Comrade_Bullski Profile picture
Jan 12, 2023 13 tweets 5 min read Read on X
One of the first batch of superhero comics I got my hands on in the original US release (and not a translated Swedish edition) was this series, which is a very strange animal even today, looking back. Image
It is in every regard a direct sequel to the 1991 mini Deadly Foes of Spider-Man which was also written by Danny Fingeroth but had a different art team mostly carried by Al Milgrom. Both series are in essence kind of about the Sinister Syndicate, the sorta-kinda Sinister Six Image
Something I like is when a comic very clearly distinguishes its time period by stylistic choices and in Lethal you can see that we are not in a post-McFarlane world but also in an Erik Larsen Spider-Man era with Scott McDaniel drawing a very Larsen-esque Vulture even on the cover Image
McDaniel unfortunately only pencils the first two issues but his Otto Octavius is also VERY influenced by Larsen's. If you don't believe me check out that bottom panel, that's straight out of the Return of the Sinister Six era. Image
What makes Lethal a much weirder read than Deadly is while Deadly focused mostly on the interactions between the Sinister Syndicate, the machinations of Leila Davis and the desperate actions of the Shocker and the Beetle... Image
...Lethal opts to just throw crazy shit at the wall to make Spidey's day worse. Doc Ock is on the loose, the Syndicate are kinda back, and a random energy blast randomly hits Vincent Stegron in the park and he turns back to Stegron the Dinosaur Man! Image
In issue 3 a canister gets broken during one of the brawls between Spidey and the villains and the nazi bee-man Swarm is released to make everyone's life even worse! This series has absolutely no chill. Image
This random-ass four-issue Spider-Man villain miniseries even explains the return of long-dead obscure villain the Answer by referencing the explosive events of Alan Davis' Excalibur #50 which utterly blows my mind. Like, great continuity but wow. Image
For some inexplicable reason this comic also squeezes in the return from the dead of Scourge victim and perennial Z-lister the Ringer (whose death was one of the cruxes of Deadly) as a 90s-ass cyborg. Young me thought this was rad, but he never appeared again* Image
This comic is absolute lunacy, squeezing in stuff from Deadly Foes, the Vulture dying of cancer subplot, brings back like five different obscure villains and even then manages to be Doc Ock-centric. It's MADNESS in only four issues. Image
Ringer's widow Leila gets an armored battlesuit in this as well and she's pretty cool here. I honestly wanted her to stick around because Spidey has woefully few female villains but alas. Love that red and black armor though. Alas she... well. Image
Some 20 years later both of these minis got a spiritual sequel in the form of Superior Foes of Spider-Man, a 17-issue run by (mostly) Nick Spencer and Steve Lieber which continued with mostly the cast from Deadly Foes with some new faces. Great read, highly recommended. Image
I'd never claim that Lethal Foes was some kind of lost masterpiece but goddamn it is unabashedly crazy comics stuff. Just fun stuff about villains getting mad at each other and Spidey having a horrible day.

The perfect jump-on comic, naturally*

*It's not but I didn't care. Image

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More from @Comrade_Bullski

Oct 5, 2024
Those moments when you realize you've possibly read Marvel comics for too long sneak up on you.

In my mind Marvel's secret sauce was the humanist perspective and the more grounded approach and it feels so weird that's largely gone. Maybe this is a distinct old fogey problem.
Marvel's greatest success historically was always with its grounded titles. "Human characters with human problems" with the iconic example being Peter Parker barely having enough power to make ends meet. Even the FF had money problems as well as a plethora of other mundane ones.
Lee and Buscema were extremely proud of Silver Surfer but nobody read that comic because it was too cosmic, too unmoored in the throughline that Marvel presented. Norrin Radd is a fascinating character to me, but he is less of a unique voice for Marvel than Peter Parker, IMO.
Read 11 tweets
Sep 25, 2024
I have seen an increasing amount of debate both within fandoms and between fans and creators about the popularity of low-conflict stories about superheroes (what I shall refer to as "cozycore") and I believe a lot of the disagreement comes from misunderstanding.

A short 🧵 Image
Everything in here also applies to other mediums and this is certainly nothing unique to superheroes, but I'm using it as a focus topic because it's obviously something I know well.
It is no secret to anybody who has read older comics that superhero comics were often quite a bit more stiff in the past, especially before the Marvel revolution that began with FF#1. Lots of books where heroes treated each other like rather formal colleagues. Image
Read 22 tweets
May 26, 2024
I'm going to break my sacred vow and briefly talk about Betsy Braddock for @EmmaTalksComics . In 1976 Marvel wanted a comic produced exclusively for their burgeoning UK market and the creative team was iconic artist Herb Trimpe and some guy named Chris Claremont.
Image
Starts off in its own mag in the UK, originally in full color and it's very silver age style with your random supervillains, exuberant narration and simple characters. This is far from what Claremont's writing would become. Image
This run introduces Brian, Courtney Ross and of course Elizabeth "Betsy" Braddock who first turns up in issue 8. Cute average blonde girl, or is she? Image
Read 14 tweets
May 10, 2024
Alright, I guess I wanna share some stuff with you fine folks. Maybe it's because I'm exhausted or maybe it's lingering depression and anxiety but hey, why not. I started thinking about this earlier...

Spoiler alert, I used to dream about making comics myself. Image
This is probably gonna get maudlin as fuck so you may wanna tune out now.

But yeah, started reading comics real young as you do. I got exposed too what i still consider some excellent comics early like Wolfman/Perez New Teen Titans, Bernie Wrightson Swamp thing, Atari Force...
I read some other stuff too but I lapsed for a long time when I just read the classic European stuff. Disney duck comics, franco-belgian albums ala Tintin etc. Then in my teens I started looking at superhero stuff again more and more ended up picking up the Claremont/lee X-men
Read 25 tweets
May 4, 2024
Alright, I wasn't going to do this but since it's already aggressively invading my timeline and I don't want to feel forced to turn twitter off for three months I feel I may as well.

I'm going to talk a little about Blood Hunt issue 1, and the "Red Band" variants of this issue. Image
Warnings: Below this point I am going to MASSIVELY spoil the story in this comic. I will not post images or scans due to how recent it is, but please turn away if you want to read it for yourself.

Second, these are PURELY subjective views, so please take it as my thoughts only
Blood Hunt is the current mega-event running at Marvel and will involve a huge amount of issues between May and July, both core titles, crossover one-shots and minis. It's another vast undertaking, and advertised as "the bloodiest event ever". Probably true.
Read 46 tweets
Apr 27, 2024
People love to joke and meme about Claremont's penchants for stories where his female characters get transformed, mentally or physically (often both). "Body and soul" is a long-established Claremont trope. But the context of WHY he does it often goes unmentioned. 1/
Image
Claremont puts his character through transformative arcs to explore their personalities, expose their raw spots and present them with a scenario where they can be free of whatever troubles them. Become what they want you to be. Conform. Stop struggling. Let go. Image
It is a physical and mental crucible where the character must confront who they are and more importantly who THEY want to be. Not what anybody else wants them to be. Because while the change is seductive in the short term, Claremont almost invariably has them defeat it. Image
Read 8 tweets

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