Return of the Sinister Six

A 90s Time Capsule of Cheese, Charm, and Peak Fun

A few months ago, while taking inventory of my comics, I noticed that I owned some of the early 1990s Spider-Man with some big names on the cover. Think David Micheline, Erik Larsen, and yes even Uncle Todd. Several of the books stood out to me. Issues 334-339: Return of the Sinister Six.

The six part series tells the main story of how Doc Ock gets the band back together. However, Micheline jams a couple of important sub plots in between the pages of Spidey vs. his old nemeses. Let me try to explain why the old heads look back so fondly, both in spite and because of, on this era of comic books.

Part 1 (Issue 334)

In Part 1, Doc Ock visits Electro and Sandman to start the process. Meanwhile, we get a look at Pete and MJ’s relationship (more on that in a bit), Spider-Man takes on some thugs, and as you can see in the panel below, Iron Man makes a cameo. Overall, a solid introduction that, if they hadn’t spoiled it in the title, might not have you thinking that this is anything but a typical Spider-Man arc.

Part 2 (Issue 335)

Okay, now things are getting serious. Hobby (3), Shocker (4, never mind), and Mysterio (4) all join the cause. This time, there’s a Captain America cameo, Flash and Felicia are dating, and I just have to say that I love, love this version of Peter and MJ. You can have drama without constantly threatening the whole of the relationship.

Nice shorts, Flash!
Wholesome content alert.

Part 3 (Issue 336)

The Vulture (5) starts the issue working for Kingpin, but Doc Ock offers a better dental package. Return of the Sinister Six is complete Another cameo, this time by Doctor Strange. And, who the hell is Chance? They promise that someone dies in the issue and someone does. It happens in a fashion very similar to Gwen Stacy. While a minor character (at least I don’t remember him), the last panel gives it an importance and gravitas sometimes missing from modern deaths.

RIP to a real one. Oof…

Part 4 (Issue 337)

We finally get some action between Spidey and the Six. He takes them on two at a time; Hobby and Mysterio, Vulture and Sandman, and then Electro at the end. There’s also some about the Flash/Felicia sub plot, a Nova cameo (literally, just him flying across the page), and some dude who is obsessed with MJ. Literally, how much can you jam into these issue, David Micheline?

Right there on the page: WHOOOOOOSH! LMAO

Part 5 (Issue 338)

They promise us the all out knock down drag out brawl finally. But first, we need to console Aunt May, work in the cameo (Mr. Fantastic on the TV in the background while MJ exercises), someone tries to kill Peter and then Caesar threatens to kill a dude unless he sets up a meeting with MJ. 20 pages. All of this in the first half of the book. Then, we finally get to the fight. Thankfully, it’s well worth it.

I mean, this is just the first page of the fight. It gets better from here.

Part 6 (Issue 339)

The thrilling conclusion. And, no, I don’t mean that sarcastically. They resolve the MJ drama by some dude shooting Caesar. But, he’s also a damn stalker. She eventually clocks him upside the head with her purse to escape. Meanwhile, there’s a satellite that will poison the planet if they don’t give in to Doc Ock’s demands of being rulers. Spider-Man faces off against the head honcho and then asks Thor to come help with the satellite. Old Thunder God takes care of it and, as you’ll see in a minute, we get the typical Spidey “happily ever after.”

Overall (Return of the Sinister Six)

These books have everything you expect from the 1990’s era Marvel. The sometimes overblown writing. Made me laugh that Micheline gave us that heart wrenching ending to part 3 and couldn’t help himself to go a bit overboard in the very next issue. Also, the beginning with the “electricity is his god, his drug, his reason to be” line? A bit much.

And, the art. It’s gorgeous, but the cliches you know from the 90s exist for a reason. What the hell is that early 90’s MJ? And Flash’s shorts in that one panel? Plus, the MJ in a full split in one panel and the outfit she wore to meet Caesar. All of it is just so delightfully chaotic. Some of this might not sound like my usual positive self. But, trust me, I say all of this with love. Every so often I pine for the simpler days of the 90s and the wild and crazy comics they brought us then.

Return of the Sinister Six brought me back to the days of riding my bike up the street to the comic book store. Walking along the racks looking for my favorites and trying to find some new ones. I gave you a peek into my 90s comics love with a tribute to Uncle Todd last month. I wanted to take another trip back to show that it’s not just a one time thing. It’s a way of life.

Thanks to mighty Marvel for bringing Spider-Man to life.

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