Textless variant cover art of The Amazing Spider-Man Vol. 3 #2 (May 2014) Art by Humberto Ramos Publication information Publisher Marvel Comics First appearance The Amazing Spider-Man #9 (Feb.
1964) Created by Stan Lee Steve Ditko In-story information Alter ego Maxwell "Max" Dillon Species Human mutate Place of origin Endicott, New York Team affiliations Sinister Six Emissaries of Evil Frightful Four Exterminators [1] Sinister Twelve Legion Accursed Notable aliases Master of Electricity Jolt Abilities • Electric manipulation • Flight • Superhuman strength and speed when fully charged Electro ( Maxwell " Max" Dillon) ( / ɪ ˈ l ɛ k t r oʊ/) is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Created by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko, he was electro spiderman in The Amazing Spider-Man #9 (Feb. 1964) as an adversary to the superhero Spider-Man. Electro has since endured as one of the web-slinger's most prominent foes, though he has also come into conflict with other heroes, most notably Daredevil. He is a founding member of the Sinister Six, electro spiderman the leader of the original incarnation of the Emissaries of Evil, electro spiderman first supervillain teams to oppose Spider-Man and Daredevil, respectively.
In the original version of the story, Max Dillon was a lineman for an electric company who turned to a life of crime after being struck by lightning while working on a power line and becoming a living electric capacitor. Electro's superpowers revolve around controlling electricity, which he can absorb to "charge" himself and become more powerful, gaining additional abilities such as flight, superhuman strength, and speed. Since his conception, the character has electro spiderman several design changes, from his original green and yellow costume, to his modern look with blue skin and a bald head.
During the time that Max Dillon was dead between 2016 and 2021, a second Electro, Francine Frye, was introduced. Outside of electro spiderman, Electro has been featured in various media adaptations of Spider-Man, including feature films, television series, and video games.
Jamie Foxx portrayed the character in the live-action films The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (2014) and Spider-Man: No Way Home (2021). Contents • 1 Publication history • 2 Fictional character biography • 2.1 Maxwell Dillon • 2.2 Francine Frye • 3 Powers and abilities • 4 Reception • 5 Other versions • 5.1 House of M • 5.2 Marvel 1602 • 5.3 Marvel Zombies Return • 5.4 MC2 • 5.5 Old Man Logan • 5.6 Spider-Man: Reign • 5.7 Spider-Man: The Manga • 5.8 Spider-Verse • 5.9 Ultimate Marvel • 5.10 Marvel 2099 • 5.11 Marvel Noir • 6 In other media • 6.1 Television • 6.2 Film • 6.3 Video games • 6.4 Live performances • 7 References • 8 External links Publication history [ edit ] Electro's first appearance, The Amazing Spider-Man #9 (Feb.
1964). Art by Steve Ditko. The Max Dillon incarnation of Electro was created by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko, and first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man #9 (Feb. 1964). [2] [3] [4] The character is also known as the member of the Frightful Four battling the Fantastic Four. [5] He is also the first major Marvel villain to be written in publication history as battling Daredevil, [6] [7] even being the founder and leader of the supervillain team that oppose him, the Emissaries of Evil.
[8] The second incarnation of Electro, Francine Frye, was created by Dan Slott and Humberto Ramos, and first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 3 #2 (July 2014), though she did not become Electro until The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 4 #17 (October 2016). Fictional character biography [ edit ] Maxwell Dillon [ edit ] Max Dillon, as he originally appears.
Interior artwork from Amazing Spider-Man Annual#1 (October 1964). Art by Steve Ditko. While Maxwell "Max" Dillon, an electrical engineer and lineman, was repairing a power line, a freak lightning accident caused a mutagenic electro spiderman that transformed him into a living electrical capacitor. [9] His powers were initially weak, so he spent some time stealing electrical equipment from Stark Industries to charge himself.
During this time, he was approached by Magneto, who considered him a potential recruit for his Brotherhood of Evil Mutants, claiming that Dillon's power rivaled his own, but Dillon refused. The following day, Dillon was confronted by a small-time thug from whom electro spiderman had been borrowing money to pay for the machinery he had needed. When the thug drew a gun on him because he had not paid back the money yet, he responded by shooting a blast of lightning through the thug's chest—the first time Dillon ever killed anybody.
[10] Soon taking the name "Electro", he turned to a life of a professional criminal, his first victim being J. Jonah Jameson. Electro broke into the Daily Bugle Building and stole from Jameson's safe right in front of him. Jameson accused Spider-Man of being an alternate identity of Electro, prompting Spider-Man to prove the publisher wrong.
During their first ever confrontation, Spider-Man was nearly killed after touching the electrically charged villain. Spider-Man eventually used a fire hose to short-circuit Electro while wearing rubber gloves to protect himself. [11] Electro next confronted Daredevil for the first time when trying to break into the Baxter Building. He was again defeated.
[12] Electro later joined the original Sinister Six led by Doctor Octopus, and was the first member of the group to fight Spider-Man, battling him at a Stark plant. Spider-Man entered the fight believing he had lost his powers, however when electro spiderman dodged a bolt of electricity from Electro he realized his powers had returned. Electro lost his power when the power was cut off by Spider-Man, who got a card from him that led him to fight Kraven the Hunter.
[13] Electro attacked the Fantastic Four at the wedding of Sue Storm and Reed Richards, under the control of Doctor Doom's mind-control machine, but he has no memory of this due to the actions of Mister Fantastic. [14] He later recruited the Emissaries of Evil in a plot of revenge against Daredevil for previous defeats.
This group consisted of Gladiator, Stilt-Man, Leap-Frog, and the Matador. [15] Electro was later hired by J. Jonah Jameson to defeat Spider-Man on national television.
[16] He encountered Daredevil again in San Francisco, at which time he temporarily donned a modified costume. [17] He then took control of a Protarian android seeking the destruction of Omega.
[18] Electro then teamed with Blizzard against Spider-Man and Daredevil. [19] Electro then attempted to aid a band electro spiderman criminals escaping the Defenders. [20] Electro later joined the Frightful Four. [21] As part of the Frightful Four, he used Spider-Man as bait to trap the Fantastic Four. [22] Subsequently, he battled the Falcon but was defeated, partly because he did not consider the Falcon to be a serious threat.
[23] Electro later learned that he can electro-statically disrupt Spider-Man's wall-crawling ability. [24] Chameleon and Hammerhead then sent the Shocker to try to recruit Electro into their organization. [25] Instead, he later accepted Doctor Electro spiderman invitation to rejoin the Sinister Six, and battled Spider-Man. [26] Electro has fought Spider-Man countless times, either on his own or as part of a group such as the Sinister Six. He has also fought such other heroes as Daredevil, the Fantastic Four, and the New Avengers.
Despite his immense power, he has almost always been defeated, electro spiderman as a result of his foes outsmarting him or taking advantage of his weakness to water while charged.
As a result of his frequent and often embarrassing defeats, Electro tried to take over New York City's power supply in an attempt at glory and respect. Spider-Man thwarted this plan, however, and convinced Electro to quit his criminal career. When Kaine (Spider-Man's insane clone) started killing enemies of Spider-Man, Electro began to fear for his life and temporarily joined Mysterio's Sinister Seven, which had been formed to combat Kaine.
This group was quickly disbanded, and following Kaine's subsequent disappearance, Electro returned to retirement.
This changed when the Rose agreed to fund an experimental technique that would amplify Electro's abilities, in exchange for Electro's services as an enforcer.
Seeing this as a chance to rise above the string of failures that had made up so much of his life, Electro underwent the procedure. After paying off electro spiderman debt to the Rose by defeating several members of The True Believers (an offshoot of the famous ninja sect called the Hand), a group of ninja assassins who had been interfering in the Rose's operations, Electro attempted to demonstrate his newly amplified powers to the world, once again attempting to take control of New York City's power supply.
Wearing an insulated suit, Spider-Man stopped him. Electro, in an effort to make a final grand gesture, threw himself into the Hudson River while his body was highly charged, seemingly killing himself in an explosion. Somehow surviving, Electro resurfaced later as part of the re-formed Sinister Six, formed to kill Senator Stewart Ward and Doctor Octopus (whom the other members of the Six now hated due to his arrogance).
His powers had seemingly reverted to their pre-amplification level, and he wore a new blue-and-white costume. When Venom betrayed his fellow Sinister Six members, attempting to kill them one by one, he attacked Electro and left him for dead. Once again, Electro survived, and when he next appeared had returned to his yellow-and green-costume. Electro was working with the Vulture [27] when they were attacked by Spider-Man who thought they had kidnapped his Aunt May.
Electro managed to bring Spider-Man to the edge of defeat, using electro spiderman powers in more intelligent ways and blowing up a large number of cars, including some with children in them. After a devastating battle, Spider-Man defeated him by fighting him to a gas refinery.
[28] The badly wounded Electro recovered fairly quickly, and shortly afterwards joined the Sinister Twelve, assembled by the Green Goblin, though he and the rest of the team was defeated thanks to the intervention of the Fantastic Four, Daredevil, Captain America, Iron Man and Yellowjacket. [29] Electro's new look in The Amazing Spider-Man #612. Art by Paul Azaceta. Later, separately, he was hired by the Skrull Pagon (posing as Elektra) to free Karl Lykos (also known as Sauron) from The Raft, a maximum-security prison electro spiderman supervillains.
[30] After causing a riot, Electro tried to run away with his waitress girlfriend, but was captured by the New Avengers, subsequently fainting when faced with the prospect of being beaten up by Luke Cage, using Spider-Man's webbing to protect himself from Electro.
[31] Later, Electro joined Chameleon's "Exterminators", [1] seeking to take advantage of Peter Parker and his loved ones. During the " Civil War" storyline, Electro was among the villains in Hammerhead's unnamed villain army when Iron Man and S.H.I.E.L.D.
raided the hideout. [32] In " Secret Invasion," Electro appears as member of Hood's crime syndicate and attacked a Skrull force. After the Skrull posing as Edwin Jarvis kidnaps the baby of Luke Cage and Jessica Jones, the Avengers and the Fantastic Four begin going after everyone who is associated with the Skrulls.
Because of this, Electro is confronted by Wolverine in an alley where, after a battle, he leaves Dillon beaten and unconscious. [33] Electro returns in issue 612 kicking off The Gauntlet, with a new look as his face is now scarred with lightning bolts and sporting a trench coat.
The revamp was explained by writer Mark Waid, stating that artist Paul Azaceta "tweaked the design a bit, adding some burn scars to reflect Electro's current situation. As Electro gets older, as electro spiderman body chemistry starts to shift into middle age, his powers are electro spiderman more erratic and less easy for him to control. So he turns to a surprise Marvel villain – someone rarely, if ever, seen in the pages of Amazing – to level up." [34] During his appearance in "The Guantlet", it is revealed that Electro has lost electro spiderman over his powers: besides the physical disfigurement, his touch is now 100% lethal.
Depressed and angry at the world because of this, Electro begins gathering other outcasts and misfits into a group known as "Power To The People", which electro spiderman right-wing newspaper baron Dexter Bennett and the New York Stock Exchange in the wake of the 2008 Financial Crisis. Electro's group manages to gain positive coverage in the media, hampering Spider-Man's ability to convince Electro's followers of his true evil nature.
[35] Electro's duplicitous nature causes him to betray his followers in order to align with the amoral Bennett in exchange for help finding a way to restore his powers to a controllable level. The Mad Thinker is able to come up with a process to cure Electro, but Spider-Man interferes with the process, turning Electro into an artificial electrical thunderbolt. Furious, Electro double-crosses Bennett and ultimately uses his new powers to destroy The DB building, crippling Bennett in the process.
In doing so, Electro uses up so much of his newfound power that Spider-Man is able to neutralize him with his webbing. [36] In the epilogue, Electro runs into Sasha Kravinoff and Chameleon electro spiderman his new jail cell. [37] In the following issue involving Sandman, it is revealed that Electro has escaped. [38] Under the orders of the Kravinoffs, he breaks the fourth Vulture out of prison. [39] During the " Heroic Age" storyline, it is suspected by the Young Allies that Electro had a discarded and disavowed daughter named Aftershock (similar electro spiderman the MC2 Universe version) who is a member of the Bastards of Evil.
[40] When Young Allies members Firestar and Gravity fight Electro, he defeats them and lets them live so that they can spread the message that he does not endorse Aftershock and the Bastards of Evil's terrorism.
He also says they can look up how electro spiderman when he got his powers on the internet and there was no way a girl of Aftershock's age could have been conceived after electro spiderman got his powers: It is impossible for him to be Aftershock's father.
[41] Electro is later present at the scene where Mattie Franklin is sacrificed by Sasha Kravinoff as electro spiderman of a electro spiderman that resurrects Vladimir Kravinoff as a large humanoid lion creature. [42] During the "Origin of electro spiderman Species" storyline, Electro is among the supervillains invited by Doctor Octopus to reestablish the Sinister Six, where they are promised that they will receive a reward in exchange for securing some specific items.
[43] Electro goes after Spider-Man for Menace's infant. Anticipating Spider-Man's plan to deliver the infant to a hospital, Electro waits at the nearest hospital in Spider-Man's area until Spider-Man shows up. The two begin to battle until Sandman interferes and Spider-Man tricks Electro into electrocuting Sandman, turning him into glass.
Flying shards of glass hit Electro, temporarily stunning him and allowing Spider-Man to escape. [44] Spider-Man goes on an angry rampage against all the villains after the Chameleon tricks him into thinking the infant is dead.
He defeats Electro in Vinegar Hill, Brooklyn. [45] In the Big Time storyline, Electro becomes a member of Doctor Octopus' new Sinister Six and helps Chameleon break into an air force base in New Jersey. [46] Electro was with the Sinister Six when it came to fighting Intelligencia. During a conflict between the Intelligencia and the Sinister Six, Mad Thinker was able to briefly deactivate Electro's powers, but was caught off-guard when Electro physically attacked him instead, the surprise of the attack allowed Electro to defeat Mad Thinker.
[47] During the "' Ends of the Earth" storyline despite the Sinister Six being prepared for a fight with the Electro spiderman, Electro was the first of the team to be defeated, being hurled into the upper atmosphere by Thor while distracted by his inability to attack Spider-Man's new hi-tech armor. [48] Electro returns to Earth and attempts to avenge himself on Thor by forcing an A.I.M. scientist to convert him to generate protons instead of electrons, but he is defeated when Superior Spider-Man (Doctor Octopus' mind in Spider-Man's body) manages to convert him into a stream of protons and traps him.
Superior Spider-Man places Electro in containment next to Sandman in his hidden underwater lab. [49] Electro, Chameleon, Sandman, Mysterion, and the Vulture are later seen as part of a team led by Superior Spider-Man called the "Superior Six".
