And now to today's mischief...
"With great power comes great responsibility. And emotional angst. And years of questioning your own decisions. And occasionally calling the whole superhero thing quits, only to reconsider that decision. Did I mention the angst?" ~ Peter Parker
Well, a decade after the last Spider-Man trilogy of films by Sam Raimi began, and five years after the last of those films, along comes The Amazing Spider-Man, a reboot of the film franchise returning Peter Parker to the beginning again with a new cast, a new director, and all in 3D if you're not careful which screening you're walking into (don't go into the 3D screening, okay? Well, don't blame me if your stomach does that whole spinning in circles thing; I did warn you). It seems obvious that I'd go see this film, particularly because I'm a fan of the character. Before I get started though, I'd just like to get one thing out of the way.
I want to track down the imbecile who coined the term reboot. I want them dead. Sleeping with the fish. Rubbed out, knocked off, encased in cement, congressionally investigated. Same goes for their family, their friends, their acquaintances. Their pets can go in peace; we can't hold the idiocy of humans against the pets, but seriously... I really, really, really, really hate the word reboot. Hate, hate, hate it. Did I mention I hate it?
Okay. Got that out of my system. Shall we begin?
Andrew Garfield as Peter Parker |
The film by director Marc Webb retells the origin story of Peter Parker (Andrew Garfield), an outsider in high school. His parents leave him with his aunt May and Uncle Ben (Sally Field and Martin Sheen), vanishing when he's a child. He's a smart kid, trying to live up to the example of his aunt and uncle, who are, after all, inherently decent people (though younger than I'd picture the characters, in fact). Peter winds up at OsCorp labs one day, where his life is altered forever by the bite of a certain spider, which of course infects him and grants him the powers he'll soon be known by. He also crosses paths with Doctor Curt Connors (Rhys Ifans), a scientist working for the unseen Norman Osborn (a big bad in the comics universe who's otherwise known on a bad day as the Green Goblin). Osborn, it seems, is dying, and Connors (seen in the Raimi trilogy as one of Peter's professors, and played by Dylan Baker) is working on a cure.
Rhys Ifans as Curt Connors |
Peter gets used to his powers, making a mistake that inadvertantly leads to the death of his uncle, which as any comics fan will tell you becomes the central motivating factor for the rest of his life. He becomes Spider-Man as atonement, becoming involved with a classmate, Gwen Stacy (Emma Stone), meeting her father George, a police captain (Denis Leary). Connors meanwhile makes himself a test subject in his own work, and as usually happens in these things, it goes wrong. He becomes a human-reptilian hybrid monster otherwise known as the Lizard (one of the other big bads in the comics universe) and starts wrecking havoc. Out of this, of course, two opposing forces must collide.
Emma Stone as Gwen Stacy |
Denis Leary as Captain Stacy |
Now to the cast. Garfield has more of a wisecracking sensibility about him than Tobey Maguire's take on the character in the previous films. He looks young enough to pass for the character (though they'd better move him up to college next time out). He plays the character properly, I think, someone on an emotional arc that revolves around the sense of responsibility that's so integral to the role. And he really looks the part. Emma Stone is a good Gwen Stacy, and it was right to go with this character instead. She's not the girl next door, but she's very appealing, and the two actors inhabit the roles well.
Denis Leary dials down the usual snark (though I like the snark) for George Stacy, the policeman who's wary of the webbed vigilante. Ifans makes a decent villain; he's been known more for comedy, but he's not as good as Alfred Molina's Doctor Octopus, who was far and away the best villain of the Raimi films. And from the CGI side of things, I thought the look for the Lizard was, well, a bit off. And Sally Field and Martin Sheen convey the decency of the roles, the two guiding forces in Peter's life, with the grace and warmth you'd expect of these two characters.
The Lizard |
One big missing part of the film: no J. Jonah Jameson. In the Raimi films, J.K. Simmons played the part of the newspaper publisher and rabid loather of Spider-Man to absolute perfection. Peter in fact isn't working at a newspaper in this film, a situation I hope gets rectified in the sequel. I really, really missed the motormouth of Jolly Jonah, and it seems to me that Spider-Man needs this particular loudmouthed nemesis to bicker with. Just as much as the reverse is true.
