Jump to content

Green Goblin in other media

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Manny20444 (talk | contribs) at 19:17, 4 May 2016 (→‎The Spectacular Spider-Man). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Adaptations of Green Goblin in other media
Created byStan Lee
Original sourceComics published by Marvel Comics
First appearanceThe Amazing Spider-Man #14 (July 1964)
Films and television
Film(s)Spider-Man (2002)
The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (2014)
Television
show(s)
Spider-Man (1967)

Spider-Man and his Amazing Friends (1981)
Spider-Man: The Animated Series (1994)
Spider-Man Unlimited (1999)
The Spectacular Spider-Man (2008)

Ultimate Spider-Man (2012)
Games
Video game(s)Spider-Man (1982)

The Green Goblin is a fictional Marvel Comics character that has appeared in a range of media, usually as Spider-Man's nemesis.

Television

Spider-Man (1967)

The Green Goblin appears in the 1960s animated television series, voiced by Len Carlson. The character is depicted as a dimwitted, spoiled robber who is obsessed with magic and the supernatural - fields of expertise that the original iteration is never interested in, preferring to use technology to commit crimes.

A new weapon Green Goblin uses is gremlin dust, which briefly blinds people. He appears in the episodes "The Witching Hour", "Magic Malice" and "To Catch a Spider". He first steals a magician's book of spells and tries using Jameson as a medium to summon demons of the Underworld. Spider-Man stops the summoning in a graveyard, the Green Goblin is webbed and jailed. Next, in a similar episode, he steals from Blackwell the Magician's House, and uses his magic powers to commit robberies. While he is in Blackwell's House again, Spider-Man stops him with Blackwell's help, and he is webbed up. In his last appearance the invisible scientist Dr. Noah Boddy breaks him out of jail along with Electro and the Vulture. He is the first of the group to encounter Spider-Man, using a special pumpkin bomb with a formula created by Dr. Noah Boddy to weaken Spider-Man's senses. He is defeated finally with the other villains when they have a showdown at midnight with Spider-Man when Spider-Man uses ventriloquism to make them fight each other. The Goblin knocks out Electro with a pumpkin bomb, then Spider-Man knocks him out by deflecting one of his own pumpkin bombs and webs him up to be jailed along with the other villains.

Spider-Man (1981)

The Green Goblin appears on the 1980s Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends cartoon show, voiced by Dennis Marks. This incarnation is depicted as something closer to the Lizard with a serious medical problem of physically and uncontrollably changing into the Green Goblin. The character has a niece named Mona Osborn (voiced by Sally Julian) that had no knowledge of her uncle's double identity. When she was held captive by the Green Goblin so he could discover the location of a formula, she stated that he looked familiar. Norman Osborn is cured by lightning and send back to Medical Institute.

The version that appears on the concurrent, solo Spider-Man series is closer to the comic book original, with Norman Osborn suffering from amnesia and wearing a Goblin costume instead of physically transforming into the villain. He appears in the episode "Revenge of the Green Goblin". In the episode's continuity, Spider-Man first faced and defeated the Green Goblin three years earlier, during which the opponents were unmasked to each other. Having regained his memory during a train accident at the start of the episode, Osborn resumes his Goblin persona and equipment, and threatens to reveal Spider-Man's true identity to the world.

Spider-Man: The Animated Series

File:Spider-Man (1996) ep31.jpg
The Green Goblin in Spider-Man: The Animated Series.

Norman Osborn appeared in the 1990s Spider-Man: The Animated Series, voiced by English actor Neil Ross. This version is one of the most recurring villains of the series, along with the Kingpin. Unlike his comic counterpart, he is not an insane version of himself and has instead developed multiple personality disorder. But though ruthless businessman, he gets caught up in the Kingpin's affairs. This incarnation is also a responsible father and inventor, caring deeply for Harry Osborn and told him nothing about his criminal dealings. His Green Goblin personality (which came after the Hobgoblin persona) acts on destroying everyone who has hurt his original persona throughout his life.

