Brush up on the coolest Spider-Man before he hits the small screen! Spidey legend ERIK LARSEN puts on his writing hat to reinvent this Spider-Man like he did the original with rising-star artist ANDREA BROCCARDO. It's the 1930s and Peter Parker is a private detective by day, vigilante Spider-Man by night. Things were going well until a certain dame walked into his office to ask Peter to solve the case of her father's murder. The dame's name? GWEN STACY! This case may not only break George Stacy's police department, but Spider-Man himself!
This is a really solid first issue that sets the stage beautifully. Having Peter Parker solve a case in which his alter ego, Spider-Man, is implicated as the killer is a brilliant conundrum that immediately raises the stakes. What I enjoyed most, however, is the dialogue. Right from the opening segment, we get the wisecracking Spider-Man fans know and love. I especially liked the scene where he tries to talk the thugs out of using guns, resulting instead in a fistfight. Read Full Review
Spider-Man Noir Issue 1 is a brilliant revisiting of the world. While the plot may appear simple in nature, its depth comes from the dialogue and the story's details. Read Full Review
Broccardo enhances the thrills and action of the story with beautifully detailed and impressive art. I love the style of this issue and how it embraces the world of the story. Read Full Review
Spider-Man Noir #1 features the return of one of the coolest characters in the Spider-Verse, and a mystery that's appropriate to his time period. Read Full Review
Spider-Man Noir #1 is an engaging, hilarious debut that perfectly blends the familiar drama of Peter Parker with the shadows and secrets of the detective genre. If you love your Spider-Man a little hard-boiled, you should definitely consider picking this one up! Read Full Review
Spider-Man: Noir #1revisits a cool Spider-Man concept that hits a lot of the right notes, while attempting to strike a balance between the nostalgic and the campy. The art is outstanding. Read Full Review
Spider-Man Noir #1 will not be the book every fan wanted for this cult-classic character, but it is still a ride in of itself, the creative team doing what they do best in a way that harmonizes with one another strengths. Read Full Review
Spider-Man Noir #1 looks like rainy-day perfection and throws punches with vintage flair, but the script cant decide if its after Oscar Wilde or Raymond Chandler. The result? A detective story where the action dazzles, the mood is top-notch, but the protagonists quirkiness and shoehorned Nazi lecture rob it of true noir grit. Next time, heres hoping Spider-Man Noir broods, not jokes, and that villains are organic parts of the mystery rather than propaganda on bat-wings. Read Full Review
Best spiderman comic right now.