- House of M
-
"House of M"
Cover of House of M 1 (Aug 2005).
Art by Esad Ribic.Publisher Marvel Comics Publication date August 2005 – January 2006 Genre Superhero
CrossoverTitle(s) Black Panther (vol. 4) #7
Cable & Deadpool #16-17
Captain America (vol. 5) #10
Decimation: House of M - The Day After #1
Excalibur (vol. 3) #11-14
Fantastic Four: House of M #1-3
House of M #1-8
Incredible Hulk (vol. 3) #83-85
Iron Man: House of M #1-3
Mutopia X #1-4
New Thunderbolts #11
New X-Men (vol. 2) #16-19
The Pulse #10
The Pulse: House of M Special #1
Secrets of the House of M #1
Spider-Man: House of M #1-5
The Uncanny X-Men #462-465
Wolverine (vol. 3) #33-35Creative team Writer(s) Brian Michael Bendis Penciller(s) Olivier Coipel Inker(s) Tim Townsend Colorist(s) Frank D'Armata Collected editions Hardcover ISBN 0-7851-2466-7 House of M is an eight-issue comic book limited series and crossover storyline published by Marvel Comics in 2005. Written by Brian Michael Bendis and illustrated by Olivier Coipel, its first issue debuted in June 2005 as a follow-up to the events of the Planet X and Avengers Disassembled storylines, in which the mutant superhero Scarlet Witch suffered a mental breakdown and tried to alter the fabric of reality to recreate her lost children. Scarlet Witch's father, Magneto, and her twin brother, Quicksilver, played major roles in the series.
The universe where House of M takes place is designated as Earth-58163.
Contents
Publication history
The first issue was released in June 2005, with the series concluding in November 2005. The first two issues were ranked first and second in sales in the June 2005 period, with the first issue selling over 233,000 copies.[1] The final issue, House of M #8, was ranked third in sales for the November 2005 period with sales of 135,462.[2] In addition to the main eight-issue limited series, House of M was preceded by a story in Excalibur #13-14, and had several tie-ins to ongoing series, including Uncanny X-Men, New X-Men: Academy X, and Wolverine, and several mini-series: Fantastic Four: House of M,The Incredible Hulk: House of M, Iron-Man: House of M, Mutopia X: House of M, and Spider-Man: House of M.
Bendis, lead writer for the House of M event, stated that the series would "shake the world and break the internet wide open."[3] Prior to the event, Bendis also mentioned in several interviews that the event would have a lasting effect on the Marvel Universe, but remained tight-lipped as to what. The reduction of the mutant community was the only rumored effect that actually came about.
The crossover was followed by a one-shot called House of M: Decimation - The Day After, a series called Son of M that depicts Quicksilver dealing with his loss of powers, and Generation M, which devoted each issue to a different mutant dealing with his/her loss of powers. Characters who appeared include Chamber, Jubilee, and Blob. Characters who lost their powers included Dani Moonstar, Magneto, and Tag. The storyline also led to the reboot of Excalibur into New Excalibur, a shift in the creative teams of several comics, and the debut of several spin-off series, including X-Men: Deadly Genesis, X-Men: The 198, Sentinel Squad O*N*E, Ms. Marvel, and a new X-Factor series.
The epilogue to the House of M and Decimation storylines, which served to answer to the mystery of the strange "energy-cloud" hovering in orbit around the Earth at the conclusion of House of M #8, was revealed in the pages of New Avengers #16-20.
World
In this world, Magneto was attacked by Sentinels over Manhattan in 1979 (taking advantage of Marvel's sliding timescale policy, there are no heroes active in the 1970s). At the end of the attack, Magneto revealed an alleged international anti-mutant conspiracy involving Richard M. Nixon. The main result of this was that Magneto was granted sovereignty of the island of Genosha as the leader of the world's mutants. Another result was that the protection of mutant life was judged to be the first worry of all laws (as a result, stem cell research on mutant embryos is illegal, but stem cell research on altered human embryos is permitted). Because of this, the world is a racist society, with mutants controlling governments, businesses, and culture; and humans (or "sapiens") are looked down on as inferior (essentially a reversal of the status quo in the mainstream Marvel Universe, where mutants are looked down on and despised instead).
