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Paperback Ultimate Spider-Man - Volume 16: Deadpool Book

ISBN: 0785119272

ISBN13: 9780785119272

In 'Deadpool', Spider-Man teams up with his new girlfriend, X-Men's Kitty Pryde, who gets a new super-hero identity for when she's not hanging around with her mutant mates

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Format: Paperback

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Ultimately Awesome!!!!!

In Ultimate Spider-Man 16 Deadpool. Peter Parker has broken up with girlfriend Mary Jane Watson. His fear that she would end up a casualty of his superheroic extracurricular activities drove him to that painful decision. A chance meeting with the X-Men (in an earlier issue) sets the stage for a new love interest in Kitty Pride. Unlike MJ, Kitty cannot be harmed due to her mutant ability to phase through solid matter. Kitty dons a new costume when she hangs around fighting crime with Spider-Man because "People see Kitty Pride with Spider-Man, and then see her dating Peter Parker. It doesn't take a genius to figure it out." In an arc of Ultimate X-Men the team travel to the island of Genosha. There they go agianst orders of Professor X and intervene in the events taking place. A TV show in which mutants are hunted and killed on air. That event precipitates to what happens here (Deadpool). After a night of Super activities Kitty returns home to find the school empty say for one person, team member Wolverine. Logan attacks Kitty but she manages to escape via phasing. She makes it to the X-Jet and programs it to return to previous destination (Peters Place). Before Kitty can board she is tased by Storm. Peter sees the X-Jet from his room and boards in costume (lucky considering that the X-Men know that he is Spider-Man). Once at the school he sees Kitty, he is then warned by his Spider sence which he ignores and the result is shocking. Peter wakes up aboard a helicopter surrounded by Kitty and her fellow X-Men, all in chains. They are dropped from the chopper to an island below. They realise that they are back on Genosia and that the show is back on the air, and they are it's contestants. Expect thrills, excitement, and panel splashing visuial action in Ultimate Spider-Man 16: Deadpool.

16th

Collecting issues #91-97, and Annual #2, this collection covers a lot of ground. Introducing Morbius, Blade, Deadpool, and Kangaroo, it also features the X-Men, Daredevil, Moon Knight, Kingpin and everyone's favorite villan The Shocker. Always well written and drawn by the durable team of Bendis and Bagley, there is nothing earth shaking in this collection. It does introduce a very differant Deadpool to the Ultimate universe. The other characters are very similar to the mainstream Marvel Universe. This also covers Peter and Kitty's romance which is funny and very realistic. Most of the trade involves Spider-man rather than Peter trying to be a kid. It is a good read and very enjoyable.

ultimate spider-man 16

This volume was allot of fun to read. The humor found inbetween spidy and kitty and hilarious. (and if you haven't read the previous you may want to skip this review and get vol. 15.)The product came in good shape in in good time. I highly recommend this espeically if you have been following the ultimate spider-man thus far.

