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Writer/artist Erik Larsen leaving Marvel in 1992 was one of the worst things to happen to Spider-Man comics. Larsen has always been a good writer, and he had a great handle on who Spider-Man is. Larsen has done a lot more writing since the early ’90s and is a more well-rounded scribe, so him writing this book makes a lot of sense. From the beginning, he definitely has a handle on who Peter Parker is in this universe, and does quick world-building and housekeeping in the first couple pages, kicking off with a cool action scene and using caption boxes for character exposition so we know where the character is.
It works pretty well, and throughout the book, we get more of that. Larsen is an old school comic writer, so he lays out a lot of plot points in the book that he will pay off. They aren’t exactly subplots, but little nuggets of Peter’s noir life that works pretty well. The issue’s pacing is just right, and it definitely feels like you’re getting a good story for your money’s worth. The book sets up a cool mystery to solve, involving Gwen Stacy and the murder of her father, and the last page takes things to a very interesting place.
If there’s any problem with the writing, and I don’t know if this a personal opinion or not, it’s that the book just feels like a standard Peter Parker dropped into another setting, not a new version of Peter Parker. The Peter of this universe feels exactly like the Spider-Man of the 616 universe, and that broke my immersion several times. There also isn’t any of the darkness that you’re expect from noir. The humor is great, but it doesn’t always fit. Finally, editor Nick Lowe’s fingerprints and his Gwen Stacy obsession are all over the book. Peter and Mary Jane are broken up on the first page, and there’s definitely the feel that the book is going to go in the Peter/Gwen direction, although that could change. This is noir after all, and duplicitous women are a part of the trope.
Rating: 3.5 out of 5
| Pros | Cons |
| Great humor throughout | It doesn’t feel like a different Spider-Man from another universe |
| The art is fantastic; kinetic and detailed | Too much of Marvel’s anti-Mary Jane agenda shines through |
| The mystery has potential | So far, it doesn’t really feel like a noir story except for the plot itself; there’s no noir atmosphere |









