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Spider-Man/Black Cat: The Evil That Men Do

In association with Amazon.com

Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - A sadly uneven story
"Spider-Man/Black Cat: The Evil That Men Do" was a mini series that started in 2002 and did not end until 2005.

Kevin Smith, who wrote the fantastic "Daredevil: Guardian Devil," is the writer here and he does a very good job over the first three chapters. However, due to a ridiculously long hiatus, the series was not finished for three long years.

The story revolves around a villainous low-level mutant named Mr. Brownstone who is a teleporter. He's smuggling drugs and getting wealthy clients to overdose. One of his victims was Peter Parker's students and another victim happened to be a good friend of Felicia Hardy, aka the Black Cat. After a contentious reunion, Spidey and Cat team up to take down Brownstone. The story takes an odd turn where the hiatus kicks in and it never really recovers. The focus is gone and all momentum is ruined. Suddenly, several other Marvel characters make guest-appearances out of nowhere. It's tolerable only because Smith's dialogue is really well written. There was a great cliffhanger at the end of the third chapter and because of the time lost, Kevin Smith cops out of it.

The art is done by Terry Dodson and Rachel Dodson and is excellent. Their take on the characters is unique and stylized and fits real well.

All in all, it's a good book and might be better to new readers who did not jump on back in 2002. It might be worth checking out for those interested.



Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - Started strong but ended weak
Kevin Smith's interpretation of Spider-Man in the first three issues of this limited series was the best in years. Spidey was witty and throwing off some genuinely funny one-liners while bantering with Black Cat, and the series showed incredible promise at the outset.

Then Kevin Smith had to take a few YEARS off halfway through the six-issue run to direct a few movies. When he came back to finish the last three issues, the change in direction was jarring. For the first three issues you have a lighter story, but the last three issues take an unnecessarily sadistic twist. Suddenly the villain set up for three issues is gone, a minor character becomes a major one, and we are subjected to the rapes of two characters (off panel, but clearly confirmed by dialogue). It's as if Kevin returned to the story after the hiatus with a whole new outline and decided to scrap the first part of the story and take it somewhere else.

The only redeeming part of the whole story is the epilogue involving the return of a major supervillain, but since there's little chance they'll let Kevin near another miniseries any time soon, we'll probably never see this developed further.

A promising beginning that was ultimately disappointing at the conclusion.


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