this, Aunt
May had died in Amazing Spider-Man #400, a heartbreaking comic where
she reveals that she knew Peters identity the whole time. Some more
backstory: Mary Jane suffered a miscarriage. Something weird was
implied to have happened with the remains of the stillborn Parker
child, who would have been named May. Fans were buzzing for years about
whether Baby May was alive, and if Osborn had her.
Got it? Okay.
After Osborns mystical ceremony, Mary Jane hears that May is alive.
Spider-Man desperately tries to find his daughter, fighting his way
through the Green Goblin, only to find out that this living May is
actually Aunt May. The retcon here involved plastic surgery, a hired
actress, DNA infusion lets not go into it, but it definitely ruins
#400 for no good reason whatsoever.
8. The Clone Conspiracy
Dont worry, folks, the Clone Saga will be coming up soon. But The
Clone Conspiracy, a recent follow-up story, is also pretty rotten.
The Clone Conspiracy has Spider-Mans old villain the Jackal reemerge
in an interesting new Anubis-inspired costume, and with an all new
cloning plot: reviving dead people. Theres also a whole thing where
the Jackal is set to cause global devastation by unleashing the Carrion
Virus upon the population. Taken on their own, these story ideas have
potential. But then, Jackal takes off his mask and reveals himself to
be Ben Reilly, the former Scarlet Spider.
This is an act of pure character assassination on Reilly, and for no
reason whatsoever. Ben Reilly died at the end of the Clone Saga as a
hero. Hes continued to be a fan-favorite character ever since his
death in the 1990s, with many clamoring for his return. But no one
wanted him to come back as a villain, betraying all of his values, and
acting like an entirely different character than the hoodie-wearing
rebel from the 1990s. In the end, this story takes the few good things
that came out of the Clone Saga and rubs them in the dirt.
7. The Other
This is the one where Morlun eats Spider-Mans eye.
Though fan opinions on the totem era vary, one thing that most can
agree on is that Morlun is one of the most effective new Spider-Man
villains of the 2000s. His original storyline, by JMS and John Romita
Jr., is cinematic in scope, and could easily be adapted into a great
Spider-Man movie.
The same cant be said for The Other, another of these obnoxious huge
events that litter this list, loaded with tag lines like everything
changes forever again and lots of noisy press releases that hyped it
up (ever wonder why fans hate big events these days?). To be clear, The
Others problems have little to do with Morlun. The story starts with
Peter finding out that hes dying, leads to a blowout fight with Morlun
with the whole eye-eating episode, and then concludes with Peter
getting reborn (again) by shedding his old skin and regenerating, or
something. It all ends with him conversing with some mystical spider-
being, a potentially cool story element in say, a Doctor Strange
comic, but which has no business in a web-slinging adventure.
6. Doc Ock Almost Marries Aunt May
Not all of the terrible Spider-Man stories come from the last few
decades. Most of them, yes. But even the classic era had at least a few
stinkers.
Doctor Octopus has had many devious and intelligent plans, but this one
was not one of his shiniest. The whole thing happens because Octavius
discovers that Peters Aunt May is about to inherit a major nuclear
plant. For whatever reason, Octavius determines that the best way to
steal the inheritance from her is to get married to her, a proposition
which Peter is obviously not too excited about. Luckily, the wedding
gets interrupted by Hammerhead. Not so luckily, this story still
occasionally gets referenced, which means it must still be part of
continuity. Can we just pretend that this story didnt happen, please?
5. Corporate Peter
Spider-Man is the everyman. Its the whole nature of his appeal. Except
this plot element, which is still running in the comics today, totally
destroys that appeal by turning Peter Parker into a second-rate Tony
Stark ripoff.
Sure, by the time Peters in his late 20s, he shouldnt be working
freelance at the Daily Bugle anymore. The comics of the 2000s solved
that problem by placing him as a high school science teacher at his old
school. But now, as the CEO of Parker Industries, Peter Parker is
suddenly this cocky billionaire playboy who flies to different Parker
Industries branches all over the world, and uses the Spider-Man
identity as both his bodyguard and as the mascot of his company.
Basically, the whole thing changes Peter from a working class hero into
an annoying 1% percenter.
In general, the whole thing is so far removed from what Spider-Man
storylines are supposed to be about that it feels as if one is reading
about another character altogether. Like, say, Iron Man.
4. Spider-Man: Chapter One
Since Spider-Man was created in the 1960s, a lot of those early comics
do show their age, so the notion of updating them for the present day
isnt a bad one. In fact, the same idea led to the highly successful
Ultimate Spider-Man comic. But here, it didnt work so well.
