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The Amazing Spider-Man (1999) (Collected Editions) #21

The Amazing Spider-Man - Brand new Day 3 (ShoPro Books / Marvel Comics) Manga Comics

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The Amazing Spider-Man - Brand new Day 3 (ShoPro Books / Marvel Comics) Manga Comics. Japanese Titles: スパイダーマン:ブランニュー・デイ 3

120 pages, Tankobon Softcover

First published October 1, 2008

14 people are currently reading
259 people want to read

About the author

Dan Slott

1,996 books451 followers
Dan Slott is an American comic book writer, the current writer on Marvel Comics' The Amazing Spider-Man, and is best known for his work on books such as Arkham Asylum: Living Hell, She-Hulk, Silver Surfer, The Superior Spider-Man, and Ren & Stimpy.

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5 stars
194 (20%)
4 stars
258 (27%)
3 stars
370 (39%)
2 stars
95 (10%)
1 star
29 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 56 reviews
Profile Image for Tina➹ lives in Fandoms.
494 reviews473 followers
March 14, 2022
4.5 Golden Stars

first 5 star, in Spidey comics! (but now I'm thinking maybe giving first Brand New Day a 5 too? the plot was stronger there in general)
well, what can I say? I loved it! good times!
even the side plot was awesome (mainly because of its fun, but the villain was also intriguing & unique)
(tho I'm still not sure if the main thing (spider-tracer) also finished? well, I keep continue reading)

I love the cover!
Profile Image for Wing Kee.
2,091 reviews37 followers
March 24, 2018
Pretty pointless...

World: The art is aight, nothing special nothing memorable. With Brand New Day we get a new status quo and since the first two arcs the world has been back to the past and the status quo is fairly...meh. The new pieces don't really feel anything fresh and the world really does feel like a step back.

Story: The paparazzi storyline is pretty stupid and pretty much against that males Peter...well Peter. It's stupid and long winded and boring. Then we get the gambling story which is even worse. So pointless, so meaningless and a chore. What does this bring???

Characters: Peter is okay. His banter is okay and his sense of humor is pretty good. That being said it's a retread of things past and kinds pointless. Then there's the new villain which looks cool but that's about it. The gambling story is soooo dumb.

Pointless and forgettable...zzz

Onward to the next book!
Profile Image for Subham.
3,072 reviews102 followers
January 11, 2021
This book was horrendous, Peter becomes a Paparazzi and has to go after some movie star while some Paper cut girl is in love with him and it turns into a weird 1960s soap opera which is so corny and Peter leaves DB and then fights some bookie guy whose father is...yeah this book was horrible, I skipped out in the end. Its Peter acting amateurish and annoying and stories are not even worth reading. I understand why people say Dan Slott's run on Spider-man is bad and this volume proves it.
Profile Image for Aaron.
274 reviews79 followers
April 27, 2016
Peter agrees to take on papparazzi jobs for his new boss if it means more money in the bank, which doesn't sit well with his friends. Of course this leads to Spider-Man intervening between a famous actor and the obsessed Paper Doll, and Pete manages to find out who the actor is secretly dating: . Next, Spider-Man takes on the Bookie and the Enforcers, and then the vehicle-enhancing criminal Overdrive makes his first appearance since volume one.

Once again there's a noticeable difference between Dan Slott's writing (fun and modern) and Bob Gale's writing (bordering on silly and clichéd). The "Brand New Day" comes to a close, but plot threads introduced in the first volume are still hanging out there. Entertaining stuff overall, but not quite gripping enough for me to want to push forward from this point. BND is still a good place to jump on board with today's Spider-Man, but the shifting writers are obvious enough to be a minor distraction to me. When I do resume my Spider-Man catch-up, I think I'll jump forward about 100 issues to Big Time where it looks like Slott takes a permanent position as writer.
Profile Image for Noah Williams.
18 reviews49 followers
July 8, 2015
Eh again just like the rest of the Brand New Day series it's just ok. Nothing fancy. MJ is back dating the super star, Peter is a paparazzi. And now living with a cop. There's some great set up for stories but that's about it. I did enjoy the art a lot, probably my favorite part of this series all together
Profile Image for Nicko.
208 reviews1 follower
January 21, 2021
I bought this mostly because I’ve always been a fan of Marcos Martin’s art since I read MYSTERIOSO many years ago. I’ll get to the point — Slott writes a decent Spidey story here, one with the right dilemma, but compromises Peter’s character in doing so. Peter wants to get his life on track and move out of his Aunt May’s, and to get a lot of money quick, agrees to do some paparazzi to shoot a huge celebrity, Bobby Carr. Peter ends up getting shots of him attacking other people due to his fame, and this gets Peter a lot of money. Turns out, the villain of this arc, is a psychotic, obsessive fan girl of Carr’s, and can turn into a thin figure, Paper Doll. The people that Carr ends up attacking in Peter’s photos, end up victims of Doll, because she’s trying to make Carr’s life easier.

