Guidelines

Why did Spider-Man sell his marriage?

Why did Spider-Man sell his marriage?

Marvel Comics editor-in-chief Joe Quesada felt dissolving the Peter Parker and Mary Jane marriage and returning Spider-Man to his roots was necessary to preserve the longevity of the character for the next 20 or 30 years.

What happened between MJ and Peter?

She and Peter got closer, fell deeply in love, had an on-off relationship for years and eventually married. Despite their marriage being undone due to the timeline manipulations by the villain Mephisto, Mary Jane and Peter retained a close friendship and have since resumed their romantic relationship.

Why was the clone saga controversial?

Spider-Man: The Clone Saga is one of the biggest failures and controversial storylines in the history of the Spiderman comic. The comic ultimately failed because the creative team behind the comic were told to drag it out and they couldn’t come up with an ending.

Did Peter Parker and Mary Jane divorce?

Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse Parker and they were married. However, Peter and Mary’s marriage got rocky because of his stressful hero work and bad luck in the years to come. Eventually, Mary wanted kids but they divorced after Peter was afraid to endanger her or their kids because of his hero life.

READ ALSO:   What are scientific explanations always based on?

Does Mary Jane know Peter is Spiderman?

Both Mary Jane and Harry now know that Peter is Spider-Man. In the film, Peter and Mary Jane are dating and Peter is intending to ask Mary Jane to marry him. When he reports the good news to his Aunt May, she was delighted and asks Peter to give her engagement ring as a gift to Mary Jane.

Is the clone saga that bad?

Looking back, the Clone Saga was indeed a bad comic book plot, a story that became so convoluted even its own writers struggled to keep track. The Ben Reilly retcon was undone, and for decades Spider-Man comics avoided clones altogether.

Who is Spider-Man clone?

Ben Reilly was first featured as Spider-Man in The Amazing Spider-Man #149 as a nameless clone of Peter Parker who seemingly dies alongside his creator the Jackal, who had also created a clone of Parker’s lost love Gwen Stacy. The events of the issue were later revisited in several comics such as What If #30.