Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Spider-Man ====== ===== Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary ===== * **Core Identity:** **Spider-Man is Peter Parker, a brilliant but unassuming young man from Queens, New York who, after being bitten by a radioactive spider, gains incredible arachnid-like powers and dedicates his life to helping others, driven by the profound lesson that with great power, there must also come great responsibility.** * **Key Takeaways:** * **Role in the Universe:** Spider-Man is the quintessential street-level hero, Marvel's everyman. He serves as the "friendly neighborhood" protector who grounds the universe's cosmic-level conflicts, acting as a relatable human anchor whether he's stopping a mugging or fighting alongside the [[avengers]]. * **Primary Impact:** He revolutionized the superhero genre by being the first teenage lead hero who was not a sidekick. His constant struggles with money, relationships, and guilt—the so-called "Parker Luck"—made him one of the most identifiable and beloved characters in all of fiction, cementing the principle of "power and responsibility" as a cornerstone of modern heroism. * **Key Incarnations:** In the [[#earth-616_prime_comic_universe|Earth-616 comics]], he is a seasoned hero in his late 20s or early 30s with a vast, complex history involving marriage, clones, and cosmic events. In the [[#marvel_cinematic_universe_mcu|Marvel Cinematic Universe]], he is depicted as a much younger hero whose journey begins in high school, heavily mentored by [[iron_man|Tony Stark]] and defined by his integration into the larger Avengers narrative and access to advanced technology. ===== Part 2: Origin and Evolution ===== ==== Publication History and Creation ==== Spider-Man first swung into the pages of Marvel Comics in **//Amazing Fantasy// #15**, published in August 1962. His creation is credited to the legendary duo of writer-editor **Stan Lee** and artist **Steve Ditko**. In the midst of the Silver Age of comics, Lee was eager to create a character that broke the established superhero mold. He wanted a hero who was a teenager, but not a mere sidekick to an older, established character. This new hero would be beset by the same anxieties and problems as his readers: feelings of inadequacy, loneliness, and financial woes. Publisher Martin Goodman was initially hesitant to approve the character, believing that a hero based on a spider would repel audiences. However, he allowed Lee to feature the character in the final issue of the anthology series //Amazing Fantasy//. The response was immediate and overwhelmingly positive. Readers connected deeply with Peter Parker's dual life, and the issue became one of Marvel's all-time best sellers. This success led to the launch of Spider-Man's own ongoing series, **//The Amazing Spider-Man//**, in March 1963. Steve Ditko's contribution was equally vital. He designed the now-iconic red-and-blue costume, with its full face mask to conceal Peter's youth and intricate web pattern. Ditko's wiry, almost acrobatic art style defined the character's visual language, emphasizing his agility and unique powers. Together, Lee's relatable everyman pathos and Ditko's dynamic visual storytelling created a cultural phenomenon that has endured for over six decades. ==== In-Universe Origin Story ==== The core elements of Spider-Man's origin are a cornerstone of modern mythology, but the specifics differ significantly between the primary comic universe and his cinematic counterpart. === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === Peter Parker was an orphan raised in Forest Hills, Queens, by his loving Aunt May and Uncle Ben Parker. A shy, bookish teenager, Peter excelled in science but was a social outcast at Midtown High School, frequently bullied by classmates like Flash Thompson. His life changed forever during a public exhibition at the General Techtronics Corporation. A common house spider, caught in the path of a particle accelerator's demonstration, became irradiated and bit Peter on the hand before dying. Feeling dizzy, Peter stumbled into the street and was nearly hit by a car. He leaped to safety, discovering he had stuck to the side of a building, possessed of incredible strength and agility. Excited by his newfound abilities, Peter decided to test them for personal gain. He created a costume and a pair of wrist-mounted "web-shooters" that fired a specialized adhesive fluid of his own invention. As "The Amazing Spider-Man," he became a television sensation. One fateful evening after a TV appearance, a security guard asked him to stop a fleeing burglar. Arrogantly, Peter refused, claiming it wasn't his problem. Days later, he returned home to find that his beloved Uncle Ben had been murdered by a burglar who had broken into their home. Consumed by rage, Spider-Man tracked the killer to an abandoned warehouse, only to discover in horror that it was the same man he had allowed to escape earlier. It was in this devastating moment that Peter Parker learned the hardest lesson of his life, the one that would define his future: **"With great power there must also come--great responsibility!"