The dilemma is there and it’s set up right, it’s just not the right chess pieces. The way Carr is even blended into both Peter and Spidey’s life is good. So Peter hurts for money because he wants to better his life, takes a really sketchy job to get said money. Peter’s life benefits, but in doing so, Spider-Man’s life gets worse due to what Peter’s actions are and he ends up with dead victims of a new supervillain. One life benefits while the other suffers, and thus, should put Peter at a compelling standstill.

Firstly, Peter Parker would never take a morally low job such as being paparazzi. He would find another way especially if it was just to get his own apartment. Slott doesn’t help his case either, since supporting characters like Robbie and Harry are the voice of reason, questioning Peter’s choice. Peter, by the end of the arc, learns his lesson through Carr, who vocalizes what it’s like to be a huge celeb and having his private life made public. The better version, the more “correct” version, would be Peter needing money to afford hospital bills for Aunt May, instead of just wanting to move out and better his life. THEN, if paparazzi was his only choice, he’d have to say yes to it. It’d be a bit more compelling due to what Peter is fighting for and what’s at stake. Here, Peter is just fighting for part of his status as a human being. Which, there’s nothing wrong with that, since Peter is like you and me — he’s more human than superhuman, and has everyday wants and wishes. But saying yes to paparazzi-ing for money to help his own life out was a big red flag to me. Peter is more selfless than selfish. I think that’s where this component suffers..

Secondly, Slott writes a very very lame villain in Paper Doll. There is nothing to it. No further motivation. She is just an obsessive fan girl. No huge revelation of her being an ex co-star of Carr’s or nothing. Just a fan girl. Really boring and pretty lame, making it real easy to dislike her.

You can tell someone else was writing in the last issues of the book, when a low thug on TV calls out Spider-Man to meet him to fight and Peter thinks to himself that he can show up as Peter to at least make sure no one gets hurt. A guy who thinks that, isn’t the same guy to say yes to a paparazzi job, one that involves peaking into, and intruding in people’s lives. That being said, Bob Gale didn’t write much of a better story either, with “The Bookie” being a villain basically about addiction in gambling, with family drama. I will say though.. Gale can write some perfectly spot on Spidey quips..

I will say, the art absolutely delivered with Martin, as well as Mike McKone, who I don’t think I’ve ever seen before but would love to check out what else he’s done..
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Amanda Shepard (Between-the-Shelves).
2,366 reviews45 followers
May 25, 2022
There's nothing that really stands out about this particular volume for me. There were some high stakes fighting scene, and Peter has to deal with the fact that he has a job as paparazzi, and of course we finally get to see MJ. We also still get some of the famous Spider-Man banter, which is probably one of my favorite things about the comics. But I wasn't necessarily sold on the overall story in this volume.

The art wasn't really my favorite thing here either, especially in one of those later issues. I just don't think it was the best of Spider-Man art, and I wanted a little more from the story overall.
Profile Image for Mike.
1,586 reviews149 followers
February 12, 2013
Goofy - the silly Parkour was fine, but the panels of Robbie Robertson silently moralising at Peter is just sad. I know it's written like the old days, but at least write so it doesn't come off as stale or anachronistic.

And seriously - the villain Paper Doll's real name is Piper Dali? For real? That's just revoltingly bad.

Otherwise Slott's writing is pretty good - solid, funny dialogue when Slott's not trying to be clever with the puns, and a slightly interesting moral turnaround for Parker (from paparazzo to decent poor guy again).

Martin's art though is far out - not good, very 60's style, hard to take caricature at all seriously.

I'm not even interested in reading more Gale dreck, but slogged through it anyway for the plot points. Pretty harmless story done a thousand times - the Enforcers and a bookie, a little double cross, a few punches and a good deed for Aunt May. Meh. The only good thing here is trying to address (but really just drag out) the framed-for-murder subplot. At least McKone's art was better than Martin's.
Profile Image for Alli Brooks.
167 reviews61 followers
March 5, 2015
This installment was very OKAY for me.

