
|
Cover Price: $.25 |
#132 |
Value: $60 (Near Mint-) |
|
Supporting Cast:
|
"The Master Plan Of The Molten Man!" - 19 Pages
|
Amazing Spider-Man #132 marks the
return of Peter Parker's oldest friends - as well as the return of one of the
Web-Slinger's long-time foes, but this issue also is noteworthy for another
return - a guest-shot by legendary Spider-Man artist John Romita. During his
lengthy run with writer Stan Lee, Romita created the classic look for Spider-Man
that subsequent artists have used as their template. Romita's Spider-Man is more
imitated even than that of Steve Ditko, the character's co-creator.
Spider-Man has returned to New York after preventing Aunt May from making the
mistake of a lifetime by marrying Doctor Octopus. He thinks he should be in a
good mood, but unfortunately, he's come down with a bad cold. However, Spidey
doesn't have much time to worry about his health. While swinging around town, he
notices a break-in at the Museum of Natural History. "Who would be looney enough
to steal a Tyrannosaurus Rex?" he thinks. (As luck would have it, that actually
happens in
Amazing Spider-Man #165 - but that's another story for another day). A
closer examination of the crime scene reveals that the bandit melted his way
through the skylight. He also burned his footprints into the sidewalk, leading
Spider-Man to strongly suspect the identity of the thief, although he doesn't
share his suspicions with the reader just yet. In any case, the bandit only
stole some meteor fragments, passing up on more valuable artifacts. The scene
shifts to a fleabag hotel on the Lower West Side, where a tenant named "Mr.
Raxton" rather rudely chases out the cleaning lady. She calls the Daily Bugle
with a tip and ace reporter Ned Leeds goes to check it out. Raxton's hotel room
explodes just as Ned arrives and Raxton shuffles out, muttering, "I'm
doomed...I'll remain this hideous monstrosity...forever!" He melts the linoleum
floor as he leaves, providing yet another clue as to his identity. When Ned goes
inside to check things out, he is attacked by a mystery assailant.
Meanwhile, Peter Parker runs into his old high school classmate, Liz Allen, who
hasn't been seen since all the way back in
Amazing Spider-Man #30. Peter remembers his high school crush on Liz,
but those days seem long ago to the college student. Liz is upset and exhausted
and asks for Peter's help. He takes her to Mary Jane's apartment and she goes
right to sleep. Peter heads over the the Daily Bugle offices to check their
files on the villain he suspects robbed the museum and Joe Robertson gives him
an assignment to take some photos for Ned's story. "Looks like the police will
have to solve their museum-robber on their own," he thinks. " 'Cause Spidey's
off to make some bread...and in a world as inflation-ridden as this one, that
takes A-1 top priority!" Lucky for Ned he got that assignment, because
Spider-Man arrives to find Ned unconscious and injured but alive. Before he can
do anything, though, he is attacked by Ned's assailant and the thief behind the
museum robbery - the Molten Man (last seen in
Amazing Spider-Man #35). It turns out the Molten Man has been in a
hospital since their last encounter, but he escaped. The Molten Man's body is
covered in a molten metal shell and his body heat has risen to 300 degrees
Fahrenheit. That makes him a dangerous foe - and a tough one to hurt. He can't
match Spider-Man's speed, though, and the Wall-Crawler dodges the Molten Man's
attacks. But Spider-Man, in turn, can't do much to hurt the enraged Molten Man,
although he does web his fist into a makeshift boxing glove so he can punch the
villain (In what appears to be a mistake, the glove completely disappears in the
next panel!). Declaring he will kill Spider-Man, the Molten Man charges the
hero. Spidey dodges the attack, saying, "My fairy godmother promised me I
wouldn't die till I saw a dragon -- and you don't think I'd make a liar out of
my fairy godmother!" The Molten Man tumbles out of the window and lands on a
fire hydrant. The ensuing cloud of steam enables him to escape. Peter dresses
back into street clothes and carries Ned to the hospital. He starts feeling weak
himself and figures his cold must be worse than he originally thought. At the
emergency room, the doctors say that Ned has a case of radiation poisoning. The
meteors Mark Raxton (A.K.A. the Molten Man) stole were radioactive. As Peter
leaves the hospital, he becomes too weak to stand and collapses on the floor.
He, too, has been stricken by the radiation poisoning. The issue ends with a
sick Peter Parker thinking "Is this -- is this it? Is this the end of
Spider-Man?"
It's great to see a classic Lee/Ditko villain like the Molten Man return after a
nearly 100-issue absence. He never has been a top-notch Spider-villain, but he's
still a valuable, long-time member of Spider-Man's rogues gallery. Thankfully,
it won't be as long before he appears again, as he comes back to torment the
Web-Slinger in
Amazing Spider-Man #171. It's also wonderful to see John Romita return
to the character he helped make famous. By this point, Romita was Marvel Comics'
Art Director, meaning he was doing more behind-the-scenes work than published
art (although he provided a number of Amazing Spider-Man covers during
this era). Regular penciller Ross Andru, who was doing some fantastic work at
this point, resumes his usual duties in the next issue.
Next month: The two-part Molten Man storyline concludes, with the tragic mystery
of the Molten Man's crimes explained!
Reviewed by
Bruce
Buchanan.
| Quality Rating: | 4 |
| Significance Rating: | 3 |
|
Overall Rating: |
7 |
Reprinted In:
Marvel Tales #109
|
Also This Month: |