Popularity: 13 (history)
Director: | Marc Webb |
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Writer: | James Vanderbilt, Alvin Sargent, Steve Kloves |
Staring: |
Peter Parker is an outcast high schooler abandoned by his parents as a boy, leaving him to be raised by his Uncle Ben and Aunt May. Like most teenagers, Peter is trying to figure out who he is and how he got to be the person he is today. As Peter discovers a mysterious briefcase that belonged to his father, he begins a quest to understand his parents' disappearance – leading him directly to Oscorp and the lab of Dr. Curt Connors, his father's former partner. As Spider-Man is set on a collision course with Connors' alter ego, The Lizard, Peter will make life-altering choices to use his powers and shape his destiny to become a hero. | |
Release Date: | Jun 23, 2012 |
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Director: | Marc Webb |
Writer: | James Vanderbilt, Alvin Sargent, Steve Kloves |
Genres: | Adventure, Action, Science Fiction |
Keywords | loss of loved one, based on comic, teenage girl, super power, masked vigilante, genetic engineering, death of husband, virus, teenage angst, absurd, romantic, experiment, superhero, vigilante, teenage boy, spider bite, reboot, social outcast, duringcreditsstinger, teen superhero, vigilante justice, intense, excited |
Production Companies | Columbia Pictures, Laura Ziskin Productions, Marvel Entertainment, Arad Productions, Matt Tolmach Productions |
Box Office |
Revenue: $757,930,663
Budget: $215,000,000 |
Updates |
Updated: May 24, 2025 (Update) Entered: Apr 13, 2024 |
Name | Character |
---|---|
Andrew Garfield | Spider-Man / Peter Parker |
Emma Stone | Gwen Stacy |
Rhys Ifans | The Lizard / Dr. Curt Connors |
Denis Leary | Captain Stacy |
Martin Sheen | Uncle Ben |
Sally Field | Aunt May |
Irrfan Khan | Rajit Ratha |
Campbell Scott | Richard Parker |
Embeth Davidtz | Mary Parker |
Chris Zylka | Flash Thompson |
Max Charles | Peter Parker (Age 4) |
C. Thomas Howell | Jack's Father |
Jake Keiffer | Jack |
Kari Coleman | Helen Stacy |
Michael Barra | Store Clerk |
Leif Gantvoort | Cash Register Thief |
Andy Pessoa | Gordon |
Hannah Marks | Missy Kallenback |
Kelsey Asbille | Hot Girl |
Kevin McCorkle | Mr. Cramer |
Andy Gladbach | Physics Nerd |
Ring Hendricks-Tellefsen | Physics Nerd |
Barbara Eve Harris | Miss Ritter |
Stan Lee | School Librarian |
Danielle Burgio | Nicky's Girlfriend |
Tom Waite | Nicky |
Keith Campbell | Car Thief |
Steve DeCastro | Car Thief Cop |
Jill Flint | Receptionist |
Mark Daugherty | OsCorp Intern |
Milton González | Rodrigo Guevara |
Skyler Gisondo | Howard Stacy |
Charlie DePew | Philip Stacy |
Jacob Rodier | Simon Stacy |
Vincent Laresca | Construction Worker |
Damien Lemon | Taxi Driver |
Ty Upshaw | Police Officer with Sketch |
James Chen | Police Officer |
Alexander Bedria | Officer (SWAT) |
Tia Texada | Sheila (Subway) |
Jay Caputo | Subway Guy |
John Burke | Newscaster (News Chopper) |
Terry Bozeman | Principal |
Jennifer Lyons | Second Girl (Subway) |
Michael Massee | Man in the Shadows |
Amber Stevens West | Ariel |
Max Bogner | Scientist (uncredited) |
Ethan Cohn | Lab Technician (uncredited) |
Miles Elliot | Billy Connors (uncredited) |
Miranda LaDawn Hill | Cheerleader (uncredited) |
Amanda MacDonald | Goth Girl (uncredited) |
Maury Morgan | Tina (uncredited) |
Michael Papajohn | Alfie (uncredited) |
Name | Job |
---|---|
James Vanderbilt | Screenplay, Story |
Ve Neill | Makeup Department Head |
Page Buckner | Art Direction |
Michael E. Goldman | Art Direction |
Suzan Wexler | Art Direction |
Vincent Schicchi | Makeup Department Head, Key Makeup Artist |
Lynda Foote | Costume Supervisor |
Susan J. Wright | Costume Supervisor |
Michelle Collier | Art Department Coordinator |