Paper Doll was super creepy and it was kind of cool seeing some... old characters... pop up, but overall I found this volume to be not as engaging as the previous two.
Profile Image for Michael Emond.
1,283 reviews23 followers
November 12, 2018
The Dan Slott and Marcos Martin three parter is actually a fun read but the two-parter at the end was a huge dud of bad writing and mediocre art.

The Slott story is still not Slott at his best - that was yet to come when he was the primary writer for Spider-man and there wasn't the revolving door of writers (I believe this was because they made the comic come out twice a month). But it had some elements I love of Slott - he had the humour - the history of the character - a message to say and it ended on an optimistic note. This story was about Parker being lured in by the money to become a paparazzi photographer - getting the dirt on celebrities. The villain was an obsessed fan of the celebrity. Some solid art and a fun story.

The two-parter that follows is so forgettable and poorly plotted it is no wonder I have never heard of the writer. The basic idea is there is a guy who places bets on what will happen with super-heroes and villains, when they clash. Kinda. And there is a bar where villains who are wanted can hang out. Ugh. I am writing "ugh" because Spider-man finds this bar and after he gets the info he needs he leaves...leaves behind all the wanted criminals. You know - cause that's what a super-hero deos when he finds a bunch of wanted criminals hanging out. He leaves them to their drinking.

So I have read all 3 of the first volumes of Brand New Day and was not impressed. Better things follow when Slott takes over completely and Spider Island is on its way.
Profile Image for Ian.
1,332 reviews6 followers
September 25, 2025
Peter Parker sells his soul for a lucrative job as a paparazzi photographer, much to the disgust of his friends and peers. However, it becomes a job for Spider-Man when one of the celebrities he's hounding is targeted by the murderous supervillain stalker Paper Doll. He is then forced to track down and confront someone who is impersonating Spider-Man to rig an illegal gambling operation.

I will say this for the storytelling in this book; it does a good job of imitating the style of Spider-Man's iconic 1960s stories (as written by the likes of Stan Lee). This feels like back-to-basics Spider-Man storytelling where he has to overcome some supervillain shenanigans whilst in costume, whilst also juggling a troubled (romantically or financially) private life as Peter Parker.

That said, this book doesn't feel like it has the same soul as those 60s classics. It's very hard to quantify why, but you just don't feel as invested in this story as you would in one of the ones from actual era it's mimicking. On top of that, the artwork here feels like it's trying to capture the retro style of Darwyn Cooke, but somewhat unsuccessfully.

* More reviews here: https://fsfh-book-review2.webnode.page *
Profile Image for Mr. Stick.
445 reviews
June 29, 2025
"LOOK AT YOU. A GROWN MAN IN FOOTIE PAJAMAS. BET YOU STILL LIVE AT HOME IN YOUR MOM'S BASEMENT!"
- Screwball to Spider-Man (who, by the way, lives with his aunt... so there!).

Meet Screwball, a live-streaming super(ish) villain who does parkour and smart-ass comments.
Then, a two-dimensional villain who's stalking a Hollywood movie star. Finally, an original idea.
Finally, the Bar With No Name (favorite watering hole of super-villains), multi-generational bookies, and counterfeit Spider-Men.
Overall, very cool. Four stars.
Profile Image for Frédéric.
1,974 reviews86 followers
August 17, 2025
2 different storylines in this TPB. The first one from Slott and Martin is quite nice. Pete becomes a paparrazzo to make ends meet and tries to rationalise how he fell so low while fighting a villain who has the merit of being original. Nothing transcendent but enjoyable with a nice graphic part.

The second by Gale and McKone is more anecdotal and involves a rogue bookie - ain't they all? Having said that, these episodes are light and the bookie's family relationships are pretty funny.

