Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
In issue #97 (Nov. 1998) of the second series titled Peter Parker: Spider-Man, [79] Parker learns his Norman Osborn kidnapped Aunt May and her apparent death in The Amazing Spider-Man #400 (April 1995) had been a hoax. [80] [81] Shortly afterward, in The Amazing Spider-Man (vol. 2) #13 (#454, Jan. 2000), Mary Jane is killed in an airplane ...
In 2018, while headed on a field trip, Parker sees the Q-Ship above New York City and asks Leeds to cover for him as he leaves the school bus. As Spider-Man, he helps Stark fight Cull Obsidian and follows Ebony Maw—who had captured Stephen Strange–to his spaceship.
The Daily Bugle (at one time The DB!) [2] is a fictional New York City tabloid newspaper appearing as a plot element in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.The Daily Bugle is a regular fixture in the Marvel Universe, most prominently in Spider-Man comic titles and their derivative media.
You are free: to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work; to remix – to adapt the work; Under the following conditions: attribution – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made.
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]
The scene has been adapted in other works featuring Spider-Man, including the 2017 film Spider-Man: Homecoming. The story follows Peter Parker, the superhero Spider-Man, as he investigates an anonymous criminal mastermind known as the Master Planner while tending to his Aunt May as she suffers from a life-threatening illness.
Spider-Man (Miles Gonzalo Morales [1] / m ə ˈ r æ l ɛ s /) is a superhero and the second predominant Spider-Man to appear in American comic books published by Marvel Comics, created in 2011 by writer Brian Michael Bendis and artist Sara Pichelli, along with input by Marvel's then-editor-in-chief Axel Alonso.
Spider-Man remained at the top of the box office in its second weekend, dropping 38% and grossing another $71.4 million [155] while averaging $19,756 per theater. At the time, this was the highest-grossing second weekend of any film. [155] Spider-Man reached the $200 million mark on its ninth day of release, also a record at the time. [155]