"How's Spectacular Spider-Man?"
"SO GOOD."
Alright, a shameless way to start a review post, but that about sums up my feelings so far. We are 12 episodes in and the show doesn't seem to be suffering from freshmen jitters or flukes of fate. Every episode builds on the last and things don't seem to be going anywhere but up. I was hoping that we could finally have a show for Spider-Man that truly had it all; good writing, acting, animation, storylines, and ACTION, and I am simply amazed that SS-M has done so with such speed. I mean, I can't think of too many shows that didn't stumble at least once with Season 1. SS-M really hasn't. And it certainly hasn't with the Black Costume saga, having the comics, the 90's cartoon and the movie to borrow from.
Continuing from last week, Peter finds out that May is in the hospital, just as the suit seems to be exercising it's influence over him more directly, probably feeding on his emotions. When he sees Eddie Brock at the hospital, he doesn't try to explain himself; he just tosses his angry ex-friend aside. While he dotes over May, the fact that the hospital bills are extreme make "Dark Peter" more bitter and eager for money. I thought having the symbiote exist as a black t-shirt for Peter was simple yet effective. Not as extreme as the suit/slicked hair of the third film, which was good.
I have to admit, when Gwen, MJ, and Liz all rushed to Peter's aid at Midtown High, I kind of imagined that Peter was Tenchi from TENCHI MUYO, having a little harem of supporters. He brushes them aside in his bitterness and at this point is calling himself, and thinking of himself, as "we". He rejects their sympathy as his only concern is getting the cash he needs. He immediately swings into Tombstone's office and wants to take that offer of employment; Tombstone is glad to oblige, ordering him not to fight any non-supervillain crime for a month to prove his loyalty.
Joshua LaBar, who plays Flash Thompson, was interviewed by Comics Continuum recently, and it was good timing as Flash of all people gets through to Peter, calling him something akin to an uptight egghead for rejecting the friends that he has (which are more than he had at the pilot). I did smirk when Dark Peter referred to the former bully by his give name, "Eugene". Of course, the fact that Flash actually made sense gets Peter to thinking, and realizing that the alien costume is becoming an unwelcome influence on his life. He happens upon a church cathedral and upon finding out that the intense BONG of the bell hurts the alien, the battle for control begins.
Josh Keaton has been a good Peter/Spidey since the pilot, but this episode really tested his chops, basically asking of him to play both Peter and "Dark Peter". In some ways he fared better than Adam Baldwin did in SUPERMAN: DOOMSDAY. The part that was most unexpected, and therefore excellent, was choosing this moment and this circumstance to go over Peter's origin.
The problem with origin sequences is that for major characters, especially A-list, title heroes like Spidey who have 3 movies, a few shows, and thousands of comics behind them, the audience already knows it. The challenge comes in when is the best time to show it, and why. SPIDER-MAN & HIS AMAZING FRIENDS in the second season actually had a good reason for airing the origin story in ALONG CAME SPIDEY, framing it in the context of May being injured in a fight with Shocker and Peter questioning his entire career. The 90's series covered the origin twice, once in Season 1 briefly and more in depth in Season 2 during a somewhat awkward adaptation of "THE BOY WHO COLLECTED SPIDER-MAN", but that series had the downside of a fairly uninspired design for Peter (too Nicholas Hammond). But in some ways this show surpasses both of these prior angles. The origin, first of all, has some extra oomph being in Black and White, not only due to it being a flashback, but because those are the symbiote's colors. The origin is also part of a dream-like state between a battle of wills. The alien is trying to use Peter's own origin against him, but Peter manages to turn to tables.