** From that day forward, he dedicated his life to using his powers to protect the innocent as the crime-fighting hero Spider-Man. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === The MCU takes a different approach, introducing a Peter Parker who is already an established, if inexperienced, hero. When he debuts in **//Captain America: Civil War//** (2016), the 15-year-old Peter Parker (portrayed by Tom Holland) has been operating as Spider-Man for approximately six months. His origin story—the spider bite and the death of Uncle Ben—is alluded to but never shown on screen. Instead, his "origin" as a major hero is tied directly to [[iron_man|Tony Stark]]. Stark, having discovered footage of the amateur hero, recruits Peter to his faction in the Avengers' internal conflict. He provides Peter with a high-tech suit, taking the place of a traditional mentor figure. This relationship is central to the MCU's Spider-Man trilogy. In **//Spider-Man: Homecoming//**, Peter is desperate to prove himself worthy of being an Avenger, struggling to balance his high school life with his desire for big-league heroics. The defining lesson of "power and responsibility" arrives much later in his MCU journey. In **//Spider-Man: No Way Home//**, after Peter's identity is publicly revealed, a magical attempt to fix it goes awry, bringing villains from other universes into his own. Peter's compassionate decision to try and "cure" the villains rather than send them back to their deaths leads directly to a confrontation with the Green Goblin that results in the tragic death of his Aunt May. It is with her dying words—"With great power, there must also come great responsibility"—that the MCU's Peter Parker fully internalizes the creed that has defined his comic book counterpart from the beginning. This loss forces him to mature, and he ultimately makes the sacrifice of having the entire world, including his closest friends, forget who Peter Parker is, allowing him to fully commit to his role as Spider-Man, now truly alone. The primary adaptation is the shift from a self-made hero born from personal tragedy to a hero-in-training shaped by the larger-than-life figures of the MCU. His reliance on Stark technology and his initial motivations are Stark-centric, a stark contrast to the fiercely independent and guilt-driven origins of the comic version. ===== Part 3: Abilities, Equipment & Personality ===== === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === Peter Parker's powers and intellect make him one of the most formidable and versatile heroes in the Marvel Universe. * **Superhuman Physiology:** The radioactive spider's bite rewrote Peter's DNA, granting him a host of arachnid-like abilities. * **Wall-Crawling:** He can psionically control the inter-atomic attraction between his body and other objects, allowing him to adhere to virtually any surface. * **Superhuman Strength:** Spider-Man possesses immense strength, allowing him to lift approximately 20-25 tons under optimal conditions. He often pulls his punches to avoid killing his opponents. * **Superhuman Speed & Agility:** His agility, balance, and bodily coordination are all enhanced to levels far beyond the natural physical limits of the finest human athlete. He can move and react at speeds that appear as a blur to the human eye. * **Superhuman Reflexes:** His reflexes are approximately 40 times greater than those of an ordinary human. Combined with his Spider-Sense, this makes him incredibly difficult to hit. * **Enhanced Durability & Healing:** His body is more resistant to impact and injury than a normal human's, and he possesses a moderate healing factor that allows him to recover from injuries like broken bones or severe burns in a matter of days. * **Spider-Sense:** Perhaps his most crucial power, the Spider-Sense is a precognitive "sixth