For the first two seasons of the show, Norman appeared as a corrupt industrialist, pressured into supplying the Kingpin with weapons and chemicals against his will. In the episode "Enter the Green Goblin", Osborn is exposed to a toxic gas that greatly increases his physical strength but also drives him insane and awakens the evil inside that is the Green Goblin. The gas also somehow alters the Hobgoblin's equipment into green-color equipment which Norman dons the altered OsCorp equipment. While it is assumed Osborn has been killed in the accident, the Green Goblin then kidnaps various OsCorp stockholders (like the Kingpin and J. Jonah Jameson) that had tormented Norman. The Goblin captures Mary Jane Watson when he finds MJ in the remains of the building and takes MJ to an underwater base. He gives a mock trial of the stockholders. After a fight with Spider-Man, Osborn lost his memory. He then says OsCorp will stop making chemical weapons.

In the episode "Goblin War!", Osborn, once again tormented by the Kingpin, sees the Green Goblin in all reflections and becomes him again, defeating the 'imposter' Hobgoblin and stealing the Time Dilation Accelerator, a machine capable of generating portals. In the episode "Turning Point", the Goblin finds out Spider-Man's secret identity, kidnaps Mary Jane, and fights Spider-Man atop the George Washington Bridge. In the end, the Goblin gets stuck in another dimension, after his glider pushes him through a portal and Mary Jane also falls through a portal. In the episode "The Return of the Green Goblin", the Goblin appears in Harry's nightmares, luring his son into being the second Green Goblin. Among the promises to kill Spider-Man, he promised the boy to reveal what happened to his father. He finally reveals this, but Harry is placed in a mental hospital. In the episode "The Wedding", the Goblin appears again to convince Harry to break out and be his successor again when he hears that Peter Parker and MJ are going to get married. But Liz Allan convinces Harry who are real friends, his connection to Harry broken and Osborn remains trapped in limbo.

In the series finale "I Really, Really Hate Clones", alternate reality versions of the Green Goblin and the Hobgoblin make an appearance where they are working for Spider-Carnage and a Kingpin of an alternate reality.

Spider-Man Unlimited

A Counter Earth version of the Green Goblin appears in the Spider-Man Unlimited animated series, voiced by Rino Romano. This version is portrayed as a hero, mistaking Spider-Man for an enemy during their first encounter. Instead of a glider, he wields a backpack that sprouts wings. In his first appearance, he saves Naoko Yamada-Jones and Shayne Yamada-Jones from one of Venom's and Carnage's plans with Spider-Man's help. After the Goblin lets Naoko and Shayne go, he whispers to himself about calling Naoko his love. The next episode that Naoko has a jealous ex-husband who works for the rebellion against the High Evolutionary. Naoko's ex-husband, standing in the shadows by the episode's end, reveals that he's jealous, suspecting that Naoko and Peter Parker are having an affair. He punches a wall that bricks fall down thus confirming the Goblin is indeed Naoko's ex-husband.

The Green Goblin's next appears when he finds out that both Spider-Man and Peter are the same person. He also learns that Spider-Man is from the original Earth, and the hero's intentions on Counter-Earth are to rescue John Jameson. Since Jameson, working with the rebels against the High Evolutionary, doesn't agree to come and lets Spider-Man go off on his own, the Goblin decides to help by getting a ship the High Evolutionary has, which was originally Spider-Man's. Spider-Man and the Goblin team up with the Rejects, a group of Beastials that the High Evolutionary got rid of since they proved useless, and they get to Solaris II, the ship Spider-Man once had. Spider-Man has more heart and has Solaris II crash into one of the High Evolutionary's towers, which presumably kills the Goblin in the explosion. However, by the series finale, it is revealed he survived the explosion and joined the Rejects. He leaves them to help Spider-Man and the rebels fight against the High Evolutionary. By the end of the episode, he is one of the characters who ran off when thousands of symbiotes spring to Counter-Earth according to Venom's and Carnage's plans.

The Spectacular Spider-Man

File:Green Goblin 05.jpg
The Green Goblin in The Spectacular Spider-Man

The Green Goblin appears in The Spectacular Spider-Man animated series, with Norman Osborn voiced by Alan Rachins and the Green Goblin voiced by Steven Blum. Throughout the series, Norman is a ruthless businessman, inventor, gifted chemist, founder and CEO of OsCorp, and Harry Osborn's father.

