Spider-Man: India | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
Schedule | Yearly |
Format | Limited series |
Genre | |
Publication date | November 2004 – February 2005 |
No. of issues | 4 |
Main character(s) | Spider-Man |
Creative team | |
Written by | Sharad Devarajan Jeevan Kang Suresh Seetharaman |
Artist(s) | Jeevan Kang |
Letterer(s) | Dave Sharpe |
Colorist(s) | Gotham Studios Asia |
Editor(s) | John Barber Nick Lowe Ralph Macchio |
Collected editions | |
Spider-Man: India | ISBN 0-7851-1640-0 |
Spider-Man: India is a comic book originally published in India by Gotham Entertainment Group in 2004, retelling the story of Marvel Comics' Spider-Man in an Indian setting. It ran for four issues, which were later also published in the United States in 2005 and collected into a trade paperback (ISBN 0-7851-1640-0). The series was created by Sharad Devarajan, Suresh Seetharaman, and Jeevan J. Kang with Marvel Comics. The Indian version was conceptualized by Indian director Satyajit Ray, who had once met Stan Lee in New York to discuss creating an Indian version of the superhero. However, this was not done during Ray's lifetime.[1]
Plot summary[]
Pavitr Prabhakar, a simple Indian boy from a remote village, moves to Mumbai with his Aunt Maya and Uncle Bhim to study after getting half a scholarship. His parents died some years ago. Other students at his new school tease him and hit him for his studious nature and village background. He knows his Uncle Bhim is struggling to support him and his aunt Maya, and pay his school fees. Only Meera Jain, a popular girl from his school, befriends him. Meanwhile, a local crime lord named Nalin Oberoi uses an amulet to perform an ancient ritual in which he is possessed by a demon committed to opening a gate for other demons to invade Earth. While being chased by bullies, Pavitr Prabhakar encounters an ancient yogi who grants him the powers of a spider, in order to fight the evil that threatens the world. While discovering his powers, Pavitr Prabhakar refuses to help a woman being attacked by several men. He leaves the place, but comes back when he hears his uncle cry out, and discovers that he has been slain. He learns that Bhim was stabbed when he tried to help the woman. Pavitr Prabhakar understands that with great power comes great responsibility, and swears to use his powers for the good of others.
Nalin Oberoi briefly becomes human again and transforms a mild-mannered doctor into a demon with four magical tentacles (the Indian version of Doctor Octopus), and sends him to kill Spider-Man, as instructed by the demon voices. Doc Ock fails, and Spider-Man makes his public debut as a hero. He is, however, labeled a threat by the newspapers.
Oberoi kidnaps Pavitr Prabhakar's aunt, taking her to a refinery outside Mumbai. There he betrays Doctor Octopus, blasting him into the ocean with a ray. Spider-Man arrives and fights Oberoi, who has also kidnapped Meera. He drops both Maya and Meera from the top of the refinery. Spider-Man dives for his aunt, but fails to rescue Meera, who is saved by Doctor Octopus. Pavitr reveals his identity to Meera and asks her to take his aunt to safety.
Oberoi gets rid of Doctor Octopus for good and touches Spider-Man with the amulet. A Venom-like creature emerges from the amulet and tries to lure Spider-Man to the dark side. Pavitr remembers his uncle's saying about responsibility and rejects the evil. By doing so, the link between the demons and Oberoi is shattered, and he becomes human again. Spider-Man throws the amulet into the ocean, and Oberoi is sent to a mental institution.
Peace is restored to Mumbai eventually. Pavitr Prabhakar begins a romance with Meera, and is shown celebrating the festival Diwali with his aunt. The story ends with a quote from the Bhagavad Gita, showing the Venom-Demon still alive.
Parallels with Western Spider-Man[]
Spider-Man's alter ego in the comic is named Pavitr Prabhakar, a phonetic distortion of Peter Parker. There are a number of other parallels with the original comic book characters:
- Meera Jain - She is analogous to Mary Jane Watson.
- Auntie Maya - She is analogous to Aunt May.