sense" that alerts him to potential danger. It manifests as a buzzing sensation in his skull, providing omnidirectional warnings of threats from a simple punch to a hidden sniper. It is not specific, but it allows him to react instinctively to danger before it happens. * **Intellect & Skills:** * **Genius-Level Intellect:** Peter Parker is a bona fide genius with an IQ well over 250. He is a brilliant scientist with expertise in chemistry, physics, and mechanical engineering. * **Inventor:** His intellect allows him to invent and maintain his own advanced equipment, most notably his web-shooters. * **Master Tactician:** Years of fighting a vast array of enemies has made him an excellent combat strategist, able to assess threats and formulate plans on the fly. * **"Way of the Spider":** After temporarily losing his Spider-Sense, he was trained by [[shang-chi]] to develop a unique martial art that combines his powers with formal combat training, making him a more effective hand-to-hand combatant. * **Equipment:** * **Web-Shooters:** Peter's signature invention. Twin devices worn on his wrists that shoot a specialized "web-fluid" of his own design. The fluid is a shear-thinning polymer that is liquid in the pressurized cartridge but solidifies into an incredibly strong, flexible, and adhesive fiber upon contact with air. The fluid dissolves on its own after about one hour. * **Utility Belt:** A belt worn under his costume that holds spare web-fluid cartridges, spider-tracers (small tracking devices), and a Spider-Signal light. * **Various Costumes:** Over the years, he has developed numerous specialized suits, including the black Symbiote costume (later becoming [[venom]]), an armored "Spider-Armor," a stealth suit, and the advanced Iron Spider Armor gifted to him by Tony Stark during the first //Civil War//. * **Personality:** Peter Parker's personality is defined by his indomitable will and sharp wit. He famously uses a constant stream of jokes and quips during fights to unnerve his opponents and mask his own fear. Beneath the jokes lies a man burdened by immense guilt and a profound sense of responsibility. He is fundamentally selfless, always willing to sacrifice his own happiness and safety for the well-being of others. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === The MCU version's powers are largely consistent with the comics, but his equipment and experience are vastly different. * **Powers:** * All core abilities from the comics are present: enhanced strength (strong enough to hold a ferry together), speed, agility, and wall-crawling. * **Spider-Sense ("Peter Tingle"):** His precognitive danger sense is present but is initially underdeveloped. He doesn't fully trust it until the events of **//Spider-Man: Far From Home//**, where he learns to rely on it to defeat Mysterio's illusions. * **Intellect:** * This Peter is also a scientific prodigy. He is shown to have created his own web-fluid formula and the prototype web-shooters himself. He is a member of his school's Academic Decathlon team and is brilliant enough to quickly understand and even modify Stark's highly advanced technology. * **Equipment:** * The most significant departure from the comics is Peter's heavy reliance on technology provided by Tony Stark. * **Homemade Suit:** His first suit was a simple hoodie-and-goggles affair, demonstrating his resourcefulness. * **Stark Suit (//Civil War// & //Homecoming//):** His first "official" suit, featuring an onboard A.I. named "Karen," a heads-up display, reconnaissance drone, multiple web-shooter combinations (e.g., taser webs, web grenades), and a parachute. * **Iron Spider Armor (//Infinity War//, //Endgame//, & //No Way Home//):** Built with the same nanotechnology as Stark's own armor, this suit provides enhanced durability, can be deployed instantly over his clothes, and features four mechanical spider-arms ("waldoes") that can be used for combat and traversal. * **Stealth Suit & Upgraded Suit (//Far From Home//):** A black tactical suit provided by Nick Fury, and a red-and-black suit Peter designs himself using Stark's mobile fabrication technology. * **Integrated Suit (//No Way Home//):** A hybrid of his Upgraded Suit and the Iron Spider's nanotechnology, allowing him to deploy the gold highlights and spider-arms as needed. * **Classic Suit (end of //No Way Home//):** After the world forgets him, Peter is shown to have sewn his own, more comic-accurate red-and-blue suit, signifying his return to a more self-sufficient, "friendly