Welcome to the first edition of Weekend Reads! It’s your little, weekly dose of comic book goodness that focuses on some aspect of my weekend reading!

This weekend I longed for the Spider-Man of years past.

The reads:

Amazing Spider-Man no. 7 by Dan Slott and Matteo Buffagni
Spider-Man no. 1 by Brian Michael Bendis and Sara Pichelli

These books are both full of potential right now. Slott is setting up to explore some potentially Jessica Jones/The Purple Man-esque themes with Mr. Negative, who can take control of essentially anyone that he wants. Bendis, on the other hand, seems to be writing a book that is going focus on Miles Morales’ internal battles (i.e. struggling to balance his personal life and his life as Spider-Man). The art of both books is top notch. There isn’t much that I find wrong with either book, but I’m struggling to connect with them.

I appreciate the direction Marvel is taking with Spider-Man, but I can’t help but long for a Peter Parker more like the one originally conceived by Lee and Ditko. Peter was a character who could never get out of his own way. Even when he won, he’d lose; many of his victories as Spider-Man came at the cost of extreme personal loss. His struggle to fit in, to balance his priorities and endless battles not to feel like a giant screw-up made him more relatable than any other super-hero in comics. Sure, he could spin webs, had spider strength, etc. but I think back on the character I obsessed over growing up and recall more of his personal struggles and losses than his supervillain battles. I’ve come to the realization that I didn’t fall in love with the character of Spider-Man, I fell in love with Peter Parker.

Peter Parker, now the CEO of a multi-international corporation, is a much less relatable character. He no longer solves his problems with his small science experiments; he relies on his company. His financial struggles have become minimal. He has little time for a relationship because he is focused on Spider-Man and running his business. The character who any reader could once relate to has become one with who very few can empathise.

As I mentioned before, it looks like Bendis is going to explore many of those original Peter Parker themes I loved with Miles Morales but it just isn’t the same when it isn’t Peter. There is potential for many fans to fall in love with Miles (many already have) but I just can’t imagine I ever will. I’ll keep trying, but I don’t believe Miles will ever be able to replace Peter Parker.

Peter Parker? Miles Morales? Could care less? What are YOUR thoughts on the state of Spider-Man in the all new, all different, Marvel universe? Tweet us or tell me directly that I’m a big baby!

Briefly: We knew that it wouldn’t last forever, but it’s ending sooner than I’d hoped. Dan Slott’s excellent Superior Spider-Man is set to end this March, and an all-new The Amazing Spider-Man will launch in April.

Just as most others seemed to be, I was skeptical when Superior was first announced, but quickly fell in love with the vastly different series. Now, just when Superior Spider-Man is at its best, its set to end all too soon. The numerous changes to Peter’s life, however, will not be ending with it, as Slott told Yahoo today, “Everyone’s expecting that it’s going to be a nightmare, a landscape of broken friends and crushed dreams, but there’s another side to it, too. When Peter went out, Doc Ock crashed course through college and got him a doctorate, got him a girlfriend and got him his own company.”

He even made a child cry, stating that “To do that for a solid year of my life, that’s the hardest thing I’ve had to do — to look small children in the eye at a convention and lie to them. One of them with an honest-to-God Little League uniform and a quivering lip. Inside, part of me was dying.”

In any case, as a long-time reader, I’m excited to see what happens next. Take a look at the cover art for the first issue below, and let us know what your thoughts are on Superior Spider-Man, and the fact that it’s ending!

AmazingSpiderMan

Source: New York Daily News

We’ve seen actor Jamie Foxx done up in the makeup for Marc Webb’s The Amazing Spider-Man 2 and now the director has given us an official first look at Foxx as Max Dillon. The image highlights the character’s previously talked about obsession with Spider-Man and shows Foxx looking quite different than we are used to.

In The Amazing Spider-Man™ 2, for Peter Parker (Andrew Garfield), life is busy – between taking out the bad guys as Spider-Man and spending time with the person he loves, Gwen (Emma Stone), high school graduation can’t come quickly enough. Peter hasn’t forgotten about the promise he made to Gwen’s father to protect her by staying away – but that’s a promise he just can’t keep. Things will change for Peter when a new villain, Electro (Jamie Foxx), emerges, an old friend, Harry Osborn (Dane DeHaan), returns, and Peter uncovers new clues about his past.

The Amazing Spider-Man 2 swings into theaters May 2nd, 2014.

We’re 45 days into production and Marc Webb continues to tease fans from the set of The Amazing Spider-Man 2 via his Twitter account. The latest production still that the director has tweeted teases the damage caused by Electro surrounding a New York police officer. Check it out below.


 
The Amazing Spider-Man 2 is set to swing into theaters May 2, 2014

Director Marc Webb continues to tease fans with tweets from the set of The Amazing Spider-Man 2. The director has tweeted some pretty confusing images and today continued that trend with an interesting image features some cast members…in a Panda and Gorilla suit? With a caption that reads “Thinking about some new villains…”, could these be some henchmen? Or could the shadow with the green background and giant “N” be possibly hinting at things to come?

