Best of Marvel: Week of September 25th, 2019

Runner Up: Christos N. Gage, Mike Hawthorne, Wade von Grawbadger, Jordie Bellaire and Clayton Cowles

Norman Osborn is the bane of Spiders everywhere.

After the explosive end to the last issue, Otto has found himself at the end of his rope with Osborn going after everyone that Otto has begun to care about since his turn toward the side of good. Friends, colleagues and even young children that he’s helped after their parents died. At every single turn Osborn has outsmarted him and made him look like a simpleton by comparison.

When Otto goes off to rescue James Martin, the kid he saved back in issue #4, Osborn is already there on James’ heels. Otto does his best to help James escape, but Orborn and his six arms mollywhop Otto and punch him in the ribs 65 times. Absolutely defeated, Otto begs Norman to let the boy go and Norman does agree… on the condition that Otto murders three innocent civilians in full view of broadcasting cameras. Not criminals, not terminally ill people, but three innocents that very well still have a future ahead of them. Osborn then flies off, holding little James by the throat.

Mike Hawthorn continues to really sell this story with his amazing art and Jordie Bellaire’s even more amazing coloring. It’s very easy to tell that Otto is tired, he’s frantic. Even seeing one eye partially under his mask is more then enough to convey his worry alongside his body language. He doesn’t make the coordinated moves that he used to when he had everything planned out, but fights like a cornered animal.

Bellaire captures this best NYC giving most of the pages in this issue a red tint offset by Grawbadger’s dark inks to give things an even more sinister feel. It also shows just how dire the situation is, how intense Otto’s emotions are after suffering such traumatic losses in a single instant. I don’t know if this is meant to foreshadow the rest of the issue, but it absolutely paints a picture of who exactly may be the blame for all of Otto’s hardship, even adjacently.

After passing out from his fight with Osborn, Otto wakes up to the company of Anna-Maria in his lab. He has a fit of anger over his losses and is brought to tears over losing James. Anna Maria asks him if he’s really considering killing innocents for Osborn and Otto says that he won’t, knowing Osborn would betray him anyway. Seeing no other options, Otto summons the second Bane of all Spiders: Mephisto.

Otto asks Mephisto if he’ll change him back into his previous, devious and smarter self for just one day in Hope’s that a ruthless Otto Octavius can outsmart one Norman Osborn. Mephisto taunts him and says that that’s not a deal he’s willing to take, but will change him back into Otto Octavius completely, free of any ailments he supposedly had. Since then beginning of this series, Otto has said that all of his villainy and evil was caused by his addled mind and Mephisto is giving him a chance to prove just that.

I won’t spoil what his ultimate answer is, but I can guarantee you that everything has been leading up to this moment. We’ve seen Otto become an actual symbol for good. A hero that walks the same path as his former enemy Spider-Man. He’s found love, actual friends and intellectual equals that he’s not bent on destroying because of his ego. He’s grown and is still growing to become the man that he’s always believed he could be.

Superior Spider-Man isn’t just a name that Otto chose to show how much better he is than Spider-Man (even though that’s the exact thought process), but a symbol of what a genius he is and how his methods differ from that of the regular Spider-Man. He’s more calculated, more willing to take down crime and not let emotions get in the way…until they ultimately do.

Gage, Hawthorne, Grawbadger, Bellaire and Cowles have done their best job with an amazing character and an even better story of redemption for one of Spider-Man’s greatest foes. With this issue likely being the penultimate, who know just where this story will go. High recommend!

Best of Marvel: Week of August 21st, 2019

Runner Up: The Superior Spider-Man #10 (Legacy #43) – Christos Gage, Mike Hawthorne, Wade von Grawbadger, Jordie Bellaire and Clayton Cowles

Things were looking up for Otto Octavius. He had found a nice woman and was slowly falling in love, he had mended fences with Anna-Maria in a way. After the events of War of the Realms, he was a respected and loved hero in San Francisco and then it all came crashing down.

After taking the lovely Emma on a swing through the city, The Spider-Man of San Francisco goes on to visit the child he saved all the way back in issue #4 and help his new adoptive parents get custody of him. These small moments of warmness are a far cry from the maniacal nature that we were once accustomed to from Octavius. Bellaire colors most these scenes in a nice, warm orange. Giving us this feeling of joy and some happiness for Otto… at least until he’s discussing having a child with Emma and she alerts him to the news report that asks if the SF Spider-Man is really Otto Octavius. 

Things start to spiral even further as Spider-Man is interviewed and dances around the question and the Brothers Grimm acknowledge that he hired them for some temp work if they went straight, alluding to the first arc of the book. Otto is furious, Anna-Maria gives him snark and Emma tells him that he needs to face things head on, getting in front of it all. He can prove that he’s changed. Unfortunately, Anna-Maria brings up the kid as an example of someone who he’s helped and he swings to the apartment to find the foster parents angry and the child sad that he lied. Normally Otto wouldn’t think twice about lying to someone or omitting information, but looking into that child’s eyes as he began to cry, Otto reveals that he lied because he wanted the kid to like him and they hug. 