And so the new series of films has been released. Barring the possibility of the whole thing tanking and going the way of the Green Lantern franchise, there will be sequels. The leads have a good chemistry together in this one, the screenwriters give us a story that's focused on character over roller coasters, and the director runs with it. If Webb returns for the sequel, he can polish up his pacing on the action sequences a bit, but he's done well this time out. I look forward to what's to come.
Thanks for the review. You're really good at this. I'm going to have to go see it now.
ReplyDeleteI've never been a huge fan of super hero movies, but this one sounds good. Maybe I just don't like Tobey MacGuire of the last batch of Spiderman films. Out of all of them, I think I liked Iron Man the best...wait, that could've been because I like Robert...
ReplyDeleteWell anyway, sounds like a good one but I think I'll wait until it comes to the movie channels...
I LOVE superhero movies and was a big fan of the previous Spidey films. Like one TV reviewer here, I wonder why it was necessary to start over. But I am looking forward to seeing it. Especially now that I've read your review!
ReplyDeleteI heard that Garfield and Stone are dating in real life....
As usual you always write the most interesting reviews.
ReplyDeleteLove the hate hate hate tirade, let me get this straigh, you hate the term reboot whahahahahahah you spared the pets, good choice.
Not a big Spider-man fan, don't know why ? I like lots of the other superheros.
I think the movies like the Green Hornet and Green Lantern didn't know what way they wanted to go and had weird leading men like the Green Hornet movie, Seth Rogen was not the Green Hornet !
As for Andrew Garfield he comes off as such a smirky douche in real live that I can't separate the person from the actor in a movie. Much the same way I can never see a Tom Cruise movie, the smirk. ugh !
I'm so weird.
cheers, parsnip
@Christine: if I were doing this with Ebert, I'd be giving it a qualified thumbs up.
ReplyDelete@Beth: if you do see it, don't do it in 3D!
@Norma: yes they are!
@Gayle: I haven't seen Garfield in anything else yet. As to Rogen... that bloody idiot needs to be kicked off the planet.
I have to admit that when I saw the previews I was confused. I didn't know why they were remaking this since Toby's version wasn't out *that* long ago. But, this version does look good.
ReplyDeleteMy kids can't wait to see this. I haven't been the biggest spider man fan - but who knows, maybe that'll change.
ReplyDeleteI don't like the look of that lizard though :-p
What a great review. I was planning on seeing it but decided to save my money for The Dark Knight Rises. I think I might check this out though.
ReplyDeleteSpiderman has always been my favorite. They have done intriguing things with the Batman movies; as well. There is a new one coming out with Morgan Freeman as the Butler character (I think that is who Freeman plays.) I look to forward to the possibility of a William Kendall review when the time is right...?
ReplyDeleteYou always do a great review. Hopefully, this Spiderman movie doesn't bore me. The last one did.
ReplyDeleteHugs,
Shelly
@Kelly: Raimi and Tobey walked away from a fourth film, so the studio figured they might as well start fresh.
ReplyDelete@Lisa: the comics version has more of a pronounced reptilian snout. I rather wanted that.
@Auden: I'm definitely looking forward to the Batman film!
@Undercover: Morgan plays the executive at Wayne Enterprises, Lucius. He's actually older than the comics version, who's only a few years older than Bruce. And there will definitely be a review!
@Shelly: the last one was a mess!
I've not been taken by the SpiderMan films at all! I don't know why! I continue to wait for Wonder Woman to debut (rhymes with your hated word that I deliberately didn't use)! LOL!! Thanks for a thorough review - I never knew Rhys Ifans was even in it! But I can totally see him as a lizard man type creature!! LOL! Take care
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@Kitty: As much as I like the character, I doubt Wonder Woman will ever turn up on the big screen.
ReplyDelete