The Amazing Spider-Man 2, Gwen is killed by Harry Osborn's Green Goblin in a clock tower, while in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), the thematic weight of this moment is transferred to the murder of Aunt May by the Green Goblin in Spider-Man: No Way Home.
“The Night Gwen Stacy Died” was published across two issues: The Amazing Spider-Man #121 (June 1973) and The Amazing Spider-Man #122 (July 1973). This story was a product of a new creative team taking the reins from Spider-Man's co-creator, Stan Lee. The arc was conceived and written by Gerry Conway, with pencils by Gil Kane and inks primarily by John Romita Sr., who also provided significant art corrections and character expressions that defined the story's emotional weight.
The decision to kill Gwen Stacy was radical and controversial. At the time, major supporting characters in a hero's life, especially the primary love interest, were considered untouchable. Gerry Conway felt that Gwen Stacy had become a stagnant character. In his view, she was too perfect, and her relationship with Peter had reached a narrative dead end. He believed that killing her would not only introduce a shocking and realistic element of tragedy into Peter's life but also free him to develop a more dynamic and complex relationship with Mary Jane Watson.
John Romita Sr. initially suggested killing Aunt May, but Conway argued that her death, while sad, wouldn't have the same dramatic impact on Peter as a young man losing his first love. Stan Lee, who was no longer writing the book but was still Marvel's publisher, was famously against the decision. He was traveling abroad when the issues were developed and was shocked upon his return to discover they had killed off one of his favorite characters. Despite his initial disapproval, the overwhelming reader response—a mixture of outrage and captivated engagement—solidified the story's place in history. This arc is widely considered the definitive event that closed the door on the optimistic, often-whimsical Silver Age of Comics and violently kicked open the door to the grittier, more psychologically complex Bronze Age.
This section details the specific narrative events within the Marvel Universe that culminated in the confrontation on the bridge. The build-up is distinct between the original comics and its cinematic reinterpretations.
The seeds of Gwen's death were sown in the long and bitter history between Spider-Man and his arch-nemesis, the Green Goblin. The key contributing factors were:
The Amazing Spider-Man #39, a fact he would exploit to devastating effect.The Marvel Cinematic Universe, starring Tom Holland as Peter Parker, has not directly adapted “The Night Gwen Stacy Died.” Instead, it uses the story's thematic core—a devastating personal loss at the hands of the Green Goblin that teaches Peter the ultimate lesson of responsibility—and applies it to a different character.
“This is a conscious decision to not tread the same ground… We wanted to tell a story about a Peter Parker who is still a kid, who is still figuring it out, and the last thing he needs is to be burdened by the death of his girlfriend.”\
– Kevin Feige, President of Marvel Studios
* The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (2014): This film presents the most direct and faithful visual adaptation of the event. Here, it is Harry Osborn (Dane DeHaan), not Norman, who becomes the Green Goblin. Driven by a desperate need for a cure for a genetic disease and a perceived betrayal by Spider-Man, Harry targets Peter's girlfriend, Gwen Stacy (Emma Stone). The confrontation takes place inside a massive clock tower. As in the comic, the Goblin throws Gwen from a great height. Spider-Man dives after her, firing a web-line that catches her just before she hits the ground. However, the film explicitly and tragically confirms the long-debated comic theory: the whiplash from the sudden stop audibly snaps Gwen's neck, killing her instantly. This event completely shatters Andrew Garfield's Peter Parker, causing him to temporarily abandon his identity as Spider-Man.
The story unfolds with the pacing of a Greek tragedy, building from a quiet, domestic scene to a universe-altering climax. The events of The Amazing Spider-Man #121 and #122 are a masterclass in suspense and emotional devastation.
SNAP! Spider-Man, in horror, realizes she is dead. The Goblin cruelly mocks him: “A sentimental fool! She was dead before your webbing reached her! A fall from that height would kill anyone!”The fallout from these events was immediate and profound, reshaping the world of Spider-Man.
This event is defined by the four central characters whose lives were irrevocably changed or ended by the events on the bridge.
Gwen was Peter Parker's college sweetheart and his first true love. She was brilliant, kind, and beautiful—often portrayed as the “perfect” girlfriend. Unlike Mary Jane, Gwen loved Peter Parker completely and was initially frightened by his alter-ego, Spider-Man. Her death was so shocking precisely because she represented the normal, happy life Peter desperately craved but could never have. She was the ultimate innocent, a casualty of a war she had no part in, and her death symbolized the death of Peter's own youthful dreams.
For Peter, Gwen's death was his ultimate failure. It taught him the brutal lesson that even with all his power, he could not save everyone. The event forced him to mature overnight, stripping away the last vestiges of his teenage optimism. The psychological torment of not knowing if his own web-line killed her introduced a deep-seated trauma that would inform his actions for years to come. He became more cautious, more prone to brooding, and terrified of letting anyone else get that close to him again, a fear that would complicate his budding relationship with Mary Jane.