- Uncle Bhim - He is analogous to Uncle Ben.
- Naman Oberoi - Naman Oberoi is a local crime boss. He is analogous to Norman Osborn and transforms into a demon reminiscent of the Ultimate Green Goblin.
- Hari Oberoi - Hari Oberoi is analogous to Harry Osborn. He did not appear, but was mentioned by Doctor Octopus.
- Aadi - Aadi is analogous to Eddie Brock/Venom.
- Doctor Octopus - A mild-mannered doctor who Nalin Oberoi transforms into a demon with four magical tentacles.
Later comic appearances[]
During the Spider-Verse storyline which featured Spider-Men from various alternate realities, Pavitr Prabhakar was seen fighting a mysterious new villain named Karn, whom he mistook for a demon. The Superior Spider-Man (Doctor Octopus' mind in Peter Parker's body) managed to save him and recruited him into his army of Spiders.[2] In the second volume of Spider-Verse set during the Secret Wars event, Pavitr Prabhakar found himself in the domain of the Battleworld called Arachnia, where he teamed up with Spider-Gwen, Spider-Ham, Spider-Man Noir, Spider-UK and Anya Corazon, though none of them remembered their previous encounter during the original Spider-Verse.
Following the conclusion of Secret Wars the team of six Spiders that formed during the event will rename itself and feature in a new ongoing series called Web Warriors, a name that was coined by Peter Parker from the Ultimate Spider-Man TV series during the original Spider-Verse.[3]
In other media[]
Video games[]
- Pavitr Prabhakar is playable among other Spiders in the Spider-Man Unlimited.
References[]
External links[]
- Spider-Man: India at Marvel Wiki
- "Spider-Man, Swinging Through India". NPR. 6 January 2005
- Overdorf, Jason. "A MULTICULTURAL WEB". Newsweek International. 25 July 2004
- Sandhu, Sukhdev. "World Wide Web". New York Magazine 21 May 2005
- "Spider-Man gets Indian make-over". BBC News. 24 June 2004
Spider-Man comics publications | |
---|---|
Current series | The Amazing Spider-Man (issues) • Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man • Marvel Team-Up • Miles Morales: Spider-Man • Spider-Gwen: Ghost Spider • Spider-Man/Deadpool • Superior Spider-Man • Venom |
Former series | Amazing Fantasy • Avenging Spider-Man • Amazing Spider-Man: Renew Your Vows • Ben Reilly: The Scarlet Spider • Peter Parker: The Spectacular Spider-Man • Peter Parker: Spider-Man • The Sensational Spider-Man vol. 1 • Marvel Knights Spider-Man/The Sensational Spider-Man vol. 2 • Spider-Man and Zoids • Spider-Man Family/The Amazing Spider-Man Family • Spider-Man's Tangled Web • Spider-Man Unlimited • Spidey • The Superior Foes of Spider-Man • The Superior Spider-Man • Superior Spider-Man Team-Up • Untold Tales of Spider-Man • Web of Spider-Man • Webspinners: Tales of Spider-Man |
Limited series | Planet of the Symbiotes (1995) • Spider-Man: Chapter One (1998) • Spider-Man: Blue (2002) • Spider-Man/Black Cat: The Evil that Men Do (2002) • Venom vs. Carnage (2004) • Spider-Man: House of M (2005) • Spider-Man and the Fantastic Four (2007) • Spider-Man: With Great Power (2008) • Astonishing Spider-Man & Wolverine (2010) • Spider-Man and the X-Men (2014) |
Outside continuity |
Marvel Adventures Spider-Man • Spider-Gwen • Spider-Man 2099 • Spider-Man Noir • Spider-Man: India • Spider-Man: The Manga • Spider-Man J • Spider-Girl • Peter Porker, The Spectacular Spider-Ham • Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane • Spider-Man: Reign • Ultimate Spider-Man • Ultimate Comics: Spider-Man |
