Sony’s Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse has
released another trailer
and with it we got another glimpse of the very tangentially related ‘Bag-Man’
costume which also happens to make a few appearances in the MC2. I have
already published posts about Six-Arm
Spider-Man and the original Spider-Armor,
so be sure to check those out too.
Let us take in some context and history, shall we? Full
credit goes to Youtubers Jason Lethert (HeroJournalism and Comics2Film)
and Chris Baker for doing all
the research and making their confessions. I will try to keep It
straightforward, but it is all over the place, so strap in. The iconic and
well-known iteration of Peter Parker in an old Fantastic
Four costume with a paper bag on his head comes from MC2
creators Tom Defalco and Ron Frenz in Amazing Spider-Man #258.
Following the discovery that his new black costume was, in fact, an alien symbiote,
Peter was left wearing nothing but his underwear until Johnny Storm
outfitted him with the aforementioned suit and bag and slapped a ‘Kick Me’ sign
to his back.
After intervening in a hit and run robbery, Peter
finds himself surrounded by news reporters who bombard the humiliated hero with
questions. Returning home, Pete catches a news report about his paper
bag persona who the press dubs ‘The
Unknown Super-Hero’. As others above have noted, this is a reference to ‘The
Unknown Comic,’ a stand-up
comedian who frequently appeared on The Gong Show wearing a paper
bag over his head.
Now that we have detailed the infamous origin, let us look
at a precursor from way back in Amazing Spider-Man #82 by Stan Lee
and John Romita Sr. With his Spider-Man costume in desperate need
of the local laundromat but worried about onlookers, Peter dons a paper
bag mask and swings in to finish his laundry. It is a nice touch from Romita
Sr to draw web-shooters
on Peter’s wrists, even if the colourist seems to have rendered them the
same yellow as Peter’s shirt.
The Spider-Man animated show (not to be confused with
Spider-Man
and His Amazing Friends) which began production in 1981 (though it
apparently wasn’t completed or widely aired for some time after) also features
an instance of Peter wearing a paper bag mask. In the episode ‘The Sandman
is Coming’ written by Jeffrey Scott, Spider-Man finds himself
inadvertently unmasked by the villain and uses a paper bag to cover his face as
he makes his way home in his Spider-Man suit.
Writer J.M. Dematteis and artist Luke Ross
give us yet another version of the Bag-Man in Spectacular Spider-Man
#256. When confronting the villainous White Rabbit and her goons, Peter
is forced to throw together this paper bag mask and shirtless look which he dubs
‘The Bombastic Bag-Man’ before launching into a humorous fictitious origin
story for his temporary identity. Dematteis even references ‘The
Unknown Comic’ again.
Now it is time to look at how the Bag-Man costume
made the transition to another medium and probably the one most responsible for
propelling this design to wider recognition: video games. Making its first video game appearance in Activision’s
Spider-Man in 2000, the costume is dubbed ‘The Amazing Bag Man’.
The Bag-Man would go on to appear in various Spider-Man games
from then on, but the question remains, why is the Fantastic Four
costume with the paper bag mask called ‘The Bombastic Bag-Man’ nowadays
if that nom du jour refers to the Dematteis version? Well, Chris Baker has the answer.
As he explains in a video on his YouTube channel,
Chris Baker was working as a Licensed Game Manager for Marvel on game
developer Beenox’s Spider-Man: Shattered Dimensions in 2010.
With the Bag-Man costume, Chris asked them to change the name from whatever
name it had originally been given in-game to ‘Bombastic Bag-Man.’ Mr. Baker not only admits his error but points out the actual source of the
name, Spectacular Spider-Man #256 while musing what they would call that
costume if it appeared alongside the other design in a future game. Games and
merchandise since 2010 have often used the ‘Bombastic Bag-Man’
moniker making it widely accepted regardless of accuracy.
Now, let us circle back to the MC2 and its own
history with the Bag-Man identity. For what might be considered Bag-Man
3.0 or even 4.0 we must look to Spider-Girl #47 in which Peter
is visiting the Fantastic Five Headquarters so that Big Brain aka
Reed Richards can work on his new bionic
leg. When Apox the Omega Skrull destroys the top floors of the
building, Peter aids members of the Fantastic Five, his daughter Spider-Girl
and the new Scarlet Spider, leaping into battle with a familiar temporary
costume courtesy of Johnny Storm aka the Human Torch, albeit this
time the trademark paper bag is replaced with a metal helmet belonging to The
Thing.
Much like with the case of Six-Arm Spider-Man and the original Spider-Armor there is the lingering question of how Jack O’ Lantern came to know of the connection between Spider-Man and The Unknown Super-Hero given it’s not even spider-themed. I would like to offer a No-Prize explanation. Given the media picked up the story and he was caught on camera, it is not hard to believe there is footage of the Bag-Man crawling up a wall. Thus, Jack O’ Lantern was able to deduce the two were probably one and the same.
It is absolutely mind-blowing how much this one-off gag
based on a stand-up comedian’s own gag has taken off. It is even more amusing
that none of the writers of the Bag-Man appearances seem to have been
referencing each other another.
Until I wind up in a paper bag with a ‘Kick Me’ sign tapped
to my back, I remain
frogoat
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