All in all, a totally dispensable volume, but not unpleasant to read.
Profile Image for Rocky Sunico.
2,277 reviews25 followers
June 21, 2019
Still going through my journey through the earlier Slott books and this definitely feels like part of the getting into the groove books. It had interesting moments with the whole "Peter Parker becomes a paparazzi photographer" and a Mary Jane tease as well. But the book still feels a little raw or like they don't quite know how to flesh out their ideas just yet but will get there.
Profile Image for Kris Shaw.
1,423 reviews
July 26, 2024
Brand New Day is amazing! These feel like authentic Spider-Man stories in the tradition of Stan Lee, Gerry Conway, Roger Stern, and Tom DeFalco. The Spidey “brain trust” of Gale, Guggenheim, Slott and Wells really seem to get what Spider-Man is all about.
33 reviews
October 18, 2025
Bu ciltte iki hikaye var ilki Peter' ın paparazzilik yaptığı ve enteresan bir hikaye. Farklı bir villian ve olay örgüsü olduğu için sevdim. Ancak bahis olayları ile ilgili olan 2. hikaye baya sıkıcıydı.
Profile Image for Roman Colombo.
Author 4 books35 followers
June 24, 2019
The more I thought about this volume, the more I liked it. At first, it felt like we were treading water, but there are actually some important developments to the character of Peter Parker.
Profile Image for Fuuma.
320 reviews6 followers
January 13, 2020
Got a little more exciting toward the end, but still not that fun of a read.
Profile Image for ilham.
64 reviews
April 10, 2022
rating: 3.5* | can we just take a moment to appreciate the artwork I'M OBSESSED
Profile Image for Max Libros.
18 reviews
November 3, 2023
La historia de Peter Parker siendo un papparazzi (es con dos p?) es god y la historia de los weones que apuestan por peleas de spider-man tambien es god, god.
Profile Image for Adam Gent.
12 reviews3 followers
May 11, 2014
Spider Man: Brand New Day Volume 3

The DB, New York's trashiest tabloid, has just hired the sleaziest, most muckraking, lowlife paparazzi of them all...PETER PARKER?! Plus: It's web-slinger vs. wall-crawler as we answer the question - who is The Other Spider-Man?

Written by Bob Gale
Written by Dan Slott
Pencils: Marcos Martin
Pencils: Mike McKone
Review by Adam Gent

This is my fourth ‘comic’ book I have read and the third in the Brand New Day series. Again, I have tried to keep the formatting of my reviews in the same way as my books…but obviously with added extras.

Plot/Storyline

Picking up from volume 2 after the snow-storm and a tussle with an Aztec god, the start of the comic starts off with a fast paced chase through New York as Spidey goes after a new villain; Screwball whpo is also a Parkour master. The pace of the story does not slow from their as Peter and Spidey swing from one situation to another, however, I as the reader did not feel confused or lost myself at any point.
The only time when the story did seem to slow was near the end in the ‘Bookie’ storyline – which is the one story I did not really enjoy. The villains weren’t very exciting and the story seemed to be fuelled by one man’s greed, just didn’t click with me. The one aspect of the story I did enjoy was the Peter Parker paparazzi plot, which revolved around the obsessive villain and Parker’s new job.
Peter faced a dilemma which many people hero faced the ethical morals of the media – to take sleazy pictures whilst invading peoples’ private space or to not take pictures?

Characters

I enjoyed the character of Peter Parker much more in volume 3 than I had done in the previous 2 volumes. He seemed a bit more of a real character grounded with more real world decisions driven by money, which I think many of us can relate to, leading him to take the paparazzi job. It is one of the reasons I really like the character of Spider-man/Peter Parker, he is always juggling decisions about his life and saving lives – which can cost of friendships. So, as usual Parkers’ friends and family dislike his decision to become a photographic stooge, which causes conflicts between the characters (which I must admit make the story a lot more interesting to read).

Two other characters I surprisingly enjoyed were Bob Carr the famous actor and the News tycoon, Baxter Bennet. Both quite stereotypical characters but I think for this plot, there stereotypical actions (news driven tycoon and angry famous celebrity trying keep the pap at bay) drove a lot of plot along.

Villains

Just thought I would add this as after reading 4 comics, I already know the villain for me, as a reader, is a big part of why I would pick up any comic. The villains in volume 3 are a lot weaker and less interesting than in previous work in this series (maybe it is just me). The only villain who would stand out would be the compressed doll girl which is a part of the Parker paparazzi storyline – which as I have already mentioned is plot in this volume.

Artwork

The artwork (I am by no means an expert) was similar to that of volume 1 and 2 of brand new day. I think my favourite art/story panes involved the compressed girl, who was a 2D character in a 3D world. I think the artists (pencilists?) did a great job of capturing her.

Overall I think Spider-man Brand New Day volume 3 is worth a read. It has a good solid plot at the start which is fast paced, with solid character development for the main character Peter Parker and some of the secondary characters even stand out. The villains are not as interesting as the others which have popped up in the Brand New Day series (Freak springs to mind) but the plot and characters kept it going for me.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 56 reviews

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