Joseph A. Alfieri Jr. | Construction Coordinator |
Eric Hugunin | Assistant Art Director |
Nancy A. King | Art Department Coordinator |
Paul Sonski | Assistant Art Director |
Ernie Avila | Set Designer |
Andrew Birdzell | Set Designer |
Noelle King | Set Designer |
William J. Law III | Set Designer |
Thomas Machan | Set Designer |
Eric Sundahl | Set Designer |
Abe Costanza | Scenic Artist |
Cuitlahuac Morales Velazquez | Sculptor |
Joe Farrell | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Robin Harlan | Foley |
Sarah Monat | Foley |
David Giammarco | Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
Patrick Ballin | Visual Effects Editor |
John Berri | Visual Effects Editor |
Terry Bradley | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Kevin Crandell | Visual Effects Editor |
Russell Anderson | Leadman |
Mark Herman | Visual Effects Editor |
Sébastien Moreau | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Lindsey Zamplas | Visual Effects Producer |
Jennifer Silver | Visual Effects Producer |
Julie Orosz | Visual Effects Producer |
Julia Neighly | Visual Effects Producer |
Hetal Jain | Visual Effects Producer |
Matt Daly | Visual Effects Producer |
John Clinton | Visual Effects Producer |
James Armstrong | Stunt Coordinator |
David R. Christensen | Gaffer |
Russell Engels | Gaffer |
Ian Fox | Camera Operator |
David Luckenbach | Camera Operator, Steadicam Operator |
Peter Mercurio | Camera Operator |
Michael Nelson | Camera Operator |
Jaimie Trueblood | Still Photographer |
Valentina Aulisi | Set Costumer |
Paul Corricelli | Set Costumer |
David Fernandez | Set Costumer |
Elizabeth Frank | Set Costumer |
Mustapha Mimis | Set Costumer |
Bob Moore Jr. | Set Costumer |
Julie Shack | Set Costumer |
Malik Summers | Set Costumer |
Jim Henrikson | Music Editor |
Barbara McDermott | Music Editor |
Joe E. Rand | Music Editor |
Joel Marrow | Transportation Coordinator |
Trisha Burton | Script Supervisor |
Elizabeth Himelstein | Dialect Coach |
Hugo Dominguez | VFX Artist |
Earl A. Hibbert | Visual Effects |
Joel Foster | Animation |
Mike Dharney | Animation |
Aaron Williams | VFX Artist |
Elizabeth McClurg | Compositors |
Dean Andre | Sound mixer |
David F. Klassen | Supervising Art Director |
Sascha Wolf | Visual Effects Editor |
Jatinder Singh Manhas | Visual Effects |
VFx Star | Visual Effects |
Andrew M. Siegel | Property Master |
Robert Troy | Dialogue Editor |
Miguel López-Castillo | Art Direction |
Diana Matos | Camera Loader |
Diana Ulzheimer | Camera Loader |
John Connell | Camera Operator |
Christopher A. Schenck | Camera Operator |
Kurt E. Soderling | Aerial Director of Photography |
Ralph Del Castillo | Dolly Grip |
Jose Aguirre | Electrician |
Carlos Baker | Electrician |
Christopher Dorowsky | Electrician |
James J. Ferris | Electrician |
Ted Goodwin | Electrician |
Jared Greenstein | Electrician |
Stuart Kirschner | Electrician |
Jerame Maas | Electrician |
Jim McComas | Electrician |
Zoran Milosavljevic | Electrician |
Jaim O'Neil | Electrician |
Charles Sparks | Electrician |
Dave Anderson | Electrician |
Michael Arisohn | Electrician |
James Fitzpatrick | Electrician |
James Mahoney | Electrician |
Beth O'Brien | Electrician |
Mark Schwentner | Electrician |
Justin Situ | Electrician |
Joshua Solson | Electrician |
Jon Wolowec | Electrician |
Dobb Schreiber | Electrician |
John Leigh | Electrician |
Trish Herremans | Electrician |
Matthew Kistenmacher | Electrician |
Richard Mosier | First Assistant Camera |
Maricella Ramirez | First Assistant Camera |
Alan R. Disler | First Assistant Camera |
Mark Santoni | First Assistant Camera |
Darrin DeLoach | First Assistant Camera |
Tommy Tieche | First Assistant Camera |
Shane D. Kelly | Gaffer |
William Moore | Generator Operator |
Les T. Tomita | Key Grip |
Michael Alexonis | Key Grip |
