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Spider-Woman (Ultimate Marvel character)

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(Redirected fromUltimate Spider-Woman)
Superhero
Comics character
Spider-Woman
Textless cover ofUltimate Spider-Man #98 (October2006).
Art byMark Bagley andRichard Isanove.
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearance
Created by
In-story information
Alter egoSpider-Woman
SpeciesHuman mutate (clone)
Team affiliations
Partnerships
Notable aliases
Abilities
  • Superhuman strength, stamina, speed, durability, agility, and reflexes
  • Ability to stick to surfaces
  • Organic webbing
  • "Spider-sense"

Ultimate Spider-Woman (colloquial:Jessica Drew,Julia Carpenter, orBlack Widow) is asuperheroine appearing inAmerican comic books published byMarvel Comics. Created byBrian Michael Bendis andMark Bagley, she is theUltimate Marvel equivalent ofBen Reilly and both iterations ofSpider-Woman (Jessica Drew andJulia Carpenter). As opposed to her prime counterparts, this Spider-Woman is a female clone ofEarth-1610'sPeter Parker, dealing with being the brain of a teenage boy trapped in the body of a teenage girl. In 2014 and2019, the character's red-and-white costume and characterisation as a secret agent relative of Peter Parker were respectively adapted as hisEarth-616 sisterTeresa Parker and Earth-19529 daughterClaire Parker.

The character received a positive critical reception. In 2023, the character made their cinematic debut in the animated feature filmSpider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse as a member ofMiguel O'Hara'sSpider-Society.

Publication history

[edit]

Created byBrian Michael Bendis andMark Bagley, the Ultimate incarnation of Spider-Woman first appeared inUltimate Spider-Man #98 (October 2006),[1] and appeared inAll-New Ultimates #1 (April 2014) as the Ultimate Universe's third equivalent of Black Widow (afterNatasha Romanoff andMonica Chang).[2] She is a supporting character inUltimate Comics: Spider-Man andUltimate Comics: The Ultimates.[3]

Fictional character biography

[edit]

Clone Saga

[edit]

Spider-Woman is agenetically engineered clone of the original Spider-Man,Peter Parker, whose chromosomes were manipulated to make her biologically female. Created alongsideKaine to act as agents for the CIA (code name: Spider-Woman), she retains Peter's memories and love of Mary Jane Watson, also viewing herself as Peter. The intent of her creators was to erase her memories and implant new ones, but both escaped before the process could be carried out.[4]Doctor Octopus reveals himself as the mastermind behind the experiments that created them. All three fight Doctor Octopus together and eventually prevail. Peter surrenders toNick Fury while the clones opt to flee.[5] At the storyline's close, Spider-Woman decides to start a new life apart from Peter, takes her leave of him after what she calls "the most awkward hug in history", establishing a sibling-like relationship with him.[6]

Ultimatum

[edit]

Spider-Woman later appears during the "Ultimatum" storyline, making their public debut when they help Johnny Storm apprehend theVulture.[7] Storm begins to develop a romantic interest in Spider-Woman after a bad date with a famed but obnoxious teen singer, unaware that she is Spider-Man's female clone. They later meetMay Parker while aiding civilians duringMagneto'sworldwide attack,[8] taking them to safety and promising to find Peter for them.[9] Later, she travels to the center of Manhattan whereDoctor Strange's home is being attacked byNightmare; theHulk begins to destroy the portal to the Dark Dimension, causing an explosion.[10] After briefly being chased by Hulk, Spider-Woman continues her search for Peter and meetsKitty Pryde. They work together on the search as well as try to help survivors, but are overwhelmed by the deaths and destruction around them. They manage to find a remnant of Peter's mask, which Kitty takes with her and gives to Mary Jane Watson at Peter's home, informing her and May that Peter is still among the missing.[11]

Doomsday

[edit]

InUltimate Enemy, Spider-Woman is seen doing recon on theRoxxon Corporation, investigating possible illegal genetic experimentation, when the corporation building is attacked. It is assumed that the person behind the attack is the "Ultimate Enemy". She is later attacked by the same creature that destroyed the building.[12] Spider-Woman then attempts to infiltrate Roxxon, posing as an employee.[13] On her first day, she is introduced to the Roxxon Brain Trust.[14] Shortly afterward, she witnesses an attack on the Baxter Building, and Roxxon suggests she move into an underground bunker. While waiting there,Misty Knight starts to ask them questions and figures out that she is not who she claims to be. The Roxxon Brain Trust then reveals that they suspect Roxxon in the attacks. Spider-Woman does not trust them and when they want to see her powers, she webs them up and attempts to flee. One of the Brain Trust members transforms into a brute of some sort and knocks them out before she can get away.[15]