Some exceptions apply to "sapiens" who live with privileges like Carol Danvers (Ms. Marvel in Earth-616 continuity, but Captain Marvel in the World of M) and Peter Parker (Spider-Man). However, while Danvers is widely known to be a "sapien," Spider-Man is believed by the House of M world at large to be a mutant.
Given that the House of M reality was created by the Scarlet Witch and Charles Xavier combining their powers to give the assembled New Avengers and X-Men their heart's desires, it appears that Magneto's heart's desire was threefold. Primarily, he wanted the entire world to acknowledge that his paranoid fantasies about baseline humans wanting to exterminate mutants were true (hence the Sentinel attack over New York in 1979, which concluded with the release of evidence that the world's human leaders were involved in a genocidal anti-mutant conspiracy). Secondly, he wanted to be acknowledged as a heroic figure and the rightful leader of all mutantkind (hence the disappearance of Charles Xavier and the timing of Magneto's rise to dominance before other superheroes had appeared on the scene to challenge him). And thirdly, a massive speeding-up of the natural evolution of homo sapiens into homo superior; until, by the modern era, they accounted for almost 50% of the global population, providing him with a power base sufficient to take over the governments of the world and use them to oppress baseline humans.
It is unclear whether the Scarlet Witch's magic altered the entire Marvel Universe, or merely the structure and history of Earth, a fact further complicated by the events of Secret Invasion. The Skrull Hank Pym stated that there was no way the Skrull army could win against such a vast number of mutants, at least possibly implying the Skrull army was left intact by Wanda's reality warp. Also, Xavier's supposed death in this reality, yet with no body, combined with his own off-planet actions, further confuse the issue. However, there is a Kree ambassador called Genis-Vell that appears within this illusory reality, and the Kree are shown to be peacefully collaborating with Earth, signifying that such was the Scarlet Witch's power that she was indeed capable of rewriting all of reality, the entire universe.[4]
Synopsis
Genesis
Wanda Maximoff, also known as the Scarlet Witch, is living on the devastated island of Genosha under the care of Professor Charles Xavier and her father Magneto. Professor X informs Magneto that his telepathic powers will no longer be enough to hold back Wanda's reality-warping abilities and that a permanent solution must be found. Magneto blames himself for twisting his children through the strength of his own dreams and ambitions.
Meanwhile, Xavier arranges a meeting of the Avengers, the X-Men and several lone heroes to Avengers Towers to decide the fate of Wanda Maximoff. Emma Frost concludes that killing Wanda is the only way to end her destructive magic. Captain America, however, argues that the group should seek alternate methods of dealing with Wanda including suppression of her powers and her insanity. The X-Men argue that if word gets out that a mutant with the ability to change reality went insane, it would "send human-mutant relations back to the stone-age." As the conversation progresses, it is revealed that Professor X asked Doctor Strange to help Wanda, but unfortunately neither was strong enough to combat her magic. Wolverine speaks up, saying that there is no other way—Wanda must be killed. The rest of the group, however, decides that they must talk to Wanda in person before making their decision.
Back in Genosha, a distraught Quicksilver rushes to Magneto and reveals that he was just in New York where he heard that the X-Men and Avengers are planning on killing Wanda. Magneto angrily replies that he does not know what to do. Quicksilver falls to the floor sobbing and Magneto glances over at his sleeping daughter.
Xavier takes the two groups to Genosha, only to discover that Wanda is missing. Suddenly, the members of the group start to disappear one by one. Spider-Man is soon the only one left and becomes engulfed by a white light.