The Amazing Spider-Man 2 is set to swing into theaters May 2, 2014

Director Marc Webb has been teasing fans with images from the set of The Amazing Spider-Man 2 that don’t really give much away. Well, that was until today. The director tweeted an image earlier teasing the appearance of Ravencroft Institute. In the comics Ravencroft is a government backed mental hospital for supervillains that has housed many of Spidey’s rogue gallery at one point of another.
 
 


 
 

“The Amazing Spider-Man 2,” for Peter Parker (Andrew Garfield), life is busy — between taking out the bad guys as Spider-Man and spending time with the person he loves, Gwen (Emma Stone), high school graduation can’t come quickly enough. Peter hasn’t forgotten about the promise he made to Gwen’s father to protect her by staying away — but that’s a promise he just can’t keep. Things will change for Peter when a new villain, Electro (Jamie Foxx), emerges, an old friend, Harry Osborn (Dane DeHaan), returns, and Peter uncovers new clues about his past.

 
 
The Amazing Spider-Man 2 is set to hit theaters May 2, 2014.

Director Marc Webb had revealed awhile back that we would be seeing some upgrades for Spider-Man in the upcoming The Amazing Spider-Man 2, which included a new suit and upgraded web shooters. We’ve already seen the new suit and now an Instagram user has spotted the suit’s upgraded and enhanced webshooters that you can check out below.

 

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“The Amazing Spider-Man 2,” for Peter Parker (Andrew Garfield), life is busy — between taking out the bad guys as Spider-Man and spending time with the person he loves, Gwen (Emma Stone), high school graduation can’t come quickly enough. Peter hasn’t forgotten about the promise he made to Gwen’s father to protect her by staying away — but that’s a promise he just can’t keep. Things will change for Peter when a new villain, Electro (Jamie Foxx), emerges, an old friend, Harry Osborn (Dane DeHaan), returns, and Peter uncovers new clues about his past.

 

The Amazing Spider-Man 2 is set to hit theaters May 2, 2014.

 

Source: Instagram

Earlier today we got an official first look at the new suit from Marc Webb’s The Amazing Spider-Man 2, and now we have some photos from the set featuring the suit. Seriously, the suit looks great and has a “classic” look that should get fans senses tingling.

 

article-0-184A92A1000005DC-462_634x286 Spiderman spotted in full costume on set in New York City article-0-184A92A5000005DC-307_634x440

 

 “The Amazing Spider-Man 2,” for Peter Parker (Andrew Garfield), life is busy — between taking out the bad guys as Spider-Man and spending time with the person he loves, Gwen (Emma Stone), high school graduation can’t come quickly enough. Peter hasn’t forgotten about the promise he made to Gwen’s father to protect her by staying away — but that’s a promise he just can’t keep. Things will change for Peter when a new villain, Electro (Jamie Foxx), emerges, an old friend, Harry Osborn (Dane DeHaan), returns, and Peter uncovers new clues about his past.

 

The Amazing Spider-Man 2 is set to hit theaters May 2, 2014.

 

Source: Daily Mail

After teasing us with a look at the eyes from the suit, Sony has just revealed the first official look at Peter Parker’s new suit in Marc Webb’s highly-anticipated sequel to The Amazing Spider-Man. The suit definitely has a “classic” look to it and should make fans very happy.
 

 
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In “The Amazing Spider-Man 2,” for Peter Parker (Andrew Garfield), life is busy — between taking out the bad guys as Spider-Man and spending time with the person he loves, Gwen (Emma Stone), high school graduation can’t come quickly enough. Peter hasn’t forgotten about the promise he made to Gwen’s father to protect her by staying away — but that’s a promise he just can’t keep. Things will change for Peter when a new villain, Electro (Jamie Foxx), emerges, an old friend, Harry Osborn (Dane DeHaan), returns, and Peter uncovers new clues about his past.

 

The Amazing Spider-Man 2 is set to hit theaters May 2, 2014.

 

Source: Coming Soon

Not too long ago director Marc Webb recently revealed that there would be a few new alterations to the suit in The Amazing Spider-Man sequel. He revealed that there would be “bigger eyes” and “gnarly web shooters” for the new suit. Well, as you can see from the video that the director tweeted earlier there are definitely larger eyes on this suit that are closer to the “classic” look of the hero.

 

 

 

SpideyEye

 

 

The sequel to The Amazing Spider-Man is set to hit theaters May 2, 2014.

So, we are going to warn you right off the bat that there are spoilers in this article. If you have not yet read Amazing Spider-Man #700 and Avenging Spider-Man #15.1, you may want to avoid reading any further.

Starting next month we’re getting a new Spider-Man in the Marvel Universe. No, the man behind the mask is not Peter Parker. Well, not exactly that is. At the conclusion of “One Dying Wish” we end an era and begin a new chapter in Spider-Man’s story. This is quite possibly one of the riskiest stories that Marvel has done and is going to lead into something quite a bit darker and different than we’ve seen in the past when it comes to Spider-Man. Trust me, writer Dan Slott definitely has some of the biggest balls in comics right now. Just check hit Twitter feed out for all the hate he is getting over this.

