I confess enjoying this show, enjoy watching most of its episodes again and again, I've been saying that for a while. A couple of episodes seem unbearable for a while, but I enjoy them after a rewatch, that is my case as a Spider-Man geek who is bound to like almost everything with Spider-Man's name stapled on it, I'm not sure if I would have hated it if not for that, I know I'd probably enjoy it less than I do now, even while taking it for what it is.
Honest review of the show so far, trying not to sound like a fanboy or something:
Spectacular Spider-Man stunned lots of fans, in a positive way, it displayed how a great Spider-Man series looks like, that series is not without its faults, like sometimes breaking midway through a battle for a segway scene, then going back for it, but it remained consistently good, with great presentation of characters, and Spider-Man's profile as a loner.
Then came this show; Ultimate Spider-Man. The promise Joe Quesada gave us is seeing Spider-Man as we've never scene him before, as an old fan I see some truth in what he said, there are things we have never seen before in an adaption, and some things we've never seen before, but there are things we have seen.
We saw Spider-Man deliver quips in everything, be a member of a team of teenage heroes that includes at least one female member (Spider-Man & His Amazing Friends), as a teenager (60s cartoon, Spider-Friends, and Spectacular), in high school (Bakshi's portion of 60s Spider-Man, and Spectacular), we saw him facing the audience and talking in the 60s cartoon.
The new things for a Spider-Man cartoon are him pausing in midair while everything is gray but him, joke on when they make fun of his joke, and the tiny figures, and him being trained to be a better hero, causing less damage.
The show has it's share of good things, it's not without them, the art design is good, the animation is pretty good, sometimes stunning, and Spider-Man power display is nice and well rounded.
The banter can be good at times, not always, Drake Bell's voice as the titular character and his delivery of one liners is passable.
What made this a disappointment is how Spider-Man can be overly defendant on the need for teammates sometimes, the way Spider-Man pauses mid battle or mid touching moment sometimes to be the exposition medium, and sometimes the cutaway jokes to explain his joke or poke fun of it, making it like a Looney Tune cartoon. Another problem with how Spider-Man acts is using the power against the villain, like he did against Electro, then brags about it to his pals, and when he says words he doesn't know what they mean like "coup de grace".
Overall, it's a C- show, nothing Spectacular, but better than being an Ultimate Let Down.