Spider-Man vs. Venom


By David Michelinie & Todd McFarlane (Marvel Comics)
ISBN: 2-48852-363-8,   2nd edition 978-0-87135-616-1

There was a period in the mid 1990s where, to all intents and purposes, the corporate monolith known as Marvel Comics seemed to have completely lost the plot. An awful lot of stories from that period will hopefully never be reprinted, but some of them weren’t completely beyond redemption.

During the Marvel Super Heroes Secret Wars of 1984-1985, Spider-Man picked a super-scientific new costume which turned out to be a hungry alien parasite which slowly began to permanently bond to its unwitting wearer.

After being discovered and removed by Reed Richards of the Fantastic Four “the Symbiote” ultimately escaped and, like a crazed and jilted lover, tried to re-establish its relationship with the horrified hero; seemingly destroying itself in the attempt.

During a stellar run of scripts by David Michelinie, the beast was revived with a new host and became one of the most acclaimed Marvel villains of all time, helped in no small part by the escalating popularity of rising star artist Todd McFarlane…

This rapidly rushed out compendium from 1990 collected literally every scrap of extant material featuring the new nemesis, comprising a teaser page from Amazing Spider-Man #298 (March 1988), two from #299, the entirety of #300 and an epic showdown from # 315-317 (May-July 1989).

Those orphan pages show a shadowy bestial character obsessing over clippings of the Wall-crawler before breaking into the apartment of Peter and Mary Jane Watson-Parker, before the main event begins with ‘Venom’ wherein the monstrous shape-shifting stalker, having terrorised Peter’s new bride, begins a chilling campaign to psychologically punish Spider-Man.

Venom is a huge hulking, distorted carbon copy of the Web-spinner: a murderous psychopath constituted of disgraced reporter Eddie Brock (who obsessively hates Parker the photo-journalist) permanently bonded with the bitter, rejected parasite whose animalistic devotion was spurned by an ungrateful host who even tried to kill it…

The story is a stunning blend of action and suspense with an unforgettable classic duel between Good and Evil which famously saw Spider-Man finally return to his original Ditko-designed costume and kicked off a riotous run of astounding stories from Michelinie & McFarlane, culminating in the titanic triptych ‘A Matter of Life and Debt!’, ‘Dead Meat’ and ‘The Sand and the Fury!’ with Brock bloodily breaking out of super-penitentiary The Vault to resume his campaign of hate while the oblivious Spider-Man is preoccupied with meta-thug Hydro Man and Peter Parker is embroiled in a deadly gambling debt drama concerning Aunt May’s current beau Nathan Lubensky…

Making his way across America, Venom begins to hunt his enemy’s nearest and dearest, starting with old flame and occasional crime-fighting comrade Black Cat, before moving on to Mary Jane and even frail old May Parker…

Pushed to breaking point Spider-Man gives Venom what he’s been demanding: a final all-out, one-on-one battle to the death…

Of course neither character died and the savage, shape-changing Symbiote – a perfect dark-side version of the Amazing Arachnid – went on to his own blood-drenched series. Eventually the spidery foes reached a tenuous détente and Venom became a “Lethal Protector”, dispensing his highly individualistic brand of justice everywhere but Spider-Man’s hometown.

This run of tales pushed the Wondrous Web-spinner to a peak of popularity and critical acclaim, with tense, terse tales of terror and triumph which inevitably resulted in ultimate arch-villain Venom gradually rehabilitating just enough to become one of the grim-and-gritty, dark anti-heroes which positively infested comics of that era (which explains why they’re also included in the sturdy compendium Spider-Man: Birth of Venom which additionally features Secret Wars #8, Amazing Spider #253-259, Fantastic Four #274 and Web of Spider-Man #1).

Whichever book you find however, if you’re a big fan of frantic Fights ‘n’ Tights action comics these are tales you just can’t ignore.
© 1990 Marvel Entertainment Group/Marvel Characters, Inc. All rights reserved.