New world
When the light departs, we see that the world has changed: Spider-Man is a celebrity actor/athlete married to Gwen Stacy; Cyclops and Emma Frost are married; Doctor Strange is a psychologist; Carol Danvers is now Captain Marvel, America's most beloved superhero; Gambit is a criminal; and Steve Rogers is an aged veteran. As we follow vignettes of their lives, it becomes readily apparent that none of them remember the change. However, Wolverine recalls all of his lost memories and knows this new world is a lie. He finds the world has changed into one where homo superior are the dominant species instead of homo sapiens. Mutants rule humans—and Magneto and his "House of M" rules mutants.
Wolverine seeks help from his fellow X-Men and Avengers. Unable to find Professor X, Wolverine goes looking for Spider-Man and Tony Stark. He is confronted by his "teammates" in the Red Guard, elite mutant soldiers of S.H.I.E.L.D. Wolverine escapes and finds the Human Resistance Movement led by Luke Cage. Cage has gathered other non-mutant crimefighters to protect humans from the House of M's abuses of power. Wolverine is shocked to see one of the members is Clint Barton (Hawkeye), a hero who had died in the real world.
Wolverine explains why he knows this world was created by the Scarlet Witch. He theorizes Magneto used her to create a world where everyone's deepest wish was granted. Magneto got the mutant supremacy he always wanted. Spider-Man got a life free of guilt. Wolverine got back all the memories he has lost over the years. Cage reveals that a little girl named Layla Miller told him almost exactly the same thing days ago. The heroes begin visiting the Avengers and X-Men in their new lives as Layla awakens their true memories.
Wake-up call
Wolverine and the Human Resistance awaken many heroes to the truth, including Cyclops, Spider-Man, Shadowcat, Doctor Strange, Iron Man, She-Hulk, Daredevil, Rogue, Mystique, Nightcrawler, Toad, and Spider-Woman. Hawkeye becomes distraught over learning of his death and briefly leaves the group. The rest travel to Genosha for a final confrontation with Magneto.
Back in Genosha, Magneto receives representatives from around the world to commemorate the mutant triumph over humanity. The heroes attack Magneto and his family directly, while Cloak, Emma Frost, Doctor Strange, and Layla search for Xavier. They find a gravestone with Xavier's name, but Cloak discovers no body buried beneath it.
Battle with big consequences
The battle between the House of M and the heroes continues with great ferocity. While the chaos ensues, the Scarlet Witch disappears from the battlefield only to be discovered by Doctor Strange in a tower with her children. The two begin to talk as Doctor Strange attempts to discover the origin of the madness that is happening. Wanda reveals the answer to him in a flashback from when Quicksilver confronted Magneto about the fate of Wanda. It turns out that Quicksilver himself was the one responsible for the creation of the alternate world, suggesting to Wanda to make everyone happy in an almost-perfect world. After this revelation, Emma Frost tells Doctor Strange to ask about the fate of Charles Xavier. Before she can answer, Wanda is struck in the back by an arrow.
The attacker is Hawkeye, who begins to break down emotionally to Wanda about his death in the real timeline. After a heated exchange, Hawkeye is killed for the second time as one of the Scarlet Witch's antagonized sons uses his mutant powers to "erase" the Avenger. Meanwhile in the memorial garden, Magneto confronts Emma Frost and Layla Miller, who reveal the truth to Magneto about all that has happened. He then unleashes his wrath on everyone, especially his son Quicksilver. He nearly kills Quicksilver by pummeling him to a bloody pulp with large pieces of steel. Suddenly the Scarlet Witch appears, stopping Magneto and returning her brother to healthy form. She begins to lash out, saying "We're freaks, Mutants... You chose this over us and you ruined us... Daddy!" She then utters "No more mutants." Everything turns to white once again.
No more mutants
In a blinding flash, the world seemingly returns to normal.
