10 'Spider-Man: The Animated Series' Episodes That Are Considered Masterpieces

2 weeks ago 13
 The Animated Series' Image via Fox Kids Network

Published May 9, 2026, 8:34 PM EDT

Born with Autism (formerly classified as Asperger syndrome), Tyler B. Searle has been obsessed with storytelling since he was old enough to speak. He gravitated towards fairy tales, mythology, the fantasy genre, and animated movies and shows aimed at family audiences. When not writing, Tyler enjoys watching more cartoons and reading fantasy books in his home in Ontario, Canada.

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Following the major success of X-Men: The Animated Series, Avi Arad, CCO of Marvel at the time and CEO of Toy Biz, decided to create more Marvel cartoons in order to sell toys. The most successful of these was Spider-Man: The Animated Series, helmed by John Semper Jr., who was handpicked by Stan Lee after the show ran into trouble following the departure of its original showrunner. While working around the mandatory characters who already had toys based on them, and some of the strangest censorship found in any TV show, Semper managed to weave a long-running storyline full of callbacks and character growth, which resulted in one of the greatest television adaptations of the web head ever produced.

Semper had a hand in writing nearly every episode of the show, which helped to keep the story's vision on track. He knew how to balance the melodrama of Peter Parker's (Christopher Daniel Barnes) dual life with superhero action, and many of the show's best episodes drew on the original comics for inspiration.

"Partners in Danger Chapter I: Guilty"

Season 4, Episode 1

J Jonah Jameson in a trenchcoat Image via Fox Kids Network

Grieving over the loss of Mary Jane Watson (Saratoga Ballantine), Peter contemplates walking away from his life as Spider-Man. However, he decides to postpone retirement when his friend at the Daily Bugle, editor-in-chief Joseph "Robbie" Robertson (Rodney Saulsberry), is arrested at a crime scene and identified as a villainous mastermind. Knowing that Robbie has been framed, J. Jonah Jameson (Ed Asner) hits the streets to do some detective work, and is even willing to put aside his rivalry with Spider-Man to secure Robbie's freedom.

"Guilty" kicks off Season 4 of the show with a more ground-level storyline that has elements of a classic film noir. Jameson is the real star of this episode, quickly slipping into the role of an investigative journalist and proving vital to acquiring evidence to clear Robbie's name, letting audiences see the more noble side of this beloved character. It's also a stellar episode for showcasing the show's adherence to continuity when it's revealed just who was responsible for Robbie's incarceration and why.

"Neogenic Nightmare Chapter VIII: Duel of the Hunters"

Season 2, Episode 8

Man-Spider holds his head Image via Fox Kids Network

During a battle with the Punisher, Frank Castle (John Beck), Spider-Man mutates into a horrific Man-Spider and flees into the city. Despite the creature's overwhelming strength, Punisher is committed to destroying Spider-Man, fearing that he will attack innocent people. Meanwhile, Dr. Mariah Crawford (Susan Beaubian) learns of the mutation and calls her lover, Sergei Kravenoff (Gregg Berger), to track down Spider-Man while she attempts to make a cure.

"Duel of the Hunters" certainly lives up to its name, as alongside the race to find the Man-Spider, there is also Michael Morbius (Nick Jameson), who is still out attacking people to sate his vampiric hunger. This makes for a really solid episode that explores the differences between monsters and men, especially when Sergei and Frank cross paths. The design of the Man-Spider is also great, tapping into some effective body horror and tragedy when Peter's personality resurfaces from time to time to direct the creature's next action.

"The Sins of the Father Chapter IX: Tombstone"

Season 3, Episode 9

Tombstone smashes a pillar Image via Fox Kids Network

Alisa Silvermane (Leigh Allyn Baker) has learned that the Daily Bugle is going to publish a story about how she has taken over her father's criminal empire, and tasks her father's enforcer, Tombstone (Dorian Harewood), with stopping it. His plan to do so involves re-connecting with an old friend, Robbie Robertson, and forcing him to bury the story due to their past history. He's also managed to get Robbie's son, Randy (Alfonso Ribeiro), to join a criminal gang to further blackmail his father.

"Tombstone" is a stellar episode that shows that the writers could make an episode where Spidey was not the main character. Robbie's quest to take down Tombstone and save his son from a criminal life is excellently paced, and the flashback segments add even more depth to both him and Tombstone. It's also one of the few episodes to show a real gun via Robbie's service revolver, and the way it's utilized helps ground the story in a more realistic conflict than most episodes.

