Untold Tales of Spider Man



Untold Tales of Spider-Man was a Spin-Off of the Spider Man series of Comic Books. Written by Kurt Busiek and pencilled by Pat Olliffe, it featured new stories set in the early days of Spidey's crimefighting career, interweaving its plotlines with those originally created by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko.

The title was part of an experiment by Marvel Comics to publish a number of new titles for only 99 cents, in hopes that the low price point would attract new readers who might have been put off by the higher prices for comics at the time. It ultimately ran for 26 issues (#1-25, with an issue #-1) from September 1995 to October 1997.

"The Wizard: "You can't have solved that equation that fast! You can't! I'm smarter than you -- smarter than any costumed clown -- and I'll prove it! You hear me? I'LL PROVE IT!""
 * A Day in the Limelight: Issue #16 focuses on Mary Jane during this period. Highlighted is her perspective on knowing that Peter is Spider-Man.
 * Action Girl: After discovering the thrill of helping Spider-Man, Peter Parker's classmate Sally Avril decided to use her aerobic skills to fight crime. She created a blue-and-white costume, called herself BlueBird, and armed herself with various homemade egg-themed gadgets.
 * Adaptive Armor: Commanda's armor can generate a force field, fire electric shocks, and change its shape and appearance at her will.
 * Armed with Canon: Occurred since Untold Tales ran around the time the regular Spider titles were entangled in the Clone Saga mess; this became exacerbated when John Byrne created Spider-Man: Chapter One, his attempt to update the old Lee and Ditko stories. Needless to say, Byrne simply disregarded most of what Busiek had done.
 * Art Shift: The backup story of Untold Tales #-1, "Hydra and Go-Seek", was written and drawn by Fred Hembeck.
 * Ascended Extra: The Headsman first appeared in several issues of Untold Tales, before being promoted to a main character on Thunderbolts.
 * Continuity Nod: Lots, due to the nature of the series.
 * Criminal Mind Games: Issue #6 had Spidey and the Human Torch working together to stop The Wizard, who left logic-based puzzles as clues to his next caper. The crime spree was The Wizard's attempt to prove that he was smarter than the Torch, but Genius Bruiser Teen Genius Spider-Man solved them all fairly easily.

""Not going... get cut up by scientists... like mom said!""
 * Femme Fatale: Commanda doesn't hesitate to morph her armor into a low-cut dress when she tries to seduce Spider-Man.
 * Festival Episode: Issue #19 features teenage Peter Parker taking pictures of a festival for J. Jonah Jameson.
 * Jerk Jock: In addition to Spider-Man regular Flash Thompson, Untold Tales featured Tiny, one of Flash's pals, who initially comes off as a copy of Flash. Peter eventually discovers why he's such a jerk: Tiny is under constant pressure from his abusive father to keep his grades up for football but genuinely lacks the intelligence, so Tiny takes it out on Pete because school seems so easy for him.
 * The Load: Sally Avril/BlueBird, whose crime-fighting zeal was surpassed by her inexperience and poorly-developed gadgets. Spider-Man even allowed one villain to hurt her quite badly in an attempt to dissuade her from crime-fighting.
 * The Man Behind the Man: The person backing the Headsman is eventually revealed to be
 * Mutants: Batwing, who was originally a prepubescent boy until he got lost in the Carlsbad Caverns and drank water polluted from illegal chemical dumping.
 * "Previously On...": To help out readers without encyclopedic knowledge of Spider-Man history, most issues include a one-page summary of recent events, both from Untold Tales and from the original Lee/Ditko stories.
 * Revision: The whole point of the series. Busiek even included a timeline indicating where each story took place among the original Lee/Ditko stories.
 * The Power of the Sun: David Lowell, a.k.a. Sundown, who first appeared in Untold Tales Annual #1.
 * Sacrificial Lion:
 * Save the Villain: Spider-Man saves J. Jonah Jameson from being framed by the mob in issue #15.
 * The Silver Age of Comic Books: Played straight and deconstructed at times; many fans lauded the series for being faithful to the tone of the original stories by Lee and Ditko while adding additional characterization and depth to its story arcs.
 * They Would Cut You Up: This was the motivation behind Batwing's rampage in Untold Tales #2. When Spider-Man discovers that Batwing is actually a frightened mutated child and promises to get him help, Batwing freaks out completely.


 * Villain with Good Publicity: The Spacemen are four astronauts who got their powers from a secret space mission, and are immediately lauded as honest heroes by reknown anti-vigilante J. Jonah Jameson. In reality, they're washout trainees who used their powers to steal money while blaming Spider-Man along the way.
 * Water Tower Down: Spider-Man uses it in issue #1 to defeat the Scorcher.