ragdus said:
If you stick to pete always being a teen, the character WILL die. Nobody wants to read about acne and bullies for 20 years.
The Peter Parker/Spider-man you long for hasn't existed in DECADES. This was a relevant argument back in 1980. Nowadays? Not so much.
My point is proven.
At their apex, comics were not written for people who would read for 20-plus years. Kids (and adults who understood the conceits of the genre) read for a few years, then moved on.
Somewhere along the way, one or two generations of fans decided not to move on, and began feeling that the characters "owed" them, because "long-time readers are what kept the industry afloat".
And so, we have today's dilemma: a fringe minority (which is now the majority, because most of the mature fans who love and understand the characters have long since left) that demands that the characters grow and change along with them.
Just because a mistake (such as the marriage) has been around for 20 years or more doesn't mean
it isn't a mistake.
Superman remained Superman for many, many years. Then, "geniuses" (a.k.a. aging fanboys-turned-professionals) came along with ideas like Lois and Clark getting married, or (come June 30) Superman leaving earth for years (and Lois having a child out of wedlock).
There are the people who demand that we see Dr. Doom's real face, who demand that Dick Grayson become an adult at odds with Batman, who demand that Iron Man become a drunk and a jerky control freak, who demand that Hal Jordan age and change (and go mad and become a villain), who demand that everything in a juvenile medium become realistic so it can be "cool".
I care about the characters. If the guy running around in The Amazing Spider-Man is not the character that Lee and Ditko created (and was expanded upon by Romita, Conway, etc.), then it's worthless.
And I'm not even saying that "If Spider-Man isn't in high school and he isn't excactly like Lee and Ditko's version, then it's bad". I'm saying that if the creators ignore or change everything that made Spider-Man SPIDER-MAN (his place in life, his personality, his dynamics with his family/friends, his powers, his costume, etc.), then they are wrong.
And a slavish devotion to every little detail from 40 years doesn't work either. Stan and the gang contradicted themselves quite often in the old stories (with factual errors, incorrect flashbacks, etc.). But they didn't do so
at the expense of the characters.
If Stan retold Spider-Man's origin and suddenly added in a few guys who accosted Peter right after he gained his powers, fine. That's an addition. But Peter still
acted like Peter in that retelling.