The Avengers come together to try to make sense of what happened that night, only to be confronted by a distraught Doctor Strange who states that the House of M really took place and its effects are slowly being felt on a wider scale. They later get an alert from the ruins of Avengers Mansion. Investigating, they find Hawkeye's uniform pinned to a wall with his arrows. It suggests Hawkeye has returned to life.
At the Xavier Institute for Higher Learning, most of the students lose their mutant abilities. Emma Frost scans the whole world with Cerebro for mutant activity. She learns the number of mutants in the world has dropped from millions to a few hundred. Meanwhile, Wolverine awakes remembering everything about his past. The X-Men fly to Genosha looking for Magneto and his children. They find Magneto is also powerless, and does not know where Wanda or Quicksilver have gone.
The heroes can only guess about what has caused the majority of the mutant population to lose their powers. With Xavier still missing, and with the Scarlet Witch probably depowered (as she could not be detected by the Cerebro scanner or by Doctor Strange, though she later appears to be living a normal life), the mutant population can only hold on to Hank Pym's words that all these powers could not simply vanish... They are contained somewhere, and that every action has an equal and opposite reaction. The question remains, as Pym said, "What will be the reaction?"
As if to punctuate this statement, a colossal red ribbon of energy begins to orbit Earth.
Decimation
Main article: Decimation (comics)The House of M has created some serious consequences in the Marvel Universe. The greatest so far is the reduction of the mutant population from millions to hundreds. Only two current members of the X-Men (Polaris and Professor X) suffered this fate, as well as former X-Man Chamber; although their main villain, Magneto, has also lost his abilities, as have two members of the Avengers: Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch. Magneto and Xavier have since been repowered, whilst Polaris and Quicksilver (and others) have either gained new powers (sometimes almost exactly like their old powers) or regained lost powers via other means (such as through Quicksilver himself and Chamber), within a span of well under two years. Other reasonably popular mutants have also been repowered by technology, such as Wind Dancer and Jubilee.
Other consequences include:
- The temporary disappearance of Charles Xavier (he returned in X-Men: Deadly Genesis without his powers), Scarlet Witch, and Quicksilver. Quicksilver's disappearance is explained in the Son of M limited series.
- Wolverine's total recall of his past, which caused a serious change in his status. Multiple governments and agencies for which he has worked or which have manipulated him consider him to be one of the most dangerous threats to them.
- Though not explicitly expressed in the House of M series, as of New Avengers #26, Clint Barton has been revived in the Marvel Universe.
- The Collective, a new villain that destroyed the Canadian superhero team Alpha Flight, was created as a result of the Decimation event. The Collective was apparently formed from all of the mutant energies displaced by Wanda's actions.
- The Shadow King was able to return to this reality with Shadow-X when Wanda shifted reality.
- Onslaught was reborn.
- Jim Jaspers was brought back to life and fused with The Fury.
- The disappearance of Meggan and return of Captain Britain to the United Kingdom as a result of preventing the destruction of all realities from the strain of the House of M rewriting the Earth-616 reality; later Meggan was reportedly taken prisoner by a demon named Plokta. Finally she managed to free herself, reuniting with Captain Britain.
- Due to the vast depowerment of mutants, America won the super powers war without lifting a finger.[5]
- The Skrulls gained a massive advantage in their infiltration and sabotage. With so many millions of mutants killed, lost, or powerless, one of the three primary threats Veranke stated was neutralized.
- With all the mutant energy released, Vulcan, the third Summers brother, was revived from a long slumber.
- Illyana Rasputin was reborn as Darkchylde.
Worlds Tour
The Exiles begin their Worlds Tour in Exiles #69 to chase down Proteus who has been reborn in this new world. It was their first stop of six.
