Chris Wallace
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- Joined
- Jul 13, 2001
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And no gratuitous attempts at realism.
I recently re-read the original Return of the Sinister Six arc from Michelinie and Larsen. Some of the dialogue is cheezy enough to make you cringe, but the story builds up well, has a great ending, and is fun throughout. No contrived attempts to be grim-n-gritty, no agenda driven crap or trying-desperately-to-be-hip self aware deconstruction nonsense. Just a kick butt entertaining superhero story, with Ock at his manipulative peak. And best of all: no Wolverine.
One of my favorites. There's even a cool sub plot in it with MJ and a psycho stalker that's really entertaining.
Didja notice how Hal McGee (the Secret Hospital director) bears a striking resemblance to Guy Gardner?

Killer Doc Ock tribute video. Dig it:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v0tudXkZpno&feature=fvsr
One of my favorites. There's even a cool sub plot in it with MJ and a psycho stalker that's really entertaining.
I gotta say, this decrepit, near cadaverous Ock is the most interesting he has been to me. His body is useless now, but the sheer loathing that he emanates in disgust by his condition is fascinating to watch. He truly is disgusted at the idea of a world without Otto Octavius and if it must happen, he will make his death as painful for the world as it is for his own monumental ego. The image of a near lifeless body hanging by his tentacles and his voice being transmitted by an electronic device makes a hell of a visual. Despite it all, his mind is as dangerous as ever. Maybe even more so by the sheer desperation of his situation. He's been stripped to his core, and it is vile.They should have written him that way years ago.
I am now an Ock fan.
Sometimes the journey back or justification for going back is worse than what they're trying to come back from. Case in point: much as I hated Spidey's identity being a matter of public record, it wasn't worth "One More Day" to get that genie back in the bottle.
That's the great thing about Ock, they can try some different things with his character like this and it works. It's a very interesting direction to take him, it makes sense, and it doesn't feel contrived. The sign of a versatile character.
they both have their place. Which one I consider truly worth of the title often depends on the story or my mood.
Both are on my top 5 greatest Spidey Villians of all time list, but I think the Green Goblin wins by half of a second. He just caused so much pain to Spidery and tormented him over the years. No other Villian has caused him so much pain.they both have their place. Which one I consider truly worth of the title often depends on the story or my mood.

I was SO gonna paste these pages in this thread. You beat me to it.I saw that, dude. It looks great. Mysterio is in it, too.
I posted this in the movie forum, but it definitely deserves a place here, too.
I recently dug out a Doc Ock comic book I haven't read in YEARS! Hence why I never copped this before because I had completely forgotten about it. But it seems Raimi took more inspiration from the comics regarding Doc Ock's storyline than we give him credit for.
Observe:
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What do we take from this? Well:
1. Doc Ock's tentacles reacting against a threat even when Ock's unconscious. Obviously it's not A.I. but the principle is the same.
2. Ock's reactor going haywire, and the whole city is in danger from it.
3. Spidey needs Ock to stop the reactor, and he does. Obviously the key difference here is Ock is stopping it for selfish reasons to save his own butt, but again you can see the inspiration Raimi got from it here.
4. Ock refers to the reactor as "his dreams"
5. Ock's lair collapses afterward because he destroyed it, and he's assumed dead.
Now I am one of the most die hard Doc Ock fans around, and even I didn't know the extent to which the comic books inspired some of the plot points for Doc Ock in Spider-Man 2.
My respect for Raimi and fan love for Spider-Man 2 just went up several notches![]()
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