The following
piece is a comparison piece of the Marvel Comics Events “Spider-Man: The Clone
Saga” and “Miles Morales: The Clone Saga.”
Hey, guys,
welcome to From the Mind of One Tim Cubbin! My name just happens to be Tim
Cubbin, and I just happen to be the writer of this blog. I might actually let
someone else write for this blog, but for today, I’m your host!
So, we have
some fun planned for us right here, right now. To those of you who don’t know,
I am a major Marvel Comic Books fan. I’ve been reading regularly since 2001, so
by now that’s twenty years (I know, I’m so old). Over the past year, I’ve been
doing this blog, posting reviews of Marvel prose and graphic novels. I have
done several comparison pieces on graphic and prose novel with the same title
and adaptations. This, however, is a first. I’m going to compare two COMIC book
stories with similar titles. On July 25, 2021, I did a review of the Marvel
Comics event “Spider-Man: The Clone Saga” and a few hours ago on November 16,
2021, I posted a review of the Marvel Comics event “Miles Morales: The Clone
Saga.” For those who don’t know, Miles Morales is the new Spider-Man. So these
two reviews are the Clone Sagas of two different Spider-Men. If you haven’t
read my reviews of the two events yet, I totally have to tell you to break now,
then read the reviews by themselves (I gave you the dates posted for this
express purpose), then come back and enjoy reading this comparison post. If you
do this big favor for me, you are THE BEST!
Okay,
obviously I need to give you a little background on the Clone Sagas I
previously wrote, for the purpose of differentiating the two Clone Sagas and
preparing my comparison purposes.
Let’s talk
about the two Spider-Men to start this up. We’ll begin with the original
Spider-Man, Peter Parker. Peter was a high school nerd, bullied and ignored by
the other kids in his school. He went to a demonstration on radioactivity. While
there, a spider got in the way of radioactive rays and became irradiated and
bit Peter Parker and Cindy Moon before it died (Cindy Moon is the super hero
Silk but has nothing to do with these stories, so she will not be mentioned in
this review again). Afterwards, Peter Parker discovered he had spider-related
powers. He has adhesive fingertips and toes; the proportional speed, strength
and agility of a spider; and a precognitive awareness of personal danger he
calls “spider-sense.” He was orphaned as a boy and was raised by his Aunt May
and Uncle Ben. At first he tried to use his powers for personal gain. One day,
he let a burglar run by when Peter could have stopped him. This burglar broke
into Peter’s home and shot and killed his Uncle Ben. Peter stopped the burglar,
and decided to use his powers to help others. He truly became Spider-Man and
lived by the mantra that with great power there must also come great
responsibility.
Miles
Morales was a high school student. His Uncle Aaron was a criminal called the
Prowler. One day, Aaron stole from Oscorp, and accidentally grabbed a
genetically altered spider. While hanging out with his Uncle Aaron, the spider
bit Miles. He discovered he had spider-related powers. . He has adhesive
fingertips and toes; the proportional speed, strength and agility of a spider;
the ability to direct a mild electrical charge he calls “venom blasts;” the
ability to turn invisibility; and a precognitive awareness of personal danger
he calls “spider-sense.” He decided to use his powers to help others who needed
help, like his hero Spider-Man and became the new Spider-Man himself.
Okay, those
are the origins of the two Spider-Men. Let’s talk about the storylines leading
up to both Peter and Miles’ Clone Sagas.
In college,
Peter Parker fell in love with fellow student Gwen Stacy. Secretly, their
professor Miles Warren also fell in love with Gwen. Gwen was killed by Peter’s
super villain enemy the Green Goblin. Warren was a geneticist and became the
super villain the Jackal. The Jackal cloned Gwen and Peter. Both clones were
presumed dead. Peter’s clone, however, did not die and left New York to live a
life of his own as Ben Reilly. The Jackal was able to create more viable clones
of Peter and Gwen. When Aunt May had a stroke, Ben returned to New York, and he
and Peter originally fought, but were eventually able to live in coexistence.