Rick Harris | Key Rigging Grip |
Billy Kerwick | Key Rigging Grip |
Jason Cortazzo | Libra Head Technician |
Scott Barnes | Lighting Programmer |
Richard Rasmussen | Lighting Programmer |
Jason Apperson | Lighting Technician |
Nick Budding | Lighting Technician |
Joshua Davis | Lighting Technician |
Nathan Dean Fetzer | Lighting Technician |
Tony Hibbard | Lighting Technician |
Sean Higgins | Lighting Technician |
Daniel Cotroneo | Lighting Technician |
Jordan Johnson | Lighting Technician |
Damon Marcellino | Lighting Technician |
William Self | Lighting Technician |
Peter M. Smith | Lighting Technician |
Thomas DeRose | Lighting Technician |
Tracy Estes | Lighting Technician |
Brian D'Haem | Lighting Technician |
Andrew Clarke | Lighting Technician |
Jesse Gregson | Lighting Technician |
Nate Heartt | Red Technician |
Sean Ruggeri | Red Technician |
Doug Dalisera | Rigging Gaffer |
Frank Dorowsky | Rigging Gaffer |
Fernando Barrios | Rigging Grip |
Brian Bishop | Rigging Grip |
Justin Corbett | Rigging Grip |
Clayton Fowler | Rigging Grip |
Jeremy Griffiths | Rigging Grip |
Timothy Jipping | Rigging Grip |
Danny Nallan | Rigging Grip |
Parker Shultz | Rigging Grip |
Paul Storino | Rigging Grip |
Mike Tenerelli | Rigging Grip |
Dustin VonLossberg | Rigging Grip |
Thomas D. Lairson Jr. | Second Assistant Camera |
Robin Bursey | Second Assistant Camera |
Henry Tirl | Steadicam Operator |
Noah Bishop | Techno Crane Operator |
Cary Caraway | Techno Crane Operator |
John Betancourt | Ultimate Arm Operator |
Gaylen Nebeker | Video Assist Operator |
Connie Grayson Criswell | Contact Lens Technician |
Kathrine Gordon | Hair Department Head |
Angel De Angelis | Hair Department Head |
Barbara Cantu | Hair Department Head |
Michelle Ceglia | Hairstylist |
Joann Onorio | Hairstylist |
Robert Wilson | Hairstylist |
R. Cory McCutcheon | Hairstylist |
Yvette Stone | Key Hair Stylist |
Teressa Hill | Key Hair Stylist |
Nikoletta Skarlatos | Key Makeup Artist |
Gerald Quist | Key Makeup Artist |
Kris Evans | Makeup Artist |
Tricia Sawyer | Makeup Artist |
Corinna Woodcock | Makeup Artist |
Lindsay MacGowan | Prosthetic Supervisor |
Shane Mahan | Prosthetic Supervisor |
Aimee Macabeo | Special Effects Makeup Artist |
Mike Mekash | Special Effects Makeup Artist |
Renate Leuschner | Wigmaker |
Richard Graves | First Assistant Director |
Steve Love | First Assistant Director |
David Schaub | Animation Supervisor |
Sebastian Butenberg | Animation Supervisor |
Vincent Truitner | CG Animator |
Thomas Cheng | CG Artist |
Brad J. Hayes | CG Artist |
Sebastian Lauer | CG Artist |
Hnedel Maximore | CG Artist |
Giang T. Nguyen | CG Artist |
Kai Schadwinkel | CG Artist |
Tong Tran | CG Artist |
Robert Winter | CG Supervisor |
Ross Newton | CG Supervisor |
Adam Watkins | CG Supervisor |
Andy Lesniak | CG Supervisor |
Brandon Bartlett | CG Supervisor |
Brian Howald | Compositing Supervisor |
Chris Waegner | CG Supervisor |
Adam Ghering | Compositing Supervisor |
Theo Bialek | CG Supervisor |
James Kuroda | Compositing Supervisor |
Robin Scott Graham | Compositing Supervisor |
John Bowers | Compositing Supervisor |
David Alexander Smith | Digital Effects Supervisor |
Max Tyrie | Lead Animator |
Richard Smith | Lead Animator |
Marvin Kim | Modelling Supervisor |
Christopher Grutzmacher | Pipeline Technical Director |
Sebastian Kral | Pipeline Technical Director |
Eric D Legare | Pipeline Technical Director |
Craig Cesareo | Pipeline Technical Director |
Louise Baker | Pre-Visualization Supervisor |
Gavin Wright | Pre-Visualization Supervisor |
Eddie Chew | Senior Animator |
Steve Cady | Senior Animator |
Michael Langford | Senior Animator |
Amy Lu | Senior Animator |
Ina Marczinczik | Senior Animator |
Ben Breckenridge | Stereoscopic Supervisor |