InUltimate Doom, Spider-Woman awakens to find herself bound on a table and meets the Brain Trust's leader, Doctor Octopus. It doesn't take long for Spider-Man to arrive and save her, just before Roxxon is attacked again. As the duo start rescuing civilians, they notice Doctor Octopus is also in danger. Although Spider-Woman wants to let him die, Spider-Man eventually manages to convince her to help save him.Rick Jones arrives with the Human Torch and they learn that heroes are gathering to take downReed Richards. Spider-Woman and even Doctor Octopus join the group.[16] During the attack in theNegative Zone, Spider-Woman meets theUltimates for the first time, and assistsCaptain America himself. After the confrontation with Richards, Spider-Woman becomes an agent ofS.H.I.E.L.D. atCarol Danvers's request.[17]

Ultimate Comics: Spider-Man andUltimate Comics: The Ultimates

[edit]

After Peter apparently dies fighting theGreen Goblin, Spider-Woman confronts the new Spider-Man,Miles Morales.[18] She later assistsIron Man andHawkeye in fightingElectro.[19] Eventually, Spider-Woman becomes frustrated about being in the Ultimates team,[20] being captured along withCaptain Britain by the new S.H.I.E.L.D. directorMarvin Flumm,[21] but is later released and takes part in Captain America's swearing into the presidency.[22] When Captain America went to join the states once more, Spider-Woman joined the new president and was part of the ground forces.[23] During the "United We Stand" storyline, Spider-Woman is reluctantly teamed with Miles during S.H.I.E.L.D.'s battle with the terrorist groupHYDRA.[24] After they are separated in the battle, Spider-Woman finds Miles and returns him to New York.

Initially, Spider-Woman is not forthcoming when Miles asks why she cares so much about him.[25] But after Miles quits being Spider-Man following personal tragedy,[26] Spider-Woman reveals to Miles that she is Peter's clone, explaining that although she has Parker's memories, she is not Spider-Man, but feels that Miles should be. This convinces Miles to resume the Spider-Man identity.[27]

All-New Ultimates

[edit]

Later, Miles and Spider-Woman team up withCloak and Dagger andBombshell to fight Roxxon's Brain Trust and confrontDonald Roxxon.[28] Along with Kitty Pryde, the group becomes the New Ultimates, she changes her superhero alias to "Black Widow",[29] and attempts to begin dating Kitty "again" (from when they were Peter).

Spider-Verse

[edit]

During the "Spider-Verse" storyline, Spider-Woman teams up withKaine and an alternateBen Reilly to investigate the home of theInheritors and find out how they are able to clone new bodies for themselves.[30]

Spider-Men II

[edit]

Following theSecret Wars events that seemingly destroyed Spider-Woman's universe, she is returned to existence, once again using the Spider-Woman identity, and rejoining the Ultimates with the resurrected Peter Parker who has reclaimed the Spider-Man mantle in Miles's absence upon emigrating toEarth-616.[31]

Powers and abilities

[edit]

Spider-Woman has all the powers of Spider-Man, including superhuman strength, speed, and agility, the ability to stick to surfaces and a spider-sense that warns them of danger.[32] In addition, her fingertips havespinnerets, allowing her to firesilk-spinning webbing from them.[33][7]

Other versions

[edit]

Teresa Parker

[edit]
Main article:Teresa Parker

OnEarth-616, the Ultimate Spider-Woman's iconic red-and-white costume and characterisation as a secret agent "sister" to Spider-Man would be adapted to the new character ofTeresa Parker, the Earth-616 Peter's long-lost younger sister, first appearingThe Amazing Spider-Man: Family Business in 2014,[34] before returning inPeter Parker: The Spectacular Spider-Man,The Amazing Spider-Man Volume Five, andThe Chameleon Conspiracy.

Claire Parker

[edit]
Main article:Spider-Woman (Claire Parker)

On Earth-19529, the Ultimate Spider-Woman's iconic red-and-white costume and characterisation would be adapted to the new character ofClaire Parker, daughter of Spider-Man, as acomposite character withMayday Parker, inSpider-Man: Life Story, adapting the events of allSpider-Man comics released between 1962 and 2019 as if their events had happened in real-time, with some divergences during theClone Saga. After fending offMorlun in 2006 while Peter is involved inthe superhero Civil War, by 2019 Claire has become Spider-Woman with the Ultimate Spider-Woman costume, remaining on Earth to protect her brother Benny and mother Mary Jane as he goes to space face Doctor Doom along withMiles Morales (actuallyOtto Octavius).[35]

Reception

[edit]

Critical reception

[edit]

