- Market Forces (The Spectacular Spider-Man)
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For the novel, see Market Forces.
"Market Forces" The Spectacular Spider-Man episode
Shocker angrily fires a green sonic blast at Spider-Man in the landfill. Computer-generated imagery were used to produce the beams, though the show is naturally done in traditional animation. Shocker's suit was designed mainly after his original comic book appearance with minor differences, but his secret identity and origin were completely changed.[1][2]Episode no. Season 1
Episode 4Directed by Dan Fausett Written by Andrew Robinson Production code S1E04[3] Original air date March 26, 2008 Season 1 episodes March 8, 2008 – June 14, 2008 - Survival of the Fittest
- Interactions
- Natural Selection
- Market Forces
- Competition
- The Invisible Hand
- Catalysts
- Reaction
- The Uncertainty Principle
- Persona
- Group Therapy
- Intervention
- Nature vs. Nurture
List of The Spectacular Spider-Man episodes "Market Forces" is the fourth episode of the animated television series The Spectacular Spider-Man, which is based on the comic book character Spider-Man, created by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko. In the episode, Spider-Man is hunted by Shocker, whose suit allows him to fire intense sonic blasts.
"Market Forces" was written by Andrew Robinson and directed by Dan Fausett. It incorporated computer-generated imagery in the sonic blasts used by Shocker, which mixed in with the other, traditional animation style used in the show. Shocker's secret identity was completely changed from that of his original comic book appearance, but his design stayed close to the original costume used.
The episode originally broadcast on March 22, 2008, on the Kids WB! block for the CW Network. It received generally positive reviews from television critics. IGN praised it for its imagery and storytelling, while iF Magazine said "Even the Shocker was more interesting on this show, so I continue to have high hopes for future episodes, characters, and villains."
Contents
Plot summary
Montana and The Enforcers steal a powered suit from an armored Tri-Corp truck after gassing the guards. Montana hands it to Hammerhead, who insists that Montana dons the suit to complete the "Big Man"'s contract to kill Spider-Man. The next day, Peter Parker gets across town as Spider-Man, unaware that Montana and his men are watching him. He then hangs out at Harry's apartment, discussing the upcoming Fall Formal, until he receives an e-mail from J. Jonah Jameson of the Daily Bugle informing Peter that Jonah wants to purchase his photos of Spider-Man. He leaves and promises to help Harry with homework later. At the Bugle building, Jonah mistakenly kicks Peter out before realizing who he is. Jonah pays him and makes him exit the building.
While heading back, Peter hears an alarm coming from a landfill and investigates. It ends up being a trap and he is attacked with sonic blasts by Montana, now wearing the suit and calling himself "Shocker". When he is close to moving in for the kill, one of the thugs used as bait, Alex O'Hirn, accidentally gives Spider-Man time to recover. Shocker then knocks him into a machine and, satisfied, leaves via helicopter. Spider-Man, however, survives but his paycheck was torn to shreds. The next day after school, where Harry is outraged with him over missing out on studying, Peter goes to replace his check at the Bugle where assistant editor Joe Robertson suggests getting a better camera. After Jonah takes a photo of Spider-Man covered in garbage as Peter's submission, Peter goes after O'Hirn and his partner Flint Marko as Spider-Man. He defeats them and tells them to inform Shocker he wants a rematch.
Peter makes it home in time for his curfew and spots Aunt May struggling with the bills, but must use the money he has to buy a new camera. When he goes to school the next day, he finds Harry is furious with him once more over forgetting their studying arrangements once more. At night, Hammerhead tells Shocker the Big Man is displeased with his failure. Meanwhile, Peter unsuccessfully tries to ask out Jonah's assistant, Betty Brant. After a tremor rattles the entire city, Peter, as Spider-Man, discovers it is the Shocker, leaving him a trail that leads to a condemned theater. During their fight, Spider-Man unsuccessfully tries to find out who hired him before finally bringing the building down and defeating the Shocker.
Meanwhile, Harry returns home where his father Norman tells him to take responsibility and study by himself. Norman then goes to meet with Hammerhead, revealing that he helped them steal the suit from Tri-Corp as they are his company's competitor. He talks over speaker phone with the Big Man, who wants him to create new supervillains in return for funding. At his house, Peter sends his photos to the Bugle and tries to give Aunt May the money, but she insists that he still uses 10% of it to buy a new camera.
Production
"Market Forces" was written by Andrew Robinson and directed by Dan Fausett.[2][4][5][unreliable source?] Though the show is done in the style of traditional animation, computer-generated imagery was used to produce the green sonic beams made by Shocker.[1] In the original comic book publications, Shocker's secret identity was a man named Herman Schultz. For The Spectacular Spider-Man, they changed his identity to that of Enforcer Montana, who had, in the comics, been a prominent character already.[1] Using Montana allowed the writers to not have to come up with a completely new origin for Shocker.[2] His suit was generally the same as that done in the comic books, but had extra features including goggles and vibrators.[1] His voice was provided by veteran voice performer Jeff Bennett.[4]
Cultural references
Greg Weisman, one of the producers for the series,[6] came up with the idea to do a title scheme for each arc. For "Market Forces" and its arc, the scheme is economics.[7] A line in the episode asks how deep a location is, using the Mariana Trench and the Ninth Circle of Hell in Dante's Inferno as comparisons. Eddie Brock refers to Peter as an "emo."[5][unreliable source?]