Dan Cortez | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Colin de Andrade | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Danielle DiMarco Barto | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Veronica Kablan | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Davell Lee Libbett | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Laura M. Meredith | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Katrissa 'Kat' Peterson | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Adrian J. Sciutto | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Phelicia Sperrazzo | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Chris W. Tucker | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Andrew Turner | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Chrissy Callahan | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Chelsea Kammeyer | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Genevieve Claire | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Perry Kain | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Eric Levin-Hatz | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Anthony Ruey | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Marlies Schacherl | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Shanshan Xie | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Mingzhe Yang | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Sarah Yunrong Yu | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Momo Zhan | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Claudia Butenberg | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Nancy Lamontagne | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Linda Drake | Visual Effects Editor |
Duncan Rochfort | Visual Effects Editor |
Dane Allan Smith | Visual Effects Producer |
Jordan Soles | Visual Effects Producer |
Jordan Freda | Visual Effects Producer |
Pam Hammarlund | Visual Effects Producer |
Brian Crosbie | Visual Effects Production Assistant |
Melissa Franco | Visual Effects Production Assistant |
Evan Fulton | Visual Effects Production Assistant |
Shawn Smolensky | Visual Effects Production Assistant |
Robert Drwila | Assistant Editor |
Kathleen Latlip | Assistant Editor |
John Persichetti | Digital Colorist |
Steve Bowen | Digital Intermediate Colorist |
Reza Amidi | Digital Intermediate Editor |
Mandy Arnold | Digital Intermediate Editor |
Morning Star Schott | Digital Intermediate Producer |
Robert Mead | First Assistant Editor |
Jennifer Vecchiarello | First Assistant Editor |
Benjamin Sutor | Online Editor |
Susanne Scheel | Casting Assistant |
Elizabeth Chodar | Casting Assistant |
Andy Henry | Casting Associate |
Lauren Cokeley | Extras Casting |
Sara Conte | Extras Casting |
Wendy Washbrook | Extras Casting |
Ivory Stanton | Ager/Dyer |
Jerad Marantz | Character Designer |
Lisa Curtis Saunders | Software Engineer |
Gine Lui | Location Scout |
Christina Fong | Second Assistant Director |
Shannon Mills | Sound Designer, Supervising Sound Editor |
James Horner | Original Music Composer |
Alan Edward Bell | Editor |
Pietro Scalia | Editor |
Kym Barrett | Costume Design |
Alvin Sargent | Screenplay |
Stan Lee | Characters, Comic Book |
Francine Maisler | Casting |
J. Michael Riva | Production Design |
Addison Teague | Sound Designer, Supervising Sound Editor |
Deb Adair | Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
Paul Massey | Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
Ashley Beck | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Andy Armstrong | Stunt Coordinator |
Robert Edwards | ADR Mixer |
Greg Baldi | Camera Operator |
Christopher Allen Nelson | Special Effects Makeup Artist |
Jed Dornoff | Makeup Artist |
Natasha Anne Francis | Visual Effects Producer |
Gary Archer | Prosthetics |
Vic Armstrong | Stunts |
Jennifer Caputo | Stunt Double |