Michael Austin ofCBR.com stated, "Not only is the mainstream Jessica Drew incredibly cool, but her Ultimate universe counterpart is also an equally impressive character as well. This Jessica Drew is actually a female clone of Peter Parker. The character debuted during the Ultimate Marvel version of the Clone Saga. While the original Clone Saga is hotly debated as possibly one of the worst Spider-Man arcs of all time, the Ultimate universe counterpart was received much better, and it was thanks to great characters like the Ultimate Jessica Drew."[36] Jamie Lovett ofComicBook.com asserted, "The other alternate universe clone that needs honorable mentioning here come's from Marvel's own Ultimate Universe. The ultimate universe Jessica Drew is a female clone of Peter Parker, kind of like how X-23 is a female clone of Wolverine, except that Jessica presents as approximately the same age as Peter. The Ultimate "Clone Saga" is a much better more cohesive story than the original "Clone Saga," and Ultimate Jessica Drew's introduction is part of that. Watching her and Peter Parker try to figure out exactly what's going on when they first meet is a brilliant moment. Jessica Drew eventually joined the Ultimates and took on the persona of the new Black Widow before the Ultimate Universe finally came to its Ultimate End. Weirdly enough, the female clone origin for Ultimate Spider-Woman makes more sense than the origin of the original Marvel Universe Spider-Woman, which had to do with her father saving her life by injecting her with experimental spider-blood, and has no direct connection to Peter Parker at all. This is a great case of the Ultimate Universe doing what it set out to do - modernizing and streamlining classic Marvel Universe characters."[37] Alyssa Gawaran ofMovieWeb said, "If the multiverse has taught us anything, there is an endless amount of variants of our favorite superheroes out there. Therefore, you should not be surprised that there is a woman clone of our beloved Peter Parker that is out and about in the Marvel Comics — and she's a lesbian! Jessica Drew, better known as Ultimate Spider-Woman, is a hero found in theAll-New Ultimates series for Marvel. She ends up taking on the Black Widow legacy and has her very own 'coming out' moment inAll-New Ultimates #4. The Spider-Verse is still expanding, and Jessica Drew would be a very fitting addition."[38]

Accolades

[edit]
  • In 2014,ComicBook.com ranked Jessica Drew's Ultimate Marvel iteration 3rd in their "7 Best Female Characters from the Spider-Man Multiverse" list.[39]
  • In 2017,Gizmodo ranked Jessica Drew 9th in their "Greatest Spider-Women of All Time" list.[40]
  • In 2017,Screen Rant ranked Jessica Drew 3rd in their "Every Spider-Man Clone" list.[41]
  • In 2018,CBR.com ranked Jessica Drew's costume 10th in their "40 Alternate Spider-Man Costumes" list.[42]
  • In 2020,CBR.com ranked Jessica Drew 1st in their "Spider-Woman: 10 Most Powerful Characters To Bear The Name" list.[43]
  • In 2021,Screen Rant included Jessica Drew in their "Spider-Woman: 10 Best Alternate Versions Of The Marvel Comics Heroine" list.[32]
  • In 2022,CBR.com ranked Jessica Drew 5th in their "5 Best Spider-Man Clones" list.[44]
  • In 2022,MovieWeb included Jessica Drew in their "8 LGBTQ+ Marvel Comics Characters That Need to Be in the MCU" list.[38]

In other media

[edit]

Film

[edit]

Ultimate Spider-Woman appears inSpider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse as a member ofMiguel O'Hara's Spider-Society.[45]