There’s plenty of people already complaining about issue #700 without even reading it. Hell, I would even go as far to say that most of those people don’t even read comics and haven’t for years and just feel the need to constantly complain. Fans are always screaming for something different, even though most times fear it when they get it, and Marvel is giving you what you asked for. I’ve read the issue and as a life-long fan of Spider-Man can say it’s a “superior” end to the run (pun intended).

Marvel is shaking up the status quo with Marvel NOW! in order to generate new potential for storylines. Rather than giving us the hero that we’re going to root for, Slott is going to be giving us the anti-hero that we’re more so curious about and intrigued by. As the title above states, this is going to be a character that you are going to love to hate. But why would you read this story if it isn’t Peter Parker in the suit? Well, I am going to tell you why you should give this one a shot.

Do you honestly think that Slott and the people at Marvel do not have some form of outline as to where this story will go and lead to even more exciting storylines?  I mean, this story has been builiding up for one hundred issues. Yes, it started all the way back in issue #600. And do you think that this won’t, and it most likely will, end with the triumphant return of Peter Parker? We need these kinds of risks to happen in order for stories, as well as the characters involved, to evolve and grow. If we don’t take these risks, we face the stagnant boring repetitive stories that we complain about all the time. Personally, I am excited to see where they take the Superior Spider-Man series.  Especially being that I am going to get to see him deck Wolverine straight in the face.

So, comic readers while you may hate the character (and that’s kind of the point I think), I don’t get the feeling you’re going to hate where these comics take us. Instead of being the typical jaded comic reader who fears and hates change, make sure you pick up Amazing Spider-Man #700 and Avenging Spider-Man #15.1 this week. And then give Superior Spider-Man a shot before you write it off. While you may not admit it to your friends and the rest of the world, you may just end up becoming a fan of the series.

It seems that another character from Peter Parker’s universe will be joining him on screen in the sequel to The Amazing Spider-Man. According to the website of actor and stuntman Asim Ahmad, he has signed on to join the cast of the film in a supporting role as Professor Michael Morbius.

He apparently has also confirmed this news to writer Joe Keatinge, the writer behind the new ongoing Morbius: The Living Vampire series. The actor has had small roles in a numbver of films such as Inception, The Dark Knight Rises, The Expendables 2 and will also be appearing in next year’s Star Trek Into Darkness.

While the actor has signed on for the role of Morbius, this does not mean he will be transforming into a vampire in the film. As he has stated, it’s a supporting role and if you played the movie tie-in video game you would know that Morbius is an employee of Oscorp. We will be sure to keep you updated as more details arise.

Source: Asim Ahmad

Casting is currently underway for the highly anticipated sequel to The Amazing Spider-Man. Recently it was revealed that actors were being screen tested for the role of Harry Osborn and director Marc Webb has just revealed via Twitter who they have chosen for the role:

 

The official press release from Sony (which also confirms that Jamie Foxx will indeed be playing Electro):

Dane DeHaan will join the cast of the next installment of The Amazing Spider-Man™ along side Andrew Garfield, Emma Stone, Jamie Foxx and Shailene Woodley as Columbia Pictures prepares to begin production on the next chapter of the blockbuster franchise, it was announced today by Doug Belgrad, president of Columbia Pictures, and Hannah Minghella, president of production for the studio.

The screenplay is by Alex Kurtzman & Roberto Orci and Jeff Pinkner based on a previous draft by James Vanderbilt. The film will be directed by Marc Webb and produced by Avi Arad and Matt Tolmach.

The casting of DeHaan as Harry Osborn was confirmed this morning in a tweet by Webb (@MarcW) who wrote “Meet Harry Osborn. So excited to have him on board. @danedehaan.”

“Dane is an exciting and extraordinary young actor and he is a fantastic addition to our cast,” Webb said.

The new film in the Spider-Man saga is set for release in 3D on May 2, 2014. Production will begin in early 2013 in New York.

Webb, Garfield and Stone previously teamed on this summer’s blockbuster The Amazing Spider-Man, which has taken in more than $751 million worldwide.

DeHaan caught moviegoers’ attention with his performances in four 2012 releases: Steven Spielberg’s Lincoln, opposite Daniel Day-Lewis and Lukas Haas; John Hillcoat’s Lawless, alongside Shia LaBeouf, Tom Hardy, and Jason Clarke; Bradley Rust Gray’s Jack & Diane, with Juno Temple and Riley Keough; and one of the year’s biggest sleeper hits, the adventure thriller Chronicle, directed by Josh Trank. He began his film career with director John Sayles and actor Chris Cooper in Amigo.

DeHaan next stars in Place Beyond the Pines alongside Bradley Cooper and Ryan Gosling. In addition he will star in Atom Egoyan’s Devil’s Knot, with Reese Witherspoon and Colin Firth, about the fate of the West Memphis Three; and John Krokidas’ Kill Your Darlings, with Jack Huston, Daniel Radcliffe, Ben Foster, and Kyra Sedgwick, set in 1944 amidst the Beat Generation.

