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The story of Eddie Brock • Скульптура персонажа: Эдди Брок/Веном is very difficult and filled with difficulties and failures that haunted him from birth. Edward Charles Allan Brock was born and raised in San Francisco in a Roman Catholic family. During childbirth, Eddie's mother lost a lot of blood and died. With her death, Brock's father became very callous and rude. He was cold to his own son and showed practically no emotion. Deep down, he regretted that he had ever been born and partly blamed Brock for her death. Eddie also had an older sister, she did some of the housework, in particular cooking and washing for her younger brother. Of course, she felt all the negativity coming from her father and it often consumed her too. There were often quarrels between the brother and sister, where she repeatedly hit him in the most painful place, blaming him for the death of their mother. Mom would be here now if it weren't for you! Said the sister. Oddly enough, the father paid almost no attention to such antics from his daughter. Occasionally, he would only turn his gaze from the newspaper to the swearing children and ask them not to interfere with him while he read. Naturally, such an attitude of relatives influenced the formation of the character and the development of the personality of young Eddie Brock. Throughout his childhood, he always tried to get the attention of others, which he was so deprived of, and finally get the respect of his father. All this constantly drove him to want to be the best, to be the best in school, in sports, in everything. But no matter what he did, no matter how hard he tried, it did not make any impression on his father. Even after Eddie graduated from school with honors and achieved considerable success in athletics. His father only indifferently congratulated him, thereby proving once again that there was no paternal love and relationship between him and Brock. An important role in Eddie's future fate was greatly influenced by the article he read about the Watergate scandal of 1972. After graduating from college, Eddie moved to New York where he got a job as a journalist at one of the two most popular publishing houses in the city, the Daily Globe, whose main competitor was just the Daily Bugle, where, by the will of fate, that same Peter Parker worked. Very quickly, Eddie Brock, thanks to his efforts, established himself as a very talented and hardworking journalist. Soon Eddie met a girl named Anna, an affair began between them and after some time they got married. And although his father still did not perceive Brock as a son or as a successful and already established adult, he simply did not care. However, Eddie's life finally began to improve. A loving wife, an interesting job where he could prove himself, everything went on as usual until Eddie began to have health problems. As it turns out later, he is diagnosed with cancer. At this time, a maniac calling himself the Sin Eater appears on the streets of the city. One day, sorting through a stack of letters on his desk, Eddie Brock stumbles upon one very interesting letter. It was written on behalf of that same maniac. It spoke of another murder and that on the 12th at exactly 12 noon in a telephone booth located on Broadway there will be a call. On the other end of the line would be the Sin Eater, who would tell his story and reveal his identity to anyone who picked up the phone. Today was that very date, and there were only a few minutes left before the appointed time. Brock could not miss this moment, especially in such a difficult period of his life, when a terrible diagnosis did not leave any comforting forecasts for the future and he wanted to do something really loud, memorable in this life, something that would glorify Eddie and make him a hero. It was a stunning article, Eddie wrote an exclusive about the Sin Eater on the front page, the newspaper was immediately sold out. But it so happened that Eddie Brock succumbed to provocation and wrote an article not about a real maniac, but only about his imitator, who wanted to become famous at someone else's expense. Literally a couple of days later, Spider-Man catches a real maniac. Competing publisher Daily Bugle writes an article about the incompetent employees of the Daily Globe, which seriously damages the company's reputation. Eddie Brock is fired in disgrace. Not only that, but when his father finds out about this scandal, he disowns his son forever. And so, in one second, his whole life literally went downhill. He was no longer the kind, success-seeking person. A manic insanity that fate itself is against, deliberately brings him into contact with Spider-Man, does not give him peace.