Site icon Comic Watch

The Amazing Spider-Man #23: Lulling Lows and Nothing Else

2.6/10

The Amazing Spider-Man #23

Artist(s): John Romita Jr.with Scott Hanna

Colorist(s): Marcio Menyz

Letterer: Joe Caramanga

Publisher: Marvel

Genre: Action, Superhero

Published Date: 04/05/2023

Recap

Almost one year ago, Zeb Wells kicked off his run on The Amazing Spider-Man with a question and a mystery surrounding something Peter Parker had done in a six month time jump from where we last left him. In that gap, his life has completely fallen apart, his friends and family pushing him to the fringes of his own life, Peter working with Norman Osborn and watching silently from afar as MJ lives a new life with her husband Paul. Old villains, such as Tombstone, The Vulture, two Hobgoblins, and brother turned enemy Ben Reilly have all returned to make his life hell.

Now, as we round the corner on issue #20, the villain that caused the opening mystery has returned, bringing with him both answers and even more questions to the mystery this run kicked off.

Review

There’s a method to decompressed storytelling in comics that often can and does work. Living in moments, allowing the plot to stretch across multiple issues while growing characters and minor plots considerably, is a welcome style of comic writing popularized in the early 2000s. THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #23 is the middle chapter in a saga of decompression that suffers from terrible plotting, poor visual storytelling, and a dash of rushed writing that forms a comic book of (arguably) embarrassing quality.

This issue follows up on the last instantaneously, weaving together a tale that starts with Peter waking up in York, Pennsylvania, and ending with him going to Norman Osborn for help. A chunk of this issue, a superfluous seven pages, is Peter weaving his way towards the Baxter building with narrative boxes used to explain the semantics of what’s going on with the mystery dimension MJ is trapped inside. What could have been one page, maybe three at most, is instead stretched out to seven, leaving no room for any actual story.

The middle-to-end section of this issue focuses on the Fantastic Four and Cap turning Peter away from instantaneous help, as he’s needed to help clear up the explosions in York. The FF, or Cap, could have let Peter use the lab to save MJ and then bring him to the FBI. Or, in the age of the mobile phone, maybe do a video call and move on. It’s an entirely contrived way of putting him on the outs with his super-pals, one that has so many simple solutions it’s stunning how this plot even passed editorial. This issue ends with the reveal that Peter has no choice but to go to Norman, which has no shock value as we already know Peter will work with Norman in the future.

There is no meat to this story’s bones if the issue had gotten to the punch about Norman sooner and allowed some time to tell an actual story instead of snapshotting Peter’s rush for help without any artistry or interesting narrative events.

The art is fine. It’s John Romita Jr. doing his thing. He illustrates the hell out of Peter fighting Cap. Still, besides that, the issue is full of broken anatomy, ugly character work, and all-around messy illustrations that Marcio Menyz’s coloring couldn’t save.

Final Thoughts

This issue is boring, poorly thought out, and beyond contrived. Even in Spidey's worst publication periods, at least something exciting, whether it be grand reveals or true storytelling was at least happening. Maybe the stories were offensively bad at times, but at least they were stories. Here, you're paying 3.99 for a bag of air that contains everything you already knew.

The Amazing Spider-Man #23: Lulling Lows and Nothing Else
  • Writing - 3/10
    3/10
  • Storyline - 1/10
    1/10
  • Art - 3/10
    3/10
  • Color - 3/10
    3/10
  • Cover Art - 3/10
    3/10
2.6/10
User Review
2.33 (3 votes)
Comments Rating 0 (0 reviews)
Exit mobile version