- #FANTASTIC FOUR 3 AMAZING SPIDER MAN 4 TALES TO ASTONISH 37 SERIAL#
- #FANTASTIC FOUR 3 AMAZING SPIDER MAN 4 TALES TO ASTONISH 37 PATCH#
- #FANTASTIC FOUR 3 AMAZING SPIDER MAN 4 TALES TO ASTONISH 37 SERIES#
Spider-Man follows and destroys the robot in Stromm’s lab. As Spider-Man enters to save Osborn, he’s upset about ruining his plans.Īs Spider-Man fights the robot, Osborn knocks him out and the robot leaves him for dead, returning home.
Both are trapped as the robot reaches Osborn and begins to destroy his office. The robot is set loose so Spider-Man attaches a tracer to the robot to save Patch.
#FANTASTIC FOUR 3 AMAZING SPIDER MAN 4 TALES TO ASTONISH 37 PATCH#
Spider-Man goes to follow Patch and he leads him to the Professor’s hideout when Patch is grabbed. Osborn arrives at Oscorp and knows it’s Stromm but can’t say since he double-crossed him. Professor Stromm begins another robot with a destruction beam. Meanwhile, Stromm has created a remote-control robot and sends it to Oscorp.Īs it destroys the labs, the robot latches onto Spider-Man and is destroyed when he jumps into a fire. Gwen notices Flash threaten Peter and not flinch and notices she’s defending Pete. Back at school, Pete tries to talk to Gwen and her temper flares up, but as she begins to slap him, he stops her hand. He arrives and explains that Stromm has threatened revenge on the man who set him up for prison. After he loses him, Pete returns to The Daily Bugle for his whereabouts. Someone tries to shoot Foswell, and Spider-Man stops it and follows Foswell.
Frederick Foswell watches as his ex-cell-mate is up to something and tries to follow. Professor Stromm is released from prison and is picked up by ex-con Max Young. Synopsis for "Once Upon A Time, There Was A Robot.!" ? Norman Osborn ? (Real name first revealed).1981), reprinting a truncated, 23-page version of the 34-page Fantastic Four #116.Have no fear! Spidey is here! - Spider-Man Appearing in "Once Upon A Time, There Was A Robot.!" Afterward, the comic reprinted two Fantastic Four stories each issue, usually with a Human Torch and Thing feature from Strange Tales, before becoming a standard 36-page comic with #35 (June 1972), reprinting Fantastic Four stories, at the then-regular price of 20 cents. They and such incidentals as pin-ups were replaced by Captain America stories from Tales of Suspense in #25-28.
#FANTASTIC FOUR 3 AMAZING SPIDER MAN 4 TALES TO ASTONISH 37 SERIES#
1969), the series changed its title and reduced its page-count to 52, exchanging its Hulk stories for shorter "Tales of the Watcher" vignettes. Issues of The Incredible Hulk were not reprinted in full, but generally as chapters spread across two to three issues apiece. The covers of issues #1-11 each reprinted two to four covers of the comics reprinted inside.
#FANTASTIC FOUR 3 AMAZING SPIDER MAN 4 TALES TO ASTONISH 37 SERIAL#
The reprints were generally in serial order, with occasional skips missing, for instance, are The Fantastic Four #5-6, already reprinted in Fantastic Four Annual #2-3 (1964–1965) #11, already partly reprinted in Annual #3 #12, never reprinted at the time #19, reprinted in heavily edited form in the 1967 promotional one-shot America's Best TV Comics and #25-26, reprinted in Fantastic Four Annual #4 (1966). Six issues included short semi- anthological "Tales of the Watcher" science-fiction stories hosted by and sometimes featuring Uatu, the Watcher.
1969)ĭropping Spider-Man the following issue - with that superhero's stories going on to anchor Marvel Tales - the comic began reprinting what would be its regular line-up: The Fantastic Four, The Incredible Hulk, Iron Man stories from Tales of Suspense, and Doctor Strange stories from Strange Tales. Rare new cover art, by Jack Kirby and John Verpoorten, on the reprint comic Marvel Collectors' Item Classics #19 (Feb. 1963), and the Ant-Man story from Tales to Astonish #37 (Nov. " MCIC", as it was often abbreviated in Marvel Comics text pages, became a bimonthly series beginning with issue #2 (April 1966), which reprinted The Fantastic Four #3 (March 1962), The Amazing Spider-Man #4 (Sept. It was a sister publication of what was then the annual, giant-size reprint comic Marvel Tales. 1962) and The Amazing Spider-Man #3 (July 1963), as well as the Ant-Man story from Tales to Astonish #36, and the first "Tales of Asgard" featurette, from Journey into Mystery #97 (Oct. That first issue, dated February 1965 in its postal indicia though not on the cover, reprinted The Fantastic Four #2 (Jan. One of several 68-page, 25-cent "giant-size" comic books that supplemented publishers' regular 36-page, 12-cent lines, Marvel Collectors' Item Classics premiered as an annual publication in 1965.