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The main focus of "If This Be My Destiny" is the pressure Spider-Man faces as he balances his many responsibilities. Besides his superhero work and investigating the Master Planner, he also has to manage his classwork in university and tending to his ailing Aunt May.
He uses a grease pencil to write letters on his face, including a large, red "R" on his forehead, for "retribution". He begins committing vandalism throughout the city, and while attacking local thugs, he catches the attention of Spider-Man. Typeface uses his giant letters as weapons and manages to defeat the webslinger. [2]
Shocker has also let Spider-Man go on a few occasions, the first being when he found Spider-Man incapacitated with a bout of vertigo on the outside of a tall building. He doesn't kill Spider-Man, thinking it an unworthy end, but doesn't help him either. [24] Shocker found another moment of victory over Spider-Man when he teamed up with the ...
The flashbacks use actual pages from the original comics, and are mixed in with new pages that illustrate how events were changed by the villainous demon Mephisto. In Amazing Spider-Man #639, the story is told as a mixture of flashbacks and current events. The flashbacks are from "Civil War" and Amazing Spider-Man #539-543. These flashbacks are ...
The Amazing Spider-Man #28 (September 1965) Prowler: Hobart "Hobie" Brown The Amazing Spider-Man #78 (November 1969) Gibbon: Martin Blank The Amazing Spider-Man #110 (July 1972) Punisher: Frank Castle The Amazing Spider-Man #129 (February 1974) Rocket Racer: Robert Farrell The Amazing Spider-Man #172 (September 1977) Black Cat: Felicia Hardy
Paolo Manuel Rivera is an American comic book artist. He is known for illustrating the Mythos series of one-shots and several issues of Spider-Man as well as his collaboration with writer Mark Waid, his father/inker Joe Rivera and colorist Javier Rodríguez on Daredevil.
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In 2004, Zeck's cover of Web of Spider-Man #32, which depicts Spider-Man escaping the grave into which he has been interred by Kraven, was recreated as a 12-inch-tall resin diorama statue by Dynamic Forces. [14] Zeck has worked for DC Comics as well. He contributed to Who's Who: The Definitive Directory of the DC Universe in the mid-1980s. [15]