Mr. DeHaan first came to industry attention with his portrayal of Jesse in the third season of the critically applauded drama series In Treatment, starring alongside Gabriel Byrne. This was followed by a guest arc in the fourth season of the popular horror series True Blood.

In 2010, he received an Obie Award for his performance in Annie Baker’s The Aliens, directed by Sam Gold. The Rattlestick Theater production was cited as “Play of the Year” by The New York Times. Mr. DeHaan made his Broadway debut in with American Buffalo, Robert Falls’ 2008 staging of the classic David Mamet play.

So, does this mean we will soon learn more about who will be playing Norman Osborn? Keep checking back because we will be sure to keep you updated.

Better hurry to your local comic shop and pick up a copy before they sell out. Writer Dan Slott has been stating that retailers didn’t order enough copies of the issue, and now we’ve learned that he was definitely right. Marvel has announced that The Amazing Spider-Man #698 has sold out and is now going into a second printing.

“The end of Spider-Man’s world begins when Doctor Octopus discovers who Peter Parker really is. This is the beginning of the end to this fifty year run and you will want to see the secret that will change everything! So don’t miss the most talked about comic of the year, returning to store shelves in just a few weeks with Amazing Spider-Man #698 Second Printing Variant!”

This is definitely an issue that will be talked about for quite some time. Do yourselves a favor and go pick up a copy as soon as possible.

 

When talking about the upcoming sequel to The Amazing Spider-Man a short bit back, director Marc Webb revealed that we would be seeing Peter Parker donning a new suit in the film. Talking about the sequel via his official Twitter, the director was asked about what kind of changes we would see to the suit in the sequel. .

I’m definitely curious if the suit is going to resemble that of the suit we’re going to see in Superior Spider-Man, which closely resembles the movie suit a bit. While some people weren’t fans of the suit in the last film I actually liked it much better than the one in the previous films and it looked great in action on the big screen. The most interesting part of his statement however is “Gnarly web shooters”. Definitely curious to see what the director means by that one. 

Whatever Marvel has up their sleeve for this December’s issue #700 of The Amazing Spider-Man is supposed to be huge. So huge in fact that Marvel are ending the series with that issue. There’s been no word as far as if the series is getting a relaunch as part of Marvel NOW! yet. Dan Slott has previously stated that the events of the issue are so major that he will have to go into hiding once it hits stands. And now the waiting game begins.

Sony wants Marc Webb to return for the sequel to The Amazing Spider-Man, and even more importantly even though he sounded uncertain months ago, Webb wants to return too. But there is something that is keeping Webb from signing on for the sequel at the moment. Back when Webb directed 500 Days Of Summer for Fox Searchlight, he was locked in for one more movie with them. Apparently it seems the execs over at Fox gave him a reprieve to go work on The Amazing Spider-Man for Sony.

And according to the LA Times it seems Fox will let him sign on to direct the sequel. But there’s a catch. There is always a catch.

Fox is considering giving its blessing to Webb on “Spidey” but in exchange would extract a two-picture commitment from Webb. It would be a steep price to pay for the filmmaker — most in-demand directors don’t like locking themselves up that long — but it would free him to return to one of Hollywood’s biggest franchises.

If no agreement can be reached, Sony is going to have to begin a search for a replacement director pretty quickly, as the movie is lined up to hit theaters in 21 months. Alex Kurzman, Roberto Orci, and James Vanderbilt are currently working on a script for it. I hope Webb returns myself because of the great job he did with the first chapter but can completely understand if he walks away due to the commitment that Fox is looking for.

On August 22nd, The Amazing Spider-Man will mark 50 years with Issue #692! Five special variants by Marcos Martin take us through five decades of Spider-Man!

1960’s Variant

1970’s Variant

1980’s Variant

1990’s Variant

2000’s Variant

Source: Buzzfeed

Celebrating 50 Years of the Great Responsibility of his Great powers, The Spider-Man 50th Anniversary Series collects the Webbed Wonder’s greatest heretofore secret history! Spanning from his earliest days as a hero to the heyday of the heralded Big Time era and everything in between, a collection of Marvel Legends, venerated comic creators and awe-inspiring artists shine the spotlight on everything that makes Spider-Man the World’s Greatest Superhero!

PETER PARKER, SPIDER-MAN #156.1
Written by Roger Stern
Pencils by Roberto De La Torre
Cover by John Romita Jr.

Marvel teased this event at Wondercon earlier this year but has kept pretty damn quiet about it up until yesterdays The Amazing Spider-Man panel at Comic-Con. This upcoming event will kick off with Minimum Carnage: Alpha this October and then run through Venom and Scarlet Spider. The story will see Carnage escape into the Micro-verse, as the two heroes pursue him. Cullen Bunn and Chris Yost will handle writing duties in the prologue before the story moves into the two titles.

“Carnage is the worst case scenario for both Venom and Scarlet Spider,” Bunn said. “For Kane, it’s all about how terrible a killer can be. And for Venom, it’s how terrible a symbiote can be. This is a situation for various reasons that only Venom and Scarlet Spider can deal with Carnage…it isn’t a thing where Peter Parker can swing in and save them.”

