Marvel Studios and Sony Pictures have released the first official image of Michael Keaton as Adrian Toomes, also known as the villainous vulture, in Spider-Man: Homecoming. The image can be seen in the gallery below.

Marvel and Sony have also released some new details about Toomes’ history and how he becomes a supervillain. Toomes is a blue collar type who runs a salvaging business cleaning up after major superhero battles. However, when a new government agency led by white-collar superhero Tony Stark, a.k.a. Iron Man, takes the gig over in the wake of the events of Captain America: Civil War, Toomes decides he isn’t going to take it lying down and he becomes what producer Eric Hauserman Carroll describes “sort of...the dark Tony Stark.”

The Vulture teams with two other Marvel supervillains making their cinematic debuts, the Shocker (Bokeem Woodbine) and the Tinkerer (Michael Chernus), to turn some of the alien and advanced tech they’ve acquired through salvage into powerful new weapons to sell to criminals. "He thinks once he has this money and power, he'll have more control of his life," Carroll says.

Up Next: New Spider-Man: Homecoming Poster “Some people see themselves as victims — he sees himself a little bit like that,” Keaton says. “He probably would have a strong argument that he never got a fair shot — a lot of ‘Why not me? Where’s mine?’”

Director John Watts says his take on the Vulture was inspired by partly by John C. Reilly’s character from Guardians of the Galaxy, Rhomann Dey, who provided a more grounded perspective on the events of the film. “I like the idea that in these huge movies, you pick out one extra and you’re like, ‘What does he think of all this?’” Watts says. “Sometimes these movies are so casual about just destroying whole cities and incredible things happen and everyone’s like, ‘Eh, whatever.’ If that really happened, it would be amazing and change everything.” Watts adds that the Marvel Cinematic Universe is a place “where you can be a villain and a real person, too,” Watts says. “Being a supervillain isn’t necessarily your full-time job.”