Spider verse comic book dan slott download free
And now, because of a prophecy that at some point centuries in the future the spiders will kill the Twilight rip-off vampires, suddenly the Twilight rip-off vampires are going to feed on ALL the spiders. Which doesn't make sense on oh so many levels, but that's a Slott story for ya. Then Slott, rubbing his hands with glee on Twitter, kills off most fan favorite iterations of alternate universe Spider-Men. Did you grow up with the various cartoon versions?
Dan makes sure they get splash pages detailing their broken, bloody bodies. Did you enjoy Spider-Man ? He gets killed in front of his love. Killing is for kicks! It's all so And mean-spirited. The deaths are meaningless. They have no impact on the story. They have no impact on Peter Parker. They do not move the story forward.
They just pile up and pile up and pile up because I guess it gave Dan a giggle. Don't get me wrong, I have nothing against death as a story device. But it has to mean something. It has to have an effect. It has to move the story forward. Senseless slaughter, on the other hand, is senseless. It's desensitizing. You get more emotional resonance from a first person shooter game than you do here. Dan Slott continues to demonstrate he can't write his way out of a paper bag. The story: Spiders gather.
Faux vampires attack and kill some fan favorite characters. Spiders flee and regroup. The only forward motion comes from coincidence and deus ex machina, the lazy writer's favorite crutches. Which is why they show up over and over again in Slott's writing.
This could have been SUCH an awesome story. But the execution is ham-fisted and lackadaisical, featuring wooden action figures who stand around and do nothing but get eaten until, oops, Slott is running out of time and suddenly they come up with a plan and fight back.
Other characters call him the chosen one and make overt Harry Potter allusions, but he stands around with his thumb up his tights. He never even remembers how he conquered Morlun with radiation in the Straczynski story until Silk just oh so conveniently happens to stumble on a nuked world. Slott is shitt. Jan 20, Logan rated it did not like it. Mar 07, Melody rated it it was amazing Shelves: comic-books , own. Read all these in single issue. It was just so insane. Really loved. Like all the different spider-men from all the different worlds.
Jun 08, Relstuart rated it liked it Shelves: super-hero. There is a lot to like here but this collection is not without flaws. Story-wise, this is an interesting effort by Dan Slott. I was surprised by how dark the story starts out. A great hero needs great challenges to overcome and Slott creates a very challenging family of villains, the Inheritor family, working their way thru the multi-verse killing each world's version of Spider-Man.
It is pretty cool to see some of the different versions of Spider-Man and the main story starts out featuring the There is a lot to like here but this collection is not without flaws. It is pretty cool to see some of the different versions of Spider-Man and the main story starts out featuring the Superior Spider-Man, making this a natural follow on read for those who enjoyed that story arc. For those who didn't enjoy Superior Spider-Man the focus does not stay on him and Earth Peter Parker does take center stage.
We see several other Spider men and women take center stage at different times and find out why certain ones are more important to the Inheritor family either to kill or capture.
If you are a big comic book Spider-Man fan this is probably something you want to check out. Now, for some of the flaws. This book was originally solicited with much less material. After solicitation, Marvel doubled the amount of material. I noticed people saying that the issue organization in the book was poor.
I avoiding exact explanation so I could read it myself with an open mind. The remainder of the book is additional material that takes place before the climax and explains how some of the Spiders got to where they needed to be for the climax. I agree the issues should have been re-arranged better so you aren't reading these after the climax of the story. Sloppy work by the editors though it's possible this is a result of adding material at the last second as the book was going to the printer.
As a typically non-Spider-Man comic reader, I thought this was worth the read. Jun 16, Baba rated it liked it Shelves: spiderverse. Great event, especially for the fan boys and girls. This is another innovative piece of work that has helped Spider-verse supplant the Avengers-verse as my favourite Marvel reality.
Jul 15, Shadowdenizen rated it really liked it Shelves: comics-marvel. This is really more of a 3. But I'm feeling generous about the Spider-Man Mythos today. A very beefy story with so many different Spider-Man heroes from other universes all team up together with plenty of that Spidey action and attitude that never stops. Feb 26, Emily Matview rated it really liked it Shelves: comics.
The characters feed of Spider-powered characters and can travel dimensions at will, so everyone from Spider-Woman to Miles Morales to Spider-Ham is in danger of being, well, eaten or something. Basically, Spider-man and decades of Spider-Man derivatives are being killed off. Yeah, the premise is kind of dumb, but Slott has a winning combo of unparalleled franchise knowledge and love for the characters, so the whole event just works as a celebration of 60 years of Spider-Man lore.
