Information about Benjamin Parker

This article is about the Spider-Man comic book character. For the brand of rice and other foods, see Uncle Ben's.


Uncle Ben

Marvel Comics
First appearanceAmazing Fantasy #15
Stan Lee
Steve Ditko
Character Information
Full NameBenjamin Parker
Status
Supporting Character ofSpider-Man


Benjamin "Ben" Parker, usually called Uncle Ben, was a supporting character in the Marvel Universe’s Spider-Man stories. He was created by writer Stan Lee and artist Steve Ditko.

Parker was the uncle and adoptive father of Peter Parker, Spider-Man’s alter ego. He first appeared in Amazing Fantasy #15 (August 1962) and, in that issue, was killed by a burglar that Spider-Man declined to pursue earlier. This incident forever propelled Spider-Man into the role of superhero.

Although his history as a supporting character was very brief, Uncle Ben is an overshadowing figure in Spider-Man’s life, often appearing in flashbacks.

Arguably, Ben actually first appeared in a story titled "Goodbye to Linda Brown," scripted by Lee and drawn by Ditko, in June 1962 in Strange Tales #97, two months before Spider-Man's debut. In the story, May and Ben appear as they do in the Spider-Man adventures, with the same first names but no last name given. The story revolves around their niece, Linda Brown, a wheelchair-bound teenaged girl whom they are raising. In the final scene she turns out to be a mermaid (her legs were always concealed under a blanket) and returns to the sea. This story has never been incorporated into the Spider-Man story continuum. The girl's last name, Brown, suggests that she is the daughter of a different sibling from Peter Parker's parents. When the story was reprinted in Marvel Tales #83 in 1977, an editor introduced it, writing, "The resemblance is startling! Are these people the Parkers? Only Stan and Steve know -- and they're not talking!"

Fictional character biography

Ben Parker was born in Brooklyn, New York. He had known his future wife May Reilly since their high school days, but she in turn was naively interested in a boy who was involved in criminal activities. When he came to her one night and proposed to her on the spot, Ben was there to expose him as a murderer, and to comfort the heart-broken May when the boy was arrested. Their relationship evolved into love, and they enjoyed a happily married life. When Ben's much younger brother, Richard Parker and his wife Mary, were killed in a plane crash, Ben and May took in their orphaned son Peter and raised him. Peter grows to love both.

Ben was eventually killed by a burglar (Carradine[1]), who had come to the Parker residence looking for a hidden stash of money (unaware that it had already been devoured by silverfish). Peter subsequently captures the killer, and was horrified to realize that it was the same burglar who he could have captured earlier, except that he had chosen to not get involved.

As a result, Peter considers himself morally responsible for Ben's death, and resolved to fight crime as a superhero, vowing to always take his responsibilities seriously. Aunt May later reveals that she felt responsible for the tragedy, as she and Ben had argued a little while before the burglar arrives. She felt that if they had not had the argument, Ben would not have been where he was when confronting the burglar. Ben Parker's death was truly avenged when Carradine returns for the money once more, threatening Aunt May. Carradine dies from a heart attack upon beholding his old nemesis Spider-Man once again.

Alternate Versions

Bullet Points

In this alternate reality, a young Ben Parker is working as a military policeman. He is assigned to security for Doctor Erskine, a scientist for the Captain America program. An assassination attempt on Erskine succeeds, killing Ben in the process. Later on, May still attempts to raise Peter on her own, but without the influence of Ben, Peter grows up to be angry, cynical and mean-spritied.

Ultimate Ben Parker

Ben Parker in Ultimate Spider-Man differs slightly from the original Ben Parker. In the Ultimate Spider-Man comics, Ben Parker is younger than his original counterpart. He is also a former hippie who wears his hair in a ponytail and teaches Peter to be nonviolent. Parker also reminisces about the period he lived on a commune in the first issue of Ultimate Spider-Man.

"With great power there must also come great responsibility"

The often-quoted Spider-Man theme of "with great power there must also come great responsibility" is widely attributed to Uncle Ben. However, this was not initially true. In Amazing Fantasy #15, the phrase appears in a narrative caption in the comic's last panel, not as spoken dialogue. In fact, Ben has only two lines in the entire comic.