In in the first season, Norman coldly disapproves and neglects Harry for not getting offered ESU lab's internship that's given to Peter Parker and lashes out at his son in fury, telling his son to 'man up'. Around this time, Norman also made "Gobulin Green", a highly addictive performance enhancer. Bent on getting more power and money, Norman embezzled aerodynamics engineer Adrian Toomes's flight tech designs, tipped off Tombstone (aka the Big Man crime boss) to TRI-CORP's technology shipment, and engineers the creations of the Sandman and the Rhino as part of the Big Man's deal which makes Osborn more profit. The Green Goblin first appears threatening to overthrow the Big Man in order to be New York's reigning crime boss and tries to kill Spider-Man. Spider-Man initially suspects Norman is the Goblin as the villain returns to the Osborn residence, but Harry is seen in the Goblin suit after a fierce confrontation. Spider-Man and Norman conclude that Harry's theft and consumption of Gobulin Green, resulted in Harry's Goblin persona to fight the Big Man. After Spider-Man agrees to keep Harry's secret on the condition that the villain never reappears, Norman embarks on a tour to Europe with Harry so his son can relax and forget about the addiction to the formula.

The Green Goblin later resurfaces as a crime lord and is responsible for many events that occur in the second season. He manipulates Hammerhead into arranging a conference between Tombstone, Silvio Manfredi and Doctor Octopus, resulting in Spider-Man eventually taking down all three crime lords. Now the reigning crime boss in New York, the Goblin once again tries to kill Spider-Man, first through the creation of Molten Man, and then by trapping Spider-Man in a prison intended for most of Spider-Man's many enemies. In the series finale, the Goblin has a final showdown with Spider-Man. The truth of the Green Goblin's identity is finally revealed: Norman was the villain all along and even framed his son earlier for his own personal gain but claimed that he was helping him. Norman later hired the Chameleon to keep Spider-Man guessing and set him up for a trap. Following a grueling battle across the city, Norman is believed to have been killed when Spider-Man damages his glider and sends him crashing into a stash of his own pumpkin bombs. However, Norman is shown to have survived, leaving the country under a false identity.

Ultimate Spider-Man

Norman Osborn appears in the Ultimate Spider-Man cartoon series, voiced by Steven Weber.[1] This version is a corrupt industrialist fascinated with Spider-Man and has a strained relationship with Harry Osborn. This version of the Green Goblin is amalgam of the Ultimate Marvel version's green-skinned monster and the original incarnation's glider and pumpkin bombs that he stole from SHIELD in this incarnation.

In the first season, Norman's master plan is to obtain Spider-Man's DNA to create a mass-produced Spider-Soldier army throughout the world, however, is unaware that started when Peter Parker was bitten by Oscorp's genetically modified spider. Doctor Octopus's genetic guesswork results in the living armor Venom that always needs a host. After discovering Harry's connection to the symbiote, Norman gets intrigued by his son's new abilities. In the season finale's first part "Revealed", Osborn conducts a plan to lure Spider-Man to Oscorp. As he reveals his master plans to Spider-Man, Doc Ock betrays Norman by injecting him with a serum mixed with both Spider-Man's and Venom's DNA, resulting in Norman's transformation into a large, green-skinned, goblin-esque monster. At first, he is only a savage beast, intent on destroying everything in his path. But in the season finale's second part "Rise of the Goblin", the Green Goblin gradually begins to regain intelligence. Now smart yet psychopathic, the Goblin rampages through the S.H.I.E.L.D. Helicarrier, resulting in Harry's retransformation into Venom as well as Curt Connors's injured arm. However, Spider-Man foils the Goblin's attempts to take his son, making the mutated villain leave with the symbiote on stolen S.H.I.E.L.D. technology.