"Partners in Danger Chapter III: The Black Cat"

Season 4, Episode 3

Spider-Man swings with Black Cat Image via Fox Kids Network

Spidey is attacked by a new superpowered criminal named Black Cat (Jennifer Hale), who, unbeknownst to him, is his classmate and former crush Felicia Hardy. She has been transformed by the Kingpin (Roscoe Lee Browne) to test a supersoldier formula acquired from her father, John Hardesky (John Phillip Law), whom he had kidnapped from S.H.I.E.L.D. Eventually, Black Cat is able to escape Kingpin's clutches and tries to convince Spider-Man to help her stop him from making an army of supersoldiers.

"The Black Cat" finally sees Felicia transition from one of Peter's civilian friends into the playful on-and-off-again antihero that comic-fans love. This gives Hale a chance to show off her range as a voice actor, as she's able to seamlessly transition between Felicia's normal speaking voice and her deeper, more confident one whenever she powers up. The rest of the episode is solid as well, with a good mix of action and melodrama, especially at the end when John has to leave his family for the greater good.

Collider Exclusive · Star Wars Quiz Which Force User
Are You?
Light Side · Dark Side · Or Somewhere Between

The Force is not a binary. It is a spectrum — from the serene halls of the Jedi Temple to the shadowed corridors of Sith space. Ten questions will reveal where you truly fall. The Force has always known. Now you will too.

🔵Jedi Master

🟡Padawan

🔴Sith Lord

Inquisitor

Grey Jedi

IGNITE YOUR SABER →

01

What is the Force to you? Your relationship with the Force defines everything else.

AA living energy I must be worthy of — it is not mine to control. BSomething vast and mysterious I'm only beginning to understand. CNeither light nor dark — just a current I choose to ride. DPower. Pure and simple. The strong take it; the weak don't.

NEXT QUESTION →

02

When you feel strong emotions — anger, grief, love — what do you do? The Jedi suppress. The Sith feed. Others choose differently.

AAcknowledge them, then release them. Attachment leads to suffering. BFeel them fully, then decide what to do — they're not the enemy. CBury them. Emotion is a liability I can't afford to indulge. DUse them. Passion is the engine of the dark side for good reason.

NEXT QUESTION →

03

The Jedi Council gives you an order you disagree with. You: How you handle authority reveals your alignment.

AFollow it. The Council's wisdom surpasses my own perspective. BVoice my objection clearly, then defer to the decision. CComply outwardly while doing what I think is right. DIgnore it. The strong don't answer to committees.

NEXT QUESTION →

04

You are offered forbidden knowledge that could give you enormous power. The cost is crossing a moral line. You: The dark side's pull is never more than a choice away.

ARefuse without hesitation. There is no cost worth that price. BWeigh it carefully — sometimes darkness holds real answers. CFeel the pull but walk away — for now. DAccept it. Power justifies the method used to obtain it.

NEXT QUESTION →

05

Your approach to training and learning is: A student's habits become a master's character.

ADedicated but humble. There is always more to learn from my masters. BRigorous and patient. Mastery is earned through years of discipline. CEclectic — I draw from every tradition, not just one. DRelentless and brutal. Pain accelerates growth. Rest is weakness.

NEXT QUESTION →

06

In a duel, your lightsaber fighting style reflects: Combat is the purest expression of a Force user's philosophy.

ADefense and composure — I wait for my opponent to overcommit. BFast and instinctive — I trust the Force to guide my movements. CUnpredictable — I blend styles to keep enemies off-balance. DOverwhelming aggression — I end fights before they begin.

NEXT QUESTION →

07

A defeated enemy lies at your feet, powerless. You: Mercy — or its absence — is the truest test of alignment.

AStrike them down — compassion toward enemies is naïve and costly. BNeutralize them permanently. I can't afford loose ends. CSpare them if I can — but stay clear-eyed about the risks. DOffer them a chance to surrender. Every being deserves that.

NEXT QUESTION →

08

The Jedi Code forbids attachment. Your honest view on love and bonds: The source of the greatest falls in the galaxy.

AThe Code is right. Attachment clouds judgment and invites suffering. BLove is not a weakness — the Jedi Code got this one wrong. CI have no attachment — only loyalty to my master's mission. DI feel it deeply but struggle to reconcile it with my training.

NEXT QUESTION →

09

Why do you use the Force at all? What's the point? Purpose is the difference between a knight and a weapon.

ATo learn. I'm still figuring out what I'm capable of. BTo protect and serve. The Force is a responsibility, not a gift. CTo survive — and maybe carve out something worth having. DTo dominate. Strength demands to be expressed, not contained.

NEXT QUESTION →

10

At the final moment — light side or dark side pulling at you — what wins? In the end, every Force user faces this moment. What does yours look like?