The origin, naturally, is a mix of the comic book with heavy influences of the movie, with trading the Burglar for a Carjacker, the lab scene (with Gwen instead of MJ in that role, and she fits SO much better) and having Spidey allow the thief to escape to avenge being cheated from his wrestling money, instead of pure arrogance (ALONG CAME SPIDEY is still the most accurate animated adaptation). The only niggle is that this show has established that Peter uses mechanical web-shooters and the origin all but alluded to organics, but as they also had Spidey's red-and-blue costume melt over his skin for visual effect, it may have just been artistic license. The bit about dodging the car, crushing the pipe on the roof, that's pure Ditko. In fact, I could argue the entire sequence, especially at the end, seemed "very Ditko". The way the symbiote's "face" was yelling at Peter almost like old school Dormammu, or the webbing in the background when they threw each other around, it felt like they were channeling that 60's magic. And that helped greatly to help cement Venom, who is barely 20 years old (for a franchise that has been around for more than twice that; many older fans consider him "new"), as the A-List rogue that he has become.
Whoever played Uncle Ben here did a bang-up job. In a way it also reminded me of "FAREWELL SPIDER-MAN" from the finale of the 90's show, in which Peter trucks out Uncle Ben to stop Spider-Carnage. Much like that show, it required whoever played Ben to just come in and act as if he was in the series all along, and SS-M nailed that too. The symbiote naturally drags Peter through his origin to try to convince him of the alternative that the alien offers. Unlike his other loved ones, it remains. Rather than sit back and allow life to take from him, the alien offers Peter to take what he wants, when he wants, because he has the power. Considering the alien is a part of Peter (at least for the time being) and had access to his mind, it made perfect sense to go along this tract, which helped make this sequence utterly brilliant. I suppose if you wanted to question things, it sometimes was questionable whether Uncle Ben was Peter's conscience or somehow the man's spirit himself helping his "son". Ben, naturally, shows us a better alternative to the showdown between Peter and Ben's Killer than the 2002 movie had; Spidey doesn't allow him to fall to his death, because "Ben wouldn't allow that". Ben reminds Peter of the friends that he does have, that the alien is making him push away. And we also see clips from pretty much every episode of the show so far to showcase how Peter has used his gift responsibly. The Lizard clips especially hit the point for me; Peter was questioning taking that serum to erase his powers, especially after losing the respect of Gwen, the Conners, and Brock. He resisted because in the end, what mattered wasn't glory, but it was helping people who otherwise wouldn't be helped without Spider-Man.
Because of the serial and sequential storytelling of the series, this sequence was given a lot more power than it would have had with other shows. It really felt like a natural finale-build.
Thus reminded of his true spirit, Peter rejects the alien and psychically fights with his dark self and the alien, shredding it from himself and exposing the red an' blues once more. The alien otherwise defeated, Spider-Man returns it to the Conners lab.
But, oh boy, the episode ain't over yet. In fact this episode, like a few this season, literally seems to use every second; no minute is wasted and just when you think it is over, a new angle happens. Eddie Brock has been fired from the Conners lab, since without the alien, they have no grant money. Without that, he would have to quit ESU. When Spidey returns the alien, Brock is overjoyed until the web-slinger tries to freeze the creature to death to eliminate the threat. Brock naturally doesn't understand, and Spidey can't tell him without exposing his identity. Of course, the alien finds a kindred spirit, and the two bond. This was slightly more like USM, since it happened in a lab, not a church, like the comics and 90's series. But I liked how the communication between Brock and the alien contrasted. Brock wanted the power. And once armed with the knowledge that Peter is Spider-Man, what is Brock's first thought? Not how that means Peter WASN'T a coward and saved his life as well as the Conners from Lizard, or Gwen and some of the other people from threats. No, it was vengeance. Brock isn't going to be responsible with his power, and that ideally is what Venom is all about.
And this isn't even mentioning the quick but effective scene where MJ figures out that Gwen is crushing on Peter and encourages her to "go for it". Much like the comics, there is plenty of soap stuff without the spandex.
Venom makes his first animation debut in about 9 years and he easily looks better than the 90's show. No blue highlights or pink highlights or awkward looking eyes. He's big but not so muscular looking that he can't animate well. And we get the feeling that Spider-Man is about to face his deadliest enemy, because of how personal it is, and that is exactly the best way to use Venom.
Flawless.
The question isn't if episode 13, which may or may not be a season finale, will rock. The question is how much.