I wonder if this story is going to mention the Sin-Eater from Sinner Takes All who was radicalized while fighting in the Middle East.
I wonder if this story is going to mention the Sin-Eater from Sinner Takes All who was radicalized while fighting in the Middle East.
"I should describe my known nature as tripartite, my interests consisting of three parallel and disassociated groups; a) love of the strange and the fantastic, b) love of abstract truth and scientific logic, c) love of the ancient and the permanent. Sundry combinations of these strains will probably account for my...odd tastes, and eccentricities."
so I just got back into comics and ASM (haven't read since the early 90's).
decided to start on issue 44 as the previous arc just ended and seemed like a good starting point.
read issue 44 and am kind of confused.. then read the prologue panel in this thread and am even more confused..
can someone give me a basic coles notes of whats going on? would be -greatly- appreciated!
Thanks!
there's a spooky bandage demon from hell named kindred who wants something from spider-guy
to succeed, he has resurrected the original sin-eater with super powers and he's been keeping an eye out for sinners like overdrive, the lethal legion, and more
kindred has also been contacting spider-man in his dreams and his plans involve other spider-heroes and current director of ravencroft norman osborn
in this one-shot, sin-eater's new origin will be established, while in asm #45 peter and the pimped out sin-eater will encounter each other and kick off kindred's plan
I don't blind date I make the direct market vibrate
Kindred is a new character that debuded in Spencer's first issue ASM #1 (v.5) aka ASM #802.
Here is the full backstory.
https://marvel.fandom.com/wiki/Kindred_(Earth-616)
"Formerly a human sent to Hell, the entity known as Kindred became a demon and rapidly climbed through the ranks. Possessing an intimate familiarity with Peter Parker to the point of affectionately referring to him as "Pete", and Norman Osborn who terrified Kindred when he was human– both as Norman and the Green Goblin– and inspired his demonic form, the demon began torturing Mysterio, an enemy of Spider-Man's who had previously committed suicide, relentlessly until Beck agreed to serve him."
etc...
We don't know who he is thus all the speculation. But we are assuming we will find out in the next serveral issues at the big ASM 850 is approaching.
Do we have any idea how Jess, anya etc become involved?
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Obviously the two people terrified of Norm were Harry ( who could never please his father), and Gwen. What is interesting is the fact other spiders are involved ( both with Mephisto ( Miles and Otto) and Sin Eater/Kindred). This makes it look more them merely a revenge on Parker and Osborn story. The question becomes not only who but why? I am also interested in the motivation of Mephisto. We all know he is pure evil. But why the spiders? Peter is the strongest and even Pete is small fry compared to a character who is on the Galactus, Loki, Thor, Odin, Captain Marvel ( Carol) type power level. I am expecting a lot of shocks, twists and turns before this is over. One thing I am predicting is the Mephisto story to continue with Miles even after the Peter part ends.
Oh, man. This is issue is sooooo good. And very clearly a love letter to both of PAD's Sin-Eater stories.
I think this issue rules out Jean DeWolff as Kindred. That was a theory floating around last week.
I didn't like this issue. As a whole, I think this one-shot fails to deliver an attractive backstory to Sin Eater. I'm a little tired of the "everything is connected to his childhood" approach that has become a trope in superhero comicbooks through retcons, and Kindred' schtick of playing with what's real and what's not has stretched far too long. I'm going from interested to bored, so I expect this mystery is solved in ASM 49 or 50. Visually, it has great art, Jordie Bellaire is one of my favorite colorists and I wasn't familiar with Guillermo Sanna, but he has a way of playing with shadows that works perfectly in this story
BTW: I haven't read Peter David and Sal Buscema's follow up to The Death of Jean DeWolff, so I'm not completely aware what is retcon by Spencer and what was introduced by David and Buscema
Last edited by Chubistian; 07-22-2020 at 11:27 AM.
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I respectfully disagree. This was a masterful and creepy issue with great art and solid writing. As to your point about Carter and DeWolffe, yes; they were lovers as Jean was killed in bed (and it was confirmed in the original story). Artwork is beautiful and eerie in all the right ways, and the horror element was top-notch.