Superior Spider-Man has been temporarily controlling their minds in order to redeem them for their crimes. He does this by forcing them to do heroic deeds against their will, some of which almost get them killed.
Every time he is done controlling them, he puts them back in their containment cells. [50] They eventually break free of Superior Spider-Man's control and attempt to exact revenge on the wall-crawler, nearly destroying New York in order to do so. [51] With the help of Sun Girl, Superior Spider-Man is barely able to stop the Superior Six. [52] Electro is later seen battling the Punisher in Los Angeles.
[53] Sometime after Spider-Man regained his body, Electro comes into the Bar With No Name and is introduced to the Hobgoblin's servants by his friend and bartender, Deke. The villains start joking about the gloomy Electro. One mentions how Thor launched him into space, another about how "Spider-Man" made him part of the Superior Six, and yet another about how Electro was taken out by the Punisher, despite the latter's lack of powers.
Electro gets angry and starts sparking, but the bartender gets the situation under control by commenting on how bad the Punisher is and with compliments like breaking so many villains out of the Raft, which earned him the respect of Crossbones and Count Nefaria. This does not stop the others, however.
Determined to get respect, Electro heads back over to the Raft, ready for another breakout despite the Green Goblin having done the same just recently and the fact that it was re-christened as Spider-Island II. Electro sends a blot of electricity around, but it grows excessively big and he cannot turn it off. He finally exhausts all of his power but when this happens, he passes out and many of the villains he tried to break out are now dead. Vowing revenge, Electro soon realizes what caused this to happen to him: experiments conducted electro spiderman "Spider-Man".
[54] Electro later visits his electro spiderman, Francine Frye, and keeps his distance because electro spiderman his uncontrollable powers. Francine starts to kiss Electro, only to end up dying from electrocution. [55] At Peter Parker's behest, Parker Industries is testing out an anti-Electro netting that can capture Electro. [56] Electro is later seen with Black Cat when they raid Eel's hideout where Electro defeats Eel.
Electro and Black Cat later crash the meeting between Mister Negative and Phil Urich (who is leading the remnants of the Goblin Underground as the self-proclaimed Goblin King) where they throw Eel's body into the area where the meeting is. During Peter Parker's interview on the Fact Channel, Electro attacks the security team on the channel and the Black Cat arrives, announcing her demand that if Spider-Man does not show up in 15 minutes, Peter Parker will be dead.
Electro complains about the plan but Black Cat stays determined that Spider-Man will show up, but then Silk arrives to confront them both, giving Peter the time to change into Spider-Man and jump into action, aiding Silk. As she battles against Electro and Spider-Man deals with Black Cat, J. Jonah Jameson remains on the channel forcing the cameraman to film the action. Electro fails to stop Silk, but the Black Cat redirects one of Electro's bolts into hitting Spider-Man, knocking him down in the process.
[57] Electro pressures Sajani into telling him how effective the anti-Electro traps will be in electro spiderman his powers, but the Black Cat interrupts their talk in order to ask her how the device works. They both infiltrate the demonstration, suiting Electro into the "Fake Electro" costume while Black Cat disguises herself as one of the operators. Black Cat starts the machine, further enhancing Electro's power, only to be interrupted by Spider-Man and Silk.
Electro tries to escape but his insulated webbing protects him by allowing Silk to cover Electro with her webbing.
Black Cat changes the plan, using the wiring to overload Electro by putting his powers way out of control, shooting his lightning bolts against the helicopter. Silk saves the helicopter and Spider-Man jumps into the machine, using his webbing to cover Electro in order to take him out of there. Electro asks to let go, but Spider-Man remains determined to hold him until they are both saved by Silk who pulls them out of the machine and away from the explosion which failed to kill Spider-Man as Black Cat wanted and she escapes.
However, Electro was apparently de-powered and taken into custody. [58] As part of the " All-New, All-Different Marvel", a de-powered Max Dillon was shown as an inmate at Andry Corrections Facility alongside Lizard.
Upon being sprung out of the prison by Rhino, he meets a mysterious red-suited man who offers to restore Electro's powers in exchange for his services. [59] Jackal and Lizard work on the procedure that would re-power Maxwell Dillon. When Dillon was reluctant to go through with the procedure, Jackal brings in a woman who Dillon recognizes as Francine Frye minus the piercings electro spiderman tattoos that are on her body. Dillon agrees to go ahead with the procedure. [60] The Jackal cloned Francine from DNA taken from her charred cheek.
Francine observes the Jackal's attempt to restore Dillon's powers, but the experiment fails, charging his suit but not his body. Unexpectedly, the DNA in Dillon's saliva that was mixed in with Francine's own DNA attracts the electrical energy to Francine.
Desiring more, Francine leans in to kiss Dillon and kills him in the process while absorbing his powers as the resulting action burns Dillon's body. [61] Upon building a special machine, Doctor Octopus resurrects Electro with his powers intact as Kindred comments on Electro's abilities while stating that Doctor Octopus is getting closer to his true self. [62] Doctor Octopus and Electro find Kraven the Hunter in the Savage Land hunting a dinosaur. Electro shocks the dinosaur as Electro spiderman Octopus is instructed by Kindred to entice Kraven the Hunter by quoting "The best way to entice your fourth recruit is to offer him your fifth".
[63] Francine Frye [ edit ] The second Electro, Francine Frye, in the cover of The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 4, #17, art by Alex Ross. Debuting in The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 3 #2 (July 2014) Francine Frye is a woman who is a fan of supervillains.
At some point, she befriended Electro. At the time when Electro was losing control of his abilities, she was visited by him.
When attempting to kiss Electro, Francine died from electrocution. [55] Jackal later revived her as a clone, lacking her piercings and tattoos.
She was summoned by the new Jackal to help persuade Electro to go through with the procedure that would repower him. [60] It turned out that Electro's saliva electro spiderman mixed in with Francine's DNA, which led to her kissing Dillon enough to kill him and becoming the second Electro. She later encountered Prowler, at the time when he infiltrated New U Technologies.
During the chase, Electro accidentally caused the apparent death of Prowler causing Jackal to make a clone of him. [61] During the " Dead No More: The Clone Conspiracy" storyline, Francine assists Rhino in attacking Spider-Man when he infiltrates New U Technologies.
Both of them are defeated. [64] When Prowler has not returned from his mission to Alcatraz, the villains he cloned start fighting again enough for Jackal to send Francine to have Madame Web's clone find Prowler. Francine shocks the answers out of Madame Web's clone as Julia Carpenter feels it on her end.
After Julia Carpenter escapes, Francine confronts Prowler as his body starts failing. [65] Prowler tries to escape Francine's wrath in Alcatraz, which proves difficult with her powers and his dying body. Using his weapons, the gift shop, and his strategic thinking, Prowler manages to defeat the simple-minded Francine. [66] When Jackal's police contact Chief Anderson tells him about where the clone of Gwen Stacy is, Jackal sends Rhino and Electro to Horizon University.
When they retrieve the Gwen Stacy clone, she electro spiderman them to bring Kaine due to his encounter with the Carrion virus that might help in Jackal's research. Anna Marie Marconi persuades them to bring her along too since she also studied Kaine and the drug. Electro spiderman villains agree to the terms. [67] Electro electro spiderman assists Doctor Octopus into fighting Spectro, following his failed attempt to make off with a test subject, where she is able to knock him out.
[68] Alongside Kaine, Electro was being studied by Doctor Octopus in order to find out how to perfect the "Proto Clone". When Spider-Woman of Earth-65 tries to free Kaine, she is attacked by Electro.
[69] When Spider-Woman of Earth-65 leaves Prowler in an alley when he proves too weak to continue, he is found by Electro.
Julia Carpenter arrives and fends Electro off as she tells Prowler that Spider-Man has stabilized the human and clone cells. When Electro gets the upper hand on Julia, Prowler sacrifices himself to stop Electro and dies in Julia's arms. [70] Electro is one of the few clones that was able to survive the inverse frequency and got away.
[71] [72] Electro later appears as a member of the Sinister Six (consisting of Hobgoblin, Bombshell, Spot and Sandman) led by Aaron Davis in a recolored Iron Spider armor.
She accompanied them in their mission to steal a decommissioned S.H.I.E.L.D. Helicarrier. [73] During the " Hunted" storyline, Electro was seen as a patron at the Pop-Up with No Name.
[74] Mayor Wilson Fisk's operatives later freed Electro and she was recruited to join an electro spiderman incarnation of the Sinister Syndicate. [75] When Francine recaps to Janice how she got her powers, she learns that Janice is Tombstone's daughter.
After meeting its members, Electro was reluctant to join with them until she hears from Janice that their electro spiderman mission given to them by Mayor Wilson Fisk to target Boomerang. This is enough to convince Electro to join as she asks them to put her down for two vegan cheeseburgers. The Sinister Syndicate begins their mission where they attack electro spiderman F.E.A.S.T.
building that Boomerang is volunteering at. [76] Boomerang tries to reason with Beetle and Electro who are still made at him for betraying him.
After getting Aunt May to safety, Peter Parker changes into Spider-Man and helps Boomerang fight the Syndicate. The Syndicate starts doing their formation until Spider-Man accidentally sets off Boomerang's gaserang which knocks out Spider-Man enough for the Syndicate to make off with Boomerang. As Beetle has Electro write a proposal on how the Syndicate can use Boomerang as an example to the criminal underworld, Beetle leave while calling Wilson Fisk that they caught Boomerang as she is given the information on where the exchange can happen.
[77] When Beetle returns to the headquarters, Electro is present when Mayor Wilson Fisk brings the full force of New York City to their headquarters demanding that they surrender Boomerang to him.
When Spider-Man arrives to reason with Mayor Fisk, Electro claims that Spider-Man is buying them some time. The Syndicate then assists Spider-Man against Mayor Fisk's forces. After Spider-Man evacuates Boomerang, the Syndicate fights Mayor Fisk's forces while not killing them. The Syndicate is defeated and arrested by the police. Their transport is then attacked by an electro spiderman assailant who frees them. [78] During the " Sinister War" storyline, Electro was with the Sinister Syndicate when they were discussing adding Ana Kravinoff to their ranks until they are abducted by Kindred's giant centipedes where Kindred offers them and the other villains the opportunity to take down Spider-Man and punish him for his sins.
Electro and the rest of the Sinister Syndicate intercept Overdrive who was carrying Spider-Man away from Foreigner's group. [79] During the " Devil's Reign" storyline, Electro is among the characters that Mayor Wilson Fisk recruited to be part of his Thunderbolts units so that they can help the NYPD crack down on superhuman vigilantism.
She assists Agony, Rhino, and U.S. Agent in taking down Moon Knight. [80] Powers and abilities [ edit ] An unusually configured magnetic field was created when Max Dillon was struck by lightning while holding live, high-tension wires and a wound reel electro spiderman one-inch cable, granting him superhuman powers. Electro can generate massive quantities of electricity, theoretically up to approximately one million volts. He can employ this electrostatic energy as lightning arcs from his fingertips, and his maximum charge is more than enough to kill a normal human.
When his body is charged to high levels, he becomes superhumanly strong and fast. He can also glide over power lines by using the electricity contained therein for propulsion, and he has on occasion been shown to actually ride on lightning bolts.
During a stint in prison, Doctor Octopus gave him the ideas of ionizing metals and sparking the petroleum in the fuel tanks of vehicles as a way to generate explosions. He can charge himself up to make himself more powerful. He can also absorb the energy of electrical equipment such as a power plant to increase his powers further. In New Avengers, he was shown to fly and manipulate large amounts of electricity and machinery, when he freed all the prisoners at Ryker's Island.
[ volume & issue electro spiderman An experimental procedure heightened his powers, allowing Electro to store and absorb a seemingly limitless amount of electricity.
He also seemed to gain the power over magnetism to a certain degree, allowing him to manipulate magnetic fields and move objects in a manner similar to that of Magneto, and could overcome his old weakness to water by using the electromagnetic fields around him to vaporize water before it could touch him. He made Spider-Man beg by stimulating the bioelectric currents in his brain, and was able to defeat Nate Grey by manipulating said currents in Nate's brain to turn his own psionic powers against him.
Electro can override any electrically powered device and manipulate it according to his mental commands. By using an external electrical power source to recharge his body's energy reserves, Electro could expend electricity indefinitely without diminishing his personal reserves. When he is fully charged, Electro is extremely sensitive to anything that may "short circuit" him, such as water. Electro propels himself along magnetic lines of force in objects that have great electrical potential, such as high-tension electrical lines.
He can also create electrostatic bridges to electro spiderman upon, at the cost of a great expenditure of energy. Electro spiderman the events of the storyline "The Gauntlet", Electro became a living artificial thunderbolt, allowing him to travel through electrical appliances such as going through a light bulb and exiting through any other electronic device connected to the power source.
[ volume & issue needed] He was also able to transmit himself over Spider-Man's web line. [ volume & issue needed] Reception [ edit ] During an interview with Newsarama about The Gauntlet and Grim Hunt, Mark Waid claimed that the character of Electro is "one of the smart criminals who was saving what he's been stealing from banks and savings and loans".
He also described Electro as the "anti-bailout guy". [81] A Comics Bulletin review published by Ray Tate of Young Allies #2 described Electro's appearance in that issue electro spiderman "a punk with a gimmick". He also claimed that the character "never harbored a pathological hatred of Spider-Man", and that he instead "developed a healthy loathing for Spidey because the Wall Crawler frequently interfered with his sole goal of larceny".
Ray believes that Electro "isn't a wanton psychopath", but a "bank robber with electrical powers", and that he is "not nuts" but "a felon". These remarks show electro spiderman Electro's character is received not as being mentally ill, but simply a thieving villain. [82] In 2009, Electro was ranked as IGN's 87th Greatest Comic Book Villain of All Time. [5] Other versions [ edit ] House of M [ edit ] In the House of M reality, Electro is one of Rhino's friends (along with Vulture and Ox) who helped him attack and detain the Green Goblin for ruining the best chance at a good life Rhino ever had.
[83] Marvel 1602 [ edit ] In Marvel 1602, Electro is a member of the Sinister Sextet, the dimension's Sinister Six. The Web Warriors (alternate versions of Spider-Man) visited the 1602 Universe to deal with the Sinister Sextet. After apprehending the villains, they noticed the dimension's Electro has escaped, unbeknownst to the heroes, followed them back to the Great Web. [84] Marvel Zombies Return [ edit ] In Marvel Zombies Return, Electro appears as a member of the Sinister Six that battles the reality-jumping zombie Spider-Man.
When the zombified Spider-Man is behind him, he was bitten on the hand. Then Electro becomes headless and infected, later helping his fellow members devour Peter Parker's electro spiderman.
