LEARNING TO CRAWL PART 3!
• Spider-Man's biggest fan becomes his first super-villain!
• His name's Clash and he's about to ruin Spider-Man's life. That's not exaggeration!
Slott and Ramon Perez's collaboration serves as a true love letter to Silver Age Spidey without being too old-fashioned. Read Full Review
Amazing Spider-Man: Learning to Crawl #1.3 hasn't really made its themes and ideas clear yet but what is here is fun to read, if uneven, and beautiful to look at. Read Full Review
Overall, this issue was a disappointment. The first two issues set a standard that simply couldnt continue to be met. Perhaps the next issue will give us a reason to be excited, but for now, well have to be severely underwhelmed. Read Full Review
"Learning to Crawl" is unoriginal and it has no heart. It's basically the opposite of the main Amazing Spider-Man arc. Read Full Review
These decimal issues have been pretty good to start out. Dan Slott once again proves that he is a true Spider-Man fans as both he and the artist Ramon K. Perez deliver another good throwback to the old Stan Lee/Jack Kirby Spidey stories. The battles in these books continue to lack a little depth. These fights between Spider-Man and Clash are really not on a high level.
Weakest issue of the mini-series so far but still a decent take on Spidey's earliest days.Artwork does a nice job of paying tribute to the silver age. I still can't seem to get over the use, or should I say overuse of modern technology. Having a modern computer or cellphone in the background would be fine, but we're constantly reminded that the camera's being used are digital. I just think it takes away from some of the fun readers of classic Spider-Man could have with this series.