Monday, January 16, 2017

5 Spiderman Plotlines We Hope Marvel Will Explore In The MCU

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Quipping and thwip!-ing his way into our hearts since the golden age of comics, Spider-man is easily one of the most-recognized characters in comics. Last year, fans rejoiced when a teenage version of the beloved hero stood toe-to-toe with the Avengers in Captain America: Civil War. With that revelation came the news that a new trilogy would be coming unto us, and verily, a trailer has appeared to slake our thirst for more. While the anticipation makes us talk like Thor, we wonder what plot-lines, villains, and other Spider-men Marvel's MCU might present us?  Also, which ones should they be most careful with?

5. Sinister Six

Andrew Garfield's version of Spider-man had a couple things going for it, namely a loyalty to the lore which saw one of the most poignant moments in Spider-lore on screen, as well as the prospect of a real, live, Big-Screen super team up of villains against Spider-man. While we never got to see that shiny Power Ranger-inspired version of the Six, the vulture-shaped shadow of possibility of a standalone Sinister Six film floats above the rebooted franchise.

The MCU has heavily leaned on the events of the first Avengers movie, and the Chitaurian invasion it depicts, as the impetus for a surge in technological super villains who have co-opted the alien technology for nefarious reasons. This M.O. seems to be true for The Vulture, shown to be the villain of Homecoming, played by true bird-man Michael Keaton, as well as The Shocker. Both of these villains are stringers in the Six when needed. If this continuity trend continues, we wonder what the MCU's Octavius could do with access to the alien tech, who is at nearly each point the progenitor of the Sinister Six (see also-- octopus Octavius!). While OG members Electro, Mysterio, and Sandman seem to defy the rules of the MCU, newer iterations featuring Kraven, Hobgoblin or Green Goblin, Lizard, or Scorpion or even the Rhino (teased in the film-that-has-yet-to-be) could all be easily explainable under the Alien Tech umbrella. Murderous lowlifes, assemble!


4. Mutation

File:Spiderman-doctor-connors-the-lizard.jpgWhile the rebooted Spider-man franchise will feature a highschool version of Peter Parker, the reality is that a 16 year old actor very quickly becomes a 20 year old actor, a la Harry Potter. Assuming Marvel is anticipating this inevitability, let us also assume we will watch Peter go to college in the second or third MCU movie. Where does he go? NYU, of course (thank you, Uncle Tony), where, naturally his study would be genetic mutations and naturally he would meet a character named Doc Conners, a one-armed genius seeking the cure for all ills through genetic means. We would enjoy the undertones of foreshadowing Peter himself presents in the area of undergoing mutations, and the empathy he has for Conners when, after a self-inflicted experiment goes wrong, he transforms into a giant man-lizard and...well, the rest is up to the imagination, but the storyline is right in front of us all. The relationship between Conners and Peter is a dynamic and formative one, easily one of the most accessible and human stories that can be scooped from Spider-lore.

Image result for man-spiderOf course, having successfully brought Conner's back from the salacious sewer-scouring life the Lizard leads, he eventually (as depicted by the 90's Spider Man: The Animated Series) finds his own mutation growing out of control, sprouting new legs and becoming more Man-Spider than Spider-Man. Who is the only person who understands what is happening to him, and has the expertise in controlling massive mutations? Our very own snake-in-the-grass, Doc Conners.

There, Marvel, I just wrote you two movies. Pay me.


3. Venom


No disappointment has been so pronounced, so hurtful, and so unforgivable as the appearance of a pseudo-Venom in Spider Man 3, pitting Hollywood niceboys Tobey Mcguire and Topher Grace against each other in a mildly-entertaining yet anticlimactic slap-fight. If Marvel were eager to reclaim any bit of Spider-man's enormous lore, they ought to want to do Venom right.

Originally the black suit found Spider-man while he had been whisked away to fight in a Secret War featuring all the heroes of the Marvel continuity. Sound Familiar?

2.  Carnage

Venom presents a great story because Eddie Brock is another redeemable character in Peter Parker's life that falls victim to something Parker himself feels responsible for, namely, the Venom symbiote.  This feeling of responsibility becomes compounded a hundredfold when the Venom symbiote reproduces (because Ooze! Of course) and the offspring first bonds with maniacal serial killer Cletus Kasady, creating Carnage. Carnage is murder incarnate and presents the biggest mortal threat to Spider-man imaginable, being a stop-or-die challenge at every turn. A great quirk of many Carnage plot-lines is papa Venom himself, who sees Carnage as an out-of-control disgrace to symbiotes across the multiverse. Can we please see a QUALITY Spider-man and Venom vs Carnage? Can we? Please?




1.  Spider Fam

Should Tom Holland's Spider-man find himself indisposed after the events of the upcoming Avengers: Infinity War, there are several non-Parker webslingers that have pulled on the tights in the past. Much loved is the younger, biracial Miles Morales, an alternate Spider-man (from a universe where Peter Parker died young) voiced by Donald Glover in the recent Ultimate Spider-Man animated series. Fans will enjoy a teasing appearance by Glover as The Predator, the prospect of a 13 year old poc hero joining the fray against some of the MCU's Chitaurian infused-villains is titillating. Also recently introduced to the comics lore is Silk, or asian-american Cindy Moon. The MCU has plenty of opportunities to show increased diversity in image and dynamic plot-lines which such characters, and while we won't hold our breath for a Spider-pig on the big screen anytime soon, we do expect the mantle of spider-hero to multiply in the future, making more complex and epic stories to be told on the big screen before the effects team even takes over.

Up for a challenge, Marvel? We have already seen pervasive, underground, long-secret conspiracies in the MCU, so a secret underground (hydra-led?) plot to create multiple Spider-men doesn't seem so far-out. Ben Reilly is a spider-clone who thinks he is the real Parker, eventually adopting the morality of the real deal and becoming the Scarlet Spider after realizing and rebelling against his own origin.  Recent Marvel comics have featured a series called Spider-Gwen, Gwen Stacy from a universe where she, not Peter Parker, gets the bite. However it forms, a Stark-tech infused spider-team could provide the primordial material for the best action and most engaging story in MCU history.



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