Adrian Toomes first soared into the Marvel Universe in The Amazing Spider-Man #2, published in May 1963. Created by the legendary duo of writer Stan Lee and artist Steve Ditko, the Vulture was part of the initial wave of villains designed to test the mettle of the newly created Spider-Man. Lee and Ditko's goal was to create a rogues' gallery that was as compelling and varied as their new hero. Where Spider-Man was young, agile, and quippy, the Vulture was old, calculating, and grim. This contrast was intentional. Toomes wasn't a world-conquering megalomaniac or a monstrous science experiment gone wrong; he was a brilliant man wronged by society and the business world, a theme that would resonate throughout Spider-Man's history. Steve Ditko's design for the Vulture is iconic: a lean, bald, elderly man with a menacing scowl, clad in a green flight suit with a feathered ruff and massive, bird-like wings. The design perfectly captured the character's avian theme and his predatory nature, creating a silhouette that remains one of the most recognizable in comics. The Vulture's debut cemented the idea that Spider-Man's foes would often be grounded, relatable figures twisted by tragedy or personal failing, a stark departure from the more cosmic threats faced by teams like the Fantastic Four.
The creation of the Vulture is a tale of betrayal, both personal and professional. However, the specifics of this tale differ significantly between the two primary Marvel continuities.
In the primary Marvel comics continuity, Adrian Toomes was born and raised in Staten Island, New York. From a young age, he displayed a genius-level intellect, particularly in the fields of electrical engineering and invention. After a tragic car accident claimed the lives of his parents, he was raised by his older brother, Marcus. Adrian's brilliance led him to co-found a small electronics firm, Bestman and Toomes Electronics, with his business partner, Gregory Bestman. Toomes was the inventive mind of the operation, handling all research and development, while Bestman managed the business and finances. Adrian's crowning achievement was the invention of an electromagnetic flight harness. This device, worn like a backpack, generated an anti-gravity field that allowed the user to fly silently and with incredible maneuverability. The harness also had an unexpected, and beneficial, side effect: the electromagnetic field it generated enhanced the wearer's strength and vitality, making Toomes significantly stronger and more resilient than a man of his advanced age should be. Brimming with excitement, Toomes rushed to Bestman's office to share the news of his breakthrough. He burst in only to find that Bestman was not there. On his partner's desk, however, Toomes discovered financial records that exposed a horrifying truth: Bestman had been systematically embezzling funds from the company for years, effectively bankrupting their joint venture. When Toomes confronted him, Bestman callously admitted to the theft, confident that he controlled the company's legal standing. In the ensuing physical altercation, Toomes, empowered by the residual effects of his harness, easily overpowered Bestman. However, Bestman used his authority to have Toomes forcibly removed from the premises and fired, seizing full control of the company and all of Toomes's patents. This profound betrayal shattered Adrian Toomes. With his life's work stolen and his reputation ruined, he retreated into seclusion. For months, he secretly worked on refining his flight harness, adding a pair of large, razor-sharp wings and adopting the predatory moniker of The Vulture. He resolved to use his invention not for the betterment of mankind, but to take whatever he felt he was owed from a world that had wronged him. His first acts as the Vulture were a series of daring aerial robberies that baffled the police, leading to his first and inevitable confrontation with the fledgling hero, Spider-Man.
The origin of Adrian Toomes in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (designated Earth-199999) is a masterful exercise in modernization, grounding the character in the world-altering events of the film series. This version of Toomes, portrayed by actor Michael Keaton, is not a spurned inventor but the owner of the Toomes Salvage Company. Following the devastating Chitauri invasion depicted in `The Avengers (2012)`, Toomes and his crew secure a lucrative city contract to clean up the wreckage strewn across New York. It's the score of a lifetime, and Toomes invests heavily, hiring more men and equipment. However, their operation is abruptly shut down by the newly formed U.S. Department of Damage Control (D.O.D.C.), a joint venture spearheaded by Tony Stark. Toomes is unceremoniously dismissed, left with massive debts and a crew of unemployed workers. Feeling cheated by the very “heroes” who were supposed to protect the little guy, Toomes makes a fateful decision. He and his crew, including Phineas Mason (“The Tinkerer”), Herman Schultz, and Jackson Brice, decide to keep a truckload of Chitauri technology they had already salvaged. This act of defiance becomes the foundation of a new, highly illegal enterprise. Over the next eight years, Toomes's crew operates in the shadows, using their technical expertise to reverse-engineer the alien technology into powerful, untraceable weapons, which they sell on the black market. To lead their heists and protect his operation, Toomes constructs a massive, mechanized flight suit from Chitauri technology, including a powerful antigravity device and large, turbine-powered wings. He becomes the Vulture, a high-tech scavenger and arms dealer. This origin reframes his villainy not as a response to a single act of personal betrayal, but as a rebellion against a socioeconomic system he feels is rigged in favor of the rich and powerful. His primary motivation is not greed, but a fierce desire to provide for his family and his loyal crew, creating a far more complex and sympathetic antagonist for Peter Parker.