Angered and devastated, the zombie Spider-Man then obliterates his body for what electro spiderman and the team has done when his arm is snapped off and Spider-Man uses his powers against him. [85] MC2 [ edit ] In the MC2 alternate future, Electro has a daughter, Allison Dillon, who is emotionally troubled over never having had a stable father-figure in her life and becomes the supervillain Aftershock.
[86] She had inherited her father's powers, but because Dillon and Allison's electrical auras are different, the slightest touch causes them intense pain. When Dillon discovers his daughter is following in his footsteps, he asks Spider-Man for help.
Spider-Man, Spider-Girl, and the Avengers help subdue Aftershock. When Dillon shows up, father and daughter vow to overcome their pain, and Max promises to be a better father. [87] Old Man Logan [ edit ] Electro spiderman Earth-807128, an area of Amerika called Electroville was named after Electro after the villains eliminated the superheroes.
[88] In the pages of " Old Man Logan" that took place on Earth-21923, Electro was among the villains that came together to eliminate every superhero. He accompanied Enchantress in fighting She-Hulk, Daredevil, and Moon Knight in Manhattan.
Electro shocked Moon Knight into unconsciousness before being shot in the head by Punisher. Kraven the Hunter later stabbed Punisher in the back and avenged Electro.
The part with an area being called Electroville remains intact. [89] Spider-Man: Reign [ edit ] In the Spider-Man: Reign reality, Electro is one of the villains released by Edward to destroy Spider-Man; he is killed by Spider-Man after being knocked into Hydro-Man (who also dies) causing him to short circuit.
[90] Spider-Man: The Manga [ edit ] In Spider-Man: The Manga, Electro is Shiraishi, a mechanic who falls into massive debt after he accidentally hits a child with his car, leaving the boy permanently disabled. Desperate for money, Shiraishi takes on a number of odd jobs (the last of which he robs) before being contacted by the handicapped boy's father, a professor researching high-voltage emission technology.
Shiraishi agrees to be a test subject for the professor's experiments, and is given superhuman abilities through "electrification devices" he is implanted with. The professor convinces Shiraishi, who is dubbed "Electro" by the media, to use his electrokinesis to rob banks, but the professor begins to have second thoughts when Shiraishi's greed proves insatiable, and he begins to murder people who get in his way. While robbing a department store, due to the banks now being too heavily guarded, Electro is challenged by the new hero Spider-Man.
During his battle with Spider-Man, Electro accidentally kills the professor, the only person who knows how to remove his powers, which leave him unable to touch any living thing without shocking them. The distraught and enraged Electro is then fatally punched by Spider-Man, and before dying explains his origin, and has his mask removed to reveal that he is the missing brother of Spider-Man's friend, Rumiko, who Spider-Man was trying to get money for by claiming the reward offered to anyone who could defeat Electro.
[91] Spider-Verse [ edit ] A version of Electro is a member of the Six Men of Sinestry of the dimension Earth-803. He caused a blackout to enable the group to execute their move in stealing the mayor's plan and after a battle with Lady Spider, was forced to retreat after they were overwhelmed yet they were able to accomplish their mission. [92] This Electro went on to start a chain of events that led to an army of Electros attempting to traverse the multiverse in opposition to the Spider-Army, led by a Max Dillon from a world where he used his command of electricity to become a major world leader.
[ volume & issue needed] This Electro attempted to control the others by transforming himself into an electricity-based life-form, absorbing the power of one in ten of the other Electros gathered by his army, while using assorted dimensionally displaced Doctor Octopuses as his 'think tank'.
[ volume & issue needed] However, the Spider-Army were eventually able to trick the Electros into attacking them in Earth-803 – a 'steampunk' Earth with no available electricity for them to draw on – and containing them in a vast Farraday cage made of specially treated webbing. [93] Ultimate Marvel [ edit ] Ultimate Electro. The Ultimate Marvel incarnation of Electro has been reimagined with powers as a product of bioengineering.
Unlike his mainstream counterpart, this version is bald, wears a black leather outfit and has some grotesque burn scars. As a result of experimentation by Justin Hammer, Max Dillon is given the power to control and create electricity. He is sold by Hammer to the Electro spiderman in exchange for a real estate development contract.
[94] When Spider-Man breaks into Kingpin's office, Electro electrocutes him and he, the Electro spiderman, and Kingpin unmask him, revealing him to be a teenager. They decide to throw him out a window but Spider-Man returns and defeats him. [95] Electro later escapes from federal custody, murdering several people in the electro spiderman.
The Ultimates re-apprehend him and place him in S.H.I.E.L.D. custody along with Sandman, Kraven the Hunter, Doctor Octopus and Norman Osborn but the five supervillains escape and become the Ultimate Six. [96] They attack S.H.I.E.L.D.
and manage to capture Spider-Man. They tie him to a chair, torture and humiliate him, and force him to join them.
In a battle with the Ultimates on the White House lawn, Thor defeats Electro. He eventually escapes and is hired by Bolivar Trask to gauge Venom's power. Electro leads Venom on a chase throughout Manhattan when Spider-Man appears.
Electro knocks Electro spiderman out and tries to kill him, but Venom attacks Electro, trying to take Electro's opportunity to kill the fallen hero. Venom defeats Electro by destroying the neon signs that Electro is feeding on. When S.H.I.E.L.D. arrives Venom flees, and Electro is once again brought into S.H.I.E.L.D. custody. The Green Goblin later breaks Electro out of the supervillain prison within the Ultimates' headquarters, the Triskelion, in exchange for Electro's alliance when needed.
[97] Electro goes electro spiderman Osborn's penthouse to wait for instructions where he is disturbed by Spider-Man.
He attempts to flee and gets involved in a fight both with Spider-Man and S.H.I.E.L.D. agents. He is eventually brought down and is assumed to be back in custody.
[98] Alongside the rest of the Ultimate Six, Electro plays a role in the "Death of Spider-Man" storyline. Norman breaks him and the rest out of the Triskelion and wishes for them to kill Peter Parker.
[99] After Doctor Octopus tries to leave the group and is killed by Green Goblin, the remaining five (Electro, Green Goblin, Sandman, Kraven and Vulture) go to Parker's home in Queens. There a fight ensues between the Five and both Johnny Storm and Bobby Drake. The two heroes are defeated, with Electro himself defeating Iceman by sending a jolt of electricity through his ice, but not before Johnny manages to knock Osborn out. Peter then arrives, wearing his Spider-Man costume but no mask, and proceeds to fight the four remaining electro spiderman.
After a pitched battle, Electro is about to deliver the killing shot on the beaten and exhausted Peter. But before he can strike, Electro is shot three times from behind by Aunt May. He 'short circuits' in a massive electrical surge, taking out Kraven, Sandman and Vulture. [100] Later, Electro is shown to have survived the shooting, and is being held in S.H.I.E.L.D. custody. Electro is able to power up and attempt an escape after being improperly sedated by a S.H.I.E.L.D. nurse. After taking down the Ultimates, Electro fights Nick Fury and the new Spider-Man (Miles Morales), thinking Miles is the original and angry that he is still alive.
Morales stuns Electro by hitting him with a hurled crate, then Fury shoots him to end the threat. [101] Electro later resurfaces, fighting Sabretooth over something relating to Norman Osborn. The two are broken up and defeated by Miles, with help from Cloak and Dagger. [102] Marvel 2099 [ edit ] When Miguel O'Hara finds himself electro spiderman an alternate version of 2099 after being trapped electro spiderman the past, he encounters a 2099 version of the Sinister Six, which includes an android that calls itself 'Electro' after it gained sentience and electromagnetic powers in a lightning strike.
[103] After the battle against the rebels led by Spider-Man, concluded with the death of the former leader of the Sinister Six, Goblin 2099 (who was actually Father Jennifer D'Angelo, an undercover member of the resistance), Electro and the other members of the Sinister Six are recruited by Venture as members of the terrorist organization the Fist in the year 2016.
[104] Electro is later sent to bring defector Sonny Frisco back to the Fist's base. It follows him through Parker Industries and, defeating Captain America along the way, almost kills Sonny before Spider-Man captures Electro using wooden shields to deny its power.
[105] It is then taken and imprisoned in Miguel's private laboratory, where Electro is led to believe that Lyla, Miguel's holographic assistant, freed it and joined its crusade to start a robotic revolution. After revealing the date of the Fist's attack in New York, the simulation ends and Lyla disables Electro. [106] Marvel Noir [ edit ] The Marvel Noir version of Electro is introduced in the first issue of Spider-Man Noir (2020). [107] Unlike his Earth-616 counterpart, this version of Electro is stocky and muscular with a thick mustache, and his namesake, however, comes from a circular pattern of dense Tesla coils strapped to his back.
He also wields a lightning rod like a lightsaber, with blinding bolts of electricity coursing through both it and the aforementioned Tesla coils. [108] Electro is first seen attacking Peter Parker at his aunt's house, but he is clocked out by Mary Jane Watson and forced to retreat. [107] Electro is later shown fighting Spider-Man at the Neues Museum in Berlin (where he had previously killed Dr.
Heinrich Hellstrom), [109] but flees to retreat when Byron Ironsides throws a pack of explosives at him. Electro then proceedes to Istanbul, where he drains the power from half of the city. [110] As he and his employer Huma Bergmann reach the Temple of Inanna in Uruk, Babylon, the proximity to the M'kraan Crystal inside affects Electro, causing him to increase in size and strength while his features become progressively more deformed. [111] Inside the Temple, he confronts Spider-Man and Hu-Ri, throwing her and the Cicada Stone at the door to the Tomb of Heaven.
The door opens a gateway to the Underworld, which causes both Electro and Spider-Man to fall into the Underworld itself. There, Electro is restored to his normal self, but is eaten electro spiderman by Ereshkigal, the Queen of the Underworld.
{INSERTKEYS} [112] In other media [ edit ] Television [ edit ] • The Max Dillon incarnation of Electro makes a cameo appearance in the episode "Dr.
Doom's Day", as part of the " Namor" segment of The Marvel Super Heroes animated series. [ citation needed] • The Max Dillon incarnation of Electro appears in the 1960s Spider-Man animated series, voiced by Tom Harvey. [113] Debuting in the episode, "Electro the Human Lightning Bolt", he robs J. Jonah Jameson's house, for which Spider-Man receives the blame. After the hero defeats Electro, he leaves the villain outside of Jameson's office window.
In the episode "Killowatt Kaper", Electro breaks out of jail using a metal kite during a storm to recharge himself before cutting off the city's electricity to demand a large ransom until Spider-Man defeats him once more.
In the episode "To Catch a Spider", Dr. Noah Boddy breaks Electro, the Green Goblin and Vulture out of prison to kill Spider-Man, who uses ventriloquism to trick them into fighting and defeating each other.
• The Max Dillon incarnation of Electro appears in the Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends animated series, voiced by Allan Melvin.
[113] In the episode "Videoman", he creates the titular villain to help him defeat Spider-Man, Iceman, and Firestar. Electro later makes a cameo appearance in "Attack of the Arachnoid" as an inmate of Ryker's Island. • A variation of Electro appears in the 1990s Spider-Man animated series five-part episode "Six Forgotten Warriors", voiced by Philip Proctor. [114] [113] This version is Rheinholt Schmidt, a German Nazi who has masqueraded as Russian police chief Rheinholt Kragov for most of his life.
He spent several years searching for his father Red Skull and impersonating him in an attempt to gain control of his doomsday weapon. Once Spider-Man, the Kingpin, and the Insidious Six retrieve the keys and box needed to access it, Rheinholt traps them except for his step-brother Chameleon who betrays the Kingpin to help Rheinholt access the doomsday weapon and free the Red Skull from his energy vortex prison.
Freed, the Red Skull uses the weapon on Rheinholt, turning him into Electro. Angry at his father for risking his life, he decides to take over the world for himself, but Spider-Man tricks Electro into trapping himself in the energy vortex before destroying the machine. • A Counter-Earth version of Electro appears in the Spider-Man Unlimited animated series episode "Ill-Met By Moonlight", voiced by Dale Wilson. [113] This version is a Bestial electric eel who possesses electrokinesis and serves the High Evolutionary as a guard before he is defeated by Spider-Man.
[115] Electro in Spider-Man: The New Animated Series. • The Max Dillon incarnation of Electro appears in Spider-Man: The New Animated Series, voiced by Ethan Embry. [113] This version is a geeky teenager and Peter Parker's friend who attends Empire State University. Dillon becomes Electro in the episode "The Party" after being covered in an unknown substance and struck by lightning. He pursues revenge on the students who bullied him and kills their leader before Spider-Man weakens Electro and forces him to retreat into an underground electrical system.
In the episode "When Sparks Fly", Electro regains his powers and plots to transform his crush, Sally Thompson, into an energy being like himself. However, Spider-Man and his allies trap him in a high voltage storage container battery before throwing it into the Hudson River. Electro in The Spectacular Spider-Man. • The Max Dillon incarnation of Electro appears in The Spectacular Spider-Man animated series, voiced by Crispin Freeman. [116] [113] Debuting in the episode " Interactions", this version is transformed into a living electric capacitor after a freak accident involving genetically altered electric rays and eels.
Afterwards, he is placed in an insulated body suit to contain the bio-electricity his body now produces and attempts to lead a normal life again. However, after Spider-Man mistakes him for a supervillain, Dillon turns to crime and adopts the name "Electro".
He attacks Dr. Curt Connors, demanding a cure for his condition, but Spider-Man intervenes and defeats Electro. [117] [118] In the episode "Group Therapy", Electro breaks five other supervillains out of jail and joins them to form the Sinister Six and exact revenge on Spider-Man, though they are defeated by him in his black suit.
[119] In the episode "Reinforcement". Electro joins a reassembled Sinister Six under the Master Planner and continues to work for him until Spider-Man defeats Electro and he is taken into police custody in the following episode, "Shear Strength".
[120] [121] • The Max Dillon incarnation of Electro appears in the Ultimate Spider-Man animated series, voiced by Christopher Daniel Barnes. [122] [113] [123] This version is an old enemy of Spider-Man's from before the series began who the web-slinger views as incompetent.
Debuting in his self-titled episode, Electro is defeated by Spider-Man and thrown against a large screen in Times Square that transforms him into a hyper-electrified form. Electro cuts off the city's power and demands a significant ransom, but Spider-Man and his fellow S.H.I.E.L.D.
trainees are able to defeat him. Electro returns in the episodes "The Sinister Six" and "Return of the Sinister Six" as a member of the titular team to seek revenge against Spider-Man, only to be defeated by the web-slinger and his allies in both episodes. In the four-part episode "Spider-Verse", the Green Goblin traps Electro in the Siege Perilous to power an interdimensional travel device so the former can collect DNA from various alternate reality Spider-Men.