Soon after, Otto is called back to Horizon University where he is known as Professor Tolliver. Max Modell is waiting for him as he’s received an email telling him that Tolliver is actually Otto Octavius. Surprisingly to Otto, Max already knew. Max Modell may act like a goof, but he’s not considered one of the brightest minds in Marvel for no reason. He ran a DNA test to confirm soon after his emergence and gave “Tolliver” a chance to prove himself a changed man and given that he has, he’s been trying to help clear his name. 

With Max’s security footage and his own enhanced suit, Otto is able to determine that it was actually Spiders-Man that sent all of the incriminating data to everyone. Once Spiders-Man realizes he’s caught, the thousands of spiders that make up his form reconstitute until Ock defeats him and compresses the former Peter Parker’s consciousness into one Spider-Body. After some pushing, Spiders-Man reveals that it was Norman Osborn’s idea. This Norman Osborn, however, is from another dimension where he’s the Spider Totem and his main enemy was a Green Goblin Peter Parker, if I remember right. 

Spiders-Man also tells Otto that Norman is in his own dimension, safe from harm. During the events of Spider-Geddon, the Web of Fate was destroyed, making dimensional travel much harder for Spider people. Octavius hits a wall until Anna-Maria comes out that she’s saved a bit of Terrax’s energy from the first arc in the Living Brain robot, in case Otto ever reverted. This makes him sink even lower, but ultimately he understands and tries to use the power to make a portal…only Norman planned for this and over loads the machine, causing it to destroy the building almost killing everyone inside if not for Otto. 

Otto manages to save Max and Anna-Maria, but is swiftly defeated and left for dead by Norman who was there the entire time. When Otto asks why Norman is doing this, he responds in the most Norman Osborn way possible by saying, “You insulted me.”

Just when Otto Octavius was finding his place in the world as a hero, forces mostly belong his control have made their move in an effort to derail him. Otto finally seems happy, even helping out a young child that he absolutely has no obligation to and starting a budding new relationship with an older woman that’s just as smart as he. Things were going well, he even got a key to the city for crying out loud!

But, as fate befalls all Spiders, his terrible actions in the past are coming back to haunt him. Who’s to say that Mephisto doesn’t have a little bit of a hand in this as well? We can only hope things turn out well for Otto in the end, but not before Norman makes things much, much worse.

Best of Marvel: Week of July 17th, 2019

Runner Up: The Superior Spider-Man #9 (Legacy #42) – Christos Gage, Mike Hawthorne, Wade von Grawbadger, Jordie Bellaire and Clayton Cowles

The “Superior” Spider-Man is actually starting to live up to the ideal.

After the events of the War of the Realms, the Spider-Man of San Francisco is awarded the key to the city for his efforts in making sure that there were zero casualties as Frost Giants stomped their way across SanFran. He accepts the gesture, but “crime” calls him away, only it’s not a crime, he simply thinks he has better things to do with his time than deal with the trivialities of ceremonies. He heads back to his lab and converses with Anna Maria about her making him go to the ceremony and summarily dismisses his colleague Emma after she apologizes for freaking out on him on their first date. 

Otto seems to be in a bigger huff than usual and takes his frustrations out on a minor villain by the name of Turner D. Century. Century’s quickly defeated after a savage beating by Otto and the surprise appearance by Spider-Man, Peter Parker. Peter shows up at the request of Anna Maria and being one of the men who knows Otto best, he simply asks what’s wrong. Otto has been irritable, moody and angry since he saved the city and he obviously has no one to talk to.

He immediately spills to Peter that while he was able to keep San Francisco safe, thousands of people still died in the US, more abroad. He removes his mask and Hawthorne paints the face of a man that’s tortured by guilt and doubt. Otto feels that he’s the greatest mind in the world and that he should have thought of something. He doesn’t want to hear Pete say that he can’t save everyone, but it’s eating him up inside that he can’t. 

By far, this is some of the best character work and advancement that we’ve seen from Otto in a while. He tried to become a hero, tried to be a good guy while he was inhabiting Peter’s body, but now that he’s doing it on his own and seeing the fruits and consequences of his labors, he sees how hard it is. He’s becoming a good guy and I’m here for it.

After Peter tells him that he’s doing the hero thing right, Emma shows up on the roof that they’ve swung up to and Otto breaks down in tears in front of her. He tries to posture that he’s a loner and asks if he looks like someone that needs anything from anyone before being held by her. He cries in her arms and they finally go on a second date with a surprising enemy spying on them.

I love it when heroes become good guys, no matter how brief it might be, watching Otto rise before his inevitable fall is interesting. I love the fact that he’s sort of mended fences with Anna Maria, I love that he’s found a near intellectual equal in Emma. He has a life and is using his smarts as a teacher and a hero in San Francisco. His ego is still huge, but he’s finally starting to see his faults, becoming Superior than Doctor Octopus.

Mike Hawthorne’s art is stellar. He has a talent for faces and body language. Otto expresses frustration, annoyance and grief; not only in his face, but with the slumping of his shoulders, the shaking in his hands and the tension in his fists. He even somehow finds a way to differentiate between Peter and Otto’s bodies given that Otto’s is cloned.

This Superior Spider-Man has far more emotion in this one issue than Otto’s had in the many years since the original run. It’s a joy to see the once horrible villain embrace his own good emotions for the benefit of others. This is a definite high recommend!