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Peter Parker, the comic book superhero Spider-Man, was created by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko in 1962 for Marvel Comics. [1] The story arc "If This Be My Destiny" was written by Lee and drawn by Ditko, using the company's Marvel Method where Ditko drew the panels and Lee then added dialogue on top of them. [2] "
After defeating Harkness, Maximoff takes the book to study it while in hiding, unaware of the book's evils, and becomes corrupted. After breaking out of the corruption, she destroys Wundagore and every copy of the Darkhold across the multiverse. The Book of Vishanti serves as the antithesis to the Darkhold.
The principal of Midtown High School who hired Peter Parker to be the science teacher. He was later killed by Chameleon of Earth-9500. [20] Kelly Cox Spider-Man and Wolverine #1 (Aug. 2003) Unknown Newly hired assistant principal. Lynn Nelson Spider-Man Unlimited vol. 3 #11 (Nov. 2005) Employed Head of the science department and Peter Parker's ...
Spider-Man story arcs could be found in titles such as The Amazing Spider-Man, The Spectacular Spider-Man, Web of Spider-Man, Spider-Man Unlimited, and Peter Parker: Spider-Man. During the 21st century, the more popular Spider-Man story arcs would mostly be found in The Amazing Spider-Man , with some arcs taking as long as a year to complete.
Spider-Man Family #1 (2005 one-shot) features a sixteen-page Spider-Girl story, in which May Parker (Peter Parker's daughter) watches a DVD showing a small portion of a fictional Spider-Ham animated series, discovering that it was created by one of Spider-Man's enemies, Jack O'Lantern. Here, Spider-Ham appears to mostly be a parody of Batman.
The scene featured Rhino looking in a phone book for individuals named "Peter Parker" in the tri-state area. He storms into a "Peter James Parker" ( Kevin Michael Richardson ), a blind, elderly African-American bassoon player, accusing him of being the Peter Parker he is looking for.
The Greta Gerwig-directed hit became available on Max on Friday, December 15, and fans were pleased to discover an option to view the movie with an American Sign Language (ASL) interpreter.
The second issue received a 6.0 out of 10 from IGN, [9] and a 3.5 out of 5 from Comic Book Resources. [10] The third issue received a 6.5 rating out of 10 from IGN, [11] and a 3 out of 5 from Comic Book Resources. [12] The fourth issue received a 6.5 rating out of 10 from IGN, [13] and a 2.5 out of 5 from Comic Book Resources. [14]