Jill Brown | Stunt Driver |
Samantha MacIvor | Stunt Double |
Jennifer Lamb | Stunts |
Shawnna Thibodeau | Stunts |
Aja Frary | Stunts |
Steve Ditko | Characters, Comic Book |
Marc Webb | Director |
John Schwartzman | Director of Photography |
Steve Kloves | Screenplay |
Leslie A. Pope | Set Decoration |
Jerome Chen | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Bill Corso | Makeup Department Head |
Robin Bonaccorsi | Stunts |
Peter Lyons Collister | Second Unit Director of Photography |
Andy Cheng | Stunts |
Peng Zhang | Visual Effects |
Name | Title |
---|---|
Stan Lee | Executive Producer |
Michael Grillo | Executive Producer |
Avi Arad | Producer |
Matt Tolmach | Producer |
Beatriz Sequeira | Associate Producer |
Kevin Feige | Executive Producer |
Laura Ziskin | Producer |
Organization | Category | Person | |
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BAFTA Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Martin Sheen | Nominated |
Popularity History
Year | Month | Avg | Max | Min |
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2024 | 4 | 97 | 140 | 76 |
2024 | 5 | 125 | 146 | 104 |
2024 | 6 | 123 | 167 | 90 |
2024 | 7 | 119 | 170 | 84 |
2024 | 8 | 114 | 183 | 81 |
2024 | 9 | 85 | 116 | 63 |
2024 | 10 | 100 | 194 | 66 |
2024 | 11 | 102 | 131 | 85 |
2024 | 12 | 92 | 119 | 78 |
2025 | 1 | 98 | 130 | 79 |
2025 | 2 | 80 | 111 | 18 |
2025 | 3 | 15 | 77 | 3 |
2025 | 4 | 16 | 21 | 11 |
2025 | 5 | 14 | 17 | 12 |
2025 | 6 | 13 | 16 | 11 |
2025 | 7 | 13 | 15 | 11 |
2025 | 8 | 18 | 23 | 14 |
2025 | 9 | 16 | 22 | 13 |
Trending Position
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 9 | 361 | 760 |
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2025 | 8 | 324 | 707 |
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2025 | 7 | 451 | 749 |
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2025 | 6 | 91 | 530 |
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2025 | 5 | 81 | 320 |
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2025 | 4 | 73 | 395 |
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2025 | 3 | 76 | 368 |
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2025 | 2 | 88 | 344 |
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2025 | 1 | 57 | 255 |
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2024 | 12 | 105 | 303 |
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2024 | 11 | 132 | 348 |
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2024 | 10 | 85 | 494 |
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2024 | 9 | 187 | 505 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2024 | 8 | 135 | 217 |
“The Amazing Spider-Man” has no reason to exist. Spider-man is a hero everyone knows. He´s been around for so long everyone is familiar with his origin, comic fan or not. Its basic pop culture. Then you have the Sam Raimi´s movies. Everyone saw them. They made loads of money and they´re always on tv ... . They are entertaining movies. “Spider-Man” gave us a good origin story in 2002. This movie simply wasn't needed. Now I gave it the benefit of the doubt. There´s Burton´s Batman and Nolan´s. Maybe this was a different Spider-Man. A more “dark” vision perhaps! Maybe the movie spent a few minutes on the origin and then wisely moved on with its story. Maybe... well maybe it wasn't just another rehash. A shameless attempt to remake, or how they say it these days, reboot the same idea with minimal changes except the cast. I was naive. The whole movie is about Spider-Man´s origin. They traded Mary Jane for another love interest and held off on “The Green Goblin” because that would be too much “rubbing it in the face” for the fans, I guess. We get Gwen Stacy and “The Lizard”. The rest is same old, same old. The same uncle Ben plot, the same scenes about making the