As for
Miles Morales, Miles was abducted by the Assessor, who studied Miles to the
point of torture and created a clone of Miles. Miles faced the clone, but the
clone turned out to be inviable and fell apart. However, the Assessor managed
to create three semi-viable clones. Miles was lured by his clones who began to
commit crimes in his name, including a scientist to create a cure that would stabilize
the clones, but not knowing this, Miles destroyed the cure, incurring the wrath
of the clones Selim, Mindspinner and Switch.
For more
details of the actual events of the two Clone Sagas, read my reviews of both
events (if you haven’t done so already). Okay, now I’ve got to compare the two
Clone Sagas. I must say, however, there were almost no similarities between
Peter and Miles’ Clone Sagas. Both had clones, and both had clones that were
inviable and tried to stabilize themselves. Both had clones that tried to ruin
their reputations. Peter’s clone Kaine committed murder and Peter was put on
trial after a fingerprint match implicated Peter. Miles’ clone Selim stole
equipment and kidnapped a scientist, who Selim went on to murder. And that’s
about as far as similarities come.
Okay, now
you’re probably wondering which Clone Saga I preferred. If you read my reviews,
you know I score my reviews on a scale of one to ten, one being totally awful,
ten being totally awesome. You will also know at the time of writing the
reviews, I gave Peter Parker’s Clone Saga a five, while I scored Miles Morales’s
Clone Saga at a six. Please note I sometimes have a change of heart after writing
my posts. But you may have read that I thought Peter Parker’s Clone Saga was
too long, whereas Miles Morales’s Clone Saga was too short. There was just an
imbalance on the length of the stories. Peter Parker and Ben Reilly both had
solo stories and connecting stories. I felt that Miles Morales’s clone Selim
just did not have enough time to be thoroughly established. Granted Selim was
an evil clone, I thought more development of Selim, Mindspinner and Switch
would have actually been more interesting if each clone actually had a story
rather than just being deteriorating. So, yes, my promised preference. This is
actually a very tough decision to make. Both had flaws. Both had good points. I
have to say that, though being lower scored, Peter Parker’s Clone Saga was my
preference, owing to each clone actually having a developed storyline rather
than just eight issues solely focusing on Miles. It could have had much
potential.
Now I’ll
revisit my accessibility statements in order to give recommendations. If you
were to actually read these events, I felt that Peter Parker’s Clone Saga
required a good deal of Spidey knowledge for optimal enjoyment, while I said
that Miles Morales’s Clone Saga actually felt self-contained. I still, all
these months later, stand by both statements. If you’re new to the Spider-Men
and want to start a Clone Saga, I’d have to tell you Miles Morales’s is easier
to pick up and read. At the same time, I’m not telling you to just read Miles’
Clone Saga as Peter’s was actually rather better developed. I just have to tell
you if you either prefer Peter Parker/Spider-Man and Ben Reilly/Scarlet Spider
to Miles Morales/Spider-Man, go with whoever you like. Now, let’s get serious
about something. I am NOT making your decisions for you. What I may like in
comics are things that you have no interest in, or even dislike and hate, while
you may like things that I don’t. That is ENTIRELY up to you. If you want to
read either, both, or neither of them based on what I write, that’s on you, and
I can’t force feed this on you. You make your own decisions. This is From the
Mind of One Tim Cubbin, after all, not “From the Mind of One (Insert Your Name
Here).” My opinions are my own, I can’t expect you to always agree with me. That’s
the magic of free will.
So if you either have read or go on to read either Clone Sagas, feel free to tell me what YOU think. I’d love to hear it. You can leave a comment on my blog page, message me on Facebook, leave a Tweet on this Twitter page, I’d LOVE to hear your opinions. And feel free to Retweet or Share with your followers and friends, that’d be awesome and you are totally THE BEST! I love the support, this blog is what keeps me going from day-to-day. I’m a certified journalist unable to get a job, which is why I do this. I’m semi-professional with this blog, and I do this just so I can share my opinions and encourage you to read and connect with me. You can also check out more of my blog posts if you enjoyed this. I do plenty more than just reviews and comparison pieces, I do essays about mental health (I happen to have bipolar disorder and am a mental health advocate), editorials about stupid things that bother me, short stories, poetry, and more. I post pretty frequently, so always expect more content, and I’ll say goodbye to you, and, as always, Tim Cubbin… out!
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