Harry and Norman Osborn’s first ever on-panel (Amazing Spider-Man #37) interaction sets, shall we say, a certain tone for their interactions. It’s bad. I mean its *really* bad. For context, Norman was at the time being written specifically as an[…]↓ Read the rest of this entry…
Posts Tagged comic analysis
Harry, Gwen and Pete meet the first time Amazing Spider-Man #31 To say they’re not exactly friends from the start would be an understatement. Pete’s usual standoffishness is only made worse because Aunt May is sick at the time. Harry[…]↓ Read the rest of this entry…
Throughout the early years of Marvel comics, Toad (first introduced in 1964) is consistently treated like a pathetic joke by both the narrative and writers, and by the characters themselves. Primarily this is driven by his appearance, which, as a[…]↓ Read the rest of this entry…
Sabretooth & Mystique The original (90s canon) meeting between Sabretooth and Mystique plays out as a romance in a cold war spy thriller.Β Sabretooth is a US government operative, a secret spec ops soldier in βTeam Xβ, along with Logan[…]↓ Read the rest of this entry…
Amazing Spider-Man #43 Peter Parker and Mary Jane’s first date. On their first date: π Mary Jane constantly uses the most up to date, cutting edge hippy slang. Hippies were genuinely considered dangerous counter culture at the time. Violent and[…]↓ Read the rest of this entry…