Strange #67
In "Le chasseur et la victime," Peter Parker remains on the run, hiding a crucial tablet in a public restroom as the Caïd escapes and vows to track him down. Their tense confrontation escalates when Jonah Jameson, accompanied by Ned Leeds, arrives on the scene and calls the police—only for a mysterious woman in a car to pull up and lure the Caïd away, leaving questions in her wake. As tensions peak and accusations fly, the situation spirals into chaos, culminating in a shocking moment that leaves Jonah in distress. Written by Stan Lee and John Romita, with art by John Romita and Jim Mooney, and a cover by Jean Frisano, this 1975 issue delivers a gripping, high-stakes thriller that pushes Spider-Man to his limits.
In a twist of fate that blurs the line between hunter and hunted, Rick and Mar-Vell find themselves trapped in a shared body, forcing them to seek help from an unlikely ally—Bruce Banner. When Captain Marvel crashes into Banner’s lab, the confrontation that follows isn’t just a clash of minds, but a collision of identities, as the Hulk emerges from the shadows of science and suspicion.
In "Phoenix et le boxeur," Daredevil steps into the ring not with fists, but with purpose, shielding a young boxer whose trainer once shaped his own father’s legacy—now entangled with the shadowy Kragg and the enigmatic Phoenix Group. As past and present collide in the weight of a single fight, the hero must navigate a battle where every punch echoes a deeper history.
In "La fureur de Iron Fist," Danny Rand faces the final trial at Kun-Lun, where he must choose between immortality and his destiny as Iron Fist. As he battles the mechanical guardian Shu-Hu, memories of his parents’ sacrifices—his father murdered by Meachum, his mother’s desperate act to save him—rise to the surface, testing his resolve in ways no training could prepare him for.
In "Wanted Spider-Man," Peter Parker is still on the run, hiding a crucial tablet in the bathroom of a crowded building while the mysterious Caïd escapes and vows to hunt him down. As their confrontation escalates, Jonah Jameson arrives with Ned Leeds, calling the police—only for a shadowy woman in a strange car to appear, snatch the Caïd away, and leave him frustrated. When Jameson accuses Spider-Man directly, the hero’s rage spirals, triggering a fatal heart attack in the editor. Now, with a life on his hands, the question looms: is Spider-Man truly a killer?
In "L'Araignée attaque la Torche (suite)" from Strange #67, L'Araignée crashes a quiet evening at Johnny Storm’s girlfriend’s place, turning a casual get-together into chaos. The sudden assault forces the Torche into action, quickly drawing in the rest of the Fantastic Four as tensions flare and the team must respond to the unexpected threat.
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Reprints
↩ Reprints The Amazing Spider-Man #8 (1964), Daredevil #17 (1966), The Amazing Spider-Man #70 (1969), Captain Marvel #20 (1970), Daredevil #68 (1970), Marvel Premiere #15 (1974), Une Aventure des X-Men #1 (1975), Spécial Strange #1 (1975), Une Aventure des Fantastiques #7 (1975), Strange #68 (1975)
Reprinted in Spécial Strange #1 (1975), Strange Spécial Origines #178 (1984)
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