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| Spider-Woman: Origin (New Avengers) | 
enlarge | Authors: Brian Michael Bendis, Brian Reed Creators: Jonathan Luna, Joshua Luna Publisher: Marvel Comics Category: Book
List Price: $13.99 Buy New: $1.49 You Save: $12.50 (89%)
New (29) Used (18) from $1.47
Avg. Customer Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 187765
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 120 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 10 x 6.6 x 0.4
ISBN: 0785119663 Dewey Decimal Number: 741 EAN: 9780785119661 ASIN: 0785119663
Publication Date: March 28, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: THIS ITEM IS UNUSED AND IN GOOD CONDITION. IT MAY HAVE SLIGHT SHELFWEAR BUT OTHERWISE IT IS FINE.
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Product Description This all-new epic chronicles the intriguing secret history of Jessica Drew and her journey from child experiment to Hydra agent to S.H.I.E.L.D. agent to super hero to private eye to Avenger! Written by New Avengers scribe Brian Michael Bendis and searing-hot newcomer Brian Reed (Ms. Marvel), and featuring stunning full-color visuals by the Luna brothers (Ultra, Girls), this story is packed with intrigue leading directly into the upcoming Spider-Woman series from Bendis and Eisner Award-winning artist Alex Maleev (Daredevil). Collects Spider-Woman: Origin #1-5.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 1 more reviews...
a great introduction for a pioneering female hero March 22, 2007 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
the script by Brian Bendis & Brian Reed is very good, and the artwork by the Luna Brothers is a touch of Anime' and very colorful. The plot reworks some established history of the character, and updates it for the 21st century. There are some plotholes here and there but overall this is a worthy graphic novel to pick up.
*************SOME PLOT SPOILERS CONTAINED IN REVIEW********************** Her original comics origin was somewhat different, and more than a little bizarre: In it, back in the 1920's, her father, Jonathan Drew, worked with a partner named Herbert Edgar Wyndham. The latter pretended to be simply a human geneticist, but in reality was the High Evolutionary- who was once human but alien forces gave him unprecedented cosmic power & technology which he then used to pursue wildly disastrous experiments. They were stationed at Wundagore Mountain in Marvel's fictional Eastern European country of Transia; a very young Jessica got exposed to some radioactive material, and was poisoned. Desperate, the elder Drew convinced Wyndham to place his daughter in a stasis tube, where she was kept alive for decades, and being injected with a derivative of spider-protein. When she was finally revived decades later, she was now a young adult woman- but was brainwashed by HYDRA to be an assassin for them--a confrontation with Nick Fury snapped her out of it, and she then became a super-hero. Bendis, along with co-author Brian Reed, turn all of this on its head. You see, it seems that our beloved Jessica Drew was mind-mucked quite royally by HYDRA (she and the ex-subjects of Weapon X could form a support group). Apparently, she was only born a few decades ago, when her parents were both scientists working under the tacit assumption that this was a British government grant financing their work. Miles Warren was Drew's partner, and this Wyndham was not the High Evolutionary, but a British general secretly in HYDRA's camp. Drew and his team had developed a machine that could map the DNA from a living creature and potentially imprint certain characteristics into another. So far they were only working with arachnids--the latest being a 'Wundagore Widow'- like a black widow, but red, with a yellow underbelly- sound familiar? Anyway, the General shows up unannounced, and during an impromptu tour of the lab, Drew's wife accidentally steps in front of the laser-mapping device as Warren activates it--with the Wundagore Widow in between. The result is that the laser beam pulsates right through the spider, and into the belly of Miriam Drew--who is pregnant. The obsessive Mr. Drew is flabbergasted, and begins resenting his wife--his surly attitude does not change even after Jessica is born perfectly healthy--perhaps too healthy--he secretly takes fluid samples, injects her with serums and records the data as if Jessica is just another experiment. When Miriam finds out, she is horrified, and in her confrontation with Jonathan, he becomes enraged and starts beating her. Observing this, young Jessica lashes out with her first venom blast, and falls unconscious. Overall this is a good TPB to pick up--The Luna Brothers' art has a slight manga touch, and Bendis' dialogue is mostly solid, only occasionally diverting to eccentricity.
Getting there. November 18, 2006 1 out of 11 found this review helpful
The art is odd, the story is Average maybe I was expecting more for Spiderwoman being a fan of hers, or maybe Marvel just didn't want to put enough effort to it.
Spider-Woman gets reworked for a new generation September 6, 2007 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
When Brian Michael Bendis disassembled the Avengers, and then re-assembled them with a lineup of his favorite Marvel characters, one of the most notable new faces was Jessica Drew, AKA Spider-Woman. A character with a sordid backstory and neglected use to be sure, Bendis transformed her into one of the most popular members of the team, and with Spider-Woman: Origin, he and co-writer Brian Reed re-work her origin for a new generation. Going all the way back to before Jessica was even born, we meet her scientist father, who's experiments on Wundagore Mountain plant the seeds for future events that will set in motion Jessica's turn as a super hero. The real standout of Spider-Woman: Origin is the art from Joshua and Jonathan Luna, better known as the crafters of the surprisingly good Ultra for Image Comics. They're lush renderings are refreshing to see in a Marvel comic, and hopefully this won't be the last we see from them on a mainstream title. The story may be too short for it's own good, but all in all, Spider-Woman: Origin is a more than solid reworking of one of Marvel's top female super heroes.
spider woman origins March 10, 2007 artwork was great. i enjoted the story could use a little more color, but otherwise it is worth owning. good read.
just not enough September 9, 2007 A huge fan of Bendis, I felt a little let down by this tale. Why? Well, it was too short. I know that as comics get more expensive, pages diminish, and tales become less prolonged; things get weaned down. Sometimes for the better, particularly when a piece becomes a tale of substance. Unfortunately, it is too bad that those books of substance are so short that when you read them voraciously, you are done less than 10 minutes later. Just wanted more!!!
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