Secret Invasion
In a May 5, 2008, interview, Brian Michael Bendis indicated that the events of House of M play into the Secret Invasion. The activities of the Skrulls during House of M were covered in New Avengers #45,[6] in which it was revealed that the Skrull agents were able to retain their memories after Wanda altered reality, her powers seemingly unable to detect their true natures and desires, and had attempted to instigate the destruction of the mutants over the alteration. The Skrull queen, still disguised as Jessica Drew, considered the resulting "Decimation" to be a boon to the Skrulls plans as they could now divert the part of their forces intended to deal with Earth's mutant population to other areas.
Characters
Main article: List of House of M charactersLater mini-series
House of M: Avengers
The House of M: Avengers five-issue limited series debuted in November 2007, written by Christos Gage and drawn by Mike Perkins.[7] The series spans from 1979 to the present day and acts as a prequel to the original House of M miniseries, showing the formation of Luke Cage's Human Resistance Movement.[8]
Civil War: House of M
This mini-series depicts how Magneto took over the world and made mutants the dominant race, as well as confirming that Xavier is indeed dead in this reality. It also features House of M versions of Bolivar Trask, Bucky, Burner, Dragoness, Gateway, Graydon Creed, Lifter, Mimic, Nuke, Randall Darby, Slither, the Soviet Super-Soldiers (Crimson Dynamo, Darkstar, Red Guardian, Titanium Man, Ursa Major, Vanguard), Vashti Cleito-Son, and Warlord Krang.
House of M: Masters of Evil
Set right after Civil War: House of M, this miniseries depicts how the Hood assembles a gang of the deadliest "sapien" super-criminals: Madame Masque, Absorbing Man, Batroc the Leaper, Blizzard II, Chemistro III, Cobra, Constrictor, Crossbones, Nitro, Sandman, Titania, Wizard, and the Wrecking Crew (Bulldozer, Piledriver, Thunderball, and Wrecker).
Comic tie-ins
As a universe-wide event, House of M stretches beyond its main series with the storyline interacting with the following comics:
- Black Panther #7
- Cable & Deadpool #17
- Captain America #10
- Excalibur #13-14
- Exiles #69-71
- Giant Size Ms. Marvel #1
- House of M #1-8
- House of M: Avengers #1-5
- House of M: Fantastic Four #1-3
- House of M: Iron Man #1-3
- House of M: Masters of Evil #1-4
- House of M: Spider-Man #1-5
- House of M: Civil War #1-5
- House of M Sketchbook
- Incredible Hulk #83-86
- Mutopia X #1-4 (of 5)
- New Thunderbolts #11
- New Avengers #45
- New X-Men: Academy X #16-19
- Secrets of the House of M
- The Pulse: House of M Special Edition
- The Pulse #10
- "Punnyville" (a short piece from Hulk: Broken Worlds #1)
- Uncanny X-Men #462-465
- Wolverine #33-35
Collected editions
Trade paperbacks
The trade paperbacks collect many of the issues involved with the House of M storyline. Arranged in order, the spines of the books form the House of M logo. It should be noted that each storyline/paperback contains a mostly standalone sidestory, and can be read individually without any continuity problems. Only the House of M miniseries itself deals with the main storyline.