If you haven’t been reading Venom or Scarlet Spider you should be. These are both awesome titles and I am really looking forward to see where they go with this crossover event.

‘The Amazing Spider-Man’ has swung into theaters and is doing great so far. The film has already pulled in an impressive estimated $341.2 million in it’s six day run. Collider recently spoke with Marc Webb about the film and the sequels that are confirmed to be happening.

On him returning to direct a sequel:

“I haven’t made a decision,” he replied. “I’m just like…this has been such a long process, it’s so much fun, it’s really exciting and I’ve invested a lot. But I just want to finish this movie, take a breath and then I’ll make that call, we’ll see.”

Due to how well this film is doing in theaters I don’t think there is quite a good chance we could see Webb return to direct the sequel.

On where he drew inspiration from in the comics:

“In terms of finding things from the comics, obviously there’s some references to his parents and different versions of that, and I studied that a little bit. And then I liked some of the attitude in The Ultimates.” Further into the conversation, he stated “I like the attitude and the physical components of Spider-Man from some of the Ultimates. So it’s an amalgam of different characters that felt interesting to me.”

Also, when asked if there were any villains he would like to see in the future, he definitely didn’t give much away but it seems like he has a pretty good idea what is in store.

“Well, hmm, I don’t want to give anything away.”

Source: Collider

• The ULTIMATE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN EVENT OF THE YEAR!

• Can both Peter Parker and Miles Morales defeat _____?

• Guest starring Nick Fury and the Ultimates!

SPIDER-MEN #3
Written by Brian Michael Bendis
Pencils by Sara Pichelli
Cover by Jim Cheung
Variant Covers by Sara Pichelli, Terry Dodson

In a recent podcast with Empire Avi Arad and Matt Tolmach (producers of ‘The Amazing Spider-Man’) discuss why we didn’t see Norman Osborn, the ties between Osborn and Peter and the rumor of the ‘Proto-Goblin’ being in the movie.

On why Norman Osborn is not in the film:
Avi Arad: Norman for us, in this movie, wasn’t an important face. It was more of a symbolic idea (Oscorp Tower) of the world of science. It’s a place where his father worked. It’s a place where Connors works. And most importantly, it’s a place where Peter aspires to be. One, because his father worked there and two, it stands for the ultimate advancement of science and biotechnology.

So the threat of Norman at the top, that’s what the comics are about. You can read the whole comic book and you’ll have a mention of something that may not appear for two more issues.

Matt Tolmach: We had a lot of story to tell within this movie and Dr. Connors is a very rich character and that’s where we wanted to spend time, on the relationship between Peter and Dr. Connors. If you begin to venture into Norman and Oscorp in this movie then…ummm..you just have a finite amount of screen time. As Avi said he hangs over this building and the lives of these people and you know, we’re going to make more movies.

With Peter solving his father’s algorithm and giving birth to The Lizard, is it safe to say that he will also be responsible for the creation of The Green Goblin:
Avi Arad: If you look at Norman’s affliction, if you will, cross-species genetics or any kind of that science is exactly what he needs to survive. Obviously he will support this kind of science to the nth degree and the nth degree is what is happening in laboratories around the world; stem cells, cloning, etc. You have a guy at the top of the building who has a huge personal stake and you have Connors who has a huge personal stake in succeeding. And then you have the man who supposed to be carrying the clue for it, who vanishes. And it happens to be Peter’s dad.

Matt Tolmach: They’re all sort of Norman’s lab rats. There’s something that Norman needs and everyone here also has their own needs. And Peter becomes the little mouse. Norman is the puppeteer and that’s something we’re going to get to.

In the Dark Reign comics we saw Norman Osborn as a formidable villain without the Green Goblin persona. Is that something that could be explored down the line:
Avi Arad: The goblin can be something that happens for a very short period of time or the goblin can become a whole story. The real story is Norman and I think this movie showed, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that Peter Parker is the most interesting study here. The fact that he becomes Spider-Man is great and it’s fulfillment, and it’s the metaphor for a lot of things but Peter works so well. And Norman needs to work really, really well and be sort of the classic, Marvel, sympathetic villain who carries something personal as the reason to do what he’s doing. And the fact that he’s going to fly through the air and fight Peter, eventually it will be inevitable. But that’s not his main story.

Matt Tolmach: He like Connors, and this is important, is connected to Peter Parker. You get hints of that in the movie obviously, through his relationship to Peter’s father and his relationship to Doc Conners. Norman Osborn, the man, is critically important to where this story is going.

Avi Arad: It’s all about secrets. Norman has a secret, Connors has a secret, Peter’s father had a secret and now Peter has a secret…..All these little hints throughout the movie are saying, ‘so if it worked on Peter, oh boy, this kid is not going to have a moment of peace and I think that’s a wonderful thing to look at.

Matt Tolmach: Norman is an important character and obviously there’s a certain inevitably to one day seeing the Green Goblin. What we’ve done, and what we’ll always do is go back to what serves the story best. Going back to this quest that Peter is still very clearly on when this movie ends, that’s going to lead us to villains, that’s the best version of how you figure out who your villain is going to be, it serves Peter’s story along the way.