AThe light. I choose peace, even when darkness would be easier. BNeither fully — I carve my own path through the middle. CWhoever I serve — my loyalty defines me more than my morality. DThe dark. Power is the only thing that's ever actually been real.

REVEAL MY ALIGNMENT →

Your Alignment Has Been Determined Your Place in the Force

The scores below reveal how the Force sees you. Your highest number is your true alignment. Read on to understand what that means — and what it will cost you.

🔵 Jedi Master

🟡 Padawan

🔴 Sith Lord

Inquisitor

Grey Jedi

Disciplined, compassionate, and deeply attuned to the living Force, you have walked the path long enough to understand its demands — and accept them. You lead not through authority alone, but through example. You have felt the pull of the dark side and chosen otherwise, every time. That is not certainty. That is courage.

You are earnest, powerful, and brimming with potential — and you know it, which is both your greatest asset and your most dangerous flaw. You act before you think, trust your gut over your training, and sometimes confuse impatience for bravery. The Masters see something in you, though. The question isn't whether you have what it takes — it's whether you'll be patient enough to find out.

You are not simply dangerous — you are certain, and that is worse. You have decided what the galaxy needs, and you have decided you are the one to deliver it. Your power is genuine and formidable, earned through sacrifice that would have broken lesser beings. But examine your victories carefully. Every Sith believed their cause was righteous. The dark side's cruelest trick is that it agrees with you.

You were forged in fire and reshaped by those who found you at your lowest. You serve, because service gave you structure when you had none. Your allegiance is not to an ideology — it is to survival and to the master who gave you purpose. But there is something buried beneath the conditioning. The Jedi you hunt? You recognize them. Because you remember what it felt like before the choice was taken from you.

You have looked at the Jedi Code and the Sith Code and found both of them incomplete. You walk the line not out of indecision but out of conviction — you genuinely believe both extremes miss something essential. The Jedi don't fully trust you. The Sith think you're wasting your potential. They're both partially right. But so are you.

↻ RETAKE THE QUIZ

"Night of the Lizard"

Season 1, Episode 1

Spider-Man looks down at the Lizard Image via Fox Kids Network

Rumors of a lizard-man abducting people begin to spread through the city, prompting J. Jonah Jameson to offer a $1000 bonus to whoever can get pictures of the creature. Peter hopes to win the money to help his Aunt May (Linda Gary) with her financial troubles, but must compete with his more self-serving coworker, Eddie Brock (Hank Azaria). Unfortunately, Peter discovers that the creature is his professor, Dr. Curt Connors (Joseph Campanella), who has mutated himself in an attempt to regain his missing right arm.

As the pilot episode, "Night of the Lizard" has the arduous task of introducing audiences to this version of the web-head and his core cast of characters, which it pulls off spectacularly. Each character is given enough time to establish their personalities, especially Eddie, whose rivalry with Peter and Spider-Man is set up for the eventual payoff in the Venom saga. The presentation of the Lizard is also very effective, and set a good baseline for the introduction of future villains and what their fight scenes would look like.

"The Sins of the Father Chapter IV: Enter the Green Goblin"

Season 3, Episode 4

Green Goblin holds a pumpkin bomb Image via Fox Kids Network

As Norman Osborn (Neil Ross) works on a performance-enhancing gas for the Kingpin, an accident causes an explosion, and Norman seems to die. His son, Harry (Gary Imhoff), blames the Oscorp board of directors—Wilson Fisk (the Kingpin), J. Jonah Jameson, and Anastasia Hardy (Rue McClanahan)—for the accident, since they had been threatening to replace Norman as CEO. Later, a new villain named the Green Goblin (Neil Ross), armed with the same weapons as the Hobgoblin (Mark Hamill), begins kidnapping the board members, and Spidey's attempts to stop him reveal this goblin possesses super strength.

"Enter the Green Goblin," finally brings Spider-Man's arch rival into the show, and they more than succeed at making his presence felt. He owns every scene thanks to his physical strength and power of personality, which help feed into the mystery of who is under the mask. Ross' dual role of Norman and the goblin is like night and day, going from a stern but caring man to a maniacale villain with one hell of an evil laugh.

"The Return of Hydro Man: Part 1 and 2"

Season 5, Episodes 7 and 8

A Mary Jane clone lays on the floor Image via Fox Kids Network

Peter and Mary Jane's honeymoon is interrupted by Morrie Bench (Rob Paulsen), also known as Hydro-Man, even though it looked like he died in their previous encounter. Things get even weirder when Mary Jane demonstrates the same powers as Morrie. This leads the two to meeting Professor Miles Warren (Jonathan Harris), who reveals that Morrie and Mary Jane are actually clones.