Title Material collected Publication date ISBN House of M: Excalibur - Prelude Excalibur #11-14 August 2005 978-0785118121 House of M House of M #1-8; The Pulse: House of M Special February 2006 978-0785117216 House of M: Incredible Hulk Incredible Hulk #83-87 February 2006 978-0785118343 House of M: Fantastic Four / Iron Man Fantastic Four: House of M #1-3; Iron Man: House of M #1-3 July 2006 978-0785119234 House of M: Uncanny X-Men Uncanny X-Men #462-465; first half of Secrets of the House of M January 2006 978-0785116639 House of M: Mutopia X Mutopia X #1-5 February 2006 978-0785118114 House of M: New X-Men New X-Men: Academy X #16-19; second half of Secrets of the House of M February 2006 978-0785119418 House of M: Spider-Man Spider-Man: House of M #1-5 March 2006 978-0785117537 House of M: World of M, Featuring Wolverine Wolverine #33-35; Captain America #10; Black Panther #7; Pulse #10 March 2006 978-0785119227 House of M: Avengers House of M: Avengers #1-5 July 2008 978-0785127505 House of M: Civil War Civil War: House of M #1-5 May 2009 978-0785133803 House of M: Masters of Evil House of M: Masters of Evil #1-5 February 2010 978-0785141662 Hardcovers
Title Material collected Publication date ISBN House of M, Vol 1 House of M #1-8; The Pulse: House of M Special January 2008 978-0785124665 House of M, Vol 2: Spider-Man, Fantastic Four, and X-Men Spider-Man: House of M #1-5; New Thunderbolts #11; Fantastic Four: House of M #1-3; Black Panther #7; Uncanny X-Men #462-465 December 2009 978-0785138815 House of M, Vol 3: Wolverine, Iron Man, and Hulk Wolverine #33-35; Iron Man: House of M #1-3; Incredible Hulk #83-87; Hulk: Broken Worlds #1; Captain America #10; Pulse #10; Cable & Deadpool #17 February 2010 978-0785138822 House of M, Vol 4: No More Mutants Mutopia X #1-5; New X-Men #16-19; Exiles #69-71; House of M: The Day After; Giant-Size Ms. Marvel #1 May 2010 978-0785138839 Other versions
What If?
- An issue of What If? revolving around House of M asks, "What If Scarlet Witch Ended the House of M event by saying No More Powers?" In this story, all of the heroes of the world lose their powers with mixed results. Thing is human, Doctor Strange tells Wong that he cannot connect with magic, Wolverine's adamantium skeleton is too heavy, Ms. Marvel and She-Hulk are normal, Cyclops does not have to worry about wearing special glasses, Maria Hill delivers a report that the superpowered inmates at the Raft have lost their powers, Spider-Man is relieved at the loss of his "responsibility," Iron Man believes there is still work to be done, and most of the X-Men try to resume normal lives. Iron Man speaks to the Illuminati members about this problem. Outside of the news that this event uncovered some Skrulls on Earth, they talk about what to do next. Red Skull obtains a cosmic cube and uses it to take over New York. After killing the Young Avengers, Reed Richards, and a newly fully human Ben Grimm, Red Skull declares his intentions to take over the world. Iron Man (who had been freelancing against the non-superpowered villains) appears along with several other heroes, including Wolverine, War Machine, and Carol Danvers, all of whom are outfitted with special suits of Iron Man-esque armor (Wolverine's includes laser-claws). The X-Men appear, using remaining Shi'ar technology in an attempt to stop Red Skull. After he defeats them, Spider-Man (who had been watching the news of Red Skull's attack with his newly pregnant wife Mary Jane) uses his old mechanical web-shooters to steal and crush the cube from Red Skull before leading the collected depowered community into battle against Red Skull and his forces, shouting, "Avengers assemble!" Many years later, a white-haired Tony Stark is shown visiting Spider-Man while he and his daughter, named May, play with his granddaughter, Anna. They remark on the reason that humans would have appeared as heroes, stating that if things get bad enough again, more of "their kind" will emerge. As he says this, Anna is shown leaping from a monkey bars after a butterfly with uncanny grace and agility.
- An issue of What If? in the 2009 series revolves around the Spider-Man: House of M mini-series. The first one asks what would have happened had Emma Frost not wiped Gwen's mind and she had accompanied the heroes to Genosha. The second one asks what would have happened if the Scarlet Witch had allowed Gwen and her son with Peter to exist after returning reality back to normal.
See also
References
- ^ "House of M Boffo at 233K". icv2.com. July 25, 2005. http://www.icv2.com/articles/news/7252.html. Retrieved April 21, 2008.
- ^ "Top 300 Comics Actual–November 2005". icv2.com. December 19, 2005. http://www.icv2.com/articles/home/7956.html. Retrieved April 21, 2008.
