
Amazing Spider-Man #700 came out to… well, it came out. Let’s leave it at that. An eighteen-second video was pretty much the review for us. It did not inspire confidence in The Superior Spider-Man.
It turns out, if you can swallow the concept, this book is actually worth reading. Spoilers from here on in.
Before we talk about the writing, Ryan Stegman does a superb job on art chores. Most panels are spoilers, so we’ll be refraining from our usual one-panel sample. But suffice to say, Stegman’s Spidey is joyously dynamic, and some of the better art we’ve seen out of Marvel lately.
The basic thrust of the book is Otto Octavius, in Peter Parker’s body, going around being… well, not a good guy, exactly, but not a terrible one, either.
There are problems here, not the least of which is the fact that we totally called the ending of the book. Peter is still in his own noggin, and pushing Octavius to be more heroic, or at least not beat villains to death. But, as a hero, he’s got his own strategies and ways of doing things. Essentially, this is Spider-Man with a tendency to plan ahead and a hell of a mean streak, and Dan Slott makes it work.
But there are side points as well. Spider-Man is still a smart-ass: Octavius is just too arrogant to not get angry at people for being dumber than he is. But most relevantly, he’s still a crappy person: He’s lecherous, he’s arrogant, he’s rude. He’s beating up the new Sinister Six, made up of a series of also-rans, as much because he’s angry they’re using the name as anything else.
While the ending of this book is pretty much preordained, the first issue is actually very solid. Granted, Slott has a lot to make up for considering what a wreck the last arc of Amazing Spider-Man was, but if he can keep this up, it might be worth reading.




I was honestly considering picking Spider-Man back up after the OMD fiasco. After this craziness I’m not going for it. I’ll just continue to pick up random issues that interest me when I see them at Half Priced Books and other second hand shops.
I would recommend picking up the first issue at least. It’s far better than I was expecting.
one more day was dumb, but post one more day spiderman was fun as hell. he fought a guy who could turn anything into a racecar, THAT IS AWESOME..
Post OMD had its moments. I still insist Spider Island was probably the best arc the book had had in a while. But this whole Spider-Ock thing just wreaks of editorial mandate, like they hadn’t gotten mentioned in USA Today in a while so BOOM, kill spider, especially with the tease that another Spider-Man will be showing up soon. Hint, expect a joke about taking a few time machines and a dimensional vortex to get there.
Yeah I’ll either read it or pick it up second hand, I don’t want to encourage Marvel into thinking they have a hit on their hands by giving them more money.
one more day was dumb, but post one more day spiderman was fun as hell. he fought a guy who could turn anything into a racecar, THAT IS AWESOME..
I have to admit that has a certain appeal to the eight year old that lives inside me.
As much as I hate the SpOck storyline, I have to admit I was pleasantly surprised by the last page. I don’t want to spoil it for anyone, but I am glad to see a new dimension to the story other than Spider-Man uses more tech now, and is more brutal when he beats criminals.
Also, the fact that the last page was a surprise itself *was* a surprise, given the age of spoilers we live in.
Yeah, even though I was expecting something like it, I was pleasantly surprised it hadn’t leaked.
The art was very well done and wasn’t the worst written comic I’ve ever read, but I just could not get over how ridiculously stupid this whole plotline is. Someone tell me when this whole dumb exercise is over.
That’s what we’re here for!