Crossovers | Superman vs. The Amazing Spider-Man (1976) • Superman and Spider-Man (1981) • Spider-Man and Batman: Disordered Minds (1995) • Batman & Spider-Man: New Age Dawning • Spider-Men (2012) • Spider-Verse (2014) |
Storylines | "If This Be My Destiny...!" (1965) • "Green Goblin Reborn!" (1971) • "The Six Arms Saga" (1971) • "The Night Gwen Stacy Died" (1973) • "Nothing Can Stop the Juggernaut!" (1982) • "The Kid Who Collects Spider-Man" (1984) • "Secret Wars" (1984) • "Alien Costume Saga" (1984) • "The Death of Jean DeWolff" (1985) • "The Wedding!" (1987) • "Kraven's Last Hunt" (1987) • "Torment" (1990) • "Invasion of the Spider-Slayers" (1992) • "Maximum Carnage" (1993) • "Clone Saga" (1994) • "Identity Crisis" (1998) • "The Gathering of Five" and "The Final Chapter" (1998) • "Flowers for Rhino" (2001) • "The Other" (2005) • "Back in Black" (2007) • "One More Day" (2007) • "Brand New Day" (2008) • "New Ways to Die" (2008) • "Spidey Meets the President!" (2009)" • "The Gauntlet" and "Grim Hunt" (2009) • "One Moment in Time" (2010) • "Big Time" (2010) • "Spider-Island" (2011) • "Ends of the Earth" (2012) • "Dying Wish" (2012) • "Spider-Verse" (2014) • "Dead No More: The Clone Conspiracy" (2016) • "Go Down Swinging" (2018) • "Spider-Geddon" (2018) |
Reprintings | Ultimate Spider-Man and X-Men • Astonishing Spider-Man |
Other | Marvel Tales • Ultimate Spider-Man story arcs • Ultimate Comics: Spider-Man story arcs |
See also | The Amazing Spider-Man #129 • Spider-Man in literature • Bibliography of works on Spider-Man |
Marvel Comics Multiverse | ||
---|---|---|
Main universes | Earth-616 (Marvel Universe) • Ultimate • 2099 • Adventures • MC2 • Mangaverse • Cinematic | |
Alternate universes | Comics | "Real Time" • "Crooked World" • Forever Yesterday • "Age of Apocalypse" • 1602 • Not Brand Echh • Earth-691 • Femizonia • Earth-A • "Days of Future Past" • Mutant X • Crusader X • Marvel Zombies • Knights 2099 • The End • Askani • Noir • Apes • Larval • Nth Man • Last Avengers • Ruins • Earth X • Marvel Nemesis • Spider-Man: India • House of M • Bullet Points • Spider-Man: Reign • Old Man Logan • "Age of X" • Zombies Return • Age of Ultron • "Onslaught" • Spider-Verse • Secret Wars |
Filmed | Anime | |
Parallel universes | Earth-S/Squadron Supreme • Supreme Power • Paradise X Hyperion | |
Pocket universes | Asgard • Avalon • Counter-Earth • Darkforce Dimension • Heliopolis • K'ai • K'un-L'un • Limbo • Microverse • Mojoverse • Negative Zone • Olympus • Otherplace • Therea | |
Megaverse universes | Amalgam • New Universe • newuniversal • Razorline • Shadowline • The Transformers • Transformers (UK) • Ultraverse • Genesis • Star Comics • CrossGen | |
Alternate versions of characters | Beast • Black Widow • Captain America • Colossus • Cyclops • Daredevil • Dr Doom • Dr Strange • Gambit • Green Goblin • Hawkeye • Hulk • Human Torch • Iron Man • Magneto • Mr. Fantastic • Nightcrawler • Phoenix • Psylocke • Punisher • Rogue • Shadowcat • Spider-Man • Storm • Thing • Thor • Venom • Mary Jane Watson • Wolverine • Professor Xavier | |
Related articles | Captain Britain Corps • Exiles • Illuminati • Infinity Gems • M'Kraan Crystal • Siege Perilous • What If...? • Spider-Man: Shattered Dimensions • Edge of Time • Marvel: Avengers Alliance • Spider-Man Unlimited • Marvel: Contest of Champions • Marvel: Future Fight |