- ^ Bendis, Brian (w). House of M #1. "Director's Cut". Marvel Comics.
- ^ Thunderbolts (vol. 2) #11
- ^ Avengers: The Initiative #1 (June 2007)
- ^ DeAngelo IV, Frank; Strom, Marc (May 5, 2008). "Secret Invasion Illumination - Ka-Zar: Brian Bendis dishes on Ka-Zar's upcoming role in Secret Invasion". Marvel.com. http://marvel.com/news/comics.3535.Secret_Invasion_Illumination%3A_Ka-Zar.
- ^ "Unlocking the Cage: Gage talks House of M: Avengers". Comic Book Resources. September 4, 2007. http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=11343.
- ^ Solicitation for House of M: Avengers #1 at Marvel.com
External links
- House of M at the Grand Comics Database
- House of M at the Comic Book DB
- House of M (storyline) at the Comic Book DB
- House of M at Marvel.com
- Interview with Bendis on House of M at Comic Book Resources
- Tom Brevoort on House of M at Newsarama
- Tom Brevoort on the House of M tie-ins at Newsarama
- House of M cover gallery
- Bendis talks about House of M Postmortem, Part 1 and Part 2 at Newsarama
- House of M analysis
- House of M detailed issue summaries at UncannyXmen.net
- www.coipelcomics.com A good website about Olivier Coipel and House of M gallery
- House of M review at X-Men Nation
House of M Marvel Comics crossover event publication history 1980s Contest of Champions (June 1982) · Secret Wars (May 1984) · Secret Wars II (July 1985) · The Evolutionary War (1988) · Inferno (October 1988) · Atlantis Attacks (1989) · Acts of Vengeance (December 1989)1990s The Infinity Gauntlet (July 1991) · Operation: Galactic Storm (March 1992) · Infinity War (June 1992) · Infinity Crusade (June 1993) · Age of Apocalypse (1995) · Onslaught (May 1996) · Heroes Reborn (1996)2000s Maximum Security (December 2000) · Infinity Abyss (August 2002) · Secret War (February 2004) · Avengers Disassembled (August 2004) · House of M (August 2005) · Annihilation (March 2006) · Onslaught Reborn · Civil War (July 2006) · World War Hulk (July 2007) · Annihilation: Conquest (August 2007) · Secret Invasion (June 2008) · Dark Reign (December 2008) · War of Kings (March 2009)2010s Siege (January 2010) · Realm of Kings (January 2010) · The Heroic Age (May 2010) · The Thanos Imperative (July 2010) · Shadowland (September 2010) · Chaos War (October 2010) · Onslaught Unleashed (February 2011) · Fear Itself (March 2011) · Spider-Island (June 2011) • X-Men: Regenesis (October 2011)Marvel Comics Multiverse Main universes Alternative universes "Real Time" • "Crooked World" • "Age of Apocalypse" • 1602 • Not Brand Echh • Killraven/Guardians of the Galaxy • Femizonia • Earth-A • "Days of Future Past" • X-Men: The End • Mutant X • Crusader X • Marvel Zombies • Knights 2099 • The End • Askani • Noir • Blackworld • Femizonia • Apes • Larval • Nth Man • Last Avengers • Ruins • Earth X • Marvel Nemesis • House of M • Bullet Points • Spider-Man: Reign • Fantastic Four: The End • Old Man Logan • "Age of X" • Zombies Return
