Many years later, Spider-Man learned from the High Evolutionary that Warren had not achieved cloning but had instead created a genetic virus that could transform existing human beings into what seemed to be genetic duplicates of other people. The Spider-Amoeba suffocated Carrion, smothering him to death, and then unable to escape it perished in the fire. In the subsequent fight a fire consumed the laboratory whilst the amoeba latched onto Carrion. However Parker freed himself and became Spider-Man. Carrion captured Peter Parker and prepared to kill him with a giant "Spider-Amoeba" created by cloning cells from Parker. As Warren's clone, Carrion blamed Spider-Man for the deaths of both Warren and Gwen Stacy and sought to bring him to justice with the help of a malleable student named Randy Vale. Something went wrong and the clone's body became like a living corpse. Warren had created the clone and left it in a capsule to mature to full development however Warren had then (seemingly) died and the clone was left developing in the capsule with artificially accelerated age. Ĭarrion sought to destroy Parker/Spider-Man several times before capturing Spider-Man and revealing to him that he was a decayed clone of Professor Miles Warren, also known as the Jackal. He attacked Peter Parker, blaming him for the death of Gwen Stacy. He unsuccessfully approached the Maggia with a plan to kill Spider-Man. The original Carrion first appeared seeking to destroy Spider-Man, somehow knowing that his secret identity was Peter Parker. Fictional character biography Miles Warren clone McBride was created by Sal Buscema and Gerry Conway in The Spectacular Spider-Man #149 (April 1989). William Allen first appeared in Spider-Man: Dead Man's Hand #1 (April 1997), created by Roger Stern and Dan Lawlis. No fewer than three separate incarnations have been encountered. Often these changes took place in stories which did not directly involve Carrion, resulting in further stories trying to tie up gaps. His history has been retconned several times as successive writers changed the status of the various clones, the plans and motivations of Professor Miles Warren and other aspects from the stories. Carrion emerged as part of a storyline that was a sequel to the original Clone Saga and as a result he has one of the most complicated histories of any Spider-Man villain. The Miles Warren clone version of Carrion first appeared in The Spectacular Spider-Man #25 and was created by Bill Mantlo, Jim Mooney, and Frank Springer. The character is usually depicted as an enemy of Spider-Man. Spectacular Spider-Man #25 (December 1978)Ĭarnage Family/ Maximum Carnage (as Malcolm McBride)Ībility to disintegrate organic matter at a touchĬarrion is a fictional character, a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Interior artwork from Spider-Man: The Jackal Files vol.
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