Warning! The following post contains spoilers for comics
from fifty to as recently as 15 years ago! It is not often a comic book
storyline comes along that is so universally beloved for its consistency, quality,
and brevity, but the ‘Clone Saga’…is not one of those storylines either.
Though it is often unfairly maligned for bad writing and its excessive,
unnaturally protracted length, the Clone Saga also delivered some
spectacular stories with top tier writing with memorable, iconic, and beloved
characters. Some of these characters heavily influenced the MC2. Which
brings me to the subjects of today’s post: Clones in the MC2.
But before we start talking about clones, we need to detail
where they came from, who created them. Which means we need to talk about Professor
Miles Warren, who first appeared teaching biochemistry at Empire State
University during Peter
Parker’s first day of class in Amazing Spider-Man #31 and should
not be confused with Peter
Parker’s Midtown High
School teacher, Mr Warren who first appeared way back in Amazing
Fantasy #15 before being (sur)named in Amazing Spider-Man #8. Many
years later, Untold Tales of Spider-Man #25 would establish the two men
of science as brothers.
Shortly after the death of Gwen
Stacy, we are introduced to new villain The Jackal in Amazing
Spider-Man #129, who manipulates the vigilante known as The
Punisher into targeting Spider-Man.
The Jackal’s identity remains a mystery until Amazing Spider-Man #148
where he unmasks himself as Professor Miles Warren. Having orchestrated
the apparent ‘return from the dead’ of Gwen Stacy (Amazing
Spider-Man #142), Warren reveals that he coveted Gwen and
blames Spider-Man for her death. Using cell samples obtained during one
of his classes, Professor Warren tricked his lab assistant Anthony
Serba into cloning Gwen and Peter. Initially led to believe the
cloned cells were taken from a rat, upon realizing the truth Serba was
murdered by Miles. Professor Warren disposed of Anthony
Serba’s body, convincing himself ‘The Jackal’ had committed
the crime. Afterwards, Warren fully developed his Jackal persona,
and used hypnosis to ‘re-educate’ and control the newly awakened clone
of Gwen. Having been drugged by The Jackal, Spider-Man
awakens to find himself facing his ‘Spider-Clone,’ with neither Parker
knowing which of them was the original thanks to both sharing the same memories
up to that point. Breaking free of her mental conditioning, the clone of Gwen
lashes out at Miles for his actions. Warren regained his senses
just long enough to apparently die in his own timed explosion, along
with the clone of Peter (Amazing Spider-Man #147-#149).
The clone of Gwen Stacy would bid Peter farewell and depart, while during a battle with Spencer Smythe’s Spider-Slayer, Peter would have the revelation he genuinely loved Mary Jane Watson. Despite having Dr. Curt Connors run a test to find out if he or his doppelgänger was the original, Peter chose to throw away the results without reading them, certain only the one, true Peter Parker could have felt that way. Worried a corpse bearing his face would be found, Peter disposed of the ‘Spider-Clone’ down a smokestack, believing he would be shortly thereafter incinerated (Amazing Spider-Man #149-#151).
For a while that was the end, until Peter Parker, the
Spectacular Spider-Man #25 introduced a ghoulish new villain named Carrion
who knew Peter was Spider-Man. Later in Peter Parker, the
Spectacular Spider-Man #30 it was revealed that this mysterious figure was
a clone of Miles Warren, though writer Bill Mantlo originally
intended Carrion to be the ‘Spider-Clone’, badly decayed and
clad in the remnants of the Green
Goblin’s discarded costume. It’s
revealed that prior to his final confrontation with Spider-Man, Miles
had injected a cell sample from himself into a ‘clone casket’ to
incubate but the process had gone wrong, leaving the clone’s body within to
wither and change but kept alive. Eventually set free, the Miles Warren
clone sought revenge on the wall-crawler before finally perishing by the
tendrils of his own ‘Spider-Amoeba’ experiment (Peter Parker, the
Spectacular Spider-Man #31).
That’s where we’ll pause for now before the 90’s Clone
Saga kicks off. Special thanks to arias-98105, the Marvel Chronology Project,
the now-defunct www.samruby.com
(via the Wayback Machine) and the Appendix to the Handbook of the Marvel
Universe and the Marvel wiki as
well as the Clone
Saga Chronicles Podcast which I re-listened to while working on this
project.
Until I uncover a genetic virus to rewrite my DNA, I remain
frogoat
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