On Gwen’s story and was there ever a point throughout all the script rewrites where she met her comic book end:
Avi Arad: No, it would’ve been too fast. It took the whole movie for us to develop this new relationship. To show what a match they are because the more you fall in love with them as a couple, the more you want them to be together, the bigger the tragedy. If you introduce her and get rid of her in the first movie then it feels manufactured.

On Proto Goblin,was he ever intended to be in the film:
Avi Arad: I don’t know where the talk came from, not from us. We tried multiple villains before, as you know, and it’s really hard to service them all, especially when you’re doing an origin story. Also, there was no reason.

Source: Empire

In celebration of the release of ‘The Amazing Spider-Man’ and Spideys upcoming 50th Anniversary I decided to compile a list of five Spider-Man stories I think you should all check out if you haven’t already.

5. Revenge Of The Sinister Six

Spider-Man #18-23

One of my all time favorite Spidey story-arcs is ‘Revenge Of The Sinister Six’. The story saw the group reunited once more in a bid to take over the world with alien weaponry. The line-up consisted of Doctor Octopus, Electro, Gog, Hobgoblin, Mysterio, Vulture. Sandman’s foster family was hit with a bomb and Sandman (believing Octopus had attacked his foster family as punishment for betraying him) joined the other members of the Sinister Six in a plan to take revenge upon Doctor Octopus.

Written and drawn by Erik Larsen, this story had it all. I mean, you had Spidey getting his ass kicked by the best of the best of his villains and even calling upon some of the coolest characters of the 90’s to back him up. We had the Hulk (in his Professor identity), the Fantastic Four, Sleepwalker, Deathlok, Nova, Solo, Cyborg X, and Ghost Rider all teaming up with Spider-Man to take on the Sinister Six. This was the six in their prime. They pulled out all the stops on this one. I mean they even fucking had Gog on their squad. Gog aka a gigantic reptilian humanoid from The Savage Land. I’ve actually gone back and re-read this story many times because it holds up. And I still love seeing the ending where a broken glass Sandman nearly shreds Doc Ock to death. If you can find a trade of it. Get it. If you can find the issues. Get them. You won’t be disappointed.

4. The Death Of Spider-Man

Ultimate Spider-Man #156-160, Ultimate Comics Avengers vs New Ultimates #1-6, Ultimate Fallout #1-6

This is one powerful story right here. Bendis really delivered a blow with the story-arc that really hits you once you’re done with it. Unlike some of the other stories I am going to to avoid talking too much about this one because it really is a story to be read from start to end. And if Peter Parker’s final words in issue #160 don’t hit you…I don’t know what will. This story not only does its death right but also does right by its death unlike many comic book “death stories”. Bendis is at top of his game here and Bagley’s artwork is phenomenal to go with it. You can most likely still find this available in trade or possibly even singular issues at your local shop.

3. Venom

Amazing Spider-Man #300, 315-317

Spider-Man had never fought a villain like Venom before. Regarded by some as Spideys best villain since The Green Goblin he had all of his same powers, was stronger and didn’t set off his spider sense. While some of Tom DeFalco’s dialogue is a bit weak in the issues you ignore it looking at Todd MacFarlane’s fantastic art work. If you’ve ever been a fan of Eddie Brock…this story is a must read.

2. Kraven’s Last Hunt

Amazing Spider-Man #293-294, Spectacular Spider-Man #131-132, Web Of Spider-Man #32-33

Kraven The Hunter was a villain that many people took as a joke until this story arc hit. This is one of the best read’s you can find. Kraven has hunted every other prey on earth but there is one that has eluded him. He decides to hunt down Spider-Man and buries him alive and then begins posing as him. J. M. DeMatteis and artist Mike Zeck craft an ultimate tale of revenge here with a very memorable ending.

1. The Night Gwen Stacy Died

Amazing Spider-Man #121-122

This right here is one of the most important Spider-Man stories ever written. If you sat and wondered why they were establishing the Gwen and Peter relationship in ‘The Amazing Spider-Man’ you definitely need to read this. he death of Gwen Stacy shocked the American comic book community. Previously, it had been unthinkable to kill off such an important character and this event was so revolutionary and important that it is one of the markers of the end of the Silver Age of comics. This two issue story-arc also included the death of Norman Osborn aka The Green Goblin and makes this already epic story even better.

For years people debated on how exactly she died. The original comic features a “snap” sound effect next to Gwen Stacy’s head in the panel in which Spider-Man’s webbing catches her, however some later reprints remove the effect. Many people believe that the whiplash from Peter grabbing her with his webbing caused it. Had he not webbed her though she would have fallen to her death regardless. In the end there was no way he could have saved her. Gwen is one of the few comic characters to die and stay dead. This arc gets my number one spot due I consider it to be quite possibly the most important Spider-Man story for everyone to read.