However, the original Spider-Man uses Electro to bring his counterparts to his Earth to help him defeat the Goblin. Though Electro escapes the Siege Perilous and gains control of a damaged Helicarrier, the assembled Spider-Men are able to defeat him as well. In the episode "The New Sinister Six" Pt. 1, Electro joins a HYDRA-backed version of the titular team to attack the Triskelion, only to be defeated by Squirrel Girl.
• The Francine Frye incarnation of Electro appears in the 2017 Spider-Man animated series, voiced by Daisy Lightfoot. [124] This version is an African-American teenager who uses an exoskeleton that grants her electrical powers, which she needs to constantly recharge. In the episode "Bring on the Bad Guys" Pt. 4, Electro ambushes Spider-Man in an attempt to collect a bounty on his head. After using a power amplifier, she transforms herself into an electrical energy being, but is eventually defeated by Spider-Man, who restores her and leaves her for the police.
In the episode "The Living Brain", Electro joins the Beetle in fighting Spider-Man and Police Chief Yuri Watanabe inside a supervillain holding facility, but they are defeated and re-incarcerated. In the episode "Goblin War" Pt. 3, Electro became the leader of a Goblin Nation faction called the Electro Goblins, but is tricked into attacking Crossbones, who defeats her.
• The Max Dillon incarnation of Electro appears in the Marvel Super Hero Adventures animated series, voiced by Ian James Corlett. [113] Film [ edit ] Jamie Foxx as Electro in The Amazing Spider-Man 2. Jamie Foxx portrays Max Dillon / Electro in two live-action Marvel films. This version is an electrical engineer who works for Oscorp who views himself as a nobody and idolizes Spider-Man after the hero saves him from Aleksei Sytsevich.
• He first debuted in the 2014 Sony Pictures film The Amazing Spider-Man 2. [125] Foxx revealed that the character was redesigned to be more grounded and that the villain's classic yellow and green suit would be omitted in favor of a modern look.
[126] [127] On his birthday, while fixing a power line, Dillon is electrocuted and falls into a tank of genetically engineered electric eels, which grant him electrical powers. Dillon heads to Times Square to "charge" himself with more electricity, but is confronted by Spider-Man. Initially excited, a stray shot from an NYPD sniper causes Dillon to believe Spider-Man set him up before attacking him, only to be subdued and sent to Ravencroft for study. Taking the name "Electro", he is broken out by Harry Osborn, who requires his help in breaking into Oscorp to find a cure for his terminal illness.
Electro agrees and is given a new suit to control his powers. After they successfully break in, Harry allows Electro to take over the electrical grid he designed and take control of New York's electricity. Magnetizing his web-shooters to protect them from Electro's powers, Spider-Man confronts Dillon once more and repairs the damaged electrical grid so Gwen Stacy can reactivate it; allowing him to overload Electro with his own electricity.
• Foxx reprised his role as Max Dillon / Electro in the Marvel Cinematic Universe 2021 film Spider-Man: No Way Home, sporting an updated redesign more closely resembling his mainstream comics counterpart. [128] [129] Prior to becoming pure energy, he is transported to another universe and regains his human form after consuming the electricity there.
The second universe's version of Spider-Man and a Sandman from a different universe confront and imprison Electro in the Sanctum Sanctorum along with other dimensionally-displaced supervillains. Spider-Man later breaks the villains out and persuades them to allow him to cure them and avert their original fates. However, the Green Goblin sabotages the experiment, allowing Electro and the other villains to escape.
The former later confronts Spider-Man, powered by an Arc Reactor, and fights the three Spider-Men until a Doctor Octopus from Sandman's universe cures him. Dillon laments losing his powers, but his Spider-Man assures him that he is not a nobody and convinces him to abandon his supervillainy before Doctor Strange returns Dillon and the dimensionally-displaced individuals to their respective universes. Video games [ edit ] • The Max Dillon incarnation of Electro appears as a boss in the arcade game Spider-Man: The Video Game, the Game Boy Advance game Spider-Man: Mysterio's Menace, and the home games Spider-Man: Return of the Sinister Six and The Amazing Spider-Man vs.
The Kingpin. • The Max Dillon incarnation of Electro appears in Spider-Man and Captain America in Doctor Doom's Revenge. [130] • The Max Dillon incarnation of Electro appears in The Amazing Spider-Man 3: Invasion of the Spider-Slayers. [ citation needed] • The Max Dillon incarnation of Electro appears in Spider-Man 2: Enter Electro, voiced by Dee Bradley Baker. [113] He intends to use the "Bio-Nexus Device", a mechanism that can enhance a person's bioelectric field, to become a god.
Working with Shocker, Sandman, Beetle and Hammerhead, Electro abducts Dr. Watts, the creator of the device, and fights Spider-Man over its possession.
Electro eventually powers up the device to become a being of pure energy dubbed " Hyper-Electro", but is ultimately de-powered and defeated by Spider-Man and imprisoned.
• The Ultimate Marvel incarnation of Max Dillon / Electro appears as a boss in the Ultimate Spider-Man video game, voiced by James Arnold Taylor.
[113] He is hired by Bolivar Trask to test the Venom symbiote in combat. When Spider-Man interferes in their fight, Electro knocks him unconscious, forcing Venom to protect the web-slinger while defeating Electro. Afterwards, Electro is arrested by S.H.I.E.L.D. • The Max Dillon incarnation of Electro appears as a boss in the Game Boy Advance version of the Spider-Man 3 film tie-in game.
He kidnaps a senator, but is defeated by Spider-Man wearing his black suit. • The Max Dillon incarnation of Electro appears as a boss and playable character in the PSP version of Spider-Man: Friend or Foe, voiced by David Kaye. [131] [113] He is one of many supervillains who Mysterio captures and places under mind control before sending him to an island in the Mediterranean Sea to retrieve a meteor shard.
After Spider-Man defeats him and destroys his mind-control device, Electro joins forces with him to exact revenge on Mysterio. • The Max Dillon incarnation of Electro appears as an assist character in Spider-Man: Web of Shadows, voiced by Liam O'Brien.
[113] He goes on a rampage through quarantine camps that S.H.I.E.L.D. established for symbiote-infected people while searching for his sister. After Spider-Man defeats him, Electro is shot by Black Widow, though his infected sister approaches and infects him with her symbiote to heal him. While the symbiote-infected Electro escapes, he reemerges during the symbiotes' invasion before he is defeated by Spider-Man, who frees him from his symbiote's control.
• The Max Dillon incarnation of Electro appears as a boss in most versions of Marvel: Ultimate Alliance 2, voiced by Kirk Thornton. [132] [113] • The Ultimate Marvel incarnation of Max Dillon / Electro appears as a boss in Spider-Man: Shattered Dimensions, voiced by Thomas F. Wilson. [133] [113] He uses a fragment of the Tablet of Order and Chaos to increase his powers and take over a hydroelectric dam, becoming larger and more powerful as he absorbs more energy.
He also gains the ability to create minions to attack Spider-Man, who eventually defeats Electro by tricking him into destroying the dam while Spider-Man claims his tablet fragment. In the Nintendo DS version, the mainstream version of Max Dillon / Electro appears as a boss for the Amazing Spider-Man.
• The Max Dillon incarnation of Electro appears in Marvel Heroes, voiced again by Liam O'Brien. [113] • The Max Dillon incarnation of Electro appears in Marvel Super Hero Squad Online, voiced by Steve Blum. [113] • Both the mainstream and Ultimate Marvel incarnations of Max Dillon / Electro appear as separate playable characters in Lego Marvel Super Heroes, both voiced by David Sobolov.
[113] In a bonus mission, Electro and Shocker collaborate to rob a bank, but are foiled by Spider-Man, Captain America, and Iron Man. [134] [ citation needed] • The Max Dillon incarnation of Electro appears as a boss in The Amazing Spider-Man 2 film tie-in game, voiced by Michael A.
Shepperd in most versions and by Liam O'Brien in the IOS version. [113] Similarly to the film the game is based on, this version is an Oscorp engineer who is rescued by Spider-Man after two rival gangs attack the company.
Dillon also helps Spider-Man prevent a potentially catastrophic incident, which causes him to develop an unhealthy attraction to the hero. After failing to report an Oscorp employee who took credit for his power grid to Donald Menken, Dillon suffers a freak accident that grants him electrical powers. Realizing that Spider-Man will not recognize him in his current state and for fear of being arrested, he becomes the criminal Electro.
He is subsequently arrested and sent to Ravencroft, where he becomes one of several test subjects for experiments funded by the Kingpin and overseen by Menken. Dillon eventually escapes and drains the city's power, causing a blackout. When Spider-Man confronts him, Dillon reveals the experiments he was subjected to and blames the web-slinger for not being there to save him.
After a battle with Spider-Man, Electro is defeated and his body explodes. • Various alternate reality versions of Max Dillon / Electro appear as bosses in Spider-Man Unlimited, all voiced again by Christopher Daniel Barnes. [113] • The Max Dillon incarnation of Electro appears as a playable character in Lego Marvel Super Heroes 2.
[135] Additionally, his Marvel 2099 counterpart is also playable and serves as a minor boss in the game's story, attacking Spider-Man, She-Hulk, and Ms. Marvel when they arrive in Nueva York. • The Max Dillon incarnation of Electro appears in Marvel's Spider-Man, [136] voiced by Josh Keaton. [113] While he has a similar origin story to his comics counterpart, this version is bald and has star-shaped facial scars. Within the game's continuity, Spider-Man has been a superhero for eight years and is well-familiar with Electro, having fought him several times in the past.
At the beginning of the main storyline, Electro is imprisoned at the maximum-security supervillain prison, the Raft. However, he eventually escapes when Otto Octavius stages a prison break and agrees to join his liberator's Sinister Six in exchange for Octavius helping him achieve his ultimate goal of becoming a being of pure energy.
After the team overpowers Spider-Man, the Sinister Six split up to attack different Oscorp properties, with Electro being sent to cripple the city's power supply.
He later joins forces with Vulture to kill Spider-Man, but both are ultimately defeated and re-incarcerated. • The Max Dillon incarnation of Electro appears as a boss in Marvel Ultimate Alliance 3: The Black Order, voiced again by Christopher Daniel Barnes. [137] [113] He joins the Sinister Six and fights the heroes during a prison break at the Raft before being defeated and re-incarcerated. • The Francine Frye incarnation of Electro appears as a playable character in Marvel Puzzle Quest.
[138] Live performances [ edit ] • The Max Dillon incarnation of Electro in The Amazing Adventures of Spider-Man ride at the Islands of Adventure theme park at Universal Orlando Resort, voiced by Jim Wise.
[113] This version is a member of the Sinister Syndicate who attacks guests with an electrical power cable. He later attempts to attack Spider-Man, but accidentally hits Hydro-Man instead, knocking himself out in the process. He is later subdued with the rest of the Syndicate.
• The Max Dillon incarnation of Electro appears in Julie Taymor's Broadway theatre show, Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark, played by actor Emmanuel Brown. [139] This version was originally a scientist until the Green Goblin turns him into Electro and manipulates him into joining his Sinister Six.
• The Max Dillon incarnation of Electro appears in the Marvel Universe: LIVE! stage show. [140] [141] This version is a member of the Sinister Six. References [ edit ] • ^ a b "Exterminators (Spider-Man foes)". www.marvunapp.com. • ^ Manning, Matthew K. (2012). "1960s". In Gilbert, Laura (ed.).
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Marvel Comics. • ^ Spider-Girl #51 (Nov. 2002). Marvel Comics. • ^ Spider-Girl #81 (Feb. 2005). Marvel Comics. • electro spiderman Wolverine vol. 3 #68. Marvel Comics. • ^ Old Man Logan vol. 2 #8. Marvel Comics. • ^ Spider-Man: Reign #1–4 (December 2006 – March 2007). Marvel Comics. • ^ Spider-Man: The Manga #1–3. Marvel Comics. • ^ Spider-Verse #1 (2015). Marvel Comics. • ^ Web Warriors #11. Marvel Comics. • ^ Ultimate Spider-Man #17 (March 2002). Marvel Comics. • ^ Ultimate Spider-Man #12 (October 2001).
Marvel Comics. • ^ Miniseries Ultimate Six #1–7 (Nov. 2003 – June 2004). Marvel Comics. • ^ Ultimate Spider-Man #113 (November 2007). Marvel Comics. • ^ Ultimate Spider-Man #114 (December 2007). Marvel Comics. • ^ Ultimate Spider-Man #156 (May 2011).
Marvel Comics. • ^ Ultimate Spider-Man #157–159 (June–July 2011). Marvel Comics. • ^ Ultimate Comics Spider-Man #5 (December 2011). Marvel Comics. • ^ Brian Michael Bendis (w), David Marquez (p), David Marquez (i), Justin Ponsor (col), Cory Petit (let), Emily Shaw and Mark Paniccia (ed). Miles Morales: Ultimate Spider-Man #10 (February 18, 2015), United States: Marvel Comics • ^ Spider-Man 2099 vol.
3 #11. Marvel Comics. • ^ Spider-Man 2099 vol. 3 #12. Marvel Comics. • ^ Spider-Man 2099 vol. 3 #21. Marvel Comics. • ^ Spider-Man 2099 vol. 3 #22. Marvel Comics. • ^ a b Spider-Man Noir vol. 2 #1 (March 2020). Marvel Comics. • ^ Pulfer, Richard (July 30, 2020). "Spider-Man Electro spiderman Introduces Own Version of Electro". Screen Rant. Retrieved September 13, 2020. • ^ Spider-Man Noir vol. 2 #2 (July 2020). Marvel Comics. • ^ Spider-Man Noir vol. 2 #3 (August 2020).
Marvel Comics. • ^ Spider-Man Noir vol. 2 electro spiderman (September 2020). Marvel Comics. • ^ Spider-Man Noir vol. electro spiderman #5 (October 2020). Marvel Comics. • ^ a b c d e f g h i j k electro spiderman m n o p q r electro spiderman t u v "Electro Voices (Spider-Man)". • ^ Chitwood, Scott (February 15, 2000). "Review of James Cameron's Spider-Man Scriptment". IGN. Archived from the original on August 31, 2011. Retrieved April 28, 2007.
• ^ Larry Brody and Robert Gregory-Browne (writers) (February 17, 2001). "Ill-Met By Moonlight". Spider-Man Unlimited. Season 1. Episode 8. Fox Broadcasting Company. • ^ Crispin Freeman as Electro Archived 2012-10-05 at the Wayback Machine • ^ "Comics Continuum by Rob Allstetter: Friday, August 31, 2007".
www.comicscontinuum.com. • ^ "Interactions". The Spectacular Spider-Man. Season 1. Episode 2. March 8, 2008. The CW.
