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Spencer Smythe

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Publisher
  
Species
  
Created by
  
Stan LeeSteve Ditko

Creators
  
Spencer Smythe Spencer Smythe SpiderSlayer creator SpiderMan foe

Abilities
  
RoboticsArachnid expert

First appearance
  
The Amazing Spider-Man #25 (June 1965)

Similar
  
Alistair Smythe, Spider‑Slayer, Glory Grant, Randy Robertson, Molten Man

Spencer Smythe is a fictional character, a comic book villain in the Marvel Comics universe. He is the father of Alistair Smythe.

Contents

Spencer Smythe Spencer Smythe Character Comic Vine

Publication history

Spencer Smythe Spencer Smythe Wikipedia

Spencer Smythe first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man #25 (June 1965) and was created by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko.

Fictional character biography

Spencer Smythe Villains of Marvel Comics Spencer Smythe

Professor Spencer Smythe was a robotic and arachnid expert who asked J. Jonah Jameson to fund his projects, having become convinced by Jameson's editorials that Spider-Man was a menace. After watching a demonstration showing that Smythe's robot could sense and track spiders, Jameson hired Smythe to capture Spider-Man. Jameson himself controlled the robot, meaning that Spider-Man found himself chased by a machine with Jameson's face. However, Spider-Man escaped by leaving his Spider-Man suit wrapped in the robot's tentacles.

Smythe, annoyed at the inability of his robot to capture Spider-Man, began to obsess about the Web-Crawler, turning to crime to finance his research and constantly improving his robots, which he dubbed Spider-Slayers. However, no matter how deadly or powerful he made them they were always defeated by Spider-Man utilizing a key flaw in their designs; the second one, for example, was capable of tracking a unique energy signature generated by spiders, but was defeated when Spider-Man lured it back to Smythe's laboratory, causing it to overload from the multitude of spiders Smythe kept there for his research.

Eventually, Smythe's criminal career came to an end when the radioactive materials used in the manufacture of the robots poisoned him, dooming him to a slow and agonizing death. Blaming Jameson and Spider-Man equally for his impending demise, Smythe handcuffed the two of them together with a bomb scheduled to detonate in 24 hours, determined to make the two of them suffer the agony of inescapable death that he saw them as having condemned him to. Unfortunately for Smythe, his disease was too advanced for him to survive the 24 hours himself, and he expired convinced that he had killed off the two men responsible. Peter Parker, however, had a pretty good grasp of what made mechanical devices tick, and was able to abort the bomb by freezing its controls mere moments before it would have detonated.

During the Dead No More: The Clone Conspiracy storyline, Spencer Smythe is cloned by Miles Warren and his company New U Technologies.

Television

  • In the 1967 Spider-Man animated series, Henry Smythe (voiced by Henry Ramer) from the cartoon is based on Spencer Smythe. Just like Spencer in the comics, he creates the Spider-Slayers as seen in "Captured by J. Jonah Jameson" where he uses a Spider-Slayer to capture Spider-Man. When Spider-Man fools the Spider-Slayer with a dummy, J. Jonah Jameson gets angered at Spider-Man's trick as Henry Smythe takes the Spider-Slayer away to do some adjustments to it.
  • Spencer Smythe appeared in Spider-Man: The Animated Series voiced by Edward Mulhare. In the series, he is hired by Norman Osborn to create the original Spider-Slayer called the Black Widow in an effort to capture Spider-Man. As part of the bargain, Osborn would build a hoverchair for his paralyzed son Alistair. At Oscorp, the robot instead captures Flash Thompson in a Spider-Man costume and Spider-Man attempts a rescue which leads to a massive fire in the plant. When Osborn refuses to build the promised hoverchair for Alistair if Spider-Man isn't destroyed, Spencer chooses to stay behind and finish Spider-Man off while Osborn gets Alistair to safety. After the Black Widow is destroyed by Spider-Man, OsCorp explodes and Spencer is believed dead. Later, it is revealed that Spencer had survived having been found by Kingpin. Spencer Smythe was put in cryogenic suspension in order to maintain the loyalty of Alistair. Eventually however, Alistair outlives his usefulness and is changed into a biomechanical Spider Slayer by his replacement Dr. Herbert Landon. Alistair Smythe eventually discovers that his father is alive with Spider-Man's help and escapes with his cryonically preserved body. Afterwards, he continues working for various individuals (most predominantly the Kingpin's rival Silvermane) in order to revive his father. Spencer would remain in stasis at the conclusion of the series.
  • Film

    A viral marketing campaign for The Amazing Spider-Man 2 shows a mention of Spencer Smythe in a Daily Bugle article as the head of the engineering division of Oscorp and that he is working on significant advancements in robotics. An article published at a later date revealed that Spencer was fired from his position as department head and replaced by his son, Alistair.

    Video games

  • Spencer Smythe is featured in the PlayStation 2 and PSP version of Spider-Man: Web of Shadows. Like Nick Fury and Kingpin, he also calls up Spider-Man at specific points of the game. He is shown in alliance with A.I.M. whom he hires to capture J. Jonah Jameson in his plot to clone him and gain control of the publishing business and discredit J. Jonah Jameson and Spider-Man. Spencer Smythe had Jackal as his double agent on board the S.H.I.E.L.D. Helicarrier to obtain Spider-Man's symbiotic suit. Spencer Smythe later sends Jackal to steal the Sonic Emitter from the top of Fisk Tower and unleashes a mind-controlled Black Cat on Spider-Man.
  • Spencer Smythe appears in Marvel Heroes.

  • References

    Spencer Smythe Wikipedia