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Comics : Spidey Super Stories #10 (Story 3)This story is part of a Lookback Series: Super Stories & Electric Company
Background...This was a very difficult Spidey Super Stories for me to review. It features the first SSS appearance of the Green Goblin, which should make it great. The problem is, and I can't believe I'm saying this, but - It's not all-bad. I mean, sure the dialogue is hokey, the characters have no motivations and if you think too hard, you realize it makes no frickin' sense at all. But they stole the last half of the plot right from Stan Lee and Gerry Conway, and that stuff is pretty good. The fight scenes are a whole lot better than usual. Thankfully, they did tweak it a bit to give it that special Spidey Super Stories feeling we all know and love, so I have something to work with. But overall, this was a toughie.
In Detail...
We open with the Green Goblin flying away from the scene of his latest dastardly robbery. Mr. Caption: No toy store is safe from: THE GREEDY GREEN GOBLIN. Ah yes, The Green Goblin. Spidey's arch-nemesis. Killed his first love, destroyed his best friend's family, etc. Also wears scaly Goblin skin over his real skin and flies around on a giant metal manta ray. Wears a purple sock on his head. And in this story he robs lots and lots of toy stores, holding the city in a tight grip of diabolical fear, or something. The whole city is terrified that their children might not have all the toys they want right now today. Man, if a toy-store crime wave can shut down New York City, I wonder what would happen during a video-rental store crime wave. Within a week we'd be back to living in caves and using animal bones as hairpins again. So at this first toy store, the Green Goblin steals a hockey stick, a dartboard and a pair of roller skates. The reason we can see exactly what he's stolen is that he's clutching his stolen goods in his arms like a first-born child as he flies away. Apparently he hasn't mastered complicated BAG technology just yet. He does have a bag over his shoulder to keep his Pumpkin Bombs and other goodies in, he's cool with that. But he seems to think it's just fine to hold all his stolen toys (all 3 of them!) in his hands. He does this for the entire flight back to his lair. He doesn't seem to realize that maybe he could steal, say 12 times as much if he used a bag. If he just asked the terrified clerks at the toy store for a bag, I'm sure they'd give him one. It doesn't seem to bother him that if (when) Spider-Man shows up and kicks him, he's going to have to drop all his toys on the ground from a hundred feet up. Not to mention it's hard to... oh forget it. You get the idea. Does anybody out there go shopping and bring like 17 friends so each person can hold two of your items? No, it's stupid. So Peter is sitting at home, and reads the morning's Daily Bugle. The headline (about eight inches high, of course) is "GREEN GOBLIN ROBS TOY STORE" This accompanies a full-page picture of the Green Goblin smiling at the camera. I don't think any 20th American presidents have rated the front page of every newspaper devoted solely to their larger-than life-size head.
Mr. Caption: Peter is really the secret super-hero, Spider-man!
Peter: But first I'd better leave a note.
So Spider-Man sets a clever trap. Much in the same way as fisherman using worms set a "clever trap" for fish. "Well, gee Mr. Fish, here's an unappetizing, usually drowned dead and bloated creature that doesn't actually live in the water at all, unless he's got a giant hook through him". That's the kind of cleverness I'm talking about here. Get ready for the plan: Spidey decides the best way to catch the Goblin is to find a toy store that has a Spider-Man billboard on top, which loudly proclaims "Get your Spider-Man toys here!" It also has to have a life-size picture of Spider-Man on the billboard. (See where this is going yet? Think stupid.) Then cut-out the paper Spider-Man photo, and then stand inside the cut-out, as part of the billboard, for hours and hours until maybe the Goblin shows up. If he does show up, then be sure to wait there, in the sign, listening to him terrorizing the store below you, breaking all the windows, destroying whatever property he wants and stealing the leftovers. When the Goblin's leaving, then and only then, it's time to jump out of the sign. I just don't see how this is more of a 'trap' than waiting on the next block or in some shadows nearby. Except you don't have to destroy anyone's advertising billboards, especially ones that are selling your toys and that you would get royalties from, dumbass Spidey. Also, by doing something else, you'll save yourself a few hours picking cardboard splinters out of your armpits and trip to the podiatrist. Maybe next time you could even try hiding in the store, maybe preventing some crimes rather than listening to them. Ok, so as the Goblin flies away desperately clutching his booty to his chest (a toy boat, a baseball bat, a top, a teddy bear, and a toy car), Spider-Man pops out of the sign and starts following him. Spidey catches up with him, and then does that usual thingy where he swings over to the Goblin and ends up sitting on the Goblin's back while he's flying like some game of leapfrog gone horribly, horribly awry.
Spider-Man: How about giving me a lift?