• ^ "Group Therapy". The Spectacular Spider-Man. Season 1. Episode 11. May 31, 2008. The CW. • ^ "Reinforcement". The Spectacular Spider-Man. Season 2. Episode 3. June 29, 2009. Disney XD.
electro spiderman ^ "Shear Strength". The Spectacular Spider-Man. Season 2. Episode 4. July 6, 2009. Disney XD. • electro spiderman "Disney XD's Ultimate Spider-Man Swing Back Into Action in 2013". • ^ "Electro". Ultimate Spider-Man. Season 2. Episode 2. January 21, 2013. Disney XD. • ^ "Bring On the Bad Guys Pt. 4". Spider-Man. Season 2.
Episode 36. August 6, 2018. Disney XD. • ^ "Electro confirmed as The Amazing Spider-Man 2's main villain". YahooMail. November 22, 2013. Archived from the original on December 3, 2013.
• ^ "The Amazing Spider-Man 2 Electro Costume Is Getting a Modern Redesign". Movieweb.com. December 17, 2012. Archived from the original on October 14, 2013. Retrieved December 17, 2012. • ^ "The electric Jamie Foxx puts a charge into 'The Amazing Spider-Man 2' ". Star Tribune. Archived from the original on May 8, 2014.
Retrieved February 21, 2017. {{ cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL ( link) • ^ Holmes, Adam (November 16, 2021). "Spider-Man: No Way Home's Latest Trailer Finally Shows Off Electro, Green Goblin And Electro spiderman. CinemaBlend. Archived from the original on November 17, 2021. Retrieved November 16, 2021. • ^ Kit, Borys (October 1, 2020). " 'Spider-Man 3' Jolt: Jamie Foxx Returning as Electro (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter.
Archived from the original on October 1, 2020. • ^ "Marvel - Internapse". Archived from the original on July 13, 2011. Retrieved Electro spiderman 26, 2021. • ^ Carr, Jason. "Spider-Man: Friend or Foe". IMDb. IMDb. Retrieved February 11, 2016. • ^ Torres, Ricardo (April 3, 2009). "Marvel: Ultimate Alliance 2 Updated Impressions: Secret Wat in Castle Doom – Xbox 360 Previews". GameSpot. Archived from the original on July 4, 2009 electro spiderman. Retrieved April 11, 2009. • ^ "Spider-Man: Shattered Dimensions Achievements".
XboxAchievements.com. • ^ "LEGO Marvel Super Heroes – #EGX 2013". YouTube. Archived from the original on November 10, 2021. Retrieved September 28, 2013. • ^ "Characters". IGN Database. Retrieved January 28, 2018. • ^ "Spider-Man PS4 Release Date, E3 2018 Gameplay, Hands-On Preview Impressions, Sinister Six Villains – Everything We Know". USgamer. June 15, 2018. Retrieved June 20, 2018.
• ^ "Electro Voices (Spider-Man)". Electro spiderman The Voice Actors. • ^ "Electro (Francine Frye) - Marvel Puzzle Quest New Character". June 28, 2021. • ^ Electro, About the Artists, accessed February 12, 2011. • ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on December 3, 2013. Retrieved August 15, 2014. {{ cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title ( link) • ^ Wheatley, Cliff (November 19, 2013). "Marvel Universe LIVE! Reveals Villain Characters". IGN.
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• Privacy policy • About Wikipedia • Disclaimers • Contact Wikipedia • Mobile electro spiderman • Developers • Statistics • Cookie statement • • "Benjamin Parker" redirects here. For other uses, see Ben Parker. Uncle Ben Publication information Publisher Marvel Comics First appearance As Uncle Ben: Strange Tales #97 (January 1962) As Ben Parker: Amazing Fantasy #15 (August 1962) Created by Stan Lee (writer) Steve Ditko (artist) In-story information Full name Benjamin Franklin Parker Place of origin Brooklyn, New York Supporting character of Spider-Man Benjamin Franklin Parker, usually referred to as Uncle Ben, is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics, usually in association with the superhero Spider-Man.
He is the husband of May Parker and the paternal uncle and father figure of Peter Parker. After appearing Strange Tales #97 (January 1962), Uncle Ben made his first full appearance in Amazing Fantasy #15 (August 1962), and was created by writer Stan Lee and artist Steve Ditko. He was modeled after American founding father Benjamin Franklin. The character has been an essential part of Spider-Man's history. His death at the hands of a petty criminal, whom Spider-Man previously had the chance to apprehend, but chose not to, has been depicted in almost all versions of the hero's origin story, as the main factor that inspired Peter to become Spider-Man.
Uncle Ben's quote, " With great power there must also come great responsibility", has become Spider-Man's iconic life motto. The character has been substantially adapted from the comics into various forms of media, including films, animated series, and video games.
He was portrayed by Cliff Robertson in Sam Raimi's Spider-Man trilogy and by Martin Sheen in the 2012 film The Amazing Spider-Man. Contents • 1 Publication history • 1.1 Notability of death • 2 Fictional character biography • 2.1 Early life • 2.2 Raising Peter • 2.3 Spider-Man and death • electro spiderman Legacy • 3 Other versions • 3.1 Trouble • 3.2 Bullet Points • 3.3 Electro spiderman of M • 3.4 Marvel Noir • 3.5 Spider-Verse • 3.6 Spider-Geddon • 3.7 Ultimate Marvel • 3.8 What If?
• 3.9 Derailed Alt-Ben Parker • 4 "With great power, there must also come great responsibility" • 5 In other media • 5.1 Television • 5.2 Film • 5.3 Video games • 6 Franklin Richards's Uncle Ben • 7 Son of Spider-Man • 8 The Other Uncle Ben • 9 References • 10 External links Publication history [ edit ] Uncle Ben first appeared in Amazing Fantasy #15 and was killed in the same issue.
Although his history as a supporting character was very brief, Uncle Ben is an overshadowing figure in Spider-Man's life, often appearing in flashbacks. Notability of death [ edit ] The murder of Uncle Ben is possibly the most notable in comic book history. He is also one of the few comic book deaths that has never been reversed in terms of official continuity.
He was a member of the "Big Three", alongside Jason Todd (an associate of Batman) and Bucky (an associate of Captain America) whose notable deaths, along with Ben's, gave rise to the phrase: "No one in comics stays dead except for Bucky, Jason Todd, and Uncle Ben". Later, the revivals of both Bucky and Jason in 2005 led to the amendment, "No one in comics stays dead except Uncle Ben".
The violent killing of Uncle Ben, done by a common street criminal, also shares multiple similarities to the death of Thomas and Martha Wayne, the parents of Batman, which sometimes is included in the saying.
[1] There have been examples of Uncle Ben remaining alive in alternative timelines, including stories featured in Marvel's What If (one electro spiderman which he forces Peter to unmask in front of J. Jonah Jameson), and a storyline of the 1994 Spider-Man animated series featured a universe where Uncle Ben had never died, electro spiderman Peter Parker became a successful industrialist, having never really bothered to use his powers responsibly as everything always seemed to work out for him.
This fact is used to defeat the rampaging Spider-Carnage by exposing him to the one person he will trust and listen to: the Uncle Ben of that reality. [2] A story-line in the official series Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man seemingly suggested that Ben may be alive. This Ben, however, was actually from a parallel universe where Aunt May died in electro spiderman random accident, leaving him to raise Peter.
This alternate Ben came to electro spiderman planet Earth of regular Marvel comics (the 616 reality) as part of an evil plan devised by the Hobgoblin of 2211 to defeat the Spider-Men of different eras.
[3] During the Clone Conspiracy storyline, when Peter's clone Ben Reilly (who had taken Uncle Ben's first name, along with Aunt May's last, to differentiate himself from Peter) used the Jackal's technology to revive several of Peter's old enemies and allies, he offered to bring Uncle Ben back to life while trying to win Peter to his point of view. [4] Although tempted at the offer, Peter concluded that the reason Reilly had not brought Uncle Ben back on his own was that he knew that Uncle Ben would disapprove of Reilly's actions, as his plan would see everyone on Earth granted immortality, while dependent on him to supply the medication needed electro spiderman stabilize their cloned bodies.
[5] Fictional character biography [ edit ] Early life [ edit ] Ben Parker was born in Brooklyn, New York. He trained to be a military police officer, [6] and also spent time as a singer in a band. He had known his future wife, May Reilly since their high school days, but she, in turn, was naively interested in a boy who was involved in criminal activities. When he came to her one night and proposed to her on the spot, Ben was there to expose him as a murderer, and to comfort the heart-broken May electro spiderman the boy was arrested.
Their relationship evolved into love, and they enjoyed a happily married life together. [7] When Ben's younger brother Richard Parker and his wife Mary were killed in a plane crash, Ben and May took in their orphaned son Peter and raised him as their own.
[8] Raising Peter [ edit ] Ben was very protective of Peter, going as far as fighting some of the bullies that tormented young Parker. Peter became friends with Charlie Weiderman in high school, a teen even more unpopular than he was.
However, Charlie often provoked the trouble with the other teens. One day, he was chased to the Parker home by a group of bullies led by Rich and Ben intervened.
Ben told them that if they wanted Charlie, they would have electro spiderman go through him. Rich tried to, but was surprised by Ben's army training. As soon as the bullies were gone, he told the boy that he was not welcome at the house or with Peter because of his provoking the bullies and not being able to tell the truth. [9] Spider-Man and death [ edit ] In high school, a radioactive spider bite gave Peter superhuman powers.
Creating the costumed identity of Spider-Man for himself, Peter sought first to exploit his newfound powers as a masked wrestler and then as a television star. Coming from a television appearance, Spider-Man saw a burglar [10] being chased by a security guard. The guard called for Spider-Man to stop the thief, but the nascent Spidey refused on the grounds that catching criminals was not his job. The robber got away. [11] When Peter later returned home, he was informed by a police officer that his beloved Uncle Ben electro spiderman been killed by a burglar.
Outraged, he donned his Spider-Man costume and captured the man only to realize to his horror that it was the same burglar whom he could have effortlessly captured earlier at the studio.
As a result, Peter considered himself morally responsible for Ben's death and resolved to fight crime as a superhero — realizing that with great power comes great responsibility — and vowing never to let another innocent person come to harm if he could help it. [11] Legacy [ edit ] Ben's death was truly avenged when the burglar returned for the money once more, threatening Aunt May.
The burglar died from a heart attack upon beholding his old nemesis Spider-Man once again and electro spiderman that Spider-Man and Peter Parker were one and the same person. [12] In Amazing Spider-Man Family #7, May relates to Peter her account of meeting Ben for the first time. Ben briefly appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man #500; after Spider-Man played a vital role in preventing the resurrection of Dormammu, an unidentified higher power provided Doctor Strange with a small box that he felt he had to give to Spider-Man as a reward for his role in events.
When Peter opened the box on the roof of his electro spiderman building, it contained a note saying "You have five minutes. Spend them as you will", followed by Ben appearing on the roof.
It was revealed that this Ben – whether a ghost or Ben having been temporally relocated from the moment before his death – remembered being out for the walk that resulted in him getting shot but nothing afterwards, although he concluded that the events leading to him being on that roof were not important.
In their talk Ben said that the only thing that would disappoint him about Peter is if Peter ever settled for less because he was afraid of reaching for more. This helps Peter to see that he had a good life for all its hardships, recognizing that he has always used what he has, and Ben assures Peter that he is proud of him before he electro spiderman.
[13] During the 2008–2009 " Dark Reign" storyline, Uncle Ben makes an appearance in the Underworld when Hercules attends the trial of Zeus, directing Amadeus Cho as he attempted to find his parents in the afterlife. [14] In the "Amazing Grace" storyline, Ben appears as an apparition to Spider-Man while battling a horde of demons and gargoyles, telling him that his death is not Peter's or anyone's fault.
However, one enemy notices him and attacked only to disappear. This left Spider-Man electro spiderman if he was imagining Ben or he was really talking to his ghost. [15] When Ben Reilly adopted the identity of the Jackal and set up an elaborate plan to use Warren's new cloning process to make the world immortal, he attempted to win Peter's allegiance by showing him Ben's coffin and offering to bring Ben back to life.
[4] However, although tempted by the idea, Peter realized that Ben never intended to bring 'their' uncle back to life because he would have done it already, coldly informing his clone that Uncle Ben would tell Reilly that he was wrong, as he has the power without the responsibility. [5] At the conclusion of the crisis, Peter takes a moment beside the coffin containing Ben's corpse, acknowledging that Reilly's actions were wrong but wishing that Uncle Ben was there regardless.
[16] When Spider-Man finally confronts Kindred during the " Last Remains" arc, he finds that Kindred had dug up the bodies of Uncle Ben, Gwen Stacy, George Stacy, Ned Leeds, J.
Jonah Jameson Sr., Jean DeWolff, and Marla Jameson and sat them around a dinner table. [17] Other versions [ edit ] Trouble [ edit ] A version of Ben appeared in the Mark Millar, Terry Dodson 2003 limited series, " Trouble", with his brother Richie, who were involved with teenagers, May and Mary. [18] None of the characters' last names were revealed.
The story did not become canon because of its negative reception. [19] [20] [21] Bullet Points [ edit ] In this alternate reality, a young Ben Parker is working as a military policeman. He is assigned to security for Doctor Erskine, a scientist for the Captain America program. An assassination attempt on Erskine succeeds, killing Ben in the process.
Later on, May still attempts to raise Peter on her own, but without the influence of Ben, Peter grows up to be angry, cynical and mean-spirited, going on to become the Hulk of this reality when he sneaks onto the test site that Rick Jones sneaked onto in the original version of events. [22] House of M [ edit ] In the House of M reality, Ben Parker is alive and, like the rest of the world, is aware that Peter Parker is Spider-Man.
After recovering Peter's journal, electro spiderman entries detailing that the world is not how it electro spiderman be, Ben discovers that he is killed shortly after Peter gains his powers.
He later helps Peter fake his death, photographing Spider-Man apparently hanging himself. [23] Marvel Noir [ edit ] In the Marvel Noir electro spiderman, Ben Parker is a social activist who was murdered by the cannibalistic Vulture, one of the enforcer of crime lord Norman Osborn. He had previously been a decorated pilot and veteran of World War I, but he did not take pride in his service, believing that no just cause was fought for. His nephew Peter dons his old aviator uniform and wields his service revolver during his activities as Spider-Man.
[24] Spider-Verse [ edit ] During the " Spider-Verse" storyline, there are different versions of Uncle Ben that are featured: • A version of Peter Parker named Patton Parnell lives with his abusive Uncle Ted on an unknown Earth. After the bite of an irradiated spider mutates him into an arachnid monstrosity, Patton infects his Uncle Ted with his offspring while declaring he taught him that "With great power comes a great appetite". [25] • An alternate Uncle Ben from an unknown reality appears in a flashback along with his universe's version of Aunt May.
