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Venom: Lethal Protector is a six-issue comic book limited series featuring the Eddie Brock Venom, published by Marvel Comics from February 1993 to July 1993. It was written by David Michelinie and illustrated mostly by Mark Bagley, although Ron Lim and series inker Sam DeLaRosa pencilled the last three issues.
"Planet of the Symbiotes" is a five-issue comic book story arc written by David Michelinie and published by Marvel Comics in 1995. The arc spanned the five "Super Special #1" editions of the Spider-Man titles available at the time: The Amazing Spider-Man, Spider-Man, The Spectacular Spider-Man, Venom, and Web of Spider-Man.
The Jury is a fictional group of armored vigilantes appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The team was first introduced in Venom: Lethal Protector #2 (March 1993), and were created by David Michelinie and Mark Bagley .
Collected in Wolverine vs. the Marvel Universe, Venom Epic Collection: Lethal Protector, Spider-Man vs. Venom Omnibus and Wolverine Omnibus Vol. 4. Ravage 2099 "This Madness Unleashed" Stan Lee and Paul Ryan 118 Doom 2099 "Muses of Fire" John Francis Moore and Pat Broderick 119 Ghost Rider and Cloak and Dagger "And Let There Be Light"
In 1993, Venom would transition into having a role as an antihero vigilante in the Venom: Lethal Protector comic book series. [ 4 ] After Brock, numerous other hosts for Venom followed, including the villain Mac Gargan , who was the main incarnation of Venom from 2005 to 2009, and Flash Thompson , who became the superhero Agent Venom from 2011 ...
The film is primarily based on the Venom: Lethal Protector miniseries (1993) and the "Planet of the Symbiotes" story arc (1995), [80] borrowing the San Francisco setting of the former. [80] Spider-Man ultimately could not be included in the film because of Sony's deal loaning the character to Marvel Studios, [ 81 ] challenging the writers to ...
Other times, he said, groups of officers have simultaneously fired handguns and "less-lethal" weapons — a trend confirmed by a Times review of nearly 50 LAPD shootings between January 2020 and ...
The A.I. Army is a fictional organization appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.. Because of his revelation that he is now a simulated A.I., Tony Stark became Mark One and started to establish the A.I. Army. [1] The team also consists of Albert, Awesome Android, Egghead II, H.E.R.B.I.E., M-11, Machine Man, Machinesmith, Quasimodo, Super-Adaptoid, Walking Stiletto, the ...