New characters like Spider-Gwen are just too cool and both the classic and current animated series Spider-Men are flat out hilarious. Having an encyclopedic knowledge of the character across multiple mediums is a must. But the best part of the story, what really made it worth reading in my eyes, is seeing Peter Parker stand up and be the leader of 50 some odd Spider-Men.
View all 4 comments. It includes the main Spider-Verse story and all of the tie-in stories. However, it organizes the stories in a way that doesn't make much sense. It presents a Superior Spider-man series that provides some background for the main story. After that, it presents the event story, and then all of the rest of the tie-in stories after that. The problem with that is that once you get to the tie-in stories, you already know how the main plot resolves, so all of the tension is taken out of the tie-in stories.
It would have been better if those stories were dropped into the main story at the time they happened. It didn't help that the writing and art for the tie-in stories were generally of lower quality than the main story.
May 08, David rated it really liked it Shelves: comic-books. Ah, well. After a huge wait, months of anticaption, big love of Dan Slott's Spidy stories and we It's pretty decent, if a bit muddle with all the all-too-similar-new-characters-from-alt-universes to keep up with, but that ending? I won't give it away but it is rather disappointing after all the build up. I usually zoom right through Dan Slott books. This one I had to really pull myself back to by brute force.
Perhaps the fall-out to the regular Spider-man univer Ah, well. Perhaps the fall-out to the regular Spider-man universe will be worth all the excess of Spider-verse. The spin-off Spider-Woman series included here looks like it'll be good good book. Loved the concept of this series. Spider-Man is such an iconic character, and that simple origin story has been tweaked so many times throughout the characters many "What If" appearances.
It's a ton of fun seeing all of those different iterations of Peter Parker interact with each other. It really is sad every time one of them is killed. Overall, one of my favorite events Marvel has done in recent years. May 16, Judah Radd rated it liked it Shelves: marvel-comics. This is a huge volume. It contains the main arc, as well as most if not all tie-ins. Usually, the best you can hope for is a strong main arc, and some decent tie-in issues.
Decent is the name of the game here. Everything was Nothing sucked ass. Nothing rocked my socks either, though. The main arc was a somewhat plain story.
The big, wild twist was that every Spider was involved. That was kind of cool It This is a huge volume. It gets old. I dislike the totemization of Spider-Man. This story does not agree. I accept it for this story. The short little adventure in the oldschool cartoon universe was a highlight.
I wish we spent more time there. The art ranged, but none of it was bad. Jan 13, Ross Alon rated it really liked it. A fun event Not an easy thing to find which uses older story line, encompass spider-man of many eras and gives you almost every spider-men, beast or child you ever known, and some you haven't. I read it after not picking up spider-comics for many year and was not disappointed. The only down size it that it's very long, a little messy and as in every other event, doesn't have any impact of the marvel universe what so ever.
Not a "must" read, nut a nice one for spider lovers. Jul 07, Shannon Appelcline rated it liked it Shelves: comics , comics-marvel. Hey what!? Two totally unrelated issues about a Ms. Marvel Team-Up! Here's the problem with super team-ups meant to swell the media profile of a newbie: most writers only know how to write that as a big fight. And that's what we get here. Mind you, Slott pushes all the right buttons, even making it relevant to current events in the Marvel universe through an Inhuman pod connection A pity, as there's other great material in these issues Ms.
A pity, as there's other great material in these issues about Peter's position in the world. Some Diver Dude is murdering multiversal Spiders. More generally, I feel like this was just a total waste of these two bonus issues of Superior. It's great to see Otto being the one who gets the band together, but otherwise these issues are a dull waste. Spider-Man 5. Nice to see that Miguel is mixed up in all this too. Mind you, this is more of the S-V murder-fest, but at least it offers some perspective.
The Shorts. Here we get piles of Spiders and sometimes Morlun murdering spiders. Slott's stories are the best of the pack, because he does a great job of really personifying multiversal Spider-Man and creating emotional beats as they die. However, it's hard to get behind a murderfest, no matter how well executed, and the stories of all the spiders get a little mind-numbing. The Team-Up stories were also interesting because we finally started to get some continuity amidst the shorts.
And the Edge of Spider-Verse mini-series should have been in here because it's intertwined with many of these stories. The Spider-Verse I think that Slott is never at his best with these big mega-crossovers, because they sacrifice the character and the small moments that he really excels at. Still, this is a fun story for all its varied spider-men.