On Earth-14512, they are portrayed as scientists. They informed their niece Peni Parker that she was the only electro spiderman able to carry on the project after her father, the original SP//dr, died in battle. She accepted the responsibility, allowing the electro spiderman spider that formed the other half of SP//dr's CPU to bite her. [26] During a fight against the kaiju M.O.R.B.I.U.S., Ben witnesses Addy Brock losing control of VEN#m.
After SP//dr defeats VEN#m and finds that Addy and Aunt May aren't inside, Ben visits Peni hours later and states that what happened to May and Addy wasn't her fault. A portal opens as Spider-Ham requests Peni's help. Ben convinces her to go as duty calls. [27] • In an unknown reality, Uncle Ben and Aunt May are with their nephew Peter at the hospital after he suffers an allergic reaction to the radioactive spider bite, leaving him in a coma. Because of this, they are out of their house when it's burgled by the thief that killed Ben in the main universe.
Peter transforms into Man-Spider and attacks Uncle Ben and Aunt May, but is thwarted by Spider-Man Noir. Six-Armed Spider-Man creates a cure for Peter, allowing him to live a normal life with Ben and May. [28] • The Earth-3145 version of Ben Parker was isolated in Ezekiel's bunker after Earth is decimated by nuclear fallout.
Ben is later found by Silk, Spider-Man, and the other Spider-Men who arrive while fleeing from the Inheritors. [29] They learn that Ben received his powers electro spiderman he accompanied Peter to the science demonstration and was bitten by the spider instead of his nephew. However, Ben retired out of grief after his foe the Emerald Elf discovered his identity and killed his May and Peter. After entering Ezekiel's bunker upon being told of the Inheritors, his Earth was decimated when a nuclear blackmail plot by Otto Octavius went wrong.
Although he initially declines to join the other Spiders in their final attack on the Inheritors, Spider-Man and Superior Spider-Man convince him to do so by arguing that he has only failed if he gives up, Peter in particular affirming that the advice of his own Uncle Ben has saved his world and made a difference every day. [30] He subsequently works with Spider-Ham to rescue Benjy Parker – the baby brother of Spider-Girl – and take him to another dimension for safety.
[31] When the crisis is averted, Ben accompanies Spider-Girl back to her home dimension, and decides to remain there so he can be the great-uncle that no other Ben Parker has had the chance to become. [32] Spider-Geddon [ edit ] During the " Spider-Geddon" storyline, Earth-91918 has a version of Uncle Ben who is married to a Hispanic version of Aunt May. When he is shot by a mugger, Uncle Ben gains spider powers following a blood transfusion from his nephew.
When Ben became a Spider-Man, he was a ruthless hero where he once severely beat up Kraven the Hunter. [33] Ultimate Marvel [ edit ] The Ultimate Marvel version of Ben Parker differs slightly from the original iteration. Younger than his original counterpart, he is also a former hippie who wears his hair in a ponytail and teaches Peter Parker to be nonviolent. Ben also reminisces about the period he lived on a commune. After Peter went out for a walk, Peter learned from a police officer that Ben was murdered.
[34] [35] [36] What If? [ edit ] Uncle Ben was featured in various issues of What If. • In the electro spiderman "What If" story regarding Spider-Man (named "classic"), it was Aunt May electro spiderman went downstairs after hearing a noise, not wanting to wake up Ben. The same storyline plays out, with the burglar shooting May and Spider-Man apprehending him in the warehouse. In this story, Ben finds out about Peter's activities as Spider-Man relatively soon, and talks to him about it.
Peter explains to him when he donned the costume and why, even telling him about letting the would-be murderer go that very same night he robbed the wrestling register. Peter breaks down, saying how everything was his fault. Ben responds with anger at himself, being weak in not being able to protect "his May". After Peter tells him he did not know and could not have possibly done anything, Ben instantly calms down and tells Peter to follow his own advice. He further inspires Peter to keep being Spider-Man, not because of regret or penance, but to protect and help all those who are weak and in need of help.
Ben and Peter form an even electro spiderman relationship with Ben offering his support in many of Spider-Man's future battles.
Eventually Ben becomes outraged at Jameson's constant smearing of Spider-Man's name, considering it an insult to May's memory. He eventually lets Jameson in on Spider-Man's identity, forcing Jameson in a position he is uncomfortable in as a journalist. He cannot expose Spider-Man without endangering Ben Parker, yet he also does not wish to support vigilantism. Eventually, he finds a middle road and unofficially employs Spider-Man so he can gain inside scoops on crimes being solved in the city.
The story eventually ends with Spider-Man saving Bennett Brant and Betty Brant from Doctor Octopus, as well as fighting a Green Goblin who kidnapped Jameson to find out Spider-Man's real identity (having correctly surmised there was a reason Jameson had those inside scoops). At the end of it all, Peter and Ben shake hands with Jameson electro spiderman they will face all dangers and the future together.
[37] Derailed Alt-Ben Parker [ edit ] In an alternate reality shown in Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man, an alternate reality was witnessed where May died in a random accident, prompting Peter to go into show business with Ben as his agent to make money.
Peter's focus on his career prompts him to eventually leave home, simply paying Ben a percentage out of respect for their old relationship rather than any actual concern. This Ben was eventually 'derailed' into the 616 reality by the Hobgoblin of 2211 as part of her plan against the Spider-Men of various eras, leaving him shocked when he witnessed his destroyed house and the still-living May Parker.
Confronting her, he ended up in a fight with Jarvis, with whom she at the time has a relationship with, but wandered away in confusion. Lacking direction, Ben wandered into an alleyway where he encountered electro spiderman shadowy figure who offered him a gun, telling Ben that any action electro spiderman takes would simply create another universe where he took the opposite action, so he might as well do what felt good.
After this Hobgoblin was erased from history by a Retcon Bomb of her own invention, the Spider-Man of 2211 met with what he presumed to be the same Ben Parker to take him back to his own timeline. In a surprise twist, deciding he rather wanted to "stick around for a while", this Ben Parker shoots this future Spider-Man. At the same time, another Ben Parker was shown dead in the alley, meaning one Ben Parker had killed the other and taken his place.
[38] It was revealed that the Ben Parker who had died in the alleyway was the Uncle Ben of the alternate reality, while the Ben Parker who killed Spider-Man 2211 was, in fact, the Chameleon of 2211; the Chameleon had attempted to convince Ben to resort to murder, but Spider-Man correctly guessed that there were no circumstances under which Ben would do such a thing.
[39] "With great power, there must also come great responsibility" [ edit ] Main article: With great power, there must also come great responsibility Although it didn't originate from the character, the quote "with great power, there must also come great responsibility" (commonly paraphrased as "with great power comes great responsibility" and adapted as such in some media) has been popularized by the Spider-Man comics, and has become widely recognized as Spider-Man's life motto.
In other media [ edit ] Television [ edit ] • Uncle Ben appeared in the 1960s Spider-Man animated series episode "The Origin of Spider-Man". • Uncle Ben appeared in the Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends animated series episode "Along Came Spidey", voiced by Frank Welker.
• Uncle Ben appeared in Spider-Man: The Animated Series, voiced by Brian Keith. This version primarily appears in flashbacks or as a spirit who talks to Peter Parker whenever the latter gets frustrated with his life as Spider-Man. • An alternate reality version of Ben appeared in the two-part series finale "Spider Wars". After being recruited by Madame Web and the Beyonder to save the multiverse from Spider-Carnage, Spider-Man travels to a reality where he lived a perfect life.
Electro spiderman Ben was never killed in this reality, Spider-Man finds and brings him to Spider-Carnage to talk the latter out of his plans. Due to the symbiote's electro spiderman however, Spider-Carnage uses his reality bomb to open a portal and throw himself in it, sacrificing himself in the process. Following this, Ben expresses how proud he is of the "prime" Spider-Man despite not living in the same reality as him.
• Uncle Ben appears in the intro for the Spider-Man Unlimited animated series. • Uncle Ben appears in The Spectacular Spider-Man animated series episode "Intervention", voiced by Ed Asner. In a flashback accessed by the symbiote suit that Spider-Man was wearing at the time, Ben was killed by a burglar while protecting his wife May Parker amidst a break-in. A mental projection of Ben later appears in Spider-Man's mind to help him overcome the symbiote's influence.
• Uncle Ben appears in the Ultimate Spider-Man animated series, voiced by Greg Grunberg. [40] This version is loosely based on his Ultimate Marvel counterpart. In the pilot episodes "Great Power" and "Great Responsibility", Peter Parker recalls the night of his uncle's murder, which Nick Fury uses to recruit Parker into S.H.I.E.L.D. In the episode "Strange Days", Nightmare tries to use Parker's failure to save Ben against him, but Ben instead motivates Parker to defeat Nightmare.
• A Wild West-themed alternate reality version of Ben Parker appears in the episode "Return to the Spider-Verse" Pt. 2, voiced by Clancy Brown. [41] This version was brainwashed by Doc Ock Holliday into becoming his " Phantom Rider" until the "prime" Spider-Man, Kid Arachnid, and Web Slinger free Ben from Holliday's control. • Uncle Ben appears in the 2017 Spider-Man animated series, voiced electro spiderman Patton Oswalt. electro spiderman This version primarily appears in flashbacks.
Film [ edit ] • Uncle Ben appears in Sam Raimi's live-action Spider-Man film trilogy, portrayed by Cliff Robertson. • In Spider-Man (2002), Ben serves as a father figure to Peter Parker and is laid off from his job as a chief electrician after 35 years. While attempting to inspire Peter, his nephew tells him to stop acting like his father. Later that night, Ben is apparently shot and killed by Dennis Carradine, a robber and carjacker that Peter allowed to escape earlier that day.
Peter and his Aunt May mourn for Ben, with Peter being inspired by him to become Spider-Man and going on to accept Ben as his true father. electro spiderman • In Spider-Man 2 (2004), while Peter is contemplating giving up being Spider-Man, Ben electro spiderman in a flashback and serves as the physical representation of Peter's ideology, inspiring his nephew not to give up. Peter's guilt over Ben's death eventually compels him to tell May about the role he played electro spiderman Ben's death and she eventually forgives him.
electro spiderman In Spider-Man 3 (2007), Peter and May learn Ben's real killer was Carradine's accomplice, Flint Marko. Believing Marko killed Ben in cold blood and due in part to the black suit he was wearing at the time amplifying his anger, Peter violently seeks revenge against Marko. However, after Peter removes the black suit, Marko reveals Carradine startled him and caused him to accidentally fire his gun, which he still feels remorse for as Ben was only trying to help him.
Forgiving Marko, Peter allows him to go free. • Martin Sheen portrays Uncle Ben in the live-action film The Amazing Spider-Man. Following an argument with Peter Parker that results in the latter storming off, Ben attempts to find him. However, he encounters a thief that Peter allowed to escape earlier and is killed in the ensuing struggle. While Peter attempts to find Ben's killer, he fails electro spiderman do so.
• While not appearing directly, Uncle Ben exists in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), being referenced throughout the MCU Spider-Man film series. • In 2017, Spider-Man: Homecoming (2017) co-writer John Francis Daley confirmed that Uncle Ben exists in the MCU despite never being referenced directly. In an earlier draft of the film, May Parker mentions that Peter Parker's wardrobe for Homecoming was Ben's, but the scene was cut because the screenwriters did not want Ben's death to be a throwaway line.
[44] • While developing Spider-Man: No Way Home (2021), writers Chris McKenna and Erik Sommers realized that May would take Ben's role as she had served as Peter's "moral guide" throughout the MCU. As such, she is killed by the Green Goblin, telling Peter " with great power, there must also come great responsibility" before she dies, and her electro spiderman is not next to Ben's. [45] • Uncle Ben makes a cameo in the animated film Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse (2018), voiced by archival audio of Cliff Robertson.
Video games [ edit ] • Uncle Ben appears in the prologue of The Amazing Spider-Man 2 film tie-in game, voiced by Mark Bramhall. • Uncle Ben appears in Marvel's Spider-Man via photographs.
Franklin Richards's Uncle Ben [ edit ] Franklin Richards of the Fantastic Four often refers to Benjamin Grimm, the Thing, as "Uncle Ben" (Grimm is the best friend of Franklin's father Reed Richards).
Franklin Richards and Peter Parker also have the same middle name, Benjamin, as the Thing and Ben Parker are their namesakes.
Spider-Man is aware of this, and told Franklin, "Uncle Bens are always right". [46] Son of Spider-Man [ edit ] In The Amazing Spider-Man #498–500, Spider-Man falls through time, encountering all of his enemies from the past, and sees himself in the future. Electro spiderman future Peter Electro spiderman tells electro spiderman that he should tell Mary Jane Watson and their son that he loves them every day.
"Our son is called Ben", he says, "but it would pretty much have to be, wouldn't it?" However, because of the way time-travel in the Marvel universe works, this is only a potential future and not necessarily a definite one (this future being even more unlikely after the events of " One More Day"). The Other Uncle Ben [ edit ] Main article: Spider-Girl (Mayday Parker) Like her father, Spider-Girl also has an Uncle Ben.
[47] However, unlike her dad, May never knew her uncle: Ben Reilly, Spider-Man's clone. If Electro spiderman has any children in the future, they too would have an Uncle Ben – May's baby brother. Ironically in the aftermath of Spider-Verse, the Earth-3145's Ben Parker himself would stay on her world, and has a chance to be his grandfather, something that the other Ben Parkers were unable to achieve on account of their deaths.
References [ edit ] • ^ Sanford, Jonathan J.; Irwin, William (15 May 2012). "With Great Power Comes Great Culpability". In Tallon, Philip (ed.). Spider-Man and Philosophy: The Web of Inquiry. John Wiley & Sons. p. 86. ISBN 9780470575604. • ^ Richardson, Bob (January 31, 1998). " "Chapter II: Farewell, Spider-Man" ".
Spider-Man. Season 5. Episode 13. Fox Kids. • ^ Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man #7-10. Marvel Comics.
• ^ a b Dan Slott (w), Jim Cheung (p). The Clone Conspiracy #3 (7 December 2016), Marvel Comics, 61715 • ^ a b Dan Slott (w), Jim Cheung (p).
The Clone Conspiracy #4 (18 January 2017), Marvel Comics, 61716 • ^ The Amazing Spider-Man #519 (20 April 2005), Marvel Comics, 1868 • ^ Manning, Matthew K.; Gilbert, Laura, ed.
