Saturday, February 1, 2025

Spider-Boy #15 Review


 


Writers: Dan Slott

Artists: Paco Medina & Humberto Ramos

Colorist: Erick Arciniega & Edgar Delgado

Letterer: Joe Caramagna

Cover Artists: Paco Medina & Edgar Delgado; Kaare Andrews; Javier Garrón & Rachelle Rosenberg; Todd Nauck (Icon); Mike McKone & David Curiel (Fantastic Four; Mirka Andolfo (Madame Web)

Designer: Adam Del Re

Editors: Tom Groneman, Nick Lowe & CB Cebulski

Publisher: Marvel

Price: $4.99

Release Date: January 29, 2024

 

Maka Akana wants to destroy Spider-Boy. Hulkette wants to punch him to the moon. Daredevil wants his apprentice to concentrate on winning The Dragon's Challenge. But Bailey Briggs wants to protect his neighborhood with Spider-Man, make his mother proud by doing well in school, and hang with his friends.

 

Daredevil hasn’t told Spider-Boy why they are in Madripoor, but he insists the prize is worth fighting for. Can Spider-Boy honor his mentor's wishes? Let's grab some popcorn and sodas for the final rounds, thwip into Spider-Boy #15, and find out!

 

Story

Try as he might, Spider-Boy can’t adopt the Japanese mindset. Fighting for honor is stupid! While Daredevil maintains the respect of his colleagues, Spider-Boy keeps making enemies. Daredevil forced Bailey to steal a Golden Fang from Hulkette and her mentor. He orders Bailey to Monster Out to win his contests. In Dan Slott's story, as Daredevil pressures him to compete, Bailey tries to make friends.

 

While Bailey fights half a world away in Spider-Boy #15, his mom takes Christina Xu out for a treat. Madame Monstrosity turned both ladies into Humanimals. Since Spider-Man pulled their DNA apart, Tabitha retains a bond with her cat. Perhaps, like Penny’s superhero dog Bolt, Christina can also talk to pigeons. But as Daredevil reminds Bailey of his priorities, Tabitha wants Christina to focus on telling her about her son. After spending years at the Humanimal farm, Tabitha wants to make it up to Bailey for missing so much of his childhood. 

 


 

 

While Bailey yearns to return home, engage in meaningful battles alongside Spider-Man, and learn how to divide fractions with his new friends Marco and Larissa, this is the moment Maka Akana has waited for. Her mutant abilities let her temporarily inhabit the minds of others. But the overwhelming input from Bailey's ten eyes and his conflict with his monstrous side overwhelmed her.

 

Copying other people's fighting abilities and profiting off their years of training was an improvement over winning chess tournaments, rock music festivals, and cliff-diving tournaments. While she can still borrow others' identities, Maka is Spider-Girl forever. And she doesn't like it at all. So, no matter how much Bailey Briggs cares about her, Maka Akana is determined to destroy him in Spider-Boy #15.

 


 

 

Art

Humberto Ramos & Edgar Delgado return us to the night Spider-Girl met Bailey. Clad in a costume that evokes characters like Harlequin in the Italian Commedia Dell’arte, Maka flees the museum after gazing into Bailey’s eyes. She may rock a superhero landing. But when Maka removes her mask, her face reflects how the raging turmoil in Bailey's mind affected her. Yet when she looks at her mentor, she glimpses a side of Bullseye few others see.

 

While Mist gazes down on the fight wearing a white mask and gold horns, Bailey fights an opponent wearing an animal mask. When Bailey Monsters Out in Spider-Boy #15, the yellow lenses covering his eyes reflect this orange-and-black mask, and triangular teeth fill his mouth. 

 


 

 

After his semifinal bout, Hulkette and Tigress show Bailey frowns, but Spider-Girl reaches for the sky. Then she removes white bracelets while Bullseye places a deck of cards in a wooden box. Paco Medina & Erick Arciniega show how Bulleye observes the letter of the law while ignoring its spirit. As he faces opponents alongside Spider-Girl, Bullseye adopts Jason Bourne’s philosophy and turns seemingly innocuous items into weapons.

 

Joe Caramagna thwips uppercase black lettering into white dialogue balloons and narrative boxes. Words shrink for lowered voices, embolden for intonation, swell for volume, and change color for emphasis. Sound effects help us hear punches, kicks, falls, savage beatdowns, and Spider-Girl wielding webs for the first time. Mahalo to Marvel Comics for providing a copy for review.

 


 

 

Final Thoughts

Young people look to their mentors for guidance. As they grow, their values may diverge from those of their mentors. In Spider-Boy #15, Bailey warns Spider-Girl to look for someone more trustworthy. But while Bullseye has always encouraged Spider-Girl's desires, Daredevil forces Bailey Briggs to fight in a contest he disdains.

 

Rating 9.8/10

 

To preview interior art see my review at Comic Book Dispatch.

 

 

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