By Larry Lieber & Frank Giacoia
By Larry Lieber & Frank Giacoia
Thank you 616 for this thread! It is awesome! Spidey/Peter Parker is the best
Amazing Spider-Man #47 Apr 1967 & Deadpool #11 Dec 1997
"In the Hands of the Hunter" & "With Great Power Comes Great Coincidence"
Kraven the Hunter wants cash from Norman Osborn for attacking Spider-Man;
In the past, Deadpool uses his image inducer to impersonate Peter Parker and tries to convince a young and nerdy Weasel to fix his teleporter so he can get back to the future;
Since Norman is out of town, Kraven kidnaps Norman's son, Harry, at a party;
Kraven the Hunter and a swinging party with Peter's pals get in the way..
Spider-Man appears, and he and Kraven fight, but when Norman shows up he can't remember who Kraven is,
so doesn't pay him the money; Kraven escapes while Spidey saves Norman.
..but DP is able to manipulate Weasel into helping him, and all he has to do is wreck his buddy's life and future well being to do so!
Amazing Spider-Man #47, script by Stan Lee and art by John Romita Sr & Deadpool #11, script by Joe Kelly and art by Pete Woods.
If we're going to do a celebration, then let's do it right.
Let's have a parade!
Amazing Spider-Man #207 Aug 1980
"Mesmero's Revenge!"
Peter Parker and Debra Whitman attend a Broadway show!
But instead of enjoying Mesmero's performance, the dating duo is turned off by his crude humor and rude treatment of guests!
And apparently the entertainment critics at the Daily Globe and Daily Bugle agree!
After Mesmero reads the terrible reviews of his show, the X-Men's old foe decides to get revenge on his naysayers!
And use the web-slinger as part of his plan!
Will the machinations of Mesmero succeed? Or can the wall-crawler cancel his act?
Script by Denny O'Neil http://www.comicsreporter.com/index...._dennis_oneil/. Pencils by Jim Mooney. Inks by Pablo Marcos.
Notes: Mesmero previously appeared in Uncanny X-Men 111 & 112. Denny O'Neil begins his 1-year run as the writer for the Amazing Spider-Man title.
Amazing Spider-Man #210 Nov 1980
"The Prophecy of Madame Web!" First appearance of Madame Web.
Masked gunmen barge into the board room of the Daily Globe and kidnap its publisher K.J. Clayton! Fortunately though, the web-slinger is nearby and gives chase!
The wall-crawler doesn't catch the criminals, but he does catch a clue! A mysterious clairvoyant called Madame Web is somehow connected to the victim!
After befriending the aging soothsayer and heeding her advice, Spider-Man rushes off to the rescue! Can the web-slinger find the missing publisher and get the Daily Globe back in circulation?
Script by Denny O'Neil. Art by John Romita Jr. (breakdowns) and Joe Sinnott (finishes).
Notes: Peter Parker ends his employment with the Daily Globe. Madame Web appears next in Amazing Spider-Man 216.
John Romita Jr. begins his three-and-a-half year run as the penciler of the Amazing Spider-Man title.
The Spider-Man strips that got Hannah Blumenreich a back-up in Amazing Spider-Man Volume 4 #25.
http://www.hannahblumenreich.com/spi...3pspppaspl9jf6
http://www.hannahblumenreich.com/spidey-zine/
Sincerely,
Thomas Mets
By John Buscema & Joe Sinnott
Let's celebrate some of Spider-Man's bad ass feats.
Threatens Kingpin in 1987:
https://static.comicvine.com/uploads...15-kingpin.png
Makes good on his promise in 2007:
https://static.comicvine.com/uploads...man542-016.jpg
Bad ass
Making sweet tender love to his lady whilst also dropping science knowledge.
https://static.comicvine.com/uploads...2%23057-07.jpg
Bad ass.
Injects himself with radiation:
https://static.comicvine.com/uploads...+v2+035-04.jpg
Just so he can deck this pompus ass mystic vampire douche who hits harder than the Hulk
https://static.comicvine.com/uploads...+v2+035-07.jpg
Bad ass
Reveals his origin and secret identity to a terminally ill kid to make him feel better:
https://static.comicvine.com/uploads...man+248-19.jpg
https://static.comicvine.com/uploads...man+248-20.jpg
https://static.comicvine.com/uploads...man+248-21.jpg
https://static.comicvine.com/uploads...man+248-22.jpg
Bad ass.
Uses the power of baller Ron Frenz art to break all logic own a Herald of Galactus hardcore:
https://static.comicvine.com/uploads...man+270-21.jpg
https://static.comicvine.com/uploads...man+270-22.jpg
Bad ass
Dresses up skimpy and acts goofy out of consideration for his wife.
https://static.comicvine.com/uploads...man+298-07.jpg
https://static.comicvine.com/uploads...man+298-08.jpg
Bad ass.
Goes all out to try and stop Juggernaut, including taking brutal attacks, and ultimately outsmarting him:
https://static.comicvine.com/uploads...man+230-12.jpg
https://static.comicvine.com/uploads...man+230-13.jpg
https://static.comicvine.com/uploads...man+230-14.jpg
https://static.comicvine.com/uploads...man+230-15.jpg
https://static.comicvine.com/uploads...man+230-16.jpg
https://static.comicvine.com/uploads...man+230-17.jpg
https://static.comicvine.com/uploads...man+230-18.jpg
Bad ass.
Gives his rent money to some kids who's home got wrecked in a superhero fight:
https://static.comicvine.com/uploads...+web+10-16.jpg
https://static.comicvine.com/uploads...+web+10-17.jpg
Bad ass.
Rips off Doc Ock’s arms!
https://static.comicvine.com/uploads...man+075+39.jpg
Bad ass.
Three posts were deleted.
Don't use profane language when discussing posts by any comics website, be it CBR or anyone else.
Sincerely,
Thomas Mets
John Romita Sr. took over Spider-Man in 1966 and made the book his own (it soon became Marvel's top seller).
He reflects back on his favorite issues, taking over for Steve Ditko and more.
Amazing Spider-Man #48 May 1967
The Wings of the Vulture!
Spider-Man searches the city for a trace of Kraven the Hunter;
while searching, he gets a bad cold and goes home;
Blackie Drago, a.k.a. the New Vulture, defeats Spider-Man and leaves him unconscious in a pile of snow.
Script by Stan Lee, art by John Romita
Amazing Spider-Man #49 Jun 1967
From the Depths of Defeat!
As Peter recovers from the injuries received in his fight with the new Vulture,
he hears radio coverage of a fight between the Vulture and Kraven
and goes out to capture them.
Script by Stan Lee, pencils by John Romita, inks by Mike Esposito (uncredited)