March 22, 2008 Spectacular Spider-Man
This week’s Spectacular Spider-Man series is a dish of super
villainy best served cold.
Being a business major and an economics minor, I was eager
to see how this episode would vilify one of the fundamentals of life. I was
happily shocked (don’t groan at that, pun haters) to see that it weaves the
next sub-plot, the arrival of super villains will be a distraction for
organized crime to continue to expand. The (80’s Texan) Shocker, Norman
Osborne, The Big Man, The Sandman, The Rhino (The comics Alex O'Hirn version,
holy moley!!) and Doc Ock are all set up to be part of this ‘economic plan.’
This type of storyline is one of the better ones borrowed from the Modern Age
of comic books. Déjà vu or not, I think Norman Osborne was even tapped to by
these organizations to create super villains in the comics. One side of
intrigue aside, I fall into the camp that the Big Man is the Big Man. I think the
show shouldn’t fall in love with villain-sharing and have the Kingpin. Let’s
leave that skeleton buried with the 90’s. Stand-alone hero shows should be
stand-alone shows (well, until season five). I don’t think it’s a coincidence
that the Big Man and the Daily Bugle were on the same episode (Ask your 40 year
old unmarried uncle).
Speaking of the Daily Bugle, we have the debut of our
favorite boss (anti-villain) J Jonah Jameson, mustache and all. Sure it’s hard
to top the characterization that Sam Raimi gave us with J K Simmons, but this
JJJ was spot on. Daily Bugle fans (a sad 2% of readers) got their fan wink this
episode; JJJ, Jospeh “Robbie” Robertson and his son, Rand, Betty Brand, Ned
Lee, and even Frederick Foswell (I say nothing, give Google a workout). I
wonder how Robbie will be used. He was a footnote in the movies and he always
has the potential yang to JJJ’s ying and even a father-figure to Peter. Then
there’s Betty. She’s got options…historically, there’s Peter (but the whole age
thing and the MJ bias), Flash (that laugh ain’t going to cut it) or Ned (wonder
if he’s going to become the…almost gave that one away). But what I took home
was what everyone did, another awesome line to quote, "Are we talking
Mariana Trench deep, or Dante's Ninth Circle deep?"
Now, I am not the biggest fan of teenage drama but a
volleyball to the face and the class bully laughing like a farm animal will
still get a giggle out of me. Like super villains are a good distraction from
organized crime, high school antics are a good distraction from being a grown
up. Isn’t that really what Peter learns about, responsibility? If not him,
maybe Harry did. Though I’m sure Dad’s evil and cold aura would freeze me up,
first…
And to top it off, a pop culture reference from Eddie
Brock?! You just can’t make this stuff up. Who ever thought Brock would call
Parker an emo? But then again, it fulfills the stereotype of not wanting to
date the Girl Next Door!!! Aunt May is awesome. Period.
The fourth episode keeps up the bandwagon of great writing, with some nice payoffs
to the past two, story progression and set up. And a lot like Heroes, you can’t
go wrong with churning out some villains, or at least misunderstood people who
are heroes of their own stories. This show makes me want to wake up on a
Saturday morning!
The
Spectacular Spider-Man
"Market Forces"
Written by: Andrew Robinson
Directed by: Dan Fausett