However, later stories and flashbacks that took place when Ben was still alive retroactively made the phrase one of Ben's many homilies he would lecture Peter with. Recent reinterpretations of Spider-Man, such as the Spider-Man movie and the Ultimate Spider-Man comic, depict Ben as using this phrase while he is still alive.

Notability

Uncle Ben was notable as one of the few Comic book deaths that stuck (along with Gwen Stacy). He was a member of the "Big Three", referring also to Jason Todd and Bucky whose notable deaths, along with Ben's, gave way to the phrase "No one in comics stays dead except for Bucky, Jason Todd, and Uncle Ben". Later, the revivals of both Bucky and Jason in 2005 led to the amendment, "No one in comics stays dead except Uncle Ben". In fact, if one includes the Ultimate Marvel rebooted continuity, Uncle Ben is the only one to have stayed dead across all major continuities.

There have been examples of Uncle Ben remaining alive, including stories featured in Marvel's What If (in which he forces Peter to unmask in front of J. Jonah Jameson), and a storyline of the 1994 Spider-Man animated series featured a universe where Uncle Ben had never died, and Peter Parker became a successful industrialist, having never really bothered to use his powers responsibly as everything always seemed to work out for him. This fact is used to defeat the rampaging Spider-Carnage by exposing him to the one person he will trust and listen to; the Uncle Ben of that reality.

A storyline in Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man has suggested that Ben may be alive. This Ben, however, was actually from an alternate timeline where Aunt May died in a random accident, leaving him to raise Peter. This alternate Ben came to the 616 reality as part of a plot devised by the Hobgoblin of 2211 to defeat the Spider-Men of different eras. Here he met the 616 version of May Parker, still alive. Confronting her, he ended up in a fight with Jarvis, with whom she at the time has a relationship with. Lacking direction, Ben wandered into an alleyway where he encountered a shadowy figure who told him that any action he takes would simply create another universe where he took the opposite action. After this Hobgoblin was erased from history by a Retcon Bomb of her own invention, the Spider-Man of 2211 met with what he presumed to be the same Ben Parker to take him back to his own timeline. In a surprise twist, deciding he rather wanted to "stick around for a while", this Ben Parker shot this future Spider-Man. At the same time, another Ben Parker was shown dead in the alley, meaning one Ben Parker had killed the other and taken his place.

It was revealed that the Ben Parker who had died in the alleyway was the Uncle Ben of the alternate reality, while the Ben Parker who killed Spider-Man 2211 was, in actuality, the Chameleon of 2211.

In other media

Television

In , he was voiced by Brian Keith. He appeared in the series as a spirit talking to Spider-Man whenever he was frustrated in a mission or missions. The spirit of Uncle Ben first appeared in Mysterio's debut episode. It was revealed, like in the comics, in the second episode of the third season that Ben was killed by a crook Peter let go from a wrestling ring, causing him to turn into Spider-Man. In the series finale of the show, when Spider-Man had to stop the evil Spider-Carnage from destroying all reality, they were in a reality where Uncle Ben didn't die and Spider-Man used him to make Spider-Carnage reformed. Spider-Carnage turned good and prevented the destruction of reality. Unfortunately, he couldn't get rid of the symbiote. So he created a portal that would cause anything inside of it disintegrate and jumped in, committing suicide. Seconds after Spider-Carnage's death, although they lived in different realities, Spider-Man and Ben hugged, with Ben saying that he was proud of his different-reality nephew and Spider-Man said that he'll always have him in his heart.

Films

Spider-Man

Enlarge picture
Cliff Robertson as Uncle Ben with Tobey Maguire as Peter Parker in Spider-Man.
In the Spider-Man film series, Ben Parker is played by Cliff Robertson and his character remains faithful to the comics, including his being shot by a criminal his nephew Peter failed to stop. He appeared in the first film as a father figure for Peter. The amiable Uncle Ben is fired from his job as chief electrician for 35 years and worries about his nephew's strange behavior. His words of wisdom, "With great power comes great responsibility," inspires Peter to become Spider-Man. But Peter lashes out at him during this speech, telling him to stop acting like his father. Peter and his aunt greatly mourn his passing.

