Venom: Lethal Protector (1993) provided art for the first three issues of
Venom inaugural title. • Writer:
David Michelinie •
Penciler:
Mark Bagley (#1–3),
Ron Lim (#4–6) •
Inker:
Al Milgrom (#1–4), Sam de la Rosa (#1–6) The initial six-part series was published between February and July 1993. The story follows former reporter
Eddie Brock, (first introduced in Amazing Spider-Man #298 (March 1988) and as Venom in Amazing Spider-Man #299 (April 1988)) as a villain and enemy of the superhero
Spider-Man. In his appearances in
The Amazing Spider-Man, Brock blames Spider-Man for ending his career by debunking one of his stories. He bonds with the
Venom symbiote, a sentient alien that had previously bonded with (and been rejected by) Spider-Man. Together, Brock and the symbiote become Venom. In
The Amazing Spider-Man #375, Brock makes peace with Spider-Man after he saves Brock's wife (Anne Weying) from death. Brock then moves back to his home city of San Francisco for a fresh start, starting the events of
Venom: Lethal Protector.
Venom: Lethal Protector initiated the character's transition from unambiguous villain to anti-hero, and introduced several new characters (including Venom's symbiote offspring
Scream,
Phage,
Riot,
Lasher and
Agony, who would recur in Marvel comics until the 2011
Carnage, U.S.A. limited series, vigilante group
The Jury, its creator
General Orwell Taylor, the
Sentry,
Bomblast,
Ramshot,
Screech and Firearm). According to North American comic distributor
Diamond Comic Distributors (DCD) and former distributor
Capital City Distribution,
Venom: Lethal Protector #1 was the bestselling issue of December 1992 and DCD's overall third-bestselling issue of DCD's bestselling 300 titles of 1992. On DCD's 1993 list, subsequent issues gradually dropped in sales:
Venom: Lethal Protector #2 (placed at number 44), #3 (45), #4 (56), #5 (90) and #6 (120).
Venom: Deathtrap: The Vault (1993) • Writer:
Danny Fingeroth • Penciler: Ron Lim • Inker: Jim Sanders,
Fred Fredericks This
one-shot issue was published in March 1993. The story was originally published in graphic-novel form in 1991 as
Avengers-Deathtrap: The Vault (1991), but was later reprinted under the
Venom label. As a result, the fictional events precede those of
Venom: Lethal Protector and are referenced in that series. The issue follows a supervillain prison outbreak at
The Vault, led by Brock, that allows the inmates to overrun the prison and take its staff hostage. The Avengers and
Freedom Force attempt to defeat the villains in a race against time because the prison's final fail-safe, a powerful explosive device, has been activated by Vault warden
Truman Marsh. DCD estimated that the comic was their 13th-bestselling
trade paperback of 1993.
Venom: Funeral Pyre (1993) • Writer:
Carl Potts • Penciler:
Tom Lyle • Inker: Scott Hanna, Al Milgrom and
Joe Rubinstein This was a three-part series published between August and October 1993. The story continued Brock's adventures in San Francisco, dealing with street gangs in an uneasy alliance with the
Punisher, and saw the creation of the villain Pyre. According to DCD's 300 bestselling issues of 1993,
Venom: Funeral Pyre #1 was number 72; sales declined for
Funeral Pyre #2 and #3, which appeared at numbers 238 and 295 respectively.
Venom: The Madness (1993–1994) • Writer:
Ann Nocenti • Penciler:
Kelley Jones • Inker:
John Beatty (#1–3), Al Milgrom (#3),
Keith Williams (#3) A three-part series published between November 1993 and January 1994, the series introduces attorney Beck as a love interest for Brock. When Beck pursues a lawsuit against Scarmore Industries for employees poisoned by a sentient liquid-mercury virus, Venom is injured trying to protect her from the
Juggernaut's kidnap attempt. The symbiote is submerged and infected with the sentient virus (which heals Brock), bonding with the pair and introducing a third mind into their relationship. The virus drives Brock insane (causing him to murder a cleaning lady), and he is physically transported to the realm of insanity to confront its avatars: Paranoia, Dusk and the Necromancer. The symbiote overcomes the virus; Brock regains his senses, and Venom is returned to earth. Beck later insists on only being Brock's friend, because his romantic feelings for her make him more violent. Among DCD's 300 bestselling issues of 1993
Venom: The Madness #1 was number 173; the remaining issues did not chart.
Venom: Enemy Within (1994) • Writer:
Bruce Jones • Penciler:
Bob McLeod • Inker: Bob McLeod (#1–2), Harry Candelario (#3) In a three-part series published between February and April 1994, Brock attempts to save San Francisco as it is besieged by an army of goblins.
Morbius the Living Vampire and the
Demogoblin are magically transported from New York; Morbius joins Brock to defeat the goblins, led by criminal-turned-politician Charles Palentine (who wears a magic necklace which controls the goblins). Palentine uses fear of the goblin attacks to seize control of the city and convince its citizens to burn it down. Demogoblin takes the necklace, and the liberated goblins attack Palentine. Demogoblin then leads the goblins across the Golden Gate Bridge, ordering them to leap to their deaths. Demogoblin and Morbius then leave for New York. Of DCD's 300 bestselling issues of 1994,
Venom: Enemy Within #2 was number 286; the remaining issues did not chart.