The comic book Adrian Toomes is defined by his bitterness and immense pride. He is a cantankerous and often cruel old man who believes his genius has never been properly recognized by the world. This sense of entitlement fuels his criminal career. He is arrogant, often looking down on his opponents, particularly the youthful Spider-Man, whom he dismisses as an “insolent whelp.” This arrogance is frequently his undoing. A recurring theme in his character is his deep-seated fear and hatred of his own old age. This manifests as an obsession with youth and vitality, leading him at various points to create devices to steal life force or temporarily de-age himself. He is patient, calculating, and utterly ruthless when crossed.
The MCU's Adrian Toomes is a stark contrast to his comic counterpart. He is a pragmatic and grounded leader with a fiercely protective instinct for his family and his work crew. While he is a criminal, he operates by a strict, personal code of honor. He is not driven by ego or a hatred of youth, but by a cynical belief that the world is unfair and that he must do whatever it takes to secure his family's future. He is a shrewd businessman and a calculating strategist who prefers to avoid attention and violence when possible. However, when threatened, he is shown to be utterly ruthless, as seen when he disintegrates Jackson Brice for his recklessness. The most defining aspect of his personality is his duality as a loving father and a dangerous crime boss, a conflict that comes to a head in his iconic confrontation with Peter Parker.
In his very first appearance, the Vulture establishes himself as a new kind of threat. Using his silent flight harness, he executes a series of impossible robberies, snatching jewels and cash from high-rise buildings and armored cars, seemingly vanishing into thin air. His crimes earn him splashy headlines, which infuriates J. Jonah Jameson and fascinates a young Peter Parker, who is desperate for cash. Peter, as Spider-Man, attempts to get photos of the Vulture in action. Their first confrontation goes poorly for the hero; Vulture easily overpowers him and drops him in a water tower. Realizing he can't beat Toomes with brute force, Peter uses his scientific intellect. He deduces the Vulture's flight is magnetic in nature and develops a handheld anti-magnetic inverter. In their rematch, Spider-Man activates the device, disrupting the Vulture's harness and sending him plummeting, allowing for his capture. This story was crucial in establishing that Spider-Man would often win his battles through brains, not just brawn.
Frustrated by their individual defeats at the hands of Spider-Man, Doctor Octopus conceives a plan to overwhelm the hero by uniting his greatest foes. He breaks Adrian Toomes out of prison, along with Electro, Kraven the Hunter, Mysterio, and Sandman, forming the first Sinister Six. Their plan was not to attack as a group, but to wear Spider-Man down through a gauntlet of one-on-one battles. The Vulture's turn came at his old laboratory, where he engaged Spider-Man in a fierce aerial dogfight inside the building. Despite his skill, Spider-Man's superior agility and webbing eventually won the day, tying the Vulture's wings and defeating him. Though the team ultimately failed, this storyline cemented the Vulture's status as an A-list villain and a credible team player.
This dark and psychologically rich storyline is arguably the definitive Vulture tale. An aging Toomes learns that the prolonged use of his flight harness has given him terminal cancer. Resigned to his fate, he begins visiting May Parker's boarding house to befriend her new love interest, a kind wheelchair-bound man named Nathan Lubensky. Toomes develops a genuine affection for Nathan, seeing in him a fellow old man treated as fragile and irrelevant by the world. His plans for a peaceful end are shattered when Spider-Man attacks him during a visit. During the battle, Nathan reveals he knew Toomes was the Vulture all along but said nothing, hoping Adrian could find peace. Feeling profoundly betrayed once again, Toomes's rage boils over. As he attacks Spider-Man, he grabs Nathan and takes to the sky. The shock is too much for Nathan's weak heart, and he dies of a heart attack in the Vulture's grasp. Toomes, feeling a twisted sense of rejuvenation from the event, drops Nathan's body and flies away, leaving a devastated Spider-Man. It's a chilling story that delves deep into Toomes's obsession with age, vitality, and betrayal.
For a global audience, the 2017 film `Spider-Man: Homecoming` is the character's most defining appearance. The film masterfully adapts his core concept into a compelling, modern narrative. The entire plot revolves around Peter Parker's attempts to uncover and stop Toomes's alien arms-dealing operation. Key moments include the chaotic battle on the Staten Island Ferry, which forces Tony Stark to intervene, and the shocking reveal that the formidable Vulture is the father of Liz, Peter's high school crush. The subsequent car ride is a masterclass in tension, as Toomes slowly pieces together Peter's secret identity and delivers his chilling ultimatum. The final battle sees Spider-Man face the Vulture in a desperate fight aboard a D.O.D.C. cargo plane carrying Stark-tech weaponry. When the Vulture's damaged suit threatens to explode, Spider-Man, despite everything Toomes has done, chooses to save his life. Toomes is arrested, but in a mid-credits scene, he encounters Mac Gargan (Scorpion) in prison and, when asked about Spider-Man's identity, he chooses to keep the secret, ending his arc on a note of complex, grudging honor.