Other recommendations:

The Clone Saga, Spider-Island, The Death Of Jean DeWolff, Spider-Man: Reign, Shed, Return Of The Goblin

 

The Geekscape staff is quite split on their opinions of ‘The Amazing Spider-Man’. Some of us loved it (I really loved it). Some of us down right didn’t like it. Some of you still haven’t seen it yet and I really hope you don’t let our opinions and preferences sway you from your interest or even lack of interest in the movie.

The Hollywood Reporter recently did an interview with Marc Webb discussing the themes of the movie and why he wanted to re-tell the origin that I found really interesting and a good read.

THR: When you embarked on reimagining the Spider-Man franchise, what story did you want to tell, what did you want to keep, and what did you know you could move past immediately?

Marc Webb: What always interested me was the orphan story – this kid gets left behind by his parents when he’s six or seven years old – because that to me is a more definitive moment for the character than even the spider bite. I think his problems with authority and his surly attitude, which I loved in the comics, emerged from that moment he was left behind – because authority betrayed him. So he’s going to be inherently distrustful of it, and that is reflected in his relationship with Uncle Ben and Aunt May at times, and also with Captain Stacy. And also with the humor and the sarcastic wit, which is something that is totally indigenous to the Spider-Man comics that we haven’t seen or explored much cinematically before. So even the familiar elements of the story, I wanted to hang on a different throughline that had to do with his parents’ disappearance.

THR: Was there ever a discussion about starting the film after he’d already become Spider-Man?

Webb: No, I think you have to do groundwork. I think even if we’ve seen the origin of Spider-Man, we haven’t seen the origin of Peter Parker, and I wanted to establish a context for him. I needed to build a foundation for a universe that would last not just through this movie, but subsequent films, so there was groundwork involved in that.

THR: Peter Parker has bad luck with mentors and father figures. How much did you write Dr. Connors and every other male role model to advance that theme?

Webb: That’s a motif in Spider-Man, and not only in Spider-Man and not just superhero movies, but that’s a big mythological theme, the search for the father and the father disappointing the son in a variety of ways. It’s a story about a kid who goes looking for his father and ends up finding himself – he becomes the father that he never had. And that’s what his realization is. I think the other theme, with Curt Connors, I don’t know if I wrote to it but it was naturally something I was aware of, and one of the big reasons I chose that villain, but again it’s about this kid whose parents are missing – he has a missing piece – and Curt Connors also has a missing piece. A literal missing piece – he’s a literal embodiment of the theme. And how we choose to fill that void is how we define ourselves. And that is something that resonated with me and something that I hoped to inject into the subtext of the film.

THR: Some of the footage you screened at Comic-Con last year did not make it into the final film. How tough was it to sculpt this material into its final form and communicate the content and tone you were aiming for?

You’ve just got to feel it, and it’s about pace, it’s about tone and playing it a few times in front of an audience and refining those points. I was pretty cautious of trying to keep the pace as quick as possible and I wanted to do something more grounded emotionally; I wanted the actors to behave in a way that was more natural and that felt realistic and not stylized. And it’s tricky to use the word “grounded” when you have a nine-foot lizard running around the streets of New York, but we had a real person there interacting with Andrew to create some gravity and reality. So there was a philosophy that went beyond just the acting and the emotions, and that was keeping a level of physical reality and emotional reality.

THR: What ended up being the biggest challenge for you in terms of combining the skills you used on (500) Days of Summer with something we haven’t seen you execute on the big screen?

Webb: There’s a learning curve with the action, I guess, but I tried to think of action as a sequence of scenes where the character was a little bit different at the beginning of the scene than at the end of the scene, and it’s a way to create some emotional epiphanies. Like for example, the bridge scene is really a moment when Peter’s motivation changes. At the beginning of the scene, he is motivated by vengeance and he’s trying to satisfy some darker part of his soul – he’s trying to find the killer of his uncle. And at the end of the scene, he realizes that he’s got bigger shoes to fill, and he’s got a more profound destiny. And again, before that, his crime-fighting was just incidental – he was just hunting for the killer – but after that, he becomes responsible for the city, and he realizes that he’s got powers that can be used to better effect. Those, I think, are the best kind of action scenes.

THR: How carefully did you have to shape Andrew and Emma’s performances to make sure that she played a character equal to his?

Webb: I wanted to honor the emotions of the scene and not just the dialogue. I love Judd Apatow movies, where you feel these people are so real, and I wanted to capture that tone. But the chemistry is interesting, because Andrew comes from a more intense, theatrically-trained background; he’s done some trickster roles like in The Imaginarium of Dr. Parnassus, but he’s got this great emotional dimension and muscle, and Emma comes from improvisational comedy and lightness and has such great humor, but both have an ability to remain spontaneous and open and aware – and those different paths sort of converge in a really beautiful, magical way. And when we did the screen test, you knew it was going to work – it was really that simple.

THR: How much material didn’t make the final cut that you would like to see released, be it for the DVD or just for the purposes of supplementing the story told in the theatrical cut?

