8 Spider-Man Comic Storylines Perfect For The New Marvel Universe Movie
On this we can all agree: three movies retelling the origins of Peter Parker’s Spider-Man in 15 years is not a good or wanted thing. Every comic book reader, movie watcher, pop culture bystander and grandparent who’s glanced casually at a standard-definition television in a century that begins with a “2” understands that a young man received a very special bug bite, got cocky, got sad, got responsible and became a wise-cracking superhero icon. It’s modern mythology at this point.
Sony and Marvel are also well cognizant of this fact, so as both companies prepare for Spider-Man’s debut in the Marvel cinematic universe on July 28, 2017, they’ll have to select a storyline that’s innovative yet accessible, paving new ground for a familiar character. Fortunately, the filmmakers have over 50 years of comics to glean from, including storylines of new Spider-Men created in the same publishing line — The Ultimate Universe — that creatively fueled Joss Whedon’s The Avengers. We thought up eight particularly resonant Spider-Man yarns that could help anchor the new adventures of Peter Park or, hopefully, Miles Morales in his new celluloid home. Let us know what you think would work in the comments.
“The Death of Jean DeWolff”
PeterParker, The Spectacular Spider-Man #107-110
Writer: Peter David
Artist: Rich Buckler
From the pages of Peter Parker, The Spectacular Spider-Man, “The Death of Jean DeWolff” story arc is a much darker and grittier tale than any Spider-movie has dealt with thus far. And, that’s exactly why it could work for the next film. When Captain DeWolff, a cop that Peter admires, is randomly murdered, Spidey gets his Sam Spade on and will stop at nothing to find the shadowy culprit. It’s a street-level story that trades super-powered, technologically-advanced villains for a violently delusional psychopath called the Sin-Eater, which may be just what we need after the shit show that gave us a mecha-Paul Giamatti as Rhino. Plus, it could be a great way for Marvel to introduce Daredevil into the MCU, as he helps Spider-Man pursue the Sin-Eater.
But more than anything, what “The Death of Jean DeWolff” plot line offers a Spider-Man movie is what has always made the character so compelling: moral struggle. It takes great power and great responsibility to a whole new level when Peter finds himself out for blood. Without Matt Murdock providing a moral compass, even Peter isn’t sure what he’s capable of. Of course, with audiences and movie-Peter still reeling over Gwen Stacy’s splattery conclusion this (non-symbiote) black suit yarn keeps things appropriately dour. Robert Tutton
“If This Be My Destiny…!”
The Amazing Spider-Man #31-33
Writers: Stan Lee, Steve Ditko
Artist: Steve Ditko
In terms of “classic” Spider-Man stories, it doesn’t get much better than “If This Be My Destiny…!” The arc marks a pivotal moment in Spider-Man history, opening with Peter at his first day at college where he meets Harry Osborn and Gwen Stacy. Aside from dealing with college drama, Peter must also figure out a way to save his Aunt May from a mysterious ailment. Featuring the iconic image of Spider-Man trapped underneath mounds of heavy machinery, the arc boasts career-best work from Stan Lee and Steve Ditko. It’s the perfect blend of the dynamic, high-stakes action necessary to construct a blockbuster and the internal character drama that made Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man 2 such an emotionally resonant story for audiences. “If This Be My Destiny…!” is not only an ideal entry point in the Spider-Man saga, but also serves as an effective thesis statement for the character as a whole. Mark Rozeman
“Learning Curve”
Ultimate Spider-Man #8-13
Writer: Brian Michael Bendis
Artist: Mark Bagley