Of the crossover series, The Scarlet Spiders is the best, because it's got a nice beginning and end. Spider-Man is OK, if a bit too focused on its own continuity at times, but it still has some nice conclusions that wrap back into the main series. Shockingly, Spider-Woman was the most troubled of the crossovers, in large part because it kept losing its focus.
Spider-Woman jumped from mission to mission without rhyme or reason or closure and the other Spider-Women kept entering and exiting the picture; it was a mess, and overall I suspect these four incoherent issues did damage to the new Spider-Woman comic As a whole, Spider-Verse was too much of a good thing.
It had a good central idea and it spun wildly out of control with too many setup issues and too many crossovers, and too much chaos amidst it all. It was memorable, I suppose, but as a massive action event it just barely earns 3. Can Ms. Marvel get Spidey out of a jam? Peer over the edge of the Spider-Verse, at five different realities Spider-Man Noir returns, as the Peter Parker of the s finds himself up against Mysterio, and knee-deep in the biggest Spider-Man event of all!
What is the secret of Dr. Aaron Aikman, the Spider-Man? What if Gwen Stacy were bitten by the radioactive spider, not Peter Parker? Find out on Earth!
There, Gwen is the spectacularly misunderstood Spider-Woman - and she's wanted for Peter's death! And that's bad news, especially since Gwen's dad is a cop! When a Lizard-like menace runs amok, it brings. The porcine protector from a world of animal adventurers swings into action in these mighty "Marvel Tails" - including his dynamic debut, taking on the Masked Marauder and the Gopher Gang. The Spider-Verse is full of possibilities for Miles Morales! Marvel in a high-flying, high-stepping in Kamala's case , adventure!
Join the team of Spider-People known as the Web Warriors for an interdimensional adventure as they hop to various realities that lost their Spider-Men and Women during Spider-Verse! Jessica Drew has been an agent of both S. But nothing could prepare her for the multidimensional insanity that is Spider-Verse! Maybe Miles should take his dad's advice and focus on saving himself.
As Miles tries to get his school life back on track, he can't shake the vivid nightmares that continue to haunt him. Nor can he avoid the relentless buzz of his spidey-sense every day in history class, amidst his teacher's lectures on the historical 'benefits' of slavery and the importance of the modern-day prison system. But after his scholarship is threatened, Miles uncovers a chilling plot, one that puts his friends, his neighborhood, and himself at risk. It's time for Miles to suit up.
Welcome to the Miles Files! Swing deep into the Spider-Verse and discover what it's like to save the day, Spidey-style. In this full-color journal written by Miles Morales, meet the whole Spider Family and get to know their strengths, weaknesses, and secrets. Learn what it's like to step into some enormous Spider-Man shoes, and hear all about the legacy of Peter Parker, the original wall-crawler. This handbook based on the critically-acclaimed film Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse provides details on favorite characters, events, and places from the movie that will make it a must-have for any Spidey fan.
When the evil Inheritors begin exterminating spider-characters throughout the multiverse, every single Spider-Man ever is needed to save the day!
An interdimensional spider-army gathers to fight Morlun and his deadly family, but as the Prophecy comes to fruition, none of them are safe! What will this brutal war for survival mean for Peter Parker Starring hundreds of Spider-Men, from the beloved to the obscure! There's a new Spider-Man on the block! Meet Miles Morales, a teenage Spider-Man in a parallel universe, with even more incredible super powers than his predecessor Peter Parker!
Discover everything you ever wanted to know about his astonishing costume, loyal allies and frightening enemies. Find out about his amazing origin story and his fiercest clashes as you learn how he juggles high school life with his status as a Super Hero. Marvel Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse: The Official Guide will cover all of the movie's memorable characters, plus key locations, themes and fun facts from the movie in DK's lively and informative non-fiction style.
Now some of the incredible works of art inspired by the film are collected in this gorgeous poster book, featuring breathtaking depictions of Peter Parker, Gwen Stacy, Peni Parker, Spider-Ham, Spider-Man Noir and of course, the star of the show, Spider-Man himself, Miles Morales! At turns amazing, spectacular and sensational, these posters are sure to look as great on your walls as Spidey would himself - and will be just as big a talking point!
This sticker book contains more than colorful, exciting stickers and facts about the heroes, villains, allies and adventures of Marvel's latest Spider-Man from the new movie Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse. DK's book is packed with bright stickers and lively and informative captions - a must-have title for any Spider-Man fan or Super Hero in the making. Marvel Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse The Official Guide will cover all of the movie's memorable characters, plus key locations, themes and fun facts from the movie in DK's lively and informative non-fiction style.
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