(2012). "1960s". Spider-Man Chronicle Celebrating 50 Years of Web-Slinging. London, United Kingdom: Dorling Kindersley. p. 14. ISBN 978-0756692360. While the finished version of this duo wouldn't debut for another few months, their prototypes took center stage in a short story in the Strange Tales anthology called 'Goodbye to Linda Brown'.This particular May and Ben lived by the sea and were the caretakers of their young wheelchair-bound niece named Linda Brown.
{{ cite book}}: -first2= has generic name ( help) • ^ Bob Gale, Mark Waid, Zeb Wells, Marc Guggenheim (w), Colleen Doran, Mitch Breitweiser, Mario Alberti, Marcos Martin, John Romita, Jr. (p), Andy Lanning, Klaus Janson (i), Chris Eliopolous, Joe Caramagna (let). "My Brother's Son" The Amazing Spider-Man #600 (2 July 2009), Marvel Comics, 24407 • ^ Stan Lee (w), Mike Deodato (p), Jose Pimentel (i). The Amazing Spider-Man #516 (2 July 2009), Marvel Comics, 1511 • ^ Jeff Christiansen, Eric Engelhard, Al Sjoerdsma, Jason Godin (w).
Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe: Spider-Man #12 (31 December 2029), Marvel Comics, 1886 • ^ a b Stan Lee (w), Steve Ditko (a). "Spider-Man!" Amazing Fantasy #15 (August 1962), Marvel Comics • ^ Stan Lee (w), Keith Pollard, Jim Mooney (p), Jim Mooney (i), Glynis Oliver (col).
The Amazing Spider-Man #200 (10 January 1980), Marvel Comics, 6595 • ^ Stan Lee (w), John Romita, Jr. (p), Scott Hanna (i). The Amazing Spider-Man #500 (10 January 1980), Marvel Comics, 277 • ^ Fred Van Lente, Greg Pak (w), Ryan Stegman, Rodney Buchemi (p).
The Incredible Hercules #130 (24 June 2009), Marvel Comics, 25429 • ^ Jose Molina (w), Simone Bianchi, Andrea Broccardo (p), Simone Bianchi, Andrea Broccardo (i). The Amazing Spider-Man v4, #1.6 (10 January 1980), Marvel Comics • ^ Peter David, Christos Gage, Dan Slott (w), Stuart Immonen, Cory Smith, Mark Bagley (p).
The Clone Conspiracy: Omega #1 (1 March 2017), Marvel Comics, 62649 • ^ The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 5 #51. Marvel Comics. • ^ Trouble #1-5. Marvel Comics. • ^ "Mark Millar & Terry Dodson's Controversial Trouble to be Collected in 2011?". Web Article. Retrieved October 11, 2016. • ^ Review Archived 2005-03-08 at the Wayback Machine of Trouble #1 by Chris Allen on moviepoopshoot.com • ^ Review Archived 2005-09-01 at the Wayback Machine of Trouble #1 by Paul O'Brien on The X-Axis, 13 July 2003 • ^ Stan Lee (w), Tommy Lee Edwards (p).
Bullet Points #1 (8 November 2006), Marvel Comics, 5500 • ^ Electro spiderman Peyer (w), Salvador Larroca (p), Danny K.
Miki (i), Liquid Graphics (col), Cory Petit (let). Spider-Man: House of M #5 (2 November 2005), Marvel Comics, 2444 • ^ David Hine, Fabrice Sapolsky (w), Carmine Di Giandomenico (p), Carmine Di Giandomenico (i), Carmine Di Electro spiderman (col), Dave Lanphear (let).
Spider-Man Noir 2 (21 January 2009), Marvel Comics, 23129 • ^ Edge of Spider-Verse #4 (2014) • ^ Edge of Spider-Verse #5 (2014) • ^ Edge of Spider-Geddon #2. Marvel Comics. • ^ Spider-Verse Team-Up #1 electro spiderman • ^ The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 3 #12 (2015) • ^ The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 3 #13 (2015) • ^ The Amazing Spider-Man vol.
3 #14 • ^ The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 3 #15 • ^ Edge of Spider-Geddon #3. Marvel Comics. • ^ Brian Michael Bendis (w), Mark Bagley (p). Ultimate Spider-Man #1 (9 October 2000), Marvel Comics, 4372 • ^ Bill Jemas, Brian Michael Bendis electro spiderman, Mark Bagley (p), Art Thibert (i), Steve Buccellato (col), Troy Peteri (let), Ralph Macchio (ed). Ultimate Spider-Man #2 (10 November 2000), Marvel Comics, 14846 • ^ Bill Jemas, Brian Michael Bendis (w), Mark Bagley (p), Art Thibert (i), Marie Javins, Colorgraphix (col), Richard Starkings, Troy Peteri (let), Electro spiderman Quesada (ed).
Ultimate Spider-Man #3 (10 January 2001), Marvel Comics, 14857 • ^ Peter B. Gillis (w). What If? v7, #46: 40 (14 March 2017), Marvel Comics • ^ Peter David (w), Todd Nauck (p), Rob Campanella (i), Lee Loughridge (col), Cory Petit (let).
Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man #10 (16 July 2006), Marvel Comics, 4479 • ^ Peter David (w), Todd Nauck (p), Rob Campanella (i), John Kalisz (col), Cory Petit (let), Stephen Wacker (ed).
Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man #19 (4 April 2007), Marvel Comics, 6225 • ^ "Strange". Ultimate Spider-Man. Season 1. Episode 13. July 8, 2012. Disney XD. • ^ "Return to the Spider-Verse Pt. 2". Ultimate Spider-Man. Season 4. Episode 17. September 3, 2016. Disney XD. • ^ Electro spiderman, Chris (4 July 2017). " 'Marvel's Spider-Man' Has Secured A Notable Name To Voice Uncle Ben". Techie Gamers. Retrieved 14 May 2018. • ^ Montalbano, Dave (22 December 2010). The Adventures of Cinema Dave in the Florida Motion Picture World.
Xlibris Corporation. p. 523. ISBN 9781462836734. • ^ Mueller, Matthew (2 August 2017). "Uncle Ben Confirmed For The Marvel Cinematic Universe". Comic Book. Retrieved 14 May 2018. • ^ Couch, Aaron (December 29, 2021).
"How ' Spider-Man: No Way Home ' Was "Shaped" by Its Secret Stars". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on December 29, 2021. Retrieved December 29, 2021. • ^ Dan Slott, (w), Ty Templeton, (p), Drew Geraci, Greg Adams, (i), John Rauch (col), Dave Lanphear (let).
Spider-Man/Human Torch #5 (29 June 2005), Marvel Comics • ^ Whitbrook, James (14 July 2011). "The Greatest Spider-Women of All Time, Ranked". Gizmodo. Gizmodo Media Group. Retrieved 14 May 2018. External links [ edit ] • Uncle Ben at Marvel.com • Benjamin Parker at Marvel Wiki • Liz Allan • Aunt May • Betty Brant • Eddie Brock • Black Cat/Felicia Hardy • Cardiac • Curt Connors • Carlie Cooper • Jean DeWolff • Glory Grant • J. Jonah Jameson • John Jameson • Ned Leeds • Madame Web electro spiderman Harry Osborn • Mary Parker • Richard Parker • Teresa Parker • Electro spiderman Robertson • Robbie Robertson • George Stacy • Gwen Stacy • Flash Thompson • Uncle Ben • Ben Urich • Mary Jane Watson Other • Sally Avril • Martha Connors • Billy Connors • Jefferson Davis • Ethan Edwards • Ezekiel • Anne Weying • Vanessa Fisk • Vin Gonzales • Walter Hardy • Ashley Kafka • Jackpot • Anna Maria Marconi • Kenny McFarlane • Max Modell • Nightwatch • Normie Osborn • Gwen Poole • Solo • Sarah Stacy • Steel Spider • Debra Whitman • Wraith/Yuri Watanabe Neutral characters • Anti-Venom • Beetle • Abner Jenkins • Black Cat • Boomerang • Cardiac • Deadpool • Gibbon • Green Goblin • Harry Osborn • Hybrid • Kraven the Hunter • Living Brain • Lizard/Dr.
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" I'm just Peter Parker. I'm Spider-Man. no more. No more. " ― Peter Parker [src] Spider-Man 2 is a 2004 live action, superhero film, based on the Marvel Comics character Spider-Man. The movie is a sequel to Spider-Man and set two years after the previous film.
It is the second installment of the Raimi Spider-Man Trilogy. The film focuses on Peter Parker struggling to balance his personal life and his crime-fighting life as Spider-Man. When scientist, Otto Octavius becomes a supervillain, known as Doctor Octopus, after a failed fusion experiment leaves him fused to four mechanical tentacles, he attempts to recreate the fusion experiment that threatens to destroy New York City and Spider-Man must stop him from doing so.
Contents • 1 Plot • 2 Cast • 2.1 Uncredited • 3 Gallery • 4 Video Game • 5 External Links Plot Two years after the death of the Green Goblin, Peter Parker is struggling to balance his crime-fighting duties as Spider-Man alongside the demands of his normal life.
Peter is growing further apart from both his love interest Mary Jane Watson and best friend Harry Osborn, who still harbours a resentment towards Spider-Man, thinking him guilty of killing his father.
His obligations as Spider-Man take their toll on his ability to focus on his electro spiderman work as well as his financial situation. As a result, Peter starts to think about giving up being Spider-Man. Now head of Oscorp's research division, Harry sponsors the research of brilliant nuclear scientist Otto Octavius. Octavius's goal is to perfect fusion power. He wears a harness of powerful robotic arms with artificial intelligence for an experiment in sustained fusion.
Though the experiment succeeds at first, it quickly becomes unstable but Octavius refuses to shut it down, before Spider-Man intervenes. Octavius's wife, Rosalie Octavius is killed in the accident, the neural inhibitor chip which prevents the arms from influencing his mind is destroyed, and the arms are fused to his spine. He is taken to a hospital, but the tentacles, having developed their own artificial intelligence with the inhibitor chip destroyed, savagely kill the medical crew.
The tentacles corrupt Octavius's mind, and lead him to the resolution that he must complete his experiment regardless of the moral cost. To finance electro spiderman work, Octavius - electro spiderman called Doctor Octopus or "Doc Ock" - robs a bank, where he takes Aunt May hostage. When Doctor Octopus is about to stab Spider-Man with his spear, May smashes a sunglasses lens with her umbrella, sparing Spider-Man, but Doctor Octopus drops her from a building.
Spider-Man manages to save his aunt, but Ock returns to his electro spiderman with loot stolen from the bank. While attending a party to take photographs, Peter learns that Mary Jane is engaged to J. Jonah Jameson's son, renowned astronaut John Jameson, and gets into a fight with Harry over his "loyalty" to Spider-Man. As Doctor Octopus rebuilds his experimental reactor, Peter's powers prove unreliable.
After a doctor tells him that his physical problems are due to mental stress, he gives up being Spider-Man and disposes of his costume. During this time, Peter begins to succeed in college and subsequently mend his relationship with Mary Jane. Spider-Man no more. A garbage man brings Spider-Man's discarded costume to sell at the The Daily Bugle. Jameson takes credit for Spider-Man's disappearance, but later admits that he was indeed a hero, and the only person capable of stopping Octavius.
Peter, out of guilt, tells Aunt May that it was his fault for his Ben's death. After Peter tells his aunt everything from the thief to Ben's death, May forgives Peter and advises him that sometimes it is necessary to sacrifice one's dreams for the greater good.
Realizing that the city's need for Spider-Man is greater than his personal ambitions, Peter decides to become Spider-Man once again. Even so, his powers continue to be lost. Doctor Octopus, having rebuilt his device, needs tritium for his reactor, and goes to Harry to get it.
Harry agrees to give Octavius all the tritium he possesses in exchange for bringing Spider-Man to him, and tells him that Peter, who is supposedly good friends with Spider-Man, is the key to finding him; however, he tells Doctor Octopus not to harm Peter. Doctor Octopus finds Peter and tells him to find Spider-Man, and abducts Mary Jane in the process.
Following this, Peter finds that his powers have been restored, and he dons his costume again after stealing it back from the Bugle. A furious Jameson continues to denounce Spider-Man as a menace. Spider-Man then angrily proceeds to battle Doctor Octopus across town.
Eventually, they battle on a train which Doctor Octopus destroys the speed bar on the train, as it explodes on Peter's mask making it blurry as he takes it off. He tries to stop the train in many ways but he uses his webbing to stop it, almost making the train fall off the unfinished track. He saves the people and is tired and almost falls off but the people catch him and learned that he is only a kid as Peter wakes up. Two boys hand Peter his mask and promise electro spiderman to reveal his true identity.
Doctor Octopus returns, and ends up knocking Spider-Man (due to him still being tired) unconscious and delivers him to Harry. After giving Doctor Octopus the tritium, Harry pulls out the knife and prepares to kill Spider-Man, but he first relents and unmasks him.
He is shocked when he discovers that Peter is Spider-Man. Peter wakes up, and convinces Harry to reveal Doctor Octopus's whereabouts, before leaving him in tears. Spider-Man makes his way to Doctor Octopus's waterfront laboratory, with the doctor putting the finishing touches on his makeshift reactor. Although Spider-Man attempts to rescue Mary Jane discreetly, Doctor Octopus catches on and they fight once more.
Spider-Man ultimately subdues Octavius and reveals his identity to him, pleading for a way to stop the reactor. Free from the tentacles, Octavius uses his mechanical arms to collapse the building, successfully drowning the reactor at the cost of his own life. Mary Jane sees Peter unmasked and understands that as long as he is Spider-Man, she and Peter cannot be together. Spider-Man returns Mary Jane to Electro spiderman and leaves.
Meanwhile, Harry, shocked by the trauma caused by revelation of Peter's identity as Spider-Man, has visions of his father Norman in a hanging mirror ordering him to avenge his death. Enraged, Harry shatters the mirror, revealing a secret room containing all of his fathers Green Goblin equipment (which Peter hid after his death). He looks at the equipment and takes the Green serum his father did.
Meanwhile, Mary Jane is getting ready for her wedding, but she has a quick change of mind, and leaves John on the altar and arrives back at Peter's apartment. She tells Peter that she wants to be with him no matter what. After a passionate kiss, a fire truck is heard and Mary Jane encourages Peter to respond as Spider-Man, quietly apprehensive of the dangers they are about to face together.
Cast • Tobey Maguire as Spider-Man/Peter Parker • Kirsten Dunst as Mary Jane Watson • James Franco as Harry Osborn • Alfred Molina as Doc Ock/Otto Octavius • Rosemary Harris as Aunt May • J.K.
