Marvel’s new Spider-Man series brings Peter Parker’s clone back and more
Traditionally, the 75th issue of a comic book series isn’t much of a big deal, although these days, it’s admittedly rare to see a superhero title from Marvel or DC make it that far uninterrupted.
The Amazing Spider-Man #75, however, breaks from tradition by launching what the publisher is describing as both “a new era” and “a bold new age” — one marked by a new creative team and a new publishing schedule, as the series goes back to a thrice-monthly release program for the first time since 2010.
It’s being called “The Amazing Spider-Man Beyond,” but does this new period for the beloved hero go far enough beyond the just-completed run by writer Nick Spencer?
Who made Amazing Spider-Man #75!
There’s a whole gang of creators behind the first issue of “Beyond”: writer Zeb Wells and artist Patrick Gleason are the creators behind the main story in the issue, but there’s also a brain trust of writers credited, featuring Kelly Thompson, Cody Ziegler, and Saladin Ahmed in addition to Wells and Gleason. Thompson and Wells both write an alternate strip, which is illustrated by Travel Foreman, and Ivan Fiorelli.
How does Amazing Spider-Man #75 work?
There’s a very basic hook to the first installment of “Beyond”: the traditional dichotomy between Peter Parker and Spider-Man — where, if one of them is having a particularly good time, the other is having a bad time just as strongly — has been transferred to Peter Parker and his erstwhile clone Ben Reilly. Peter’s life is going to pieces after the death of his childhood best friend Harry Osborn, but things couldn’t be going better for Ben, who’s signed up with a mysterious new corporation that has, as unlikely as it seems, purchased the intellectual property rights to Spider-Man.
As the two attempt to come to terms with the idea of sharing being Spider-Man — surprisingly, no one mentions Miles Morales, who’s You can also see it here a Spider-Man — something happens that suggests that, in the near future, there won’t be any reason to share. I won’t say what exactly, but it’s worth noting that the cover of the next issue features Peter Parker in a hospital bed…
Amazing Spider-Man #75 is happening right now!
Together with former Amazing Spider-Man writer Nick Spencer leaving mainstream comics to head up Substack’s comic program, Marvel needed someone to take over what has been a best-seller for decades, and one of the company’s most reliable successes in recent years. That it’s gone back to the “writers room” model — and publishing schedule — of the “Brand New Day” era, which ran for just under two years from early 2008 through mid-2010 — feels like a sign that the company is retreating to a tried and true formula for a while as it prepares for the character’s 60th anniversary next year.
Do you require any reading?
Here’s where things get difficult. In theory, everyone can learn to pick up. Amazing Spider-Man #75 and, for the most part, understand what’s going on; there’s no small amount of exposition and editorial notes, at least in the main story, to spell out the information that readers It is essential to know in order to understand what’s going on. But one of the big problems with “Beyond”’s opener is that it feels trapped in the immediate past — in a way that’s somewhat off-putting to anyone that hasn’t been reading the book recently.
Nick Spencer had a lot of dreams about what he could accomplish. Amazing Spider-Man, but a lot of that — especially in the second half of his run — was focused around shifting the tone of the series towards something approaching continuity-obsessed superhero horror, with characters returning from the dead to rewrite past storylines from years and years ago for seemingly no reason other than authorial bias. ASM became a strangely self-referential, grim read that ended with the death (again) of Peter Parker’s old best friend, Harry Osborn.
“Beyond” opens with Peter still very much wracked with grief over Harry’s death, and the events of the final issues of Spencer’s run. It’s an approach that is likely welcome to fans who’ve stuck with Spencer’s storyline and wanted to see it resonate moving forward; for everyone else, though, it makes “Beyond” feel like the latest chapter in an ongoing story they weren’t reading, as opposed to a new beginning, even as Ben Reilly shows up to take things in a different direction.
Reilly’s very presence, and the “Beyond” story in general, points to even more required reading: it’s just taken for granted that readers know who Ben Reilly is, or that there was once a Parker Industries that was actually created by Dr. Octopus during the period when his brain was driving Peter Parker’s body, but that was later sold off by Peter when he was driving his own body again, and… you get the idea. And that’s saying nothing about the back-ups, which rely on the reader having some idea who characters like the Daughters of the Dragon or Ashley Kafka are.
You can be sure Amazing Spider-Man#75 makes it easy for readers to start reading new books.In theoryIt is. This might not be as easy to sell in practice than Marvel would like.
Is Amazing Spider-Man #75 good?
What’s so frustrating about the way in which Amazing Spider-Man #75 is beholden to the past is that, for the most part, “Beyond” looks like it’s going to be a fun story, told with a balance of humor and melodrama that feels classically Spider-Man. Ben Reilly’s more upbeat Spider-Man is clearly headed for a fall — the mysterious Beyond Corporation that’s helped outfit him is, almost certainly, going to turn out to be a problem before too long — and it’s unlikely that Peter Parker is in quite as much trouble as it seems. It can get out of the debts to comics old, but the story moves along well, with the cartoonish art that Gleason draws.
Tellingly, an editorial from Nick Lowe mentions that the issue begins “a nineteen-part epic,” which suggests that there’s a slow transformation underway from what Amazing Spider-ManThe past few years has been to what lies six months in the future. Reading the issue, it does feel as if there’s an exciting new era for Amazing Spider-Man on the horizon — it’s just that it feels as if we’re not quite there just yet.
One panel that pops
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