suit, learning how to control powers, the search for the criminal Spider-man lets get away with horrific results. Same thing. Except everything is done without a spark of energy or creativity. Raimi´s movies were energetic, flowing with excitement. They were “new”. Seeing Spider-Man on the big screen, webbing all over the city, fighting “The Green Goblin”, it was amazing. We didn't have “The Avengers” back there, or “Iron Man”. This was like a dream come true for comic fans. “The Amazing Spider-Man” smells of old cheese. I tried to take the movie for what it was but it was impossible. My mind would not let me. I knew what was going to happen next. I knew all the plots! I´d seen it all before! But even ignoring that the movie just does not work. Its slow, turgid with an unlikable Peter Parker and a CGI lizard for a villain. Parker is a whiny, self centered idiot. His relationship with aunt May and uncle Ben is never fully explored and what little there is consists of Parker being a rude jerk for no reason at all. The movie has one thing going for it. The cast. Sally Field and Martin Sheen are great with what little material they have. Emma Stone is sexy and sweet which is “her thing” and again she pulls it off brilliantly. Rhys Ifans is decent as Curt Connors and surprisingly enough I loved Andrew Garfield as Spidey. Yes, seriously! He looks perfect for the part and he did his best with the horrible script. He´s charismatic and brought his own touch to the role instead of copying Toby Maguire. If the movie is even slightly original its because of him. Some of the action in the last third of the movie is also spectacular. Spider-man´s movements when fighting are really well done as is the web-slinging. The action is well directed and exciting and the movie sets up a sequel rather nicely. But its asking a lot to go over the material everyone knows for two hours for a few minutes of cool action. The movie plays it so safe it hurts. Its competent but never brilliant. Tedious but far too long with little spots of action but few and far between. I hope in the sequel this “Spider-Man” can find its own style and its own place. Given space to grow and evolve, on the strength of the character and Garfield´s acting this could be the weak start to a new amazing super-hero trilogy. Then again, maybe i´m just naive.
This is the fourth spider man movie although it is not the fourth sequel but rather one of these reboots which seems to be so popular today. I found the movie to be quite enjoyable but at the same time a bit of a let-down. In some ways it is better than the previous trilogy by Sam Raimi (well it ... is not very hard to make something that is better than the 2nd installment in that trilogy of course). The film is darker, more serious and Spider Man is not so silly and a total mess-up when out of his costume as the character portrayed by Toby Maquire. However, this movie has its own faults which makes me have to think hard whether it is really that much of an improvement over the previous movie and this is what makes me feel a bit let-down since I had hope that this reboot would be that “real” Spider Man movie that enabled me to forget about the previous ones. A lot of not so interesting scenes are really dragged out and the important stuff is rushed. Peter Parker’s transition to Spider Man after his bitten is over and done with quite quickly. In another scene he spends 5 minutes trying to talk some kid out of a car. He even takes off his mask and gives it to him (what the f…) and in the end just zips him out with a net shot. He could have done that right away and spared us the boring time. Generally I think this movie is indeed a better Spider Man movie than the previous ones though and I quite enjoyed the movie evening yesterday, just not as much as I hoped.
