Misplaced Pages

The Gathering of Five and The Final Chapter

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Marvel Comics storylines
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
This article may be written from a fan's point of view, rather than a neutral point of view. Please clean it up to conform to a higher standard of quality, and to make it neutral in tone. (September 2018) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
This article describes a work or element of fiction in a primarily in-universe style. Please help rewrite it to explain the fiction more clearly and provide non-fictional perspective. (September 2018) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
This article relies excessively on references to primary sources. Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources.
Find sources: "The Gathering of Five and The Final Chapter" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (April 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
(Learn how and when to remove this message)
"The Gathering of Five"
Cover to The Amazing Spider-Man #441, cover to the first issue of "The Final Chapter" and showing the fictional Gathering of Five. Art by Rafael Kayanan.
PublisherMarvel Comics
Genre
Main character(s)Spider-Man
Creative team
Writer(s)The Sensational Spider-Man
Todd DeZago
The Amazing Spider-Man
The Spectacular Spider-Man
John Byrne #262
Howard Mackie #263
Peter Parker: Spider-Man
Howard Mackie
Penciller(s)The Sensational Spider-Man
Joe Bennett
The Amazing Spider-Man
Rafael Kayanan
Peter Parker: Spider-Man
Norman Felchle #96
John Romita, Jr. #97
The Spectacular Spider-Man
Luke Ross
Editor(s)Ralph Macchio
The Gathering of Five ISBN 0-7851-8529-1

"The Gathering of Five" and "The Final Chapter" are interconnected in 1998 story lines published by Marvel Comics. Both story lines are crossovers between the various Spider-Man titles published at the time (The Amazing Spider-Man, Peter Parker: Spider-Man, The Spectacular Spider-Man, and The Sensational Spider-Man). It marked the cancellation of both The Spectacular Spider-Man and The Sensational Spider-Man, while also "re-branding" The Amazing Spider-Man and Peter Parker: Spider-Man by renumbering the issues to start again with a new "Issue One" (as mandated by Editor-in-Chief Bob Harras).

The story line proved controversial with fans, as it resurrected Peter Parker's elderly Aunt May, who had been killed off at the height of the "Clone Saga" three years earlier in The Amazing Spider-Man #400. Tom DeFalco, who had left months earlier with his Spider-Man: Identity Crisis story line, originally had intended for Peter and Mary Jane's daughter, May Parker, to be returned to them by Kaine. (This story thread was used later as the branching point for the MC2) Mackie and Byrne insisted they have the older May revived, so she could fit into the new relaunch.

Plot summary

The Gathering of Five

After surviving an attempt on his life by supervillain Nitro, Norman Osborn makes a phone call to someone, telling them it was time for "the gathering of five".

Acquisitions

Norman Osborn and Gregory Herd have a meeting with Hamilton Cromwell, a Neomancer of the Technomancers, to try to persuade him to join The Gathering of Five and bring his piece to the ceremony. Cromwell wants no part of the ceremony and warns Osborn and Herd they should not perform the ceremony either. Herd returns later in his Override costume to steal Cromwell's piece. Spider-Man sees him entering the building and tries to prevent him from stealing the piece, but he escapes with the piece. Herd convinces Osborn to allow him to take Cromwell's place in the ceremony, instead of paying, for stealing the piece so he may try to heal his wife.

The Scriers mention a fight with Kaine but are still able to deliver a "package" to Osborn. Alison Mongrain is found by Joe Robertson in Paris.

A Hot Time in the Old Town

Spider-Man fights the Molten Man as he walks a straight line of destruction through the city in a trance-like state to try to kill Alison Mongrain, who has returned to New York City with Joe Robertson. Osborn convinces Morris Maxwell to bring his piece and join The Gathering of Five. Maxwell reveals that all participants in the ceremony must come willingly, to receive one of the possible five gifts and curses: power, knowledge, immortality, madness, and death.

Web of Despair

Madame Web asks Spider-Man to retrieve an artifact for her, and he does it without knowing what it is. She then takes it to Osborn as she volunteers to participate in The Gathering of Five because she will die soon if she does not gain immortality from the ceremony. Norman Osborn's monologues about his time with the Cult of the Scriers allowed him to gather information on the ritual and the main artifact.

