Raised on late 80's and early 90's animation, Michael T has come to love the works of DC Comics animation. He currently owns and manages http://dcauresource.com and moderates with http://animationinsider.net. He currently watches Lost, Heroes, Stargate Atlantis and occasionally Project Runway. Michael T will soon graduate with a Bachelor's degree in Finance and Management and is often seen as a one of a kind, jack of all trades, rebel.
By Michael Tanaka
Published on 05/19/2008
In the great tradition of saving the best for last,
Spectacular Spider-Man doesn’t pull any punches with four new characters, talk
of the past and a wardrobe switch.
May 17, 2008
In the great tradition of saving the best for last,
Spectacular Spider-Man doesn’t pull any punches with four new characters, talk
of the past and a wardrobe switch.
As the season winds down, there seems to be one last arc,
centered on the infamous Symbiote. It all starts with misdeeds. I don’t blame
Martha Connors for not wanting Peter Parker around and she called it. The
influence of the suit was handled quite well as opposed to the movie or that
series from the 90’s…
The main villain was the Chameleon. I loved that Weisman and
co. used the original Silver Age master of disguise, not the more modern
version who’s got issues with a certain game hunter. It caught me off-guard how
Chameleon played up on Spider-Man’s Spider-Sense. And the icing on the cake, this
villain is believable. The master spy will always get away. It was a good plug
for season two to have Chameleon’s cronies being to familiar faces, Phineas
Mason and Quentin Beck.
Black Cat was a character I was looking forward to seeing on
the series. Not only was her voice actor on spot, not grossly muscular but she
had a trademark upside down kiss with Spider-Man. She honestly stole the show.
Can’t wait to see more of her.
And holy origins, Batman! I had a feeling that the Weisman
camp was into the Ultimate series and that was proven when they adapted the
fateful past of Peter Parker and Eddie Brock’s parents dying in an airplane
crash. It definitely plays up the destiny the two have as enemies.
As for the supporting cast, as I keep saying, I like how
Flash Thompson is portrayed sympathetically to the audience. A one dimensional
bully is boring after awhile. And Sally Avril is slowly chipping away at my
tolerance for fictional characters. Anyway, here’s to hoping she gets
transferred to another school. I didn’t catch this until after the fact but
sneaky reference with Mayor Waters. I suppose I was used to how Marvel has used
real-life mayors lately.
The Spectacular Spider-Man
"Persona"
Written: Matt Wayne
Directed: David Fausett