Continues to Impress

I've been collecting comics for 16+ years. I was introduced to Amazing Spider-Man during the Michelinie/Bagley run, and I wasn't particularly impressed with the character's direction at the time. I returned to the franchise when Straczynski took over, and from there I leapfrogged to Ultimate Spider-Man. This book continues to be a breath of fresh air every time I read it. It's not particularly complicated; one of the deepest plot twists is that Captain Jean DeWoolf is a dirty cop working for the Kingpin, but that was obvious when it was revealed a couple of graphic novels ago. Rather, what makes this series enjoyable is how simple it is. Bendis seems to have a solid grasp of what it was like to be a teenager, and the way he writes the super-powered teenager experience is quite compelling. I'm a little irritated with his dialogue and the need to repeat lines back-and-forth between characters, but that's his trademark. This book combines two storylines: a crossover with Ultimate X-Men, introducing Deadpool and the Mojo reality show to the Spider-Man universe. I personally feel that Peter takes a backseat to the storyline during this arc; USM traditionally features Peter in the spotlight, complete with thought boxes, but this arc lacks that insight into his thinking. Consequently, I felt somewhat unsatisfied with it. On the other hand, I loved the Morbius storyline. I'm not sure where it's going at the moment, since I'm not familiar with the Morbius character in 'normal' continuity. However, that's the first time this has happened to me in the entire series: I don't have a basis for comparison to the canonical storylines, and so I'm a blank slate for the second half of the book. I definitely enjoy it! It's clearly unfinished, but it's a nice teaser and an excellent way of setting up the story for a future arc. The Blade appearance is quite fun, too. The last inclusion is Ultimate Spider-Man Annual #2, which features the return of Moon Knight, Punisher, Daredevil, and Captain Jean DeWoolf. The Kingpin indirectly (through DeWoolf) sics Spider-Man on his competition, the Kangaroo, and all the superheroes get involved in a free-for-all. My only complaint about this issue is the one-dimensionality of the Punisher. Frank Castle is pretty one-dimensional even in the normal universe, but here he's just a babbling angry man, and it's kind of a disappointment considering what Ennis has achieved over in the MAX Imprint. In fact, instead of this story, I'd have liked to see another Peter/Kitty dating story like the last one. Since this is a relationship that never existed in the 'normal' series, I am quite eager to see where it goes. But I digress: it's a good, fun issue. In short: USM vol. 16 contains a self-contained story arc (Deadpool), and it also develops a vampire story with the promise of a future payoff. I feel it's a nice combination: readers will be happy to have a conclusive story arc, but it's carried with a nice teaser that hooks us fo

Ultimate Spider-Man versus Deadpool, Moebius, the Punisher and Daredevil (oh my)

In "Ultimate Spider-Man" Annual #1, Kitty Pryde and Peter Parker went out on their first date and took down a (semi) super-villain together. Things are progressing pretty well, but this is Spider-Man so you knew the downside of dating an X-Men was going to show up and in the 4-part "Deadpool" story ("Ultimate Spider-Man #91-94), it does with a vengeance. Written by Brian Michael Bendis, with pencils by Mark Bagley and inks by Danny Miki, the story begins after another crime-fighting date, Peter is settling down for a nice quiet night at home, when the X-Men's jet arrives, hovering over his house. When Spider-Man climbs aboard he discovers there is no one on board and when it flies on autopilot to the X-Mansion, Spider-Man find Kitty waiting for him--with an electric stun-gun that knocks him out. Then "Kitty" changes shape, and if you do not know into who then you are simply not paying attention to the title of this story arc. By the time Spider-Man is tossed out of an airplane into a jungle, things are getting steadily worse. It seems that Spider-Man and the X-Men have been brought to Krakoa, off the cost of Genosha in the South Pacific. The idea is that Deadpool and his team of cyborgs are going to kill the X-Men, who he calls both "sickening, unholy, genetic freaks who have no business being alive in the first place" and "international mutant terrorist." So the plan is not only to do the world a favor by putting the X-Men down, but they also intend to entertain millions of people while doing it by putting the whole thing on television. Being killed before the eyes of the world is going to really put a damper on the relationship between Peter and Kitty: all he can think about is that Aunt May is going to kill him and all she can think is that Peter is going to break up with her because of this. They are such a cute couple, you almost forget that he belongs with Mary Jane and she belongs with Colossus (at least in the non-Ultimate universe). The two-part Morbius story (#95-96), written by Bendis, drawn by Bagley, will inks by John Dell and Jimmy Palmiotti, begins with Spider-Man coming between Blade and a vampire, and then dealing with the fact that three million people have downloaded the footage of Spider-Man and Shadowcat on Krakoa (and MJ has seen the cover short of the couple on "People"). However, that goes on the back burner when Peter learns that Ben Urich, investigating vampires, is suddenly missing. By the time Spider-Man runs into Moebius, the idea of a "good" vampire is a rather hard thing to wrap his mind around. Note: There is a reference here to Daredevil telling Spider-Man that he is too young to be doing what he is doing and seeing what he is seeing, which suggests this happens after the events in Annual #2, which strikes a similar theme. Finally, we have "Ultimate Spider-Man" Annual #2, written by Bendis but with Pencils by Mark Brooks and Jaime Mendoza doing the inking (along with Brooks, Mark Morales, and V
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