*Spidey jumps off the Goblin's back twenty feet in the air, not about to crash into anything except more air molecules.* So then the Goblin shoots a big shock out of one of his shock gloves, (Mr. Sound Effect: ZAP!), creating a ball of shock around Spidey's cranium bigger than his shockin' head. Shock shock. While this should fry all his synaptic relays, or at least start his hair in fire, instead the Goblin tells us that this will blind Spidey temporarily. So Spidey sees little floating stars for one panel while the Goblin hurries to make his getaway. Then in the next panel, Spidey's fine and chasing after the Goblin again, who's flown about four feet away at top speed. Spidey must have been "blinded" for all of half-a-second. I just have this to say to you, Mr. Goblin: IF YOU INVENT A DAMN BLINDING SHOCK GAUNTLET, IT HAD BETTER DAMN WELL BLIND PEOPLE.
Then Spidey tails the Goblin to his Goblin-lair. And get ready for the shock of your life --
So Spider-Man decides "he can't just break in, he must ring the bell" because it's Harry's house or something. Like that ever stopped you from breaking and entering before. So in full Spider-Man costume, he rings the bell and Harry answers.
But he holds off the insane super-villain rampage for a page or two, and invites Spidey in. Anyway, while's he's there, Spidey sees some green clothes carelessly hanging half-out of Harry's drawers, and so of course he then figures out Harry must be the Goblin. (Not that anyone else lives there anyway, duh.) So Harry shows him the door, Spidey waits outside, and a minute later the Green Goblin comes zooming back out of Harry's bedroom window. He sees Spidey, throws a pumpkin bomb at him, misses, throws another, misses again, throws a third one - misses.
Spidey: My Spider-Speed will save me! Besides, your aim is lousy. So Spidey tries webbing up the Goblin. The Goblin grabs a strand of web in each hand, leaps off his glider, and does something totally kick-ass awesome. I'm not quite sure what it is, but it rocks. The Goblin starts spinning his arms around or something, and Spider-Man falls to the ground and gets wrapped up like a human burrito in his own webbing. I don't think any other villain has been able to yank on webbing Spidey shot at them with such force that Spidey gets hopelessly tangled in it and they laugh at him. Cool. Now once Spidey's all tangled up, the Goblin lobs a final pumpkin bomb ("filled with laughing gas") at him. Now that Spidey's webbed himself up, I would think this would work, one of the damn bombs would finally find their mark. But no, somehow Spidey is now suddenly free of his tangled mess of webbing, and then makes what I can only describe as a "web-towel". Somehow, just holding this web-towel in mid-air is enough to bounce the pumpkin bomb off it and send it rocketing right back at the Goblin's head. Okay... Well... Spidey seems to be implying that an American soldier with a sturdy beach towel could decimate a corps of Nazi Grenadiers single-handedly, which I don't think is right, but whatever.
So the laughing gas hits the Goblin, he falls to the ground and starts laughing, Spidey goes over to unmask him, it's Harry Osborn, whoop-dee-frickin'-doo. He takes Harry back to his bedroom. Spidey finds some random chemicals. So Spidey strips off Harry's Goblin suit, puts him to bed and crawls into bed next to him. Sorry, everything except that last bit, trying to drag head out of gutter. Spidey opens Harry's closet and finds like 50 toys in there, which he decides to return to the toy stores. Sadly, Spider-Man walks to every toy store in New York like 5 times, since he has to carry all the toys in his hands also, for some stupid reason. Jesus, it's called a BAG, Spidey, look into it.
*the next day at school*
In General...You know, I was going to say something about how stupid the Green Goblin's outfit looks, but I just couldn't bring myself to do it. He looks just the Green Goblin in the main Marvel Universe, and I love that guy. You know you've been reading comics too long when you see a guy wearing green synthetic goblin skin and a purple elf hat riding around on a metal bat he built in his garage, and you don't find that the least bit weird. In fact, if he were to appear without his green skin or goblin glider or pumpkin-bombs that release gas, I'd kick somebody's ass. Yeah, kinda sad.
So here's the complete list of toys we see the Goblin stealing in this story. What I want to know is, where does the Goblin plan on fencing this stuff? I don't know if Tommy the Fence can fence out three different types of toy boats. Who's he gonna sell it to? The Kindergarten Mafia? Goodwill? The Make-A-Wish Foundation? Maybe the Goblin would have done better robbing the National Geographic store for back issues or something. Seriously, what kind of criminal empire is built on a mountain of toy duckies? Speaking of which (and this is a problem in the Main Marvel U, as well), why doesn't the Goblin just sell his Glider and get ultra-super-rich and buy his own chain of toy stores? Harry would be filthy rich enough to retire at age 17 and spend his full time in pursuit of junior high girls, though that's pretty much what he does now anyway. For chrissake, he invented a silent, self-propelled one man airplane (albeit, shaped like a metal bat). Now I'm no high-level U.S. military strategist (well, actually, I... uh, sorry, you're not cleared for that) but I'm pretty positive our military could think up a few uses for this glider. No, Harry thinks robbing toy stores are where the big bucks are... *sigh*
Overall Rating...
3 webs. Close call on this one. I love the Goblin, but he's just not wacky enough here compared to our regular crop of villains. Maybe my standards are too high...... reading about mind-controlled laundry-washing mountain gorillas will do that to you. |
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