Venom: The Mace (1994) • Writer: Carl Potts • Penciler:
Liam Sharp • Inker:
Bill Reinhold A three-part series published between May and July 1994, this series introduces the superhuman hit man Mace and the secretive Sunrise Society that created him. Continuing Brock's adventures in San Francisco,
Venom: The Mace sees him confront (and later join forces with) Mace to defeat a squadron of Sunrise Society soldiers sent to capture Mace. A subplot involves some people Brock protects, who steal from the needy. When he learns what they have done, Brock promises Beck he will banish them from the community; he kills them instead, concealing the truth from her. According to DCD's 300 bestselling issues of 1994,
Venom: The Mace #1 was number 255; the remaining issues did not chart.
Venom: Nights of Vengeance (1994) wrote two
Venom limited series (including 1994's
Venom: Separation Anxiety), which led to the five-part 1995 "
Planet of the Symbiotes". • Writer:
Howard Mackie • Penciler: Ron Lim • Inker: Al Milgrom In a four-part series published between August and November 1994, Brock teams up with the anti-hero
Vengeance to fight the Stalkers, a group of alien-technology-enhanced humans who have kidnapped Beck (and others) with Venom's protection. This series also introduces another romantic interest for Brock (Elizabeth, a doctor) in addition to Beck. It also begins a plot thread in which Brock is informed that there are other symbiotic hosts like himself.
Venom: Separation Anxiety (1994–1995) • Writer: Howard Mackie • Penciler: Ron Randall • Inker: Sam de la Rosa A four-part series published between December 1994 and March 1995, the story covers the return of Venom's offspring (Scream, Lasher, Phage, Riot, and Agony), who are seeking aid to control their symbiotes, and the murder of Lasher, Phage, Riot and Agony's hosts by Scream (who has become insane). The storyline also raised the question of whether Brock or the Venom symbiote was in control, leading into the five-part crossover story "
Planet of the Symbiotes" in 1995.
Venom: Carnage Unleashed (1995) wrote eight
Venom limited series between 1995 and 1998, including the concluding series
Venom: The Finale (1997) • Writer:
Larry Hama • Penciler:
Andrew Wildman (#1-4), Art Nichols (#1-Finishes) • Inker: Joe Rubinstein In a four-part series published between April and July 1995, Brock returns to New York City in pursuit of supervillain
Carnage after learning about
Carnage Unleashed, a video game based on Carnage's rampage in
Maximum Carnage (1993). Carnage discovers a method of transporting his symbiote through phone lines, which he uses to hack computers and attack people playing the game. He escapes from the Ravencroft asylum and kidnaps his caregiver, Dr. Pazzo. Venom confronts Carnage in cyberspace, before Pazzo douses Carnage in flammable liquid and sets him ablaze. Venom saves Carnage from dying, reasoning that death is what he wants. A subplot has Brock meeting Kirstin, a young musician. When Brock accidentally paralyzes her boyfriend Clive, Kirstin asks her mother to avenge him; this storyline continues in
Venom: Sinner Takes All.
Venom: Sinner Takes All (1995) • Writer: Larry Hama • Penciler: Greg Luzniak (#1–4), Ted Halsted (#5) • Inker: Scott Koblish (#1–2),
Jimmy Palmiotti (#3, #5) Ken Branch (#3), Keith Aiken (#4), Jeff Albrecht (#4), Ralph Cabrera (#5) A five-part series published between August and December 1995, it marks the first appearance of
She-Venom after the symbiote bonds with Brock's wife Ann to save her from gunshot wounds. It also features the debut of a new
Sin-Eater, Michael Engelschwert, following the death of the original. The story concludes the plotline begun in
Venom: Carnage Unleashed with Kirstin's mother, a skilled assassin, trying to kill Venom and killing the Sin-Eater. Each issue also contained an installment (or backup story) of the four-part "Tour of Jury Duty", detailing the initiation of former Vault guard Jennifer Stewart into the Jury as
Wysper. She fights (and kills) the second
Tarantula, a supervillain who murdered Wysper's husband during the riot in
Venom: Deathtrap-The Vault. The series also features the return of the vigilante, Sentry.
Venom: Along Came a Spider (1996) • Writer: Larry Hama • Penciler: Joe St. Pierre (#2–4),
Tom Grindberg (#2) • Inker:
Randy Emberlin (#1-2, #4), Mark McKenna (#2–4), Rodney Ramos (#2), Greg Adams (#2) A four-part series published between January and April 1996, the story begins with the New York Police Department using Brock's wife, Ann, to trap him. Brock sends the symbiote to Ann, turning her into She-Venom again and letting her escape. In issue #3, Ann is afraid of the symbiote's influence and refuses to have anything to do with Brock while he wears it. This plotline is resolved in
The Amazing Spider-Man Vol. 2 #19 (2000), in which Ann's experience with the symbiote triggers her suicide. The story includes contemporary Spider-Man
Ben Reilly trying to bring Venom to justice. The series also contained the four-part backup story, "Hybrid", with the Phage, Riot, Lasher and Agony symbiotes combining into a new symbiote which joins with former Vault guard Scott Washington to create the anti-hero
Hybrid. The events of "Planet of the Symbiotes" take place during "Hybrid", with the defeat of the symbiotes in that story creating the Hybrid.