In the second season, the Green Goblin tries to find a host for the Venom symbiote. The first attempt involved finding a better son. After a fight with Spider-Man, he captures and injects Peter with a symbiote sample, hoping Peter will be a perfect Venom and a better son. But unaware that Peter is Spider-Man, the sample becomes imperfect and transforms into Carnage. Ordering Carnage to bring Spider-Man, the Goblin is surprised when Harry as Venom arrives instead, resulting in a losing battle with Spider-Man and Venom until Harry rejects Venom's control thanks to Peter. The second attempt involves an attack on the S.H.I.E.L.D. Tri-Carrier. After allowing himself to be defeated/arrested, the Goblin releases the symbiote, turning Nick Fury's agents into Venom soldiers. Eventually, the Goblin bonds with some of the organism, transforming into Venom to battle Spider-Man. While Doc Ock's Anti-Venom antidote cures the Venom-infected agents, the main host separates from the symbiote and turns back to normal. Osborn then tries to make amends as the "Iron Patriot", helping Spider-Man battle the Frightful Four and later Doc Ock's Spider-Soldiers. In the season finale's first part "Return of the Sinister Six", Iron Patriot aggressively assists Spider-Man and the S.H.I.E.L.D. Trainees to stop an armored Sinister Six's prison break. With one facing off with another, Iron Patriot battles Doctor Octopus's aggravating attempts. As Spider-Man cures the Lizard, Iron Patriot is defeated by the Sinister Six's group assault and then injected with Doc Ock's Goblin serum. Now transformed once again, the Goblin incapacitates Doc Ock and retreats with extra Goblin serum samples and Spider-Man's team. In the season finale's second part "Ultimate", the Green Goblin uses Goblin-like versions of Power Man, Nova, Iron Fist and White Tiger. He also reactivates the original S.H.I.E.L.D. Helicarrier to unleash the Goblin serum across the world, creating a Goblin army to serve him. However, the Goblin is defeated by Spider-Man and a cured team and imprisoned in the S.H.I.E.L.D. Tri-Carrier.

In the third season Ultimate Spider-Man: Web-Warriors, the Green Goblin returns. With help from Taskmaster's team, he is freed from his prison unintentionally by Agent Venom and the Iron Spider. While Taskmaster and several Sinister Six members cause chaos, the Goblin steals the Siege Perilous from S.H.I.E.L.D. and escapes through a portal. In the "Spider-Verse" miniseries, the Green Goblin imprisons Electro in the Siege Perilous to act as a living power source so he can travel the Marvel Multiverse to acquire DNA samples from the alternate reality versions of Spider-Man for a 'very special purpose'. With Spider-Man pursuing him, he first arrives to Marvel 2099 to get a blood sample from a futuristic successor to Spider-Man, then a gender-swapped universe where he enlists his female counterpart Norma Osborn (voiced by Wendie Malick) (based on the original Green Goblin incarnation) to help with Spider-Girl in return for a vial of his Goblin serum for her own use. The Goblin then gets a blood sample from Spider-Man Noir, a chin-hair from Spider-Ham, and another blood sample from Spyder-Knight. The Goblin finally arrives to another alternate universe where he attempts to get the blood of Spider-Man (Miles Morales) while finding himself being attacked by a winged, demonic counterpart (also voiced by Steven Weber). During all this, he finally figures out his nemesis's identity by looking at that world's Spider-Man's gravestone. He then pools all of the alternate Spider-Men DNA into a serum to gain spider-like abilities, engaging in a winning fight with Spider-Man. Taunting the fact he knows the web-slinger's secret identity, the Goblin joyfully threatens Peter's loved ones. When the villain mentions Harry, Peter attempts to appeal to Osborn, trying to deter from his own son's harm, but the deranged Goblin no longer sees himself as Norman, angrily stating that love is a weakness and that he 'loves no one'. Just then, the serum further mutates him, transforming him into the Man-Spider-like Spider-Goblin. Recruiting the help of the Web-Warriors to battle the Spider-Goblin, Spider-Man manages to turn the Spider-Goblin back to his human form again with Electro's help. Norman is later seen in a retirement home after he lost both his memories as the Goblin (and Spider-Man's identity), happily greeting Peter and Harry as the two come to visit him. The Green Goblin also appears in the episode "A Nightmare on Christmas". In an alternate reality that Peter wished to give up being Spider-Man to be rich, the Goblin now rules New York with his Spider-Soldier army. At a much bigger and threatening Oscorp tower, Spider-Man encounters a horned, suited version that now calls himself the Goblin King. Having defeated and presumably killed most of the Earth's heroes, he has the Avengers' equipment as trophies (i.e. Iron Man's armor, Black Widow's gauntlets, Captain America's shield, Falcon's wings, and even Thor's Mjolnir). After an intense battle, Spider-Man defeats the Goblin King and learned this reality is actually Nightmare's illusion. In the season finale, Norman can be briefly seen as one the people held hostage as Spider-Man's motivation for the 'game' between the Collector and the Grandmaster.

