Spider-Man: Maximum Carnage - Tom DeFalco, J.M. DeMatteis, Terry Kavanagh & David Michelinie

Spider-Man: Maximum Carnage

By Tom DeFalco, J.M. DeMatteis, Terry Kavanagh & David Michelinie

  • Release Date: 2006-12-13
  • Genre: Graphic Novels
Score: 4.5
4.5
From 42 Ratings

Description

Carnage, the spawn of Venom, has assembled an army of Spider-Man's criminally insane adversaries to spread his message of hostility, chaos and wholesale slaughter: Carrion, Demogoblin, Shriek and the Spider-Man Doppelganger! Outmanned and overpowered, the wallcrawler must recruit his own band of superbeings to combat the rising tide of evil: Black Cat, Cloak & Dagger, Firestar, Captain America, Deathlok and ... Venom?! Spider-Man's worst enemy becomes his uneasy ally in the battle to halt Carnage's mad rampage. But when he finds himself at odds with a number of his allies, who want to finish Carnage and his cronies once and for all, Spider-Man must decide whether to violate his personal code of honor to rid the world of pure evil. Can the webslinger find an alternative before it's too late? Either choice carries dire consequences! Collects Amazing Spider-Man (1963) #378-380, Spider-Man: Unlimited (1993) #1-2, Spectacular Spider-Man (1976) #201-203, Web of Spider-Man (1985) #101-103, Spider-Man (1990) #35-37.

Reviews

  • Awesome

    5
    By thejoker015
    I just can't wait to get the full book of Maximum Carnage!
  • A convoluted storyline...

    1
    By Paco Sinclair Esquire
    I remember collecting comic books during the apex of their popularity. I purchased this book feeling nostalgic and also because I never had the opportunity of collecting all of the books tied to this storyline. Carnage's first appearance was an amazing storyline that had a weak conclusion so I expected the same type of format as his previous entry. Where the first appearance had a three issue arc, this collection was originally published in 14 comic books. The story line tries to grow in featured characters and entertain, but in the end it fails on so many levels. Throughout the story Spider-man tries to influence his allies using his moral compass, but in the end became less sympathetic and migrated to being pathetic. There were also some b and c story lines that felt unnecessary and was used as filler in between the action. The point of the subplots was to demonstrate that Spider-man also was going through some personal turmoils, but it felt forced and did not add any layers to the plot other than to serve as a method to control the pacing. The best part of the story was that it had and end.

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