Spider-Man 2

The second film features a sequence where Peter contemplates giving up his Spider-Man identity to Uncle Ben who, in the flashback, is a physical representation of the entity and ideology of Spider-Man, encouraging Peter to continue on as a superhero.

Spider-Man 3

Robertson returns in a flashback scene (as well as a dream sequence) in the third film. In the film Captain George Stacy tells Peter and Aunt May of new evidence that suggests the thug Peter failed to stop in the first film was only an accomplice of Flint Marko (Sandman), who was Uncle Ben's real killer; Peter then imagines Marko throwing Ben out of the car and gunning him down in cold blood. Robertson appears again at the end of the film during a more accurate flashback, as Marko explains to Peter that he really wanted Ben to run, but his partner's interference caused Marko to pull the trigger by accident when Ben was trying to reason with the man and show him the error in his ways. Seeing the truth, Spider-Man forgives Marko just before he slips away.

Franklin Richards's Uncle Ben

Franklin Richards of the Fantastic Four often refers to Benjamin Grimm, the Thing, as "Uncle Ben". Franklin Richards and Peter Parker also have the same middle name, Benjamin, as the Thing and Ben Parker are their namesakes. Spider-Man is aware of this, and told Franklin, "Uncle Bens are always right."

The son of Spider-Man

In Amazing Spider-Man #500, Spider-Man falls through time, encountering all of his enemies from the past, and sees himself in the future. The future Peter Parker tells him that he should tell Mary Jane and their son that he loves them every day. "Our son is called Ben", he says, "but it would pretty much have to be, wouldn't it?" However, because of the way time-travel in the Marvel universe works, it should be noted that this is only a potential future, not necessarily a definite one.

Spider-Girl's Uncle Ben

Main article: Spider-Girl
Like her father, Spider-Girl also has an Uncle Ben. However, unlike her dad, May never knew her uncle: Ben Reilly, Spider-Man's clone. If Spider-Girl has any children in the future, they too would have an Uncle Ben - May's baby brother.

References

1. ^ Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe: Spider-Man 2005

External links

Uncle Ben’s is a brand name for parboiled (“converted”) rice and related food products. Owned by Mars, Inc. in the U.S. by its subsidiary Masterfoods, the brand was first used by a company called Converted Rice Inc. which was later bought by Mars.
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New York City

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Birth name Stephen Ditko
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An alter ego (Latin, "the other I") is a second self, a second personality or persona within a person. It was coined in the early nineteenth century when schizophrenia was first described by early psychologists.
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Amazing Fantasy was a comic book anthology series published by Marvel Comics. It is best known as the title that introduced the popular character Spider-Man. Other Marvel anthology series during the same time period include Tales of Suspense and
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superhero (also known as a super hero) is fictional character "of unprecedented, physical prowess dedicated to acts of derring-do in the public interest.” [1]
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In history, film, television and other media, a flashback (also called analepsis) is an interjected scene that takes the narrative back in time from the current point the story has reached.
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May Reilly Parker, commonly known as Aunt May, is a supporting character in Marvel Comics' Spider-Man series. Created by writer Stan Lee and artist Steve Ditko, she first appeared as May Parker in Amazing Fantasy #15 (August 1962).
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Carradine, frequently referred to as simply the burglar, is a fictional character in the Marvel Universe. He is best known as the first criminal faced by Spider-Man, and as the killer of Ben Parker. He first appeared in Amazing Fantasy #15 (August 1962).
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Species: L. saccharina

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Comic Book:
Stan Lee
Steve Ditko
Screenplay:
David Koepp
Alvin Sargent
(uncredited)
Starring Tobey Maguire
Willem Dafoe
Kirsten Dunst
James Franco
Cliff Robertson
Rosemary Harris
Music by Danny Elfman
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Ultimate Spider-Man is a superhero comic book series published by Marvel Comics. The series is a modernized re-imagining of Marvel's long-running Spider-Man comic book franchise.
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Gwendolyn "Gwen" Stacy<ref name="name" /> is a supporting character in Marvel Comics’ Spider-Man series. Created by writer Stan Lee and artist Steve Ditko, she first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man #31 (December 1965).
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