In the fourth season Ultimate Spider-Man vs The Sinister Six, Norman has inoculated himself with an anti-Goblin antidote as a promise to Harry, revealing this when Doc Ock wanted to recruit his Goblin alter-ego into both HYDRA and the Sinister Six. In response, the winged, demonic Green Goblin is summoned when Baron Mordo uses the Siege Perilous. During a fight with Spider-Man, Doctor Strange and Miles, the winged Goblin learns of the Siege Perilous' destructive capabilities but is stopped when Miles uses the spider-sting to destroy the Siege Perilous, stranding both of them in the original universe. With no other options, the demonic Goblin accepts Doctor Octopus' recruitment into the Sinister Six.

Marvel Disk Wars: The Avengers

The Green Goblin makes a cameo appearance in Marvel Disk Wars: The Avengers. In the first episode, he is shown as one of the many supervillains imprisoned by the S.H.I.E.L.D. organization. He is, however, later freed by Loki's subordinates and eventually battles his archenemy Spider-Man. He ignores Loki's plans, and fellow villain Cottonmouth's pleas for being webbed up by Spider-Man, for a chance to settle the score with his most hated foe. Spider-Man defeats the Goblin off-screen, and later uses one of his pumpkin bombs against Loki.

Non-traditional appearances

  • The Green Goblin appears in the Robot Chicken episode "In a DVD Factory". He is shown exercising on an exercise machine that resembles his glider.[2]
  • In the Marvel/DC YouTube videos by ItsJustSomeRandomGuy, the Green Goblin is shown wearing the armor-like costume he wore in Spider-Man, though he wears his original costume in promos for conventions. He is loud and sarcastic, and enjoys alcoholic beverages. In story arcs in the videos, the Goblin (or "Gobby") became an anti-hero, and fell in love with Harley Quinn. He also got a spin-off series called Goblin Bloggin in which he answers fan mail and talks about his fictional life in the continuity of the videos, his obsession with Willem Dafoe, and other topics. His son Harry Osborn makes off-screen cameos. In Season 3, "Zero Hour", the Goblin's differed personality from the comics is addressed, and Darkseid captures him and Deadpool, due to the both of them being unique from the others (Deadpool can see his fictional existence while the Goblin was different from his comics counterpart). At the climax of the arc, the Goblin is confronted by Stan Lee and the latter tells him he is the only one of the characters to have free will, allowing him to defeat Darkseid by making him realize that he was an action figure. To undo Darkseid's effects on the multiverse, the Goblin sacrifices himself to reboot it. He and Harley are completely rebooted in the process, with no memories of their romance.
  • The Green Goblin appears in the MAD episode "Al Pacino and the Chipmunks / That's What Super Friends Are For" where he advertises his "Green Goblin Green Beans". He also threatens that if the customer dislikes them, he will throw their loved ones off a bridge.
  • The original Green Goblin, Norman Osborn, appears in the South Park episode Imaginationland II among the villains that invade Imaginationland.

Film

Sam Raimi series

File:Green Goblin Spider-Man (2002).png
Willem Dafoe as Norman Osborn / Green Goblin for the film Spider-Man.

Willem Dafoe appears as Norman Osborn in the 2002 film Spider-Man as the Green Goblin and makes cameo appearances in subsequent films.

