Tuesday, January 27, 2026

REMEMBERING SAL


Yesterday would have been Sal Buscema's 90th birthday. Instead we got the word that Sal passed away last Friday: an enormous loss for our industry and for all of us who knew and worked with him. There's hardly a Marvel character Mr. B didn't leave his mark on, from Captain America to the Hulk, Avengers to Thor. Working with Sal for two years on Spectacular Spider-Man remains a highlight of my career. The best tribute I can pay to Sal is to repost the tale of our magical collaboration on Spectacular Spider-Man #200, which I think was a highlight of our run. You can read it below.

Safe travels, Sal. You will be missed.

 ***

There are two basic ways that comic books are written. The first is full script (that’s where the writer lays out the whole story page by page, panel by panel, including camera-angles, captions and dialogue) and the other is plot-first (the writer creates a detailed plot outline which then goes to the artist. When the writer gets the pencilled pages back, he then adds the dialogue and captions). Both approaches have their strengths and I enjoy working either way. The challenge of a full script is that every element of the story is in your hands. You're in full control of the material. The challenge of plot-first, of course, is that you’re often surprised by what your artist does—and your scripting is directly influenced by it. Sometimes that’s a wonderful thing, sometimes not. There are some artists who can draw very well but have yet to master the art of visual storytelling—and it can be difficult (to say the least) trying to make up for their shortcomings via dialogue and captions. But when “Marvel style”—another popular name for the plot-first method—works, it’s magical.

One of the most magical experiences I had was back in the 90’s when I was collaborating with the great Sal Buscema on Spectacular Spider-Man. Sal and I hit it off from the first panel of our first story and my admiration for him remains boundless. He can draw beautifully, he’s an impeccable visual storyteller and a total professional. Add to that the fact that Sal is a truly good person—I’d go so far as to use an old-fashioned word and call him a gentleman—and you can understand why I loved working with him.

My plots were usually very tight—page by page, panel by panel, crammed with camera angles, psychological shading and rough-draft dialogue—but whatever was on the page, Sal was always able to take it to another level and do things that many other artists couldn’t. Case in point: Spectacular Spider-Man #200, which featured the death of Harry Osborn (who was then making no end of trouble as the Green Goblin).

There was a sequence at the end of that story (perhaps my favorite out of all the Spider-Man tales I’ve written) where Harry, realizing that he loved Peter Parker too much to let him die, saves a drugged, weak Spidey from a death-trap. Peter, his wife Mary Jane and Harry’s son, Norman, all stand by, shocked and heartbroken, as Harry then collapses, overcome by the toxic Goblin formula.

On the final two pages, Spidey accompanies Harry into an ambulance, they drive off and Harry passes away, leaving Peter Parker to his grief and memories. When the ambulance arrives at the hospital, it falls to Spider-Man to tell Mary Jane and Norman that Harry’s gone. They react, we cut to a photo of Peter and Harry in happier days...and the story ends. The sequence was small, quiet, but, on an emotional level, it was massive.

I did everything I could to communicate the power of those last pages to Sal in the plot—along with my thoughts on how the sequence would be handled in the final script. My intention was to verbally milk the pages for all they were worth, wringing out every last drop of emotion; going big and melodramatic via captions, inner monologues from Peter or dialogue between the characters. (Another benefit of "Marvel style": I didn't have to decide then, I could make up my mind when the art was done.)

Then Sal’s pages came in: It was one of his finest hours. The panel to panel flow was cinematic and crystal clear, the characters dramatic and achingly human. And those final two pages? Perfection! At first—locked into my original vision—I began writing captions and dialogue for the end-sequence, but it quickly became clear that everything I wanted to say had already been said, and better, by Sal. It was all there in the pictures. He had translated my plot so expertly that words would have capsized the sequence and destroyed the emotional power of the moment. So I shut my big mouth and let Harry Osborn die in silence, with his best friend by his side.

That, too, is part of a writer’s work—especially in comics: deciding when to speak and when to shut up. Deciding whether to go for a barrage of machine-gun dialogue, a series of powerful captions or to surrender to equally-powerful silence. Whether we’re working full-script of plot-first, we make those decisions on every panel of every page.

And it certainly helps the process when you’ve got an artist like Sal Buscema bringing your story to life. Take a look at the images below and you'll see what I mean.






©copyright 2026 J.M. DeMatteis

12 comments:

  1. I know is natural order, but it's still painful when legends leave us.

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  2. As somebody who started reading Spidey as a 5 year old back in the day, his artwork was always very striking and effective to me. This particular issue is an all timer and was one of the ones I picked up when I was going through Spider-Man history to find notable or important stories to read, and it’s truly a masterclass on every single level. Not to reiterate what you eloquently described here, but that final sequence is devastating and sticks with you long after you read it.

    On a lighter note, the Frog Man story from a few issues before this one…incredible stuff!!

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    1. Thanks, James. It's heartening to see all the love Sal is getting. He was truly a master.

      As for Frog-Man: Eugene is character I adore and I'd write new Frog-Man stories in a heartbeat!

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  3. Farewell to my all-time favorite artist ... condolences to his family. Sal was so massively important to my youth, and a large part of the reason I'll never completely grow up. Thank you, Sal....

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    1. Thanks. Sal was massively important to our entire business. A giant.

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  4. Thanks for sharing your beautiful story with Sal. Learning a litlle bit about behind the scene stories makes the stories itself more powerful. Rest in peace, Mr. B.

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    1. Glad the story resonated with you, Geraldo. And hope all's well with you and yours.

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  5. I always found it interesting that his brother's art was more in the clean romantic style of John Romita, but his was in the more personaly stylized vein of Dtiko and KIrby.

    That was what Sal Buscema's art was in a nutshell, personality. You could never mistake his art for anyone else's, and you felt those panels, Each and everyone. The action socked you in the face with each punch. The desperation, the joy, the somber moments, the quite loving moments. You felt it. Every four color panel, you felt when Sal Buscema was drawing.

    The comic field may have lost a giant, but his five decades in the industry was one Hell of a footprint he left behind.


    Jack

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  6. So glad Marvel reversed course and decided that Harry really did die in that story so as not to diminish the impact of what you and Sal created. Too many Spider-Man stories have involved him being hoaxed (Pete's parents coming back, the clone saga, Aunt May dying etc etc)- this was addressed in the story you did when Harry "came back" and Pete was skeptical- turns out he was right to be. To get to the main point of this, however, Sal was indeed brilliant-one of the best storytellers Marvel ever had- he pretty much defined the Marvelof the late '70s for so many of us. It was so great when he started inking his own work!

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    1. Absolutely, Jeff. Once Sal started inking himself he took his work to another level. I remember getting the pages for the Vulture story we did and being blown away by the inking. Just magnificent work. He was truly a master.

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