This story cemented the Green Goblin as Spider-Man's one true arch-nemesis. Other villains might challenge him physically or intellectually, but only the Goblin attacked him on such a profoundly personal and psychological level. By killing Gwen, Norman Osborn proved he was not just a costumed criminal but a truly evil and sadistic monster. His own death at the end of the arc was a fittingly ironic end, but his legacy of pain would haunt Peter forever, especially after Norman's eventual resurrection years later. This act remains the single most evil deed ever committed by a Spider-Man villain.
Mary Jane's role in the aftermath is one of the most important moments in her character's history. Her decision to stay with a grieving, angry Peter demonstrated a depth of character and empathy previously unseen. It was the moment she proved she was more than just a fun-loving distraction. She was a pillar of strength, someone who understood loss and was willing to share Peter's pain. This act of compassion laid the foundation for their eventual epic romance, proving that she was the one person who could love and accept every part of him, both the man and the mask.
“The Night Gwen Stacy Died” is more than just a story; it is a cultural touchstone in comic book history, with a legacy that continues to be debated and analyzed.
Historians point to this story as the symbolic death of the Silver Age of Comics (circa 1956-1973). The Silver Age was defined by its scientific-based origins, generally optimistic tone, and the unwritten rule that the status quo would always be restored. Heroes won, villains were jailed, and loved ones were perpetually safe. By killing Gwen Stacy—a major, beloved character—and having the hero potentially responsible, Marvel signaled a seismic shift. The Bronze Age that followed was characterized by darker themes, social commentary, moral ambiguity, and the idea that actions had permanent, often tragic, consequences.
Years later, the story became a central example in a critical feminist discussion about a trope dubbed “Women in Refrigerators” by writer Gail Simone. The term refers to the storytelling practice of harming, depowering, or killing a female character solely to provide motivation or character development for a male protagonist. While the story is a masterpiece of dramatic writing, it is also a textbook example of “fridging.” Gwen Stacy has no agency in her own death; she is a pawn used by one man (the Goblin) to hurt another (Peter), and her entire purpose in the narrative is to die tragically to make the male hero's story more compelling. This critical lens adds a complex and important layer to the story's legacy.
The ambiguity of what killed Gwen is the story's most enduring and debated element.
Writer Gerry Conway has confirmed his intent was for the whiplash to be the cause of death, solidifying Peter's tragic guilt. Stan Lee, on the other hand, always maintained that the fall killed her, wanting to absolve Peter of that particular burden. The official Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe lists the cause of death as the fall, but the narrative and visual evidence has left the debate raging among fans for decades.
The power of this event is so immense that it has been revisited, adapted, and subverted across Marvel's multiverse.
In the modern-focused Ultimate Universe, Gwen Stacy's death is radically different. Instead of being a victim of the Green Goblin, she is brutally killed by a rampaging Carnage, a creature spawned from a combination of Peter Parker's and Curt Connors' DNA. She dies in Peter's arms on her own front lawn. This version, while tragic, lacks the deep personal animosity and moral ambiguity of the original.
This classic issue explored an alternate timeline where Spider-Man saves Gwen by diving after her and cushioning her from the water's impact. In this reality, he reveals his identity to her, and they get married. However, his life is not made easier. J. Jonah Jameson obtains proof of his identity and publishes it, forcing Peter to become a fugitive. The story ends with Peter having to flee, leaving Gwen behind for her own safety, suggesting that even in a world where she lives, their love is doomed by his life as Spider-Man.
Perhaps the most popular modern re-imagining is the reality of Earth-65. Here, Gwen Stacy is the one bitten by the radioactive spider, becoming her world's Spider-Woman (now known as Ghost-Spider). In a tragic reversal of the original story, her friend Peter Parker, desperate to be special like her, transforms himself into the Lizard. He dies during their ensuing battle, making Gwen indirectly responsible for her best friend's death. This brilliantly subverts the original narrative, placing the burden of guilt and responsibility on Gwen and launching her into a heroic career defined by that loss.
As detailed earlier, this film is the most direct adaptation. It meticulously recreates the sense of dread and the ultimate tragedy, but with Harry Osborn as the Goblin and a clock tower as the setting. The film removes all ambiguity, making it clear that the whiplash from Peter's web-line is what kills Gwen. The visual of the web-line forming a hand reaching for her just too late is a heartbreaking cinematic touch. Andrew Garfield's portrayal of Peter's grief is raw and devastating, a highlight of the film.
Clone Saga in the 1990s, which brought a clone of Gwen Stacy back into Peter's life.