  • In the 2002 film, Norman Osborn is portrayed as a strong-minded yet troubled head of Oscorp who has a distant relationship with his son Harry Osborn and a deep respect and admiration for Peter Parker. Osborn is threatened that he will lose a military contract should a super soldier formula he is working on not receive proper human testing, which will bankrupt and possibly even destroy his company. Desperate, Osborn tests the formula on himself, which drives him insane and transforms him into the Green Goblin. The Goblin is depicted as a separate personality from Osborn, "speaking" to him through a mirror in his home and acting as a sort of unhinged, psychotic enforcer for Norman's desires and interests, claiming that Norman is too weak to achieve them himself. The "Goblin", using the glider and armor designed with the super-soldier serum, kills the military contractors who threatened to pull out of their deal with Oscorp, and then kills Norman's board of directors when they attempt to sell the company and force him to resign. After forming a begrudging respect for Spider-Man, the Goblin attempts to persuade Spider-Man into joining forces. However, Spider-Man denies this request, resulting in the Goblin vowing to kill him. After he discovers Spider-Man is actually Peter, the Goblin decides to "attack his heart", injuring May Parker and kidnapping Mary Jane Watson. During a final confrontation, the Goblin reveals his true identity, then in an attempt to kill Peter, accidentally impales himself with his own high-tech glider. Before dying, Norman tells Peter with his last breath: "Don't tell Harry," not wanting his son to realize the monster he had become. In grief and frustration, Harry later holds Spider-Man responsible for his father's death, not realizing Norman was the villain that had been terrorizing the city.
  • In Spider-Man 2, a vision of Norman Osborn appears after Harry Osborn's brief alliance with Doctor Octopus. Inside of a mirror, Norman demands that his son avenge his death. When Harry shatters the mirror, he discovers his father's hidden lair, making him realize that his father was the Green Goblin.
  • In Spider-Man 3, Harry Osborn has finally taken up the Green Goblin mantle like his father. When Harry suffers from amnesia and briefly forgets his vendetta, a new vision of Norman returns in a successful attempt to sway him back to destroying Spider-Man by one purpose: "Attack [Spider-Man's] heart." Harry later helps Spider-Man in the final battle against Venom and Sandman after his butler informs him the truth about Norman's death, but Harry ends up sacrificing himself to stop Venom from killing Peter, meeting the same fate as his father.

Marc Webb series

File:GreenGoblinDane.jpg
Harry Osborn / Green Goblin in The Amazing Spider-Man 2, played by Dane DeHaan.
  • Harry Osborn appears as the Green Goblin in 2014's The Amazing Spider-Man 2, played by Dane DeHaan. After coming home from boarding school, Norman Osborn (played by Chris Cooper) informs Harry that he is dying from a fictitious condition known as retroviral hyperplasia and that since it is genetic, Harry learns he also has the disease. After Norman left behind all his research, Harry learned that Richard Parker and Norman were working on a cure using the genetically-altered spiders. Realizing that a cure exists in the form of Spider-Man's blood, Harry asks Peter for help to find Spider-Man. Spider-Man visits Harry and tells him that he is afraid that if he gives him a blood sample that it could either kill him or he could end up like Dr. Curt Connors. His assistant Felicia Hardy tells him that before the spiders were destroyed, the venom was extracted and was stored in the Special Projects division of Oscorp. Donald Menken frames Harry for Max Dillon's accident and the experiments performed on him at Ravencroft Institute for the Criminally Insane, and Harry is kicked out of Oscorp. Harry goes to Electro and the two join forces to attack Oscorp. Electro helps Harry get into Special Projects, and Menken takes Harry to the spider venom. Menken injects the venom into Harry, but although it initially appears to have worked, it instead accelerates Harry's condition, mutating him into a goblin-like creature. He steals a prototype suit and a glider. After Spider-Man and Gwen Stacy defeat Electro at the Power Plant, the Green Goblin arrives and he learns Peter's identity when he sees Gwen at the scene. He swears vengeance against Peter saying that he takes away hope and that he is going to do the same to Peter. The Goblin then snatches up Gwen, takes Gwen atop of the power plant's clock tower and drops Gwen through the glass roof. Peter and the Goblin battle as Gwen watches on, though ultimately Gwen is killed when the gears of the clock tower fall apart. The Goblin is knocked unconscious and later imprisoned in Ravencroft, where he meets Gustav Fiers and arranges for a team to be assembled, starting with Aleksei Sytsevich / Rhino.
  • Dane DeHaan was set to reprise the role in the The Sinister Six and The Amazing Spider-Man 3, however, since a new version of Spider-Man is set to debut in Captain America: Civil War and his own film in 2017, those films have been postponed and canceled respectively.[3]