neighborhood" status. * **Comparative Analysis:** The MCU Peter starts as far more naive and star-struck than his comic counterpart. His character arc is a coming-of-age story focused on him stepping out of Tony Stark's shadow and learning to be his own hero. While the comic version was defined by independence born from tragedy, the MCU version is defined by his relationships with mentors and his struggle to find his place among gods and super-soldiers. ===== Part 4: Key Relationships & Network ===== ==== Core Allies ==== * **Mary Jane Watson:** In the comics, "MJ" is the love of Peter's life. Initially portrayed as a carefree party girl, she evolved into a deeply complex character who became Peter's most profound emotional support. She discovered his secret identity on her own and stood by him through countless tragedies. Their marriage was a cornerstone of the comics for two decades before it was erased from reality in the controversial //One More Day// storyline. * **Gwen Stacy:** Peter's first true love. A brilliant and kind science student, Gwen represented a life of normalcy that Peter craved. Her shocking death at the hands of the [[green_goblin]] is arguably the single most defining failure of his life and is a seminal moment in comic book history, marking a shift towards darker, more mature storytelling. * **Aunt May Parker:** The moral and emotional center of Peter's universe. After Ben's death, May raised Peter as her own son. She is a source of unwavering love, compassion, and strength. For many years, Peter went to great lengths to protect her from the dangers of his double life, though she eventually discovered his secret and became one of his staunchest supporters. * **[[daredevil|Daredevil (Matt Murdock)]]:** One of Peter's closest allies in the superhero community. As two street-level heroes protecting New York City, they share a deep mutual respect. Matt Murdock has often served as Peter's lawyer, and they are among the few who have trusted each other with their secret identities. ==== Arch-Enemies ==== * **[[green_goblin|Green Goblin (Norman Osborn)]]:** Spider-Man's undisputed arch-nemesis. Osborn is the brilliant but corrupt CEO of Oscorp who gained superhuman strength, madness, and a monstrous alter ego from an experimental formula. The rivalry is intensely personal: Osborn was the father of Peter's best friend, Harry, and is responsible for the death of Gwen Stacy. He knows Peter's secret identity and has used that knowledge to attack his loved ones time and again, making him Spider-Man's most hated and dangerous foe. * **[[doctor_octopus|Doctor Octopus (Otto Octavius)]]:** The dark reflection of Peter Parker. Dr. Octavius was a brilliant and respected nuclear physicist permanently fused to a set of four powerful, telepathically-controlled mechanical arms in a lab accident. The accident warped his mind, turning him into a criminal mastermind. He is one of the few villains who can match Peter's intellect and has come closer than almost anyone to defeating him, most notably by successfully swapping minds with Peter and becoming the "Superior Spider-Man" for a time. * **[[venom|Venom]]:** A unique and terrifying foe born from two beings' shared hatred of Spider-Man. The first component is the Klyntar, an alien symbiote that Peter briefly wore as a new black costume before rejecting it for its corrupting influence. The second is Eddie Brock, a disgraced journalist who blamed Spider-Man for his ruin. Bonded by their mutual hatred, they became Venom, a being with all of Spider-Man's powers but greater strength, and immunity to his Spider-Sense. Over the years, Venom has evolved from a pure villain into a brutal anti-hero, the "Lethal Protector." ==== Affiliations ==== * **[[avengers|The Avengers]]:** For much of his early career, Spider-Man was a lone hero. However, after the events of //Avengers Disassembled//, [[captain_america]] and [[iron_man]] invited him to join the //New Avengers//. He has since served as a core member of Earth's Mightiest Heroes on multiple occasions, often providing a grounded, human perspective to the team's cosmic adventures. * **[[fantastic_four|The Fantastic Four]]:** Spider-Man has a long and storied history with Marvel's First Family, having attempted to join them for a salary in his very first issue. He developed a close, brotherly friendship/rivalry with Johnny Storm, the Human Torch. After Johnny's apparent death, Spider-Man fulfilled his friend's final wish by taking his place on