The Amazing Spider-Man #27 Review
Writer: Dan
Slott
Art Team: Stuart
Immonen, Wade von Grawbadger, Marte Gracia
Marvel
Comics
Release
Date: May 10, 2017
Cover Price:
$3.99
A Face Only a Goblin Could Love
Sup fellow
web heads … if you’ve been following the Amazing Spider-Man lately you know
that Spidey, Silver Sable, and now all of Parker Industries are hot on the
trail of the old school Green Goblin, aka Norman Osborne, who keeps changing
his appearance throughout this arc. The classic villain is currently causing a
ruckus and running the Sable’s home country of Symkaria, and this group is out
to put an end to it. However in the eyes of S.H.I.E.L.D., this team lead by
Spidey, is technically invading a country to wage war. Quite the Spider-Pickle.
So what will be the coming repercussions, will this all-out assault even
succeed, and most importantly is this issue any good??? Swing in and find out.
Part three
of this arc kicks off with a glimpse of the aftermath involving Osborne’s latest
face transplant, which have been occurring more and more often lately. Due to the accelerated schedule of the recent
procedures this particular effort doesn’t turn out so well and the Doctor
responsible suffers for the misfortune despite his warnings to ol’ Greeny prior.
How does any Super Villain secure ‘help’,
these people have to know they’re never getting out alive right?
As the story
moves on we check in on Spider-Man and Silver Sable as she fills in our
favorite ‘Web-Head’, along with us the audience, about how she apparently faked
what we all thought was her death in the past.
Slott continues providing glimpse of the various parties involved in
this conflict and it’s revealed the Mockingbird has chosen to quit S.H.I.E.L.D.,
after last issues cliffhanger per recent mission requests and in this instance will
instead aiding Peter and his cause in Symkaria. These recent turn of events that
have spurred Mockingbirds moral quandary however does nothing to slow
S.H.I.E.L.D.’s perceived threat of Spider-Man and Parker Industries invading
Symkaria which they consider the problem at hand.
Once
Spider-Man and company land in Symkaria, where the Goblin has forced the citizens
of the country to work in his various factories, the action picks up from this
point forward and the issue jumps around to various, bombastic, action
sequences really picking up the pace of the page count. Spider-Man, along with
help from the rest of the heroes present, is able to make some headway through
the territory spurring Osborne to start the process and spring his secret
weapon.
STOP READING
HERE IF YOU DON’T WANT A SPOILER OF THE CLIFFHANGER: The secret weapon, in this
case, is a giant Goblin bomb, which will turn most the people of Symkaria into Osborne’s
unstoppable Goblin army. This is what Spider-Man and crew are up against, plus
S.H.I.E.L.D., but we will have to wait until next issue to find out how this
all wraps up.
Overall issue
#27 was a nice solid effort all around by Dan Slott and company to move the events
of the story forward, albeit at a brisk pace, and without much suspense. The story dialogue and art by Immonen is
becoming more worthy of celebration, with the details improving each issue, as
he settles in as the main story artist, but I still wish for a lighter color
palate.
I do have a
few other minor complaints involving this storyline, centering on the Green Goblin
who hasn’t felt or acted like the head of a country, or a possible unstoppable threat,
that he’s being painted as. We’re constantly told by the writer he’s a tough
and needs to put a stop to by the ‘good guys’ but how quickly Spider-Man’s crew
dispatches the Goblin Army and moves through the country only reinforced these
thoughts of mine throughout the issue. I still enjoy the Amazing Spider-Man as
a title but this hasn’t been a must buy story arc if he’s not a character you
consistently follow.
Bits and Pieces
The Amazing
Spider-Man #27 has some great action while making progress to the overall story
(as the title settles to prepare for its Secret Empire crossover). However the
threat of the Green Goblin has felt hallow and impersonal throughout this arc
and not much is done here to improve upon that.
7.0/10
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