A Day in the Life

Spider-Man stops minor crimes, and an unknown person brings the last piece for The Gathering of Five to Osborn.

Gifts

Spider-Man stops Override after he robs an armored car. While in police custody, he escapes and reclaims the money he stole, so his wife Annie would be fine if anything went wrong during The Gathering of Five.

The Final Chapter

And Who Shall Claim a Kingly Crown?

Mattie Franklin is revealed to be the mystery person who brought the final piece necessary for the ceremony. The Gathering of Five is performed, and each participant appears to receive one of the gifts or curses. When the Molten Man attacked Alison Mongrain and Joe Robertson in front of the Parker house, it is revealed that Osborn implanted something in his brain so that he would ceaselessly go after the tracking device he had given Mongrain as a necklace. Mongrain gives the Molten Man the necklace for him to destroy, but after his attack had already fatally wounded her. Before she dies she can tell Mary Jane "May is alive."

Let the Heavens Tremble at the Power of the Goblin

Spider-Man fights the Green Goblin as he tries to get to the Osborn hunting lodge in upstate New York. Spider-Man believes the Green Goblin is holding his daughter alive there and that she did not die at the end of the Clone Saga because of what Mongrain told MJ. At the end of the issue, it is revealed that Aunt May is alive and the one the Green Goblin was holding prisoner.

The Triumph of the Goblin!

The Green Goblin allows Spider-Man to take Aunt May without a fight. Spider-Man brings her to Reed Richards to test what she is, believing her to be an imposter or clone. Using a blood sample from one of Peter's science experiments as a child, Richards can confirm her identity, but there is a mysterious device implanted in her brain that will eventually kill her if not removed soon. Spider-Man then fights the Green Goblin until the Green Goblin declares that he has finally killed Spider-Man.

The Final Chapter

At the very beginning of the issue, it is revealed that the Green Goblin received the curse of insanity rather than the gift of power from The Gathering of Five, and he only believes that he has killed Spider-Man. In reality, Spider-Man had defeated the Green Goblin and during the fight, the Green Goblin revealed that it was the real Aunt May currently under the care of Reed Richards, and it was a paid actress infused with Aunt May's DNA who Spider-Man had believed to die before (in The Amazing Spider-Man #400). He also revealed that if the device in Aunt May's brain is removed, it will trigger bombs all over the world. One final pumpkin bomb makes the Daily Bugle building nearly collapse until Spider-Man can save the building. He then is barely able to get to the hospital in time to tell Reed Richards about the device. Richards and the other surgeons can fix it, so the device stays in Aunt May, thereby not triggering the bombs, while not killing her as it stays. Peter also tells Mary Jane that he is quitting his career as Spider-Man and burns his costume.

Reading order

The Gathering of Five

  1. The Sensational Spider-Man vol. 1 #32
  2. The Amazing Spider-Man #440
  3. Peter Parker: Spider-Man #96
  4. The Spectacular Spider-Man #262
  5. The Sensational Spider-Man vol. 1 #33

The Final Chapter

  1. The Amazing Spider-Man #441
  2. Peter Parker: Spider-Man #97
  3. The Spectacular Spider-Man #263
  4. Peter Parker: Spider-Man #98

Footnotes

  1. An on-panel version of this confrontation is shown in Revenge of the Green Goblin #1 (mini-series from 2000).

References

  1. Peter Parker: Spider-Man #95
  2. The Sensational Spider-Man #32
  3. The Amazing Spider-Man #440
  4. The Amazing Spider-Man #440-441.
  5. Peter Parker: Spider-Man #96
  6. The Spectacular Spider-Man #262
  7. The Sensational Spider-Man vol. 1 #33
  8. The Amazing Spider-Man #441
  9. Peter Parker: Spider-Man #97
  10. The Spectacular Spider-Man #263
  11. Peter Parker: Spider-Man #98

External links


Spider-Man
Characters
Features and locations
Comic books
Other media
Toys
See also
Spider-Man publications
Current series
Former series
Limited series
Outside
mainstream
continuity
Manga series
Crossovers
Storylines
Reprintings
Collected Editions
Other
See also
Goblin (Marvel Comics)
Identities
Alter egos
Supporting
Enemies
Storylines
Related
In other media
Categories: