Dan Slott explains how "Spider-Verse" was nearly a Doc Ock tale, shares the Inheritors' origins, reveals why a Spider-Ham title is off the table for now and more!
Full article here.
Dan Slott explains how "Spider-Verse" was nearly a Doc Ock tale, shares the Inheritors' origins, reveals why a Spider-Ham title is off the table for now and more!
Full article here.
You know, while we've known for a while that it was originally supposed to happen in Superior, I'm actually glad that Axel pulled the objection card on the grounds that that really is something you only do once and it should be the real Peter at the helm rather than a faker. Can't really claim to have every Spider-Man ever without the one true original. Not only that but I don't think we needed to take Otto's having everyone fooled of who he is to a multiversal level.
I also think with the change, there should have been more focus on the difference between Spider Ock's willingness to kill and Peter's aversion to it. But it just fell flat, there was no going back and seeing what Spider-Man trained by Wolverine and others from SpiderOck thought about not killing anyone.
It just became a mess that didn't seem to have much focus.
EDIT:
I'd recommend reading this thread. I think it offers a great range of responses to the event.
Last edited by MatchesMalone; 03-11-2015 at 02:28 PM.
I'm with Slott on this one. Keeping Ock in there until Secret Wars really spells commitment to the death of Peter Parker. If Marvel was aware of the upcoming reset when Peter was written back in control, then I think they may have missed an opportunity here. Just a few extra months and the commitment to Pete's death in 616 would have been complete, thanks to the coming Universe-wide reset button.
That being said, it's been a fun read regardless. Neither would have hurt the story.
Last edited by _underscore; 03-11-2015 at 02:50 PM.
Yeah, that pretty much sounds like Marvel's current editorial team, not really having a clue what's going on until it's actually happening.That was the plan, and we talked about it at a number of retreats. Everyone was cool with it up until we were right about ready to run. [Laughs] So the train was on the tracks, we were going over it one last time, and everyone went, "Wait a minute! This is going to be a Doc Ock story?" And I was like, "Yeah!" [Laughs] Then Axel [Alonso] was like, "No, no, no. This isn't a Doc Ock story. It's a story for the real Spider-Man. You only get to do something like this once. Let's do it right and save it for when Peter comes back."