Other appearances

Video games

Spider-Man games

  • The first video game appearance of the Green Goblin is in the 1982 Atari 2600 Spider-Man game. Furthermore, the character makes his first live action appearance in the television commercial for the game.[citation needed]
  • The Green Goblin was originally meant to appear in The Amazing Spider-Man for the Game Boy but was replaced by the Hobgoblin. The change was presumably a last minute one as the Goblin appears in the game's printed manual.
  • The Green Goblin is a boss in the Spider-Man arcade game. Though not the final boss, he is often acknowledged as being the hardest.[5]
  • The Green Goblin is also a boss in the 1995 video game adaptation of the Spider-Man Animated Series.
  • The Green Goblin appears as a boss in the Super Famicom game The Amazing Spider-Man: Lethal Foes.
  • In the 2000 PlayStation, Nintendo 64 and Dreamcast Spider-Man video game, a crane depicted donning a picture of a pumpkin and the word bomb next to it. When the player has Spider-Man investigate the crane, he will find pumpkin bombs, a Goblin Glider, and a Green Goblin poster inside. Upon seeing this, Spider-Man muses to himself; "Gee, I wonder who those pumpkins bombs belong to?", referencing to the numerous hideouts of the Goblin; the Green Goblin himself does not appear in this game.
  • The Green Goblin appears in the 2002 Spider-Man video game, voiced by Willem Dafoe. The Green Goblin's genesis in the game parallels that of the film, with Norman Osborn and his scientists attempting to capture Spider-Man in order to study his genetics to perfect their own contracted super soldier serum. After a number of failed attempts to capture Spider-Man using Oscorp robots, the Oscorp board terminates Norman. Enraged, he then subjects himself to the serum and becomes the Green Goblin, killing Mendel Stromm. In this guise, he offers Spider-Man a partnership but is refused. In the Xbox version of the game, he subsequently hires Kraven the Hunter to go after Spider-Man. Upon seeing a picture of Mary Jane Watson kissing Spider-Man, he abducts her as bait for a final battle with Spider-Man, ending with Norman impaled on his glider much like in the comics and film. Unlike the film, Osborn has no fight against Green Goblin.
  • Ultimate Green Goblin briefly appears in the 2005 Ultimate Spider-Man video game voiced by Peter Lurie. He is held captive by S.H.I.E.L.D. since he is such a dangerous threat, but the Beetle has sneaked into the headquarters and frees the Green Goblin, having him go on a rampage throughout New York. Spider-Man confronts the Goblin after he escapes from the Latverian embassy, the two fighting throughout the city until the battle ends in a conference house where Spider-Man finally beats the Green Goblin to a pulp, knocking him unconscious. Shortly after the villain's defeat, S.H.I.E.L.D. agents led by Sharon Carter arrive in the warehouse and take Norman Osborn back into S.H.I.E.L.D.'s custody without thanking Spider-Man, which upsets the hero.
  • Ultimate Green Goblin makes a major appearance in the Nintendo DS and Game Boy Advance exclusives of the 2006 game Spider-Man: Battle for New York. He is one of the two playable characters (the other being Spider-Man) and the game is a retelling of his origin.
Green Goblin in Spider-Man: Friend or Foe.
  • The Green Goblin appears in the Nintendo DS version of Spider-Man: Web of Shadows. Black Cat informs Spider-Man that the Green Goblin is setting up bombs as part of a plot to defeat the symbiotes. In the PC, PS3, Xbox 360, and Wii versions, the first appearance of the glider-bound armored enemies called Tech Flyers has Spider-Man mercilessly mocking them for their lack of originality by saying things like, "You're not the Green Goblin or the Hobgoblin, you're just a lousy knock-off!", "You're more like a Goblinette!", and "Really! Green Goblin is soooo six years ago".
  • The Green Goblin appears in Spider-Man: Friend or Foe, voiced by Roger L. Jackson. Outside of the opening cinematics, he is among the supervillains brainwashed by Mysterio's Control Amulet. Spider-Man fights him on the helipad at Oscorp's Japanese branch. After being defeated, he joins Spider-Man on the quest to obtain the meteor shards, mainly to stay out of prison.
  • The Marvel Noir version of Norman Osborn appears in Spider-Man: Shattered Dimensions, voiced by Jim Cummings. When he gets a piece of the Tablet of Order and Chaos, he decides to see if it would enhance him like it did for Hammerhead and the Vulture, becoming monstrously powerful. After chasing him through his carnival hideout and defeating him, Spider-Man recovers the tablet from Osborn. During the credits, Osborn is shown working in the carnival.
  • The Green Goblin appears in the Spider-Man virtual pinball game for Pinball FX 2 released by Zen Studios.[6]
  • Several variations of the Green Goblin appear as bosses in the Spider-Man Unlimited video game, including the mainstream Green Goblin, the Gold Goblin, the House of M Goblin, the Grey Goblin and Menace. In the game, the other Goblin characters are alternative reality versions of the mainstream Green Goblin.
  • The Green Goblin appears in Disney Infinity: Marvel Super Heroes as a playable character. He has his appearance from the Ultimate Spider-Man .

