Early concept art from Jon Watt's Spider-Man: Far From Home reveals how a comic book-accurate version of Hydro-Man could've been featured in the superhero sequel.

Concept artist Jerad S. Marantz shared his vision for Hydro-Man and explained, "This was in the brainstorming phase. Trying to figure out what kind of [Hydro-Man] we were going to have. This was the science experiment gone wrong scenario." The artwork showcases a more humanoid Hydro-Man and features him in some sort of suit to help harness his powers. Marantz didn't reveal why the design didn't appear in Far From Home and how the movie settled on such a different version of Hydro-Man for its final cut.

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The plot of Far From Home saw Jake Gyllenhaal's Quentin Beck conjure up a villainous group of monsters known as the Elementals. Although characters like Hydro-Man and Molten Man exist in the comics, Watts took them in a different direction and created nameless monsters.

In the comics, Hydro-Man was first introduced in 1981's The Amazing Spider-Man #212 by Dennis O'Neil and John Romita Jr. as a sailor named Morris Bench. After being struck by an underwater generator, Bench was transformed into Hydro-Man and became a recurring foe of the wall-crawling hero over the years. As well as featuring on supervillain teams like the Sinister Syndicate and Frightful Four, a reimagined Hydro-Man appeared in the fan-favorite Spider-Man: The Animated Series as a jealous ex of Mary Jane Watson.

Even though the monstrous version of Hydro-Man appeared in Far From Home's theatrical release, there was a clever Easter egg to Bench's existence in the larger Marvel Cinematic Universe. Following Hydro-Man's attack in Venice, Flash Thompson said BuzzFeed theorized the water Elemental was a Morris Bench -- a sailor who'd been transformed similar to his comic book counterpart.

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Hydro-Man clearly went through several designs during Far From Home's development, and Marantz's latest concept comes after his earlier reveal of a two-headed Hydro-Man. Watts previously discussed wanting to use lesser-known villains like Hydro-Man and Molten Man in Far From Home, however, it doesn't mean the potential of these characters is already spent. It's unclear whether the "real" Elementals exist in human form, but if Spider-Man 3 was going to revisit the idea of Bench, at least Marantz already has a design.

Directed by Jon Watts, Spider-Man: Far From Home stars Tom Holland, Samuel L. Jackson, Zendaya, Cobie Smulders, Jon Favreau, J.B. Smoove, Jacob Batalon and Martin Starr, with Marisa Tomei and Jake Gyllenhaal. The film is now available on Digital HD, Blu-ray and 4K UHD.