Simmons as J. Jonah Jameson • Donna Murphy as Rosalie Octavius • Daniel Gillies as John Jameson • Dylan Baker as Dr. Curt Connors • Bill Nunn as Joseph "Robbie" Robertson • Vanessa Ferlito as Louise • Aasif Mandvi as Mr. Aziz • Willem Dafoe as Green Goblin/Norman Osborn • Cliff Robertson as Ben Parker • Ted Raimi as Hoffman • Elizabeth Banks as Miss Brant • Bruce Campbell as Snooty Usher • Gregg Edelman as Dr. Electro spiderman • Elya Baskin as Mr.
Ditkovich • Mageina Tovah as Ursula • Daniel Dae Kim as Raymond • Hal Sparks as Elevator Passenger • Joel McHale as Mr. Jacks • Stan Lee as Man Dodging Debris • Kelly Connell as Dr. Isaacs • Brent Briscoe as Garbage Man • Emily Deschanel as Receptionist • Jason Fiore-Ortiz as Henry Jackson • Scott Spiegel as Man on Balcony • Andy Bale as OsCorp Executive • Christine Estabrook as Mrs. Jameson • Molly Cheek as Society Woman • John Paxton as Bernard Houseman • Joy Bryant as Woman at Web • Joanne Baron as Skeptical Scientist • Peter McRobbie as OsCorp Representative • Timothy Jerome as Injured Scientist • Taylor Gilbert as Mrs.
Watson • Peter Vouras as Stage Manager • Donnell Rawlings as Pizza 'Heist' Witness • Zachry Rogers as Boy Saved by Spider-Man • Ella Rogers as Girl Saved by Spider-Man • Louis Lombardi as Poker Player • Marc John Jefferies as Amazed Kid • Roshon Fegan as Amazed Kid • Brendan Patrick Connor as Electro spiderman Traffic Cop • Reed Diamond as Algernon • Dan Callahan as 'Jack' • Elyse Dinh as Violinist • John Landis as Doctor • Tim Storms as Chainsaw Doctor • Susie Park as Clawing Nurse • Tricia Peters as Screaming Nurse • Michael Edward Thomas as Man at Fire • Anne Betancourt as Woman at Fire • Venus Lam as Child in Burning Building • Bill E.
Rogers as Fireman • Joe Virzi as Fireman • Tom Carey as Train Conductor • Jopaul Van Epp as Boy with Mask • Weston Epp as Boy with Mask • Peter Allas as Train Passenger • Brianna Brown as Train Passenger • Bill Calvert as Train Passenger • Tony Campisi as Train Passenger electro spiderman Joey Diaz as Train Passenger • Chloe Dykstra as Train Passenger • Simone Gordon as Train Passenger • Dan Hicks as Train Passenger • Julia Max as Train Passenger • Savannah Pope as Train Passenger • Timothy Patrick Quill as Train Passenger • Jill Sayre as Train Passenger • Rickey G.
Williams as Train Passenger Uncredited • Dakota Anderson as Mugger #1 • Sal Ardisi as Parent • Michael Arthur as NYPD Officer • Damian Bailey as Extra • Alan Blackney as Astronaut • David Blanc as Street Walker • Frank Bonsangue as Pizza Man • David Boston as Pedestrian • Sho Brown as Passenger • Luke Burnyeat as Train Passenger • John Cameron as Man Buying 'Spider-Man No More' Newspaper • Joseph M.
Caracciolo as Priest at Mary Jane's Wedding • Cindy Cheung as Chinese Daughter • Peter Cincotti as Piano Player in Planetarium electro spiderman Lee Cogburn as Train Passenger • Al Collado electro spiderman Cab Driver • Christina R. Copeland as Chainsaw Nurse electro spiderman Dono Cunningham as Pedestrian • Vince Cupone as Victim • Grant Curtis as Hot Dog Vendor • Barbara Ann Davison as Woman with Dog • Calvin Dean as Boomer • Fabrizio Fante as Businessman • Doug Ferony as Detective • Phillip Gramm as NYPD Officer • Halla as Wedding Attendee • Mohammed Hassan as Middle Eastern Taxi Driver • Sabrina Hunter as Model • Andre Johnson as Fireman #2 • Edward Johnson as Planetarium • Janis Jones as Homeless at Burning Car • Michael Kilcullen as Subway Passenger • Eileen Kovener as Street Walker • Phil LaMarr as Train Passenger • Frank Langley as Doc Ock Tentacle Puppeteer • Rachel Lehrer as Hot Girl • Peyton List as Little Girl Playing on Steps • Spencer List as Little Boy Playing on Steps • Lorelei Llee as Bank Employee • Fancy Macelli as Reporter • Paul-Dean Martin as Bugle Lawyer • Carina Mastrippolito as Girl • Daniel Maysen as Train Passenger • Tony Mazzucchi as Newsstand Vendor Near Fire • Troy Metcalf as Blue Collar Guy • Altara Michelle as Teenage Girl at the Bank • Claudia Katz Minnick as Robbie's Assistant • Ismael Moreno as Rescued Crosswalker • Joseph Nelson as Extra • David Orris as Police Officer • Ronn Ozuk as Cop • Christopher Porto as Man Waiting For Train • Sam Raimi as University Student • Randy Reinholz as Train Passenger • Carla Rhodes as Phone Booth Girl • Rachelle Roderick as Jane - Engineer electro spiderman Scott Ross as Pedestrian • Bonnie Somerville as Screaming Woman • Jimmy Star as Reporter • Douglas Swander as Train Passenger • Angel Katherine Taormina as Female Onlooker on Street • John Thurner as EL Train Passenger • Jason Toler as Guy on El Train • Henry Truong as Doc Ock Lab Assistant #2 • Michael Urbanski as Man on Street • Wesley Volcy as Columbia University Student • Lou Volpe as Man at Web • Garrett Warren as Bearded Doctor • Jack Wetherall as Train Passenger • Ken Wharton as Uptight Businessman Gallery Video Game For the video game tie-in, see this article.
External Links • IMDB Electro spiderman Film Series Films: Spider-Man - Spider-Man 2 - Spider-Man 3 Characters: Peter Parker/Spider-Man - Mary Jane Watson - Harry Osborn - J.
Jonah Jameson - Uncle Ben - Aunt May - George Stacy - Gwen Stacy - Robbie Robertson - Betty Brant - Curt Connors - Flash Thompson - Dr. Stromm - Mr. Ditkovich - Ursula Ditkovich - Maximillian Fargas - Henry Balkan - Rosalie Octavius - Hoffman - Bernard Houseman - Mr. Aziz - Bonesaw McGraw Enemies: The Green Goblin - Doctor Octopus - The Sandman - New Goblin - Venom - The Carjacker Locations: The Daily Bugle - Oscorp Technologies - Quest Aerospace - Osborn Penthouse - Goblin Lair Video Games: Spider-Man - Spider-Man 2 - Spider-Man 3 " What makes life valuable is that it doesn't last forever.
What makes it precious is that it ends." ―Gwen Stacy [src] Gwendolyn "Gwen" Stacy was the classmate and deceased girlfriend of Peter Parker and the daughter of chief police officer, George Stacy. She is also the deuteragonist of The Amazing Spider-Man films.
Gwen was also a senior research officer at Oscorp industries. Her character was created by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko in 1965. Her character was portrayed by Emma Stone in the 2012 film The Amazing Spider-Man and in its sequel. Contents • 1 History • 1.1 The Amazing Spider-Man • 1.2 The Amazing Spider-Man 2 • 1.3 Spider-Man: No Electro spiderman Home • 2 Quotes • 3 Trivia • 4 See Also History The Amazing Spider-Man Gwen Stacy is a resident of New York where her father, George Stacy, is a captain in the NYPD.
She works at Oscorp as a laboratory assistant to Dr. Curt Connors' where Peter Parker gets bitten by the spider that mutates him.
She subsequently develops a romantic interest in him and he soon reveals to her that electro spiderman in fact Spider-Man. She also plays a crucial part in The Lizard's defeat; having helped Peter develop an antidote for Connor's serum for turning people into reptilian hybrids using her own scientific knowledge. Unfortunately, her father was killed by The Lizard before Peter can defeat the villain. George made the superhero promise to keep Gwen out of his dangerous life.
Peter honours that vow without immediately telling Gwen which offends her until she realizes what her father did and forgave Peter. However, when Peter later hints that he's reconsidering keeping that vow, she quietly smiles at this development.
The Amazing Spider-Man 2 While Spider-Man is in pursuit of criminals through the city, Gwen Stacy calls Peter on the phone who tells him that he's late. Gwen then makes a speech to her fellow class-mates and their families. Afterwards, Peter meets Gwen at their high school graduation ceremony where the two share a kiss. Gwen and Peter talk where she invites him to dinner before she was called by her mother for a family photo. Later in the evening, Peter tells Gwen about the visions he's been having and insists that he needs to keep his promise which as a result, Gwen breaks up with Peter.
Gwen is seen then working at Oscorp and meets Max Dillion in an elevator which she finds out is his birthday and is obsessed with Spider-Man. Peter later meets Gwen in attempt to maintain a friendship which they establish some 'ground rules'.
Gwen tells Peter that an opportunity to Oxford means she has to move to England. Before the two can discuss it, Max accidentally shuts off the power to Times Square whilst electro spiderman for electricity to power himself. As Electro reveals himself as Max, Gwen recognizes him and later tries to find his file at Oscorp, but the file has been erased.
Gwen is then chased by security for trying to find his file and runs into Peter who says he was with Harry. As Gwen goes to the elevator, Peter distracts the security guards and Gwen meets Harry who tells her that Peter is always complicated, but that is why he needs her.
Peter then receives a voicemail message from Gwen, telling him that she got into Oxford University and was heading to the airport to fly there earlier than expected because of an earlier class. Peter manages to catch her and professes his love for her and the two agree to go to England together. They are interrupted by a blackout caused by Electro. Peter takes Gwen down where the police are and Gwen helps him with his web-shooters to go against Electro. Peter heads off to fight with Electro having the upper-hand.
As Electro has Spider-Man in the air and is electrocuting him, Gwen comes in a police car and hits Electro, against Peter's demands. The two plan to defeat Electro by overloading his electricity supply. Just after they do so, Harry Osborn arrives, now as the Green Goblin, figures out Spider-Man’s identity and that he wants revenge for being refused the life saving blood transfusion.
Goblin takes Gwen and drops her where Spider-Man catches her. The two fight at the top of a clock tower, and Spider-Man manages to subdue the Goblin. However, during the fight, Electro spiderman falls and is supported by a web connected to one of the gears.
The gears turns which caused to cut the web, and Gwen again falls. Goblin is then defeated and Peter tries to save Gwen by diving after her and using his web. Before Gwen hits the ground, Peter's web reaches her and stops the fall.
Unfortunately, the web stretches which caused Gwen to hit her head on the floor which it causes her to die instantly. Five months pass and Spider-Man is nowhere to be seen in New York, Peter spends every day at Gwen's grave. Peter was inspired by a recording of Gwen's graduation speech and makes his return as Spider-Man to fight Rhino to keep her electro spiderman and beliefs including her love for him, alive.
Spider-Man: No Way Home When Peter was transported to another universe, he shared his grief over the loss of Gwen with that universe's electro spiderman Peter Parker who had also lost someone close to him.
He mentioned how he'd never be able to forgive himself over letting her die, and how he went a dark path after her death, leading him to do unspeakable actions. When Doctor Strange's mystical cube blew up by an alternate Electro spiderman Goblin's pumpkin bomb, the variant Peter Parker's love interest Michelle Jones fell off a scaffolding.
The variant Peter jumped to rescue her from the fall, but was interrupted by Goblin's glider, instead, Gwen's Peter saved her from the fall, as he wouldn't let another version of himself go through the same pain he did when Gwen died. After catching Michelle, Peter became visibly emotional over the similarities between what had happened and Gwen's death. Quotes " "Well, guess what?
Nobody makes my choices for me!"" ―Gwen insisting that she help Spider-Man [src] Trivia • Although dying in the actual film, in the non-canon video game Gwen isn't killed by Green Goblin, or is present during Peter's confrontation with him therefore is still alive in that continuity. • Ashley Greene, Mia Wasikowska, Scout Taylor-Compton, Teresa Palmer, Amber Heard, Dianna Agron, Brooklyn Decker, Imogen Poots, Lindsay Lohan, Emma Roberts, Emily Browning, Lily Collins, Anna Kendrick, Ophelia Lovibond, Sara Paxton, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Georgina Haig, Hilary Duff electro spiderman Dominique McElligott were considered for the role of Gwen Stacy, but were beaten out by Emma Stone.
It is interesting to note that one of the other names--Mary Elizabeth Winstead--had played Gwen Grayson (named for Gwen Stacy) in the superhero spoof Sky High (2005). • Gwen Stacy had blue eyes in the comics but in this movie, she appears with green eyes See Also • Gwen Stacy (Bryce Dallas Howard) Electro spiderman Film Series Films: The Amazing Spider-Man - The Amazing Spider-Man 2 Characters: Peter Parker/Spider-Man - Gwen Stacy - Harry Osborn - Mary Jane Watson - Uncle Ben - Aunt May - George Stacy - Flash Thompson - Norman Osborn - Ashley Kafka - Rajit Ratha - Donald Menken - Felicia Hardy - Alistair Smythe - Richard Parker - Mary Parker - Kari Enemies: The Lizard - Electro - The Green Goblin - Rhino - The Black Cat - Ultimate Goblin - Gustav Fiers - Cash Register Thief Locations: The Daily Bugle - Oscorp Industries - Oscorp Tower - Midtown Science High School - Beloit Psychiatric Hospital - Ravencroft Institute Video Games: The Amazing Spider-Man - The Amazing Spider-Man 2
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It’s great to be Spider-Man (Andrew Garfield).
For Peter Parker, there’s no feeling quite like swinging between skyscrapers, embracing being the hero, and spending time with Gwen (Emma Stone). But being Spider-Man comes at a price: only Spider-Man can protect his fellow New Yorkers from the formidable villains that threaten the city. With the emergence of Electro (Jamie Foxx), Peter must confront a foe far more powerful than himself.
And as his old friend, Harry Osborn (Dane DeHaan), returns, Peter comes to realize that all of his enemies have one thing in common: Oscorp. Search Main navigation • Explore • Movies • Television • Games • Careers About Sony Pictures • Senior Management Team • Divisions • Corporate Impact • Studio Tours • Help (FAQ) Services • Sony Pictures Imageworks • Sony Pictures Studios • Sony Pictures Stock Footage • Sony Pictures Film Clips & Still Licensing • Sony Pictures Audio Library • Group Sales • Supplier Information Sony Pictures on the Web • Sony Pictures Animation • Sony Pictures Classics • Sony Pictures Museum • Sony Pictures Television • Sony Pictures Worldwide Acquisitions • Madison Gate Records About Sony Corporation • Sony.com • Investor Relations • Sony Corp.
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