Other Marvel games

Theme park

Theatre

  • The Green Goblin appeared in the 2011 musical Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark. This version of Norman Osborn has a wife named Emily who is alive instead of having died previously. During an attempt to test a mutagenic machine he becomes the insane Green Goblin while Emily is killed. He creates the Sinister Six out of former scientists who he believes used his technology to create Spider-Man. He is killed when he falls off a building.
  • The Green Goblin appears in the 2014 Marvel Universe: LIVE! stage show.[11]

Toys

Various Green Goblin figures from the Spider-Man: The Movie toyline.
  • The Green Goblin was released in 1994 as part of Series 3 of Toy Biz's Spider-Man: The Animated Series Line. An interesting note is that while the figure is based upon the character's animated counterpart, it features a glider molded after the one used by then current Green Goblin from the comics, Harry Osborn.
  • Toy Biz released a total of eight Green Goblin figures for their Spider-Man: The Movie toy-line. Including a highly detailed super poseable figure, which was sculpted by Gentle Giant, LTD.
  • The Green Goblin is the eighth figurine in the Classic Marvel Figurine Collection.
  • The Green Goblin has been featured twice as the Twelfth and Sixty-Sixth figure Diamond Select Toys' Marvel Select line.

References

  1. ^ Ching, Albert (July 23, 2011). "SDCC 2011: MARVEL Television LIVE!". Newsarama.
  2. ^ "Goblin Aerobics". Robotchicken.org. Retrieved 2010-11-12.
  3. ^ http://variety.com/2015/film/news/details-spider-man-appear-in-sony-and-marvel-movies-1201429039/
  4. ^ "How Spider-Man Was Almost In 'The Avengers,' Sort Of". Latino Review. June 11, 2012. Retrieved May 15, 2013. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |deadurl= (help)
  5. ^ "Peter Parker & The Sorcerer Stone". Progressiveboink.com. 2005-05-10. Retrieved 2010-11-12.
  6. ^ "Marvel Pinball Preview". www.g4tv.com. Retrieved 2014-02-15.
  7. ^ Narayan Pattison (2008-07-15). "IGN: E3 2008: Marvel Ultimate Alliance 2 Character Announcements". Ds.ign.com. Retrieved 2010-11-12.
  8. ^ http://uk.gamespot.com/special_feature/marvelcapcom-breakdown/image-feature/index.html?image=25
  9. ^ "Marvel Costume Kit 4". Sony. Archived from the original on December 30, 2012. Retrieved December 30, 2012. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  10. ^ https://marvelavengersalliance2.com/aa2_characters/green-goblin/
  11. ^ http://marvel.com/news/story/21561/character_reveals_for_marvel_universe_live

External links