It’s already been 23 years, so I’ve waited long enough. So, without further adieu, let’s get into it. I need James Franco to FINALLY be the villain. I was told there was a dance scene to remember.Ģ. That said I am anxious about a few things:ġ. I think I’ve seen Tom Holland and now, nothing will ever hit the same. NO OFFENSE to those who cherish him from their childhoods, I just CANNOT get into him as Peter Parker. I have been watching all of the past Spider-Men films to get ready for No Way Home, and I’ve finally arrived at an important milestone: I finally get to be rid of Tobey. - Close Your Eyes and Blink Yourself to WDWĦ2 Thoughts I Had Watching ‘Spider-Man 3’ for the First Time Ever. ![]() Who knows how long this method of interplanetary transportation has been used by the symbiotes, and if it’s something that can be linked back to the original King in Black himself. As proven in this comic–which promises to lead into the ongoing Venom series, giving this origin even more credibility–it seems as though symbiotes have been coming to Earth via meteorites since the ‘40s, at least. While it is still super lazy writing that the meteorite in Spider-Man 3 hit the ground right next to Spider-Man, the fact that it came to Earth this way should no longer be controversial. And the Williams Brothers found this incredible substance in a meteorite. Flexo is actually a symbiote that the Williams Brothers found and then nurtured until it grew into a suit large enough to encompass an entire ‘robot’ superhero. What’s interesting about Flexo, however, isn’t what he can do, but how he was made. Flexo is seemingly a rubberized robot who can bend, stretch, and is virtually unkillable. In the Free Comic Book Day 2023: Spider-Man/Venom story designated “January, 1940” by Al Ewing and CAFU, readers are taken back to the year 1940 where a team of scientists and businessmen known as the Williams Brothers are speaking with a reporter about the newest superhero on the scene: Flexo. ![]() While that was a pretty annoying lack of storytelling passion, it seems as though symbiotes coming to Earth by attaching themselves to meteorites is just something that sometimes happens (and could be insidiously deliberate). In both the comic and the Venom film/ Spider-Man cartoon, the symbiote is picked up after a human finds it in space, yet in Spider-Man 3, the alien just plops down from the stars right next to Peter with no explanation whatsoever. It was picked up by the astronaut John Jameson and hitched a ride aboard his spacecraft, thereby invading Earth upon the ship’s descent. Then, in the movie Venom, the symbiote was brought to Earth similarly to how it came to the planet in the ‘90s Spider-Man cartoon. In the comics, Spider-Man picked up the symbiote during the original Secret Wars–an event that was happening in deep space. In Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man 3, the Venom symbiote comes to Earth via a random meteorite landing right next to Peter Parker’s scooter, before latching onto it and later infecting Parker through symbiosis, creating the Black-Suit Spider-Man which eventually leads to the birth of Eddie Brock’s Venom. ![]() Warning! This article contains spoilers for Free Comic Book Day 2023: Spider-Man/Venom Venom’s origin in Spider-Man 3 was not well received by fans, but in one of Venom’s latest comics, it seems the explanation given in the film wasn’t as lazy/overly simplistic as it initially seemed, as that controversial origin is now Marvel Comics canon.
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