Reception
"Market Forces" originally broadcast on March 26, 2008, on the Kids WB! block for the CW Network, at 10:00 a.m.[2][4] It received generally positive reviews from television critics. Eric Goldman of IGN gave the episode an 8.5 out of 10 and wrote "Sometimes change can be fun, and this episode was a great example of that." Goldman enjoyed the design of Shocker which he felt stayed true to his original design and was "intrigued" by changing his secret identity. He praised the usage of CGI, the portrayal of Peter's life, and the "cool" ending.[1]
Michael Tanaka of Firefox News wrote in his review that he enjoyed the different villains that played a role in the film and that distracted from the organized crime. Tanaka praised the portrayal of Jonah Jameson and Betty Brant, and that while he's "not the biggest fan of teenage drama but a volleyball to the face and the class bully laughing like a farm animal will still get a giggle." Tanaka raved the lines that were portrayed in the episode and considered the episode to be a continuation of the series' "great writing."[5][unreliable source?]
Sean Elliot, the senior editor of iF Magazine, gave the episode an "A-" and said about the change of Shocker's secret identity, "saves the writers from having to come up with a completely different origin for a character that pretty much is a second tier villain anyways. " Elliot wrote that having Norman making a deal to produce new supervillains was "an extremely useful" convention that allows the introduction and creation of enemies for Spider-Man to fight.[2]
See also
- List of The Spectacular Spider-Man episodes
References
- ^ a b c d e Goldman, Eric (2008-04-15). "Market Forces Review". IGN. http://tv.ign.com/articles/866/866993p1.html. Retrieved 2009-08-21.
- ^ a b c d e Elliot, Sean (2008-03-26). "The Spectacular Spider-Man - Season One - 'Market Forces'". iF Magazine. http://www.ifmagazine.com/review.asp?article=2411. Retrieved 2009-08-21.[dead link]
- ^ "Market Forces". Marvel.com. http://marvel.com/movies/Spider-Man.The_Spectacular_Spider-Man/episodes/176.Market_Forces. Retrieved 2009-08-21.
- ^ a b c Cochran, Jay (2008-03-18). "Shocker makes a connection with "The Spectacular Spider-Man"". Entertainment News International. http://enewsi.com/news.php?catid=194&itemid=12920. Retrieved 2009-08-21.
- ^ a b c Tanaka, Micheal (2008-03-23). "Spectacular Spider-Man "Market Forces"". Firefox News. http://firefox.org/news/articles/1328/1/Review-Spectacular-Spider-Man-quotMarket-Forcesquot/Page1.html. Retrieved 2009-08-21.
- ^ Elliot, Sean (2008-04-04). "Symbiotically Bonding With 'Spectacular Spider-Man' Producer Victor Cook - Part 1". iF Magazine. http://www.ifmagazine.com/feature.asp?article=2707.
- ^ Weisman, Greg (2008-08-11). "Ask Greg". Gargoyles: A Station Eight Fan Web Site. http://www.s8.org/gargoyles/askgreg/search.php?qid=10768. Retrieved 2009-08-21.
External links
- Market Forces at the Internet Movie Database
- "Market Forces" at TV.com
- "Market Forces" on Marvel.com
The Spectacular Spider-Man Developers Greg Weisman · Victor CookEpisodes "Survival of the Fittest" · "Interactions" · "Natural Selection" · "Market Forces" · "Competition" · "The Invisible Hand" · "Catalysts" · "Reaction" · "The Uncertainty Principle"Characters Spider-Man · Gwen Stacy · Harry Osborn · Liz Allan · Flash Thompson · Mary Jane Watson · J. Jonah Jameson · Norman Osborn · George Stacy
SupportingAunt May · Uncle Ben · Randy Robertson · Kenny King Kong · Hobie Brown · Glory Grant · Sally Avril · Betty Brant · Robbie Robertson · Ned Lee · Frederick Foswell · John Jameson · Black Cat · Minor charactersVillainsTombstone · Hammerhead · Enforcers / New Enforcers (Montana · Ox · Fancy Dan) · Vulture · Electro · Lizard · Shocker · Sandman · Rhino · Green Goblin · Doctor Octopus · Chameleon · Venom · Mysterio · Miles Warren · Tinkerer · Kraven the Hunter · Calypso · Silver Sable · Silvermane · Molten ManCategories:- 2008 television episodes
- The Spectacular Spider-Man episodes
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