Webb: I’m putting out the movie that I wanted to put out. I’m not going to do a director’s cut. But there are scenes that I miss – there’s a scene that’s a more explicit statement of the themes between Connors and Peter that I liked; there’s a few lines, like one Alvin Sargent wrote that isn’t in the movie that’s one of my favorite lines I’ve ever read in my life that I wish I could have put in the movie. It was Connors talking to Peter, and he said, “Be creative. We have to be greater than what we suffer.” It was so beautiful, and it kills me that I couldn’t put it in the movie, but it was at the end of a long scene where we needed to keep the pace up. But it’s things like that and a few other scenes here and there that will be on the DVD, but you’ve got to think of the thing holistically – and that stuff happens all of the time. That’s just the nature of creating a big movie, I suppose.

THR: Was there a moment on set or at some point in the production where you just kind of kicked yourself and said, “Wow – I’m making a Spider-Man movie?”

Webb: We built these huge rigs, these traveling rigs underneath Riverside highway in Harlem up by Columbia University, and we slung a human being on these wires and he traversed through the traffic. It was something that hadn’t been done before; not only did he swing, he changed webs mid-swing in a single take, and he changed direction. And that was something that was an incredible feat of engineering, and Andy Armstrong, our stunt coordinator, spent a lot of time conjuring. It was a blast to do, and it was like I just didn’t want to yell “cut” – it was so amazing to watch. But also, we got to see the body language of what it would be like for a human to swing through the streets and how his body would move, and it helped us to define the animation and the CG enhancements later in the film. But that was a moment where I sort of pinched myself – it was unbelievable.

THR: How indicative are the two films you’ve made of the career path that you want to continue on?

Webb: I don’t know. I love doing big movies – it’s really fun. But I loved doing my small movie, so it doesn’t really matter to me. It’s about the story and about the characters and whatever inspires me in the moment is what I’ll do, I imagine. I love making movies – I’m addicted to it; that’s probably the better term. But we’ll see what happens. It’s hard to say.

Ten years ago if you told someone about the concept of a movie like ‘The Avengers’ they’d have told you it wouldn’t work. Well it did work and quite possibly inspired the producers of ‘The Amazing Spider-Man’ that they could do something similar with ‘The Sinister Six’ aka a team of Spider-Mans greatest villains. Avi Arad and Matt Tolmach recently spoke with SuperHeroHype on the subject and here’s what they had to say about it.

SHH: Do you feel like you need to stay away from some of the villains that have appeared in the Sam Raimi movies? Or can you redefine them within the context of this new Spider-Man?

Arad: Well, not really. There are so many ways to paint these villains, all of them. As you know, one of the great sagas in the Spider-Man universe is of course the Sinister Six. I think “Avengers” did okay the last time I looked.

Tolmach: It’s going to be okay.

Arad: Yeah, it will survive.

SHH: So are you suggesting you’re going to do five Spider-Man movies introducing each villain and then the sixth movie will have the Sinister Six?


Tolmach: It seems like a good model.

Arad: It all depends on the stories that one wants to tell, because Spider-Man is really more a depth kind of a story, we have to be careful how many villains we can service, because a relationship with a villain has to be such that it’s a story on his own. We attempted to do multiple villains–you’ve been there–you just need screen time to do it.

SHH: Does Sony have the rights to Kingpin? That was a great Spider-Man villain until Frank Miller took him for his run on Daredevil and he became known more as a Daredevil villain, appearing in that movie.

Arad: Believe it or not, Kingpin was on loan to Daredevil, so again, anything that is part of the Spider-Man Universe or introduced in the Spider-Man Universe–without getting too legal beagle here–is an opportunity, and if we have a story that Kingpin is important, I’m sure we can handle that.

Source: SuperHeroHype

‘Arkham Asylum’ and ‘Arkham City’ are games praised by both video game and comic fans alike and ‘The Amazing Spider-Man’ definitely seems to have taken some ideas from it. And I am saying this in a completely positive way. I’ve been posting numerous updates about this game over the past few weeks and this new developers diary focuses on the stealth and combat in the game and it looks great. It definitely looks like we will be getting quite a few different styles of gameplay throughout the game.

It also appears a new skin for Spidey has been added to the game and if you know my love of this character you will know that I was pretty psyched seeing this…

SCARLET SPIDER!

Some of the most memorable moments in the Sam Raimi ‘Spider-Man’ trilogy were Bruce Campbell. He always had these great cameo appearances that you waited for and now Bruce is back. While we aren’t getting some hilarious cameo (that we know about) in the movie…we are getting him as ‘The Extreme Reporter’ in the video game for ‘The Amazing Spider-Man’! This game keeps looking like more and more fun.

‘The Amazing Spider-Man’ is in stores Tuesday.

I knew I should not have watched this. Because it has led to me watching it again and again…and again. Be warned that I warned you! If you do not want to see more of this movie click back now. This is not just a small clip but a scene from the movie. And its an awesome one.

‘The Amazing Spider-Man’ swings into theaters July 3rd.

If the rest of the movie is like this…I think we will all be praising Marc Webb in a few weeks. Sorry emo Tobey but this is the Peter Parker we’ve been wanting.

 

Source: MovieClipsComingSoon

‘The Amazing Spider-Man’ swings into theatres July 3, 2012.