Video games

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Bagley, Alison (2020-10-03)."Which Version of Marvel's Spider-Woman is The Strongest?".Screen Rant. Retrieved2022-11-10.
  2. ^Moore, Matt (January 10, 2014)."In Marvel's Ultimate universe, fate looms large".Associated Press. Archived fromthe original on January 10, 2014. RetrievedMay 20, 2019.
  3. ^Mahadeo, Kevin (August 11, 2009)."Tuesday Q&A;: Brian Michael Bendis – TheUltimate Comics: Spider-Man writer takes us for a swing to discuss the new direction for the title".Marvel.com. Archived fromthe original on August 14, 2009. RetrievedMay 18, 2019.
  4. ^Ultimate Spider-Man #102 (November 2006)
  5. ^Ultimate Spider-Man #104 (January 2007)
  6. ^Ultimate Spider-Man #105 (February 2007)
  7. ^abUltimate Spider-Man #129 (December 2008)
  8. ^Ultimate Spider-Man #130 (January 2009)
  9. ^Ultimate Spider-Man #131 (February 2009)
  10. ^Ultimate Spider-Man #132 (May 2009)
  11. ^Ultimate Spider-Man #133 (June 2009)
  12. ^Ultimate Comics: Enemy #1–2 (January–February 2010)
  13. ^Ultimate Comics: Mystery #2 (August 2010)
  14. ^Ultimate Comics: Mystery #3 (September 2010)
  15. ^Ultimate Comics: Mystery #4 (October 2010)
  16. ^Ultimate Comics: Doom #3 (February 2011)
  17. ^Ultimate Comics: Doom #4 (March 2011)
  18. ^Bendis, Brian Michael (w), Pichelli, Sara (a). Ultimate Comics: Spider-Man, vol. 2, no. 4 (January 2012). Marvel Comics.
  19. ^Bendis, Brian Michael (w), Pichelli, Sara, David Messina (a), Ponsor, Justin (col), Petit, Cory (let). Ultimate Comics: Spider-Man, vol. 2, no. 5 (February 2012). Marvel Comics.
  20. ^Ultimate Comics: Ultimates #8 (May 2012)
  21. ^Ultimate Comics: Ultimates #9 (June 2012)
  22. ^Ultimate Comics: Ultimates #16 (November 2012)
  23. ^Ultimate Comics: Ultimates #17 (December 2012)
  24. ^Ultimate Comics: Spider-Man Vol 2 #17 (June 2012)
  25. ^Ultimate Comics: Spider-Man Vol 2 #18 (February 2013)
  26. ^Bendis, Brian Michael (w), Pichelli, Sara (a). "Venom War" Ultimate Comics: Spider-Man, vol. 2, no. 22 (June 2013). Marvel Comics.
  27. ^Bendis, Brian Michael (w), Marquez, David (a). "Spider-Man No More" Ultimate Comics: Spider-Man, vol. 2, no. 25 (September 2013). Marvel Comics.
  28. ^Ultimate Comics: Spider-Man Vol. 2 #28 (December 2013)
  29. ^All-New Ultimates #1 (April 2014)
  30. ^Scarlet Spiders #1 (November 2014)
  31. ^Spider-Men II #5. Marvel Comics
  32. ^abHarn, Darby (2021-07-03)."Spider-Woman: 10 Best Alternate Versions Of The Marvel Comics Heroine".Screen Rant. Retrieved2022-11-10.
  33. ^Ultimate Secrets vol 1 #1 (January 2008). Marvel Comics.
  34. ^Sunu, Steve (June 17, 2013)."Spidey's Sister Revealed In Waid & Robinson'sSpider-Man: Family Business OGN".Comic Book Resources. RetrievedJuly 8, 2019.
  35. ^Spider-Man: Life Story #3–6. Marvel Comics.
  36. ^Austin, Michael (2020-04-02)."5 Reasons Why Jessica Drew Is The Best Spider-Woman (& 5 Why It's Mattie Franklin)".Comic Book Resources. Retrieved2022-09-06.
  37. ^Lovett, Jamie (2016-12-07)."Ranking Spider-Man's Clones In The Marvel Universe".ComicBook.com. Retrieved2022-09-06.
  38. ^abGawaran, Alyssa (2022-06-20)."8 LGBTQ+ Marvel Comics Characters That Need to Be in the MCU".MovieWeb. Retrieved2022-09-06.
  39. ^Ginocchio, Mark (2014-09-14)."7 Best Female Characters from the Spider-Man Multiverse".ComicBook.com. Retrieved2022-09-06.
  40. ^Whitbrook, James (2017-07-14)."The Greatest Spider-Women of All Time, Ranked".Gizmodo. Retrieved2022-09-06.
  41. ^Conley, Nicholas (2017-07-24)."Every Spider-Man Clone, Ranked".Screen Rant. Retrieved2022-09-07.
  42. ^Collins, Hannah (2018-12-14)."40 Alternate Spider-Man Costumes, Ranked".Comic Book Resources. Retrieved2022-09-07.
  43. ^Allan, Scoot (2020-06-23)."Spider-Woman: 10 Most Powerful Characters To Bear The Name, Ranked".Comic Book Resources. Retrieved2022-09-06.
  44. ^Kennedy, Cole (2022-03-30)."The 5 Best Spider-Man Clones (& 5 Worst)".Comic Book Resources. Retrieved2022-09-06.
  45. ^Jasper, Gavin (2022-12-13)."Guide to the Weirdest Spider-Men in theSpider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse Trailer".Den of Geek. Retrieved2022-12-13.
  46. ^Musgrave, Shaun (December 15, 2014)."Update Mondays:'Boson X','Candy Crush Saga','Oceanhorn','Boom Beach', And More". TouchArcade. RetrievedMay 18, 2019.
  47. ^Phillips, Tom (May 24, 2016)."Spider-Man swings free in Lego Marvel's Avengers today".Eurogamer. Archived fromthe original on March 29, 2019. RetrievedMay 18, 2019.

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