Venom: The Hunted (1996) provided art for
Venom: The Hunted. • Writer: Larry Hama • Penciler:
Duncan Rouleau • Inker: John Stageland A three-part series published between May and July 1996, it references the symbiote invasion in
Planet of the Symbiotes as a symbiote-eating alien (the Xenophage) arrives on earth to hunt the remaining symbiotes. Scream returns as an anti-hero after the events of
Venom: Separation Anxiety to protect the hosts of the invasion symbiotes. Venom is hunted by the police, who blame it for the murders committed by the Xenophage. Venom and Scream kill the Xenophage and escape their police pursuit. The series contained a three-part backup story featuring Hybrid. He is captured by the Jury, now under the command of Orwell's son Maxwell and dealing with criminals through the legal process. Washington and his symbiote are put on trial as criminals. The Jury's guards include many of Hybrid's former co-workers, including Sentry. The
New Warriors try to free Hybrid, who is ultimately released.
Venom: The Hunger (1996) • Writer: Len Kaminski • Penciler: Ted Halsted • Inker: Scott Koblish A four-part series published between August and November 1996,
Venom: The Hunger introduces the Venom symbiote's reliance on
phenethylamine for survival (which requires it to eat human brains after depleting Brock's supply of the chemical) and reveals that chocolate is a source of the chemical. Brock refuses to eat human brains; the symbiote abandons him, and he is locked in an asylum under the care of the deranged Dr. Paine. Brock escapes to hunt the symbiote, which has gone on a killing spree to obtain brains. He reunites with the symbiote (after finding that
chocolate is an alternative source of the chemical), but Paine steals the symbiote for himself. Brock frees the symbiote, and again becomes Venom.
Venom: Tooth and Claw (1996-1997) • Writer: Larry Hama • Penciler: Josh Hood • Inker: Al Milgrom A three-part series published between December 1996 and February 1997, this marks the return of Scream; Wolverine and Venom collaborate against the villains Dirt Nap and Chimera. In the final issue, Scream and Venom begin hunting Carnage.
Venom: On Trial (1997) • Writer: Larry Hama • Penciler: Joe St. Pierre • Inker: Derek Fisher A three-part series, published between March and May 1997, which follows Brock as he is captured and tried for his crimes as Venom. Brock is represented by Matt Murdock (
Daredevil), with Cletus Kasady (Carnage) testifying against him. After Kasady bonds again with his symbiote, Brock, Daredevil and Spider-Man unite to stop him. Before Brock can be judged, agent Daryll Smith (from an unknown agency) offers Brock amnesty in exchange for becoming an agent.
Venom: License to Kill (1997) • Writer: Larry Hama • Penciler: Derek Aucoin (#1–3), Josh Hood (#3) • Inker: Rich Faber (#1–2), Ralph Cabrera (#1), Eric Cannon (#3), Scott Koblish (#3) In a three-part series published between June and August 1997, the story continues with Venom as a government agent controlled by a bomb implanted in his chest. He is tasked with neutralizing biological-weapons expert Dr. Sergei Yesenofsky before he can release a deadly toxin. Yesenofsky's son Kostya sacrifices his life to divert a nuclear missile heading for Yesenofsky's base, and uses the explosion to destroy the toxin. Yesenofsky survives, swearing to avenge Kostya.
Venom: Sign of the Boss (1997) • Writer:
Ivan Velez, Jr. • Penciler: Tom Derenick • Inker: Chris Ivy In a two-part series published between September and October 1997, Venom continues his career as a government agent, working as a bodyguard for foreign president Franco Santera. He confronts (and later joins forces with) Danny Ketch, the Ghost Rider.
Venom: The Finale (1997–1998) • Writer: Larry Hama • Penciler: Mark Pajarillo • Inker: Robert Jones (#1–3), Pam Eklund (#3) This three-part finale to the
Venom series was published between November 1997 and January 1998. The Overreach Committee (the organization in charge of Brock's clandestine agency) decides to terminate him because of his brutal methods. Brock cuts the bomb from his chest, and uses it to escape. His escape brings him into a confrontation with Spider-Man. After a fight with Spider-Man and an injection of
dopamine blockers by Agent Smith, Brock is separated from the symbiote (which is apparently killed when Brock is re-arrested). The final issue sees Brock recover some memory of his history with Spider-Man; he had lost his knowledge of the hero's secret identity in the
Spider-Man/Venom single issue (December 1997). ==
Venom (vol. 1) (2003–2004)==