Filmed: Cinematic • AnimeParallel universes Pocket universes Asgard • Avalon • Counter-Earth • Darkforce Dimension • Heliopolis • K'ai • K'un-L'un • Limbo • Microverse • Mojoverse • Negative Zone • Olympus • Otherplace • ThereaMegaverse universes Alternative versions of characters Apocalypse • Beast • Captain America • Colossus • Cyclops • Daredevil • Dr Doom • Dr Strange • Gambit • Green Goblin • Hawkeye • Hulk • Human Torch • Iron Man • Magneto • Mr. Fantastic • Nightcrawler • Phoenix • Punisher • Rogue • Shadowcat • Spider-Man • Storm • Thing • Thor • Venom • Mary Jane Watson • Wolverine • Professor XavierRelated articles Captain Britain Corps • Exiles • Infinity Gems • M'Kraan Crystal • Siege Perilous • What If...? • Spider-Man: Shattered Dimensions • Edge of TimeSpider-Man publications and storylines Current series The Amazing Spider-Man (Issues) · Avenging Spider-ManFormer series Amazing Fantasy · Amazing Spider-Man Family · Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man · Marvel Team-Up · Peter Parker: Spider-Man · The Sensational Spider-Man · The Sensational Spider-Man (vol. 2) · The Spectacular Spider-Man · Spider-Man's Tangled Web · Untold Tales of Spider-Man · Web of Spider-Man (vol. 1 and 2)Limited series Spider-Man: Chapter One (1998) · Spider-Man: Blue (2002) · Spider-Man/Black Cat: The Evil that Men Do (2002) · Trouble (2003) · Spider-Man: House of M (2005) · Spider-Man: With Great Power (2008) · Astonishing Spider-Man & Wolverine (2010)Outside
continuityMarvel Adventures Spider-Man · Spider-Man 2099 · Spider-Man Noir · Spider-Man Noir: Eyes Without a Face · Spider-Man: India · Spider-Man: The Manga · Spidey Super Stories · Spider-Girl · Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane · Spider-Man: Reign · Spider-Man Unlimited · Ultimate Spider-Man · Ultimate Comics: Spider-ManCrossovers Storylines "Spider-Man No More!" (1967) · "Green Goblin Reborn!" (1971) · "The Six Arms Saga" (1971) · "The Night Gwen Stacy Died" (1973) · "Nothing Can Stop the Juggernaut!" (1982) · "The Kid Who Collects Spider-Man" (1984) · "Secret Wars" (1984) · "The Death of Jean DeWolff" (1985) · "The Wedding!" (1987) · "Kraven's Last Hunt" (1987) · "Torment" (1990) · "Invasion of the Spider-Slayers" (1992) · "Maximum Carnage" (1993) · "Clone Saga" (1994) · "Planet of the Symbiotes" (1995) · "Identity Crisis" (1998) · "The Final Chapter" (1998) · "Flowers for Rhino" (2001) · "House of M" (2005) · "The Other" (2005) · "Civil War" (2006) · "Back in Black" (2007) · "One More Day" (2007) · "Brand New Day" (2008) · "New Ways to Die" (2008) · "American Son" (2009) · "The Gauntlet" and "Grim Hunt" (2009) · "Siege" (2009) · "One Moment in Time" (2010) · "Shadowland" (2010) · "Big Time" (2010) · "Spider-Island" (2011)Other Ultimate Spider-Man story arcs · Astonishing Spider-Man · Spider-Man: The Darkest Hours · Marvel TalesBrian Michael Bendis Creator-owned Marvel Comics Alias · Avengers · Daredevil · Daredevil: End of Days · Dark Avengers · Elektra · Halo: Uprising · House of M · Mighty Avengers · New Avengers · New Avengers: Illuminati · The Pulse · Secret Invasion · Secret War · Siege · Spider-Woman: Origin · Spider-WomanUltimate Marvel Ultimate Fantastic Four · Ultimate Marvel Team-Up · Ultimate Origins · Ultimate Power · Ultimate Six · Ultimate Spider-Man · Ultimate Comics: Spider-Man · Ultimate X-Men · Ultimate Comics: MysteryImage Comics Categories:- Marvel Comics storylines
- 2005 in comics
- Marvel Comics limited series
- 2005 comic debuts
- Crossover comics
- Superhero comics
- Comics by Brian Michael Bendis
- Marvel Comics dimensions
- X-Men storylines
- Spider-Man storylines
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.