Like Batman: Year One, the series Spider-Man: Chapter One was supposed
to a retelling of the original Spider-Man comics by Stan Lee and Steve
Ditko, modified to suit more contemporary sensibilities. But the
problem is that unlike, say, Sam Raimis rather faithful Spider-Man
retelling, this version changes things just for the sake of changing
things. For example, the iconic radioactive spider-bite scene is
rewritten from a small incident into a catastrophic radioactive
explosion, which kills almost everyone in the building except Peter. On
top of that, Otto Octavius is also caught in the devastation, and its
this explosion that bonds those metal arms to him.
Its just too much. Suddenly, Norman Osborn and the Sandman are
cousins. Norman is responsible for everything in Peters life. It goes
on. Luckily, this one is no longer in continuity.
3. The Clone Saga
Few storylines are so infamous. We could go on for hours about all of
the problems in the Clone Saga and have, actually but the best way
to put it is this: not only does it fit all of the criteria for crappy
Spidey stories (Shocking events! Twists from the past! Everything has
changed forever!) But, arguably, this is the bad story that set the
mold for everything bad that followed.
Once again, the story begins with an interesting concept, involving the
idea of a Spider-Man clone who may or may not be the real Peter. But
thanks to editorial interference, this whole thing got dragged out for
three years. Three years of clone issues will eventually make anyone
sick of clones, especially when the storyline keeps introducing new
twists, new turns, and new characters every two seconds.
But then, the ending just makes it all worse. As famed Black Panther
writer Ta-Nehisi Coates has pointed out, the true greatest sin of the
Clone Saga was that it resurrected Norman Osborn. The dead Norman was a
complex figure, and his legacy in death held a looming presence over
Peters life; after the Clone Saga, Norman has often been written more
like DCs Lex Luthor.
2. One Moment in Time
After the ugly reception that the One More Day retcon led to (hang
tight, were almost there), editorial refused to backtrack, but they
wanted to somehow make things better. To that end, the story One
Moment in Time was created, to offer a revised explanation for why
Peter and Mary Jane never got married, and why everyone has
conveniently forgotten Spideys identity after he outed it in Civil
War. Basically, theres a whole shebang about how the marriage was
canceled because the web-head missed it, and the forgotten identity
reveal is chalked up to Doctor Stranges magic.
None of this fixes the problem.
One Moment in Time is a half-hearted editorial attempt to make excuses
for One More Day without actually fixing any of the problems that One
More Day created. The whole thing reads like an act of self-
justification, as if the story knows its wrong, it knows that it
messed up, but it wants you to pretend otherwise. Even if there are
alternate explanations for why the non-marriage happened in this new
continuity, they still only happened because Spider-Man did a deal
with the devil. Which brings us to our final entry, the worst Spider-
Man story of all time
1. One More Day
Seriously, could there be any doubt that this is the single worst
Spider-Man story of all time? Really, nothing else compares. JMS may
have been stuck as the writer for this one, but none of the blame falls
on him; JMS basically had a gun to the back of his head, and he even
wanted his name removed from the comic. One More Day is forced
editorial lunacy at its absolute worst. It was Marvels attempt to
rectify Spider-Man, by betraying everything that makes the character
worthwhile.
For any who havent heard of this story, lets put it in black and
white: Peters Aunt May is dying, and nobody can save her. So Peter
meets up with Mephisto the Marvel equivalent of Satan and strikes
up a deal. Yes, thats right. This story has Spider-Man literally make
a deal with the devil. And the terms? For May to be saved, Peter
Parker and Mary Janes marriage will be wiped off the face of reality,
as if it never happened.
The concept here is utterly childish, because theres probably not a
person on the planet who would make such a dumb deal, much less Mr.
Power-and-Responsibility Peter Parker. Furthermore, this story also
demonstrates incontrovertible proof that Marvel Comics editorial does
not understand Peter Parker, whatsoever. The Clone Saga may have been
terrible, but it didnt fundamentally undermine the character like this
story did. Until the day that this story is somehow reversed,
retconned, or wiped off the map and no, One Moment in Time doesnt
count then the comic book version of Spider-Man will forever have a
black mark on his name.
--
Dems & the media want Trump to be more like Obama, but then he'd
have to audit liberals & wire tap reporters' phones.
Dems & the media want Trump to be more like Obama, but then he'd
have to audit liberals & wire tap reporters' phones.