|
Post by Deleted on Mar 30, 2017 16:16:51 GMT -5
What is your favorite Amazing Spider-Man run?
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Mar 30, 2017 16:30:25 GMT -5
#50-185.
|
|
|
Post by Spike-X on Mar 30, 2017 16:38:11 GMT -5
Stern/JR jr.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Mar 30, 2017 16:43:19 GMT -5
I'm just about to start issue 51!
|
|
|
Post by Cei-U! on Mar 30, 2017 16:44:22 GMT -5
I have a few. First and foremost is #1-28, including Annual #1 and Amazing Fantasy #15. Lee/Ditko in their prime. Second is the Gerry Conway run (#121-149) from the death of Gwen Stacy through the wrap-up of the Jackal storyline, including Giant-Size Super-Heroes. Great art, primarily by Ross Andru, plus the introductions of Man-Wolf and The Punisher. I'm almost as fond of the succeeding LenWein and Andru run (#151-177). I like some later issues, particularly those scripted by Roger Stern, and the handful of annuals by John Byrne or Frank Miller, but I never recaptured my interest in Spidey except as a team-up star after Peter got his BS.
Cei-U! I summon the web-slinging wonder!
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Mar 30, 2017 16:46:47 GMT -5
I'm just about to start issue 51! I'm jealous if you are reading this for the first time!
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Mar 30, 2017 16:48:57 GMT -5
I'm just about to start issue 51! I'm jealous if you are reading this for the first time! Alas, it is so.
|
|
|
Post by brutalis on Mar 30, 2017 17:10:30 GMT -5
I have a few. First and foremost is #1-28, including Annual #1 and Amazing Fantasy #15. Lee/Ditko in their prime. Second is the Gerry Conway run (#121-149) from the death of Gwen Stacy through the wrap-up of the Jackal storyline, including Giant-Size Super-Heroes. Great art, primarily by Ross Andru, plus the introductions of Man-Wolf and The Punisher. I'm almost as fond of the succeeding LenWein and Andru run (#151-177). I like some later issues, particularly those scripted by Roger Stern, and the handful of annuals by John Byrne or Frank Miller, but I never recaptured my interest in Spidey except as a team-up star after Peter got his BS. Cei-U! I summon the web-slinging wonder! Right there with you Cei-U. In reprints i found the love for Lee/Ditko in beginning the legend which can't be beat. 2nd for me would be the reprints through Marvel Tales of Jazzy Johnny Romita's run which was running concurrently with the then current version i grew up with being from Conway/Andru. Then the Stern/JRJr goodness and endingwith some Wolfman/Pollard fun.
|
|
|
Post by james on Mar 30, 2017 17:22:41 GMT -5
Stern/JR jr. I second this.
|
|
|
Post by badwolf on Mar 30, 2017 18:10:46 GMT -5
The Roger Stern run is the only one I've read extensively, but I do love it. I like what I've read of Wolfman and O'Neil too.
|
|
|
Post by Warmonger on Mar 30, 2017 18:40:16 GMT -5
Wein/Andru/Esposito
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Mar 30, 2017 19:21:49 GMT -5
Top Run of All Time
Amazing Spider-Man #1-100, 105-110. Lee and Others
Honorable Mention(s)
Dematteis and Buscema: Spectacular Spider-Man 178-203 Dematteis and Ross: Spectacular Spider-Man #241-258
|
|
|
Post by pinkfloydsound17 on Mar 30, 2017 20:04:47 GMT -5
#1-100 I love for the artwork alone...the earlier stuff is better IMO. #100-120 is a lower point for me but picks up towards the end with the Hulk cross over. #121-150 I love...pivotal Spidey moment and a great clone saga. #150-200 is okay...nothing stands out as amazing storywise. #201-228 is a lull for me also #229-320 I feel is pretty darn consistent...you start with the classic Juggernaut tale, then in comes Hobgoblin and that whole beautiful mess of an arc (and I mean that it was actually something I liked even if it was convoluted and did not turn out the way people wanted) #320-400 is average at best...some good moments like Sinister Six returning but towards the end you get the return of his parents as clones and I really lose interest
400-on...no clue...with the exception of Strazynski's run, I have not ready much ASM past this point. Or Spidey in general.
|
|
|
Post by codystarbuck on Mar 30, 2017 21:47:11 GMT -5
The one where he doesn't whine so much. Oh, wait that was all of them. When I was a kid, in the 70s, I just couldn't get into the character; way to much soap opera and moaning. I never really read it consistently later. On the other hand, I loved Marvel Team-Up and Spidey always seemed more fun there, for me.
|
|
|
Post by berkley on Mar 31, 2017 0:54:55 GMT -5
I have to say the Ditko run, even though it was the Lee/Romita, then the Conway/Kane, and then Wein/Andru that I read when they first came out, though very sporadically with the first two, Romita and Kane. I did read the death of Gwen Stacy, though. I was a bit too young to read the Ditko issues when they came out., but when I read them in reprints in the 70s (many of them in those digests from the late 70s) they immediately became my favourites - though by then I no longer had my Romita and Kane issues to compare.
This just reminded me of a question I wanted to ask: was Romita's Peter Parker too handsome and well-built to convincingly play the downtrodden nerd? Or had the character grown out of that phase by the time Romita came along? I haven't re-read any of these issues since the 70s, so my memory may be at fault, but I think that by the Wein/Andru run that was certainly true - Parker was a competent, respected college student, though of course always getting into problems because of his secret life. But Romita came right after Ditko, there must have been a bit of a transition period at least. Later artists followed the Romita visual model, I think, certainly Andru did.
I took the question to refer to the Amazing Spider-Man series, but I also read the Spectacular Spider-Man for a few early issues and Marvel Team-Up when the guest character or artist took my fancy. The good Team-Up issues were more fun than the best Amazing in the 70s.
|
|