Where part four peeled back the emotional architecture beneath Peter Parker’s mask, part five widens the lens to the storm gathering around our web-slinging hero.
Marvel’s upcoming Death Spiral crossover is set to collide Spider-Man and the symbiote corner of the Marvel Universe in a story built around fractured relationships, shifting identities, and a new villain targeting Parker at his most vulnerable. Launching this week, the storyline spins directly out of Amazing Spider-Man, Venom, and Eddie Brock: Carnage, beginning with Amazing Spider-Man/Venom: Death Spiral #1 before unfolding across multiple issues through April.
The event unites three of Marvel’s key voices in symbiote storytelling: Joe Kelly (Amazing Spider-Man), Al Ewing (Venom), and Charles Soule (Eddie Brock: Carnage). Working alongside artists Ed McGuinness, Carlos Gómez, and Jesús Saíz, the crossover brings Spider-Man, Venom, Carnage, and Mary Jane Watson (now bonded with Venom) into direct conflict with Torment, a new serial killer villain who targets Parker and those he holds dear. The story leans heavily into the complicated emotional history tying these characters together, turning long-standing relationships into pressure points that threaten to tear apart Spider-Man’s often tenuous world.

Courtesy of Marvel.
Kelly positions Death Spiral as a story about returning home to chaos. Peter’s absence from Earth has left unresolved problems waiting to explode upon his return.
“He’ll be back from space,” Kelly said. “I don’t think that’ll be a big surprise to anybody. He has to try to put his life in order and figure out what’s what.”
Identity confusion complicates the situation, as multiple figures have operated under Spider-Man’s symbol as of late. As seen last week, Ben handled Peter’s work with little thanks, and even Norman handled being Spider-Man with mixed results.
Kelly described Peter’s emotional condition as fragile and uncertain, adding, “He’s already feeling a little bit disconnected, a little insecure.”
The event accelerates when Peter begins catching up on the communication he missed while off-world.
“When he finally gets his phone…one of those messages sort of sets him off,” Kelly said. That message signals the arrival of catastrophic danger: “Very, very bad things are afoot in Death Spiral,” Kelly said.
Kelly also revealed that one of Spider-Man’s most terrifying scenarios has suddenly become a reality.
“One of the messages is, ‘Oh, by the way, Carnage knows,’” Kelly said, referring to his secret identity. He described the revelation as deeply destabilizing, adding, “That is the nightmare scenario.”

Courtesy of Marvel.
At its core, Kelly says Death Spiral’s thematic focus centers on family and interconnected relationships.
“We honed in a lot on family,” Kelly said. In turn those familial consequences will echo throughout future Spider-Man stories: “There are a bunch of things that happen in this that have ramifications down the road,” Kelly said.
Kelly also teased that the event’s emotional fallout directly connects to upcoming milestone storytelling, explaining that “Peter’s world specifically is going to get rocked.”
Death Spiral serves as both climax and catalyst. By destabilizing Peter’s emotional foundation, Kelly prepares Spider-Man for the next stage of his journey, where the consequences of trauma, identity, and responsibility converge in ways that could permanently alter Peter Parker’s future.
If you haven’t already, be sure to read part one, part two, part three, and part four. And for even more Spider-Man goodness from Kelly, check out his recent appearance on the AIPT Comics Podcast.
Upcoming Release Schedule
- Part VI: The road to Amazing Spider-Man #1000 (Thursday 2/26)
- Part VII: Legacy reflections, Sal Buscema, and MAD About DC (Tuesday 3/3)


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