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The critical reviews for the game were positive. By July 2006, the PlayStation 2 version of Spider-Man had sold 2.1 million copies and earned $74 million in the United States. Next Generation ranked it as the 15th highest-selling game launched for the PlayStation 2, Xbox or GameCube between January 2000 and July 2006 in that country.
Insomniac Spider-Man [h] Yuri Lowenthal C: Peter Parker Spectacular Spider-Man [i] Josh Keaton C: Ben Parker [b] Cliff Robertson A: Peter Parker Spider-Man [c] Andrew Garfield A: Peter Parker Spider-Man [b] Tobey Maguire A: Peter Parker Spider-Man (Earth-67) [g] Jorma Taccone U C: Jorma Taccone C: George Stacy [c] Denis Leary A: Mary Jane ...
However, a small adjustment was made to a 2011 deal formed between the two studios (where Marvel gained full control of Spider-Man's merchandising rights, in exchange for making a one-time payment of $175 million to Sony and paying up to $35 million for each future Spider-Man film, and forgoing receiving their previous 5% of any Spider-Man film ...
In Spider-Man 2, he portrays an usher to Mary Jane's play who refuses to let Peter enter after arriving late. In Spider-Man 3, Campbell appears as a French maître d' who messes up Peter's proposal to Mary Jane. [193] In the ultimately unmade Spider-Man 4, Campbell's character would have been revealed as Quentin Beck / Mysterio. [194]
Peter Benjamin Parker, also known by his alter ego Spider-Man, is a superhero portrayed by Tobey Maguire, based on the Marvel Comics character of the same name.He is the protagonist of Sam Raimi's Spider-Man film in 2002, and its two sequels with the tie-in video games.
Bakshi provided the first origin story for Spider-Man presented on television, "The Origin of Spider-Man," which actually used chunks of Stan Lee's dialogue from The Spectacular Spider-Man #1 - specifically, "In the Beginning," published in July 1968, a few months before the episode aired.
Edward Charles Allan "Eddie" Brock is a character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.The character was created by David Michelinie and Todd McFarlane, making a cameo appearance in Web of Spider-Man #18 (September 1986), [5] before making his first full appearance in The Amazing Spider-Man #300 (May 1988) [2] as the most well-known host of the Venom symbiote.
The idea of giving Spider-Man a new costume was conceived by Randy Schueler, a Marvel Comics reader from Norridge, Illinois. [4] In 1982, Schueler was sent a letter by editor-in-chief Jim Shooter, who acknowledged interest in his idea, with Shooter coming up with the idea of a black-and-white costume. [5] "