"The Return of Hydro Man" sets up the show's endgame in the most heartbreaking way possible. The finale of Part 2 hits particularly hard, as the clones prove to be unstable and begin to evaporate. Saratoga Ballantine's delivery of the MJ clone's final words really hits you in the feels, and it's followed by yet another scream of anguish from Christopher Daniel Barnes as the light in Peter's life is once again snuffed out.

"The Sins of the Father Chapter XIV: Turning Point"

Season 3, Episode 14

Green Goblin holds an unconscious Mary Jane Image via Fox Kids Network

Now that Peter is in a happy relationship with Mary Jane, he tells Madame Web (Joan Lee) that he doesn't want to be a part of whatever she's been training him for. She warns Peter that he might not think so when he must face a two-headed monster. Meanwhile, the Green Goblin persona has directed Norman Osborn to repair the portal-creating Time Dilation Accelerator, which they use to learn Spider-Man's true identity, leading to a deadly confrontation with Mary Jane being taken hostage.

"Turning Point" is aptly named, as it forever altered the tone of the show. This episode is a network-approved adaptation of "The Night Gwen Stacy Died," only with Mary Jane and the Green Goblin falling through portals as opposed to dying. The emotional impact is still the same though, and Christopher Daniel Barnes goes all out in portraying Peter's grief and fury, both at the goblin for taking Mary Jane from him, and Madam Webb for her cryptic speech at the end.

"The Alien Costume Part 1–3"

Season 1, Episodes 8, 9, and 10

While returning to Earth with a rock dubbed "Promethium X," Colonel John Jameson (Michael Horton) is thrown off course by a mysterious black slime, causing his shuttle to crash. The Kingpin takes advantage of the situation to send Rhino (Don Stark) to recover the Promethium X, and, thanks to selective info from Eddie Brock, J. Jonah Jameson believes Spider-Man stole it and offers $1 million dollars to whoever brings him in. As Spidey tries to clear his name and recover the Promethium, the slime bonds to his suit, enhancing his spider-powers, but also making him hyper aggressive.

"The Alien Costume" saga is one of the show's greatest legacies in Spider-Man media, as it cemented the public perception of the Venom symbiote. The show treated the symbiote as a drug addiction and paced-out Peter's personality changes, having the anger come progressively, which led to shocking outbursts. Then Venom comes on the scene, and you feel Peter's fear and anxiety as he has to face a monster that knows everything about him and is invisible to his spider-sense.

"Farewell, Spider-Man"

Season 5, Episode 13

Spider-Man with Madame Web Image via Fox Kids Network

After Spider-Man leads a team of alternate versions of himself to stop Spider-Carnage (Christopher Daniel Barnes) from destroying the multiverse in his home dimension, the rogue escapes to another using the Time Dilation Accelerator. Mainline Spider-Man follows him and discovers that, in this world, he is rich, famous, and engaged to Gwen Stacey (Mary Kay Bergman). Unfortunately, Spider-Carnage is too much for Peter to take out on his own, so he needs to find help from none other than a still-living Uncle Ben (Brian Keith).

"Farewell, Spider-Man" is the perfect finale for the show, tying up loose ends and offering a fitting conclusion to the ambitious Spider-Verse arc, which has since become a mainstay in Spider-Man media. Emotions run high, especially when Uncle Ben talks down Spider-Carnage, which treats us with one last stellar performance from Christopher Daniel Barnes as Spider-Carnage struggles to regain his humanity. Then it ends with Peter getting to meet none other than Stan Lee himself before departing with Madame Web to find the real Mary Jane, closing the show with uncertain optimism and Peter's hero's journey arc finally coming to a close.

03110488_poster_w780.jpg
Spider-Man: The Animated Series

Release Date 1994 - 1998

Network FOX, Fox Kids

Directors Bob Richardson

Writers John Semper Jr., Mark Hoffmeier, Meg McLaughlin, Stan Berkowitz, James Krieg, Marty Isenberg, Robert N. Skir, Sean Catherine Derek, Brooks Wachtel, Cynthia Harrison, Larry Brody, Doug Booth, Len Wein, Michael Edens, Brynne Stephens, Elliot S. Maggin, Ernie Altbacker, Evelyn Gabai, Gerry Conway, Gordon Kent, J. M. DeMatteis, Jan Strnad, Marv Wolfman, Sandy Fries

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Christopher Daniel Barnes

    Peter Parker / Spider-Man (voice)

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Sara Ballantine

    Mary Jane Watson (voice)

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