Ultimate Marvel Team-Up
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Ultimate Marvel Team-Up was a Marvel Comics title which ran for 16 issues (plus a concluding Ultimate Spider-Man Super Special), set in the Ultimate Marvel Universe. The whole series starred Spider-Man teaming up with another superhero each issue. The series was written by Brian Michael Bendis, with each arc drawn by a different artist.
Issues, artists and characters
Issue 1
- Starred Spider-Man & Wolverine
- Pencilled and inked by Matt Wagner
Issues #2-3
- Starred Spider-Man & Hulk
- Pencilled by Phil Hester and inked by Ande Parks
Issues #4-5
- Starred Spider-Man & Iron Man
- Pencilled and inked by Mike Allred
Issues #6-8
- Starred Spider-Man, the Punisher (both in issues #6-8) and Daredevil (issues #7 & #8 only)
- Pencilled and inked by Bill Sienkiewicz
Issue #9
- Starred Spider-Man & the Fantastic Four
- Pencilled and inked by Jim Mahfood
- Not in Ultimate Marvel canon
Issue #10
- Starred Spider-Man & the Man-Thing & Dr. Curt Conners
- Pencilled and inked by John Totleben, with "art assistance" by Ron Randall
Issue #11
- Starred Spider-Man & the X-Men
- Pencilled and inked by Chynna Clugston-Major
Issues #12-13
- Starred Spider-Man & Doctor Strange
- Pencilled and inked by Ted McKeever
Issue #14
- Starred Spider-Man & the Black Widow
- Pencilled by Terry Moore and inked by Walden Wong
Issues #15-16
- Starred Spider-Man & Shang-Chi
- Pencilled by Rick Mays and inked by Jason Martin
Ultimate Spider-Man Super Special
- Starred Spider-Man, and all the other headlined characters above, as well as a small appearance by Ultimate Blade
- Art by Alex Maleev, Dan Brereton, John Romita Sr., Al Milgrom, Frank Cho, Jim Mahfood, Scott Morse, Craig Thompson, Michael Avon Oeming, Jason Pearson, Sean Phillips, Mark Bagley, Rodney Ramos, Bill Sienkiewicz, P. Craig Russell, Jacen Burrows, Walden Wong, Leonard Kirk, Terry Pallort, Dave Gibbons, Mike Gaydos, James Kochalka, David Mack, Bret Weldele, Ashley Wood, and Art Thibert
Continuity
Some of the issues have problems with the Ultimate Marvel canon. Brian Michael Bendis has stated that the Fantastic Four issue (#9) was intentionally written to be non-canonical - after all, it features Spider-Man and some Skrulls going on a rampage through the Marvel offices. So this can be discounted straight away.The appearance of the Hulk (issues #2-3) seems fairly inconsistent with later appearances, in terms of the Hulk's strength and his skin colour (later he is grey). One plausible explanation is that the addition of a sample of Captain America's blood to the Hulk serum brought about this change. Unfortunately, the reaction by S.H.I.E.L.D. to the Hulk's being loose in Manhattan suggests that he has always been as fearsome as he is in that issue. However, a panel in Ultimates #2 recounts this story, so Ultimate Marvel Team-Up #2-#3 should be regarded as canonical. Most recently, in the Ultimate Wolverine Vs. Hulk mini-series, it was revealed that the Hulk's color changes from time to time.
With the Iron Man story (issues #4-5), Peter explains the history of Tony Stark - a history which has since been proven false by the Ultimate Iron Man mini-series. However, this has since been explained by editors at Marvel as being a false story put out by Stark Industries to conceal Iron Man's true background.
In Nick Fury's appearances in the series (#5 and #14) he is white, while in his appearances in The Ultimates he is black. Also, in UMTU he has hair - something his 616 counterpart does, but the Ultimate character does not. He also has hair in his appearances in the Weapon X arc of Ultimate X-Men (issues 7-12). As the eye-patch dominates Fury's appearance, and as the hairstyle in UXM is a low-profile 'jar-head' style, it is conceivable that Fury changed his hair-style, opting to shave.
However, other problems are more complex, and revolve around appearances of the Fantastic Four, Doctor Doom and Latveria. The current position by Marvel is that Latveria (which is mentioned a lot through the series) does exist, is a dictatorship, but has nothing to do with Doctor Doom. In fact Latveria has been mentioned since, in the Ultimate Spider-Man video game, where the Beetle comes from Latveria.
So the only continuity issues are with the pictures of Doctor Doom up on the walls of the Latverian Embassy in issue #14, and with the appearance of an older Fantastic Four in the Super Special. In fact this older Fantastic Four is also mentioned in Ultimate Spider-Man #33, and the "Reed Richards Science Center" is mentioned both later in that arc and in the Ultimate Spider-Man video game, while the Science Center could not be named after Reed Richards as he is only a teenager. These misappearances clearly clash with the current iteration of the Ultimate Fantastic Four, but Joe Quesada, Bendis and other editors at Marvel have said that they plan to address these issues in a future Ultimate Fantastic Four arc, rumoured to involve Doctor Doom and time travel.
{|
|Trade Paperbacks
|Number of Issues
|Trade Paperback ISBNs
|-
|Ultimate Marvel Team-Up Vol. 1
|#1-5
|ISBN 0785108076
|-
|Ultimate Marvel Team-Up Vol. 2
|#9-13
|ISBN 0785112995
|-
|Ultimate Marvel Team-Up Vol. 3
|#14-16 & Ultimate Spider-man Special
|ISBN 0785113002
|-
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All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