the team, which was rebranded as the Future Foundation. * **The Daily Bugle:** Less of an affiliation and more of a long-running complication. For years, Peter's main source of income was selling freelance photos of Spider-Man to the Daily Bugle, a newspaper run by the irascible J. Jonah Jameson, who used his platform to relentlessly slander the web-slinger as a public menace. ===== Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines ===== === The Night Gwen Stacy Died (//The Amazing Spider-Man// #121-122, 1973) === A watershed moment in comics history, this story arc cemented the Green Goblin as Spider-Man's ultimate foe and marked the definitive end of the Silver Age. Norman Osborn, having regained his memories of being the Goblin and of Peter's identity, kidnaps Gwen Stacy. He takes her to the top of the George Washington Bridge (though often depicted as the Brooklyn Bridge). In the ensuing battle, the Goblin hurls Gwen from the bridge. Spider-Man shoots a web-line, catching her by the leg. The comic's narration explicitly notes the "snap" as her neck breaks from the whiplash of the sudden stop. Filled with a murderous rage, Spider-Man nearly kills the Goblin, only stopping himself at the last moment. Osborn then attempts to impale him with his remote-controlled glider, but Peter's Spider-Sense allows him to dodge, and the Goblin is killed by his own weapon. The story was shocking for its time, as it was virtually unheard of for a major love interest of a superhero to be killed so brutally and permanently. It added a layer of profound tragedy and failure to Peter's life that has haunted him ever since. === Kraven's Last Hunt (1987) === This dark, six-part storyline is a psychological deep-dive into the minds of both Spider-Man and his long-time foe, Kraven the Hunter. Believing he has become a relic, Sergei Kravinoff decides to embark on one final hunt to prove he is superior to his greatest prey. He successfully shoots Spider-Man with a powerful tranquilizer, buries him alive, and dons a replica of his costume. For two weeks, Kraven patrols New York as a brutal, efficient Spider-Man, easily capturing the villain Vermin, whom Spider-Man had needed help from Captain America to defeat. Meanwhile, Peter, fighting the effects of the drug, must claw his way out of his own grave. After finally confronting Kraven, the hunter declares himself victorious, having proven his point. His life's goal achieved, Kraven releases Vermin for Peter to deal with and dies by suicide. The story is renowned for its mature themes, exploring identity, fear, and the symbolic nature of Spider-Man. === Civil War (2006-2007) === The //Civil War// event placed Peter Parker at the absolute center of the Marvel Universe's ideological conflict. Mentored by Tony Stark and believing in the Superhuman Registration Act, Peter makes the monumental decision to publicly unmask himself at a press conference, revealing to the world that he is Peter Parker. This act of loyalty to Stark's side makes him a hero to some and a traitor to others. However, as he witnesses the increasingly draconian methods of the pro-registration side, including a brutal prison in the Negative Zone, Peter's conscience forces him to switch sides and join Captain America's underground resistance. This makes him a fugitive, hunted by his former friends. The decision to unmask has catastrophic long-term consequences, leading directly to an assassin's bullet meant for him striking Aunt May, which in turn sets up the universe-altering //One More Day// storyline. === Spider-Verse (2014) === A massive, sprawling event that celebrated the entire Spider-Man mythos. The premise involves the Inheritors, a family of powerful, dimension-hopping beings who feed on the life force of "Spider-Totems"—individuals with spider-powers—across the multiverse. Our Peter Parker of Earth-616 discovers he is just one of many and is forced into a leadership role, uniting an army of alternate-reality Spider-Men and Spider-Women to fight for their survival. The event brought together dozens of fan-favorite variants, including Miles Morales, Spider-Gwen (who made her debut here), Spider-Man 2099, and even the "Superior" Spider-Man (Doctor Octopus in Peter's body, displaced in time). //Spider-Verse// was a critical and commercial success that greatly expanded the lore of Spider-Man's powers, connecting them to a multiversal "Web of Life and Destiny." ===== Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions ===== * **Miles Morales (Earth-1610 / Earth-616):** The most prominent alternate Spider-Man. Miles was introduced in the Ultimate Marvel universe (Earth-1610) as a young Afro-Latino teenager who gains powers from a genetically-engineered spider created by Norman Osborn. After his universe's Peter Parker dies heroically, Miles is inspired to take up the mantle. His powers are slightly different, including a bio-electric "Venom Strike" and the ability to turn invisible. Following the 2015 //Secret Wars// event, Miles and his supporting cast were integrated into the main Earth-616 continuity, where he now operates as Spider-Man alongside Peter Parker. * **Spider-Gwen / Ghost-Spider (Gwen Stacy, Earth-65):** In this reality, it was Gwen Stacy who was bitten by the radioactive spider, becoming her world's Spider-Woman. In a tragic twist, her friend Peter Parker, desperate to be special like her, transformed himself into the Lizard and died in the ensuing conflict. A drummer in a rock band called "The Mary Janes," this stylish and popular version of the character became an instant fan-favorite upon her debut in //Edge of Spider-Verse//. * **Spider-Man 2099 (Miguel O'Hara, Earth-928):** Hailing from a dystopian cyberpunk future dominated by the Alchemax corporation, Miguel O'Hara is a brilliant but arrogant geneticist. An act of corporate sabotage splices his DNA with that of a spider, rewriting his genetic code. Unlike Peter, Miguel's powers are more "vampiric" in nature: he has talons on his fingers and toes for wall-crawling, fangs that can inject a paralyzing venom, and organic webbing spun from his forearms. He notably lacks a Spider-Sense. * **Superior Spider-Man (Doctor Octopus, Earth-616):** In a shocking storyline, a dying Doctor Octopus successfully transferred his consciousness into Peter Parker's body, leaving Peter's mind to seemingly perish in Ock's failing form. For over a year, Octavius lived Peter's life, determined to be a "Superior" Spider-Man. He was more brutal, arrogant, and efficient, using his genius to create an army of spider-bots to patrol the city and upgrading Peter's tech. Ultimately, when faced with a threat he couldn't defeat, he realized that true superiority required the selflessness he lacked and willingly erased his own consciousness to allow Peter's to return and save the day. ===== See Also ===== * [[green_goblin]] * [[doctor_octopus]] * [[venom]] * [[mary_jane_watson]] * [[avengers]] * [[miles_morales]] * [[civil_war]] ===== Notes and Trivia ===== ((Stan Lee insisted on the hyphen in "Spider-Man" to make the name stand out visually and avoid confusion with DC Comics' //Superman//.)) ((The infamous //Clone Saga// of the 1990s was a multi-year storyline that revealed the Spider-Man readers had been following for years was supposedly a clone, with the "real" Peter being a man named Ben Reilly. This was eventually reversed due to immense fan backlash.)) ((In 1971, Stan Lee wrote a three-issue story arc in //The Amazing Spider-Man// #96-98 that dealt with the dangers of drug abuse. The Comics Code Authority, the industry's self-censorship board, refused to approve the issues. Lee and Marvel published them anyway, a landmark move that led to a loosening of the Code's restrictions.)) ((The phrase "With great power comes great responsibility" was originally presented in a narrative caption in Spider-Man's first appearance in //Amazing Fantasy// #15. It was only in later retellings and adaptations that the line was attributed directly to Uncle Ben as his final words of wisdom to Peter.)) ((The most controversial storyline in the character's history is 2007's //One More Day//. To save a dying Aunt May, Peter and Mary Jane make a deal with the demon Mephisto, who erases their marriage and the world's knowledge of Peter's secret identity in exchange for their love. The fallout, known as //Brand New Day//, reset the character to a younger, single status quo.)) ((Spider-Man has been portrayed in live-action films by three major actors: Tobey Maguire in Sam Raimi's trilogy (2002-2007), Andrew Garfield in the //Amazing Spider-Man// duology (2012-2014), and Tom Holland in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (2016-present). All three reprised their roles in //Spider-Man: No Way Home// (2021).)) ((In the late 1970s, a Japanese tokusatsu television series, //Supaidāman//, was produced by Toei Company. This version of the hero, Takuya Yamashiro, was a motorcycle racer who could summon a giant robot named Leopardon to fight his enemies.))