Webb's Spider-Man, Spider-Man, does what ever a Spider can. The Amazing Spider-Man is directed by Marc Webb and collectively written by James Vanderbilt, Alvin Sargent and Steve Kloves. It stars Andrew Garfield, Emma Stone, Rhys Ifans, Denis Leary, Martin Sheen and Sally Field. Music is by James ... Horner and cinematography by John Schwartzman. Peter Parker (Garfield) was orphaned as a boy when his parents were killed in a plane crash, raised by his Uncle Ben (Sheen) and Aunt May (Field), he is a clever lad but something of an outcast at high school. While investigating the disappearance of his parents and sporting a crush on class mate Gwen Stacy (Stone), Peter's life is tipped upside down when he is bitten by a radioactive spider that gives him abnormal powers. While the Spider-Man franchise doesn't (thankfully) come packaged with the kind of bizarre mania that comes with Batman, the acolytes are a tough bunch to figure out. Sam Raimi's trilogy garnered close towards $2.5 billion worldwide, yet now, with this reboot (actually it's a reimaging) trundled off of the Sony production line, there are plenty of "fans" coming forward to say they never rated Raimi's films! Magurie was this, Dunst was that, Raimi missed the beat of the comic version of Spidey and etc and etc. Well I'm sorry, but I just don't remember any fall out apart from the near unanimously agreed upon over stuffing of Raimi's part 3. Perhaps I just didn't go on the right Spider-Man forums? But even then it's hard to argue with a box office take of $2.5 billion, those figures have to be made up of a good proportion of Spidey fans, surely? You would reasonably think. I mention it because The Amazing Spider-Man has met with reviews from each end of the scale. Those at the high end who support the "reimaging" seem to focus on it being close to the real Spidey universe they wanted, with great casting, better effects work and a origin story of worth. At the other end is the arguments that "reimaging" a film that is only ten years old is daft, especially since it actually doesn't bring the promised new direction or origin story of worth. In fact it just juggles bits of the Raimi trilogy and plays it out with other Spider-Man characters instead. While Garfield is hardly an improvement since he's way too old for high school as well! The truth is that Webb's movie falls somewhere in between both sides of the argument, and that's not just me being Switzerland and staying neutral! Negatively it plays out as a compromised production and not the film that the makers initially set out to make, there are too many dangling threads and haphazard edits that leave narrative gaps. An Important character disappears off the radar, other characters are given limited time to breathe, and crucial plot points are arrived at with stupendous leaps of logic. A coda spliced into the end credits tries to entice us for the sequel, suggesting that the quick wipe over the origin "origin" story was deliberate, it's unlikely, and feels like an afterthought. For a film that purports to be putting its own stamp on the Spidey universe, it quite often makes you think of Raimi's films anyway. It may be The Lizard instead of Green Goblin and Gwen instead of MJ, but the emotional and psychological beats are still the same. Reboot? My arse. Oh and Horner, who I'm normally a fan of, has turned in a score that lacks vim and vigour, it aspires to be full of swirling superhero fervour to raise the goose flesh on your arms, but instead it's just goose, and not a decently cooked one at that. However, on the positive side of things, low expectation really helped me to enjoy the film, and I even watched it a second time to check over some initial reactions I had. There is still a lot to enjoy here. Acting is of a high standard (Ifans' performance as Curt Connors gets better on repeat viewings), with good chemistry generated between Stone and Garfield, the effects work is (obviously) better ten years on; something which gives us a better-more acrobatic-moving Spider-Man, while the whole make-up of Parker as a geek who becomes cocky, even arrogant, really adds a kick to the first half of the movie's coming-of-age narrative bent. It's also good that with a running time of over two hours the makers have the time to expand Peter as a character, making the audience wait with expectation of his life changing date with the spider. As for the villain, it's true enough to say that The Lizard is hardly an inspiring choice, but it does fit in with the whole origin story plan that Webb and his team want to tell. Though it should be noted that those seeking wall to wall fights between Spidey and The Liz are going to go a little hungry. It's big on human story and not the lazy cash in movie it could have been, and undeniably it's fun, but the holes, dangling threads and logic leaps stop it breaking out to achieve its intentions. Looking forward to the sequel, mind 7/10
I enjoyed this. One of the great advantages of the whole "Spiderman" concept is that it can be reinvented time and time again without really compromising the original character - a decent but lonely young man trying to make his way in the world and to get his girl. Like Tobey Maguire before him, the ... casting of the largely unknown Andrew Garfield works well - it allows a whole new generation of fans to follow their hero. The fact that he is cute in tights doesn't do him any harm either. Emma Stone is quite good, too, as the object of his affections "Mary Jane" and the whole look of the film is sophisticated and colourful. The story is very derivative, however - and that is the problem with this film. Though there is plenty of action, it becomes a little repetitive and uninspired. The CGI will always look good, and will increasingly do most of the work with these kind of films - indeed, just about everything in the Marvel Universe is 90% style over substance; but so long as they can still recruit enthusiastic actors to play the roles than the franchise might still have legs (though hopefully not eight) for the future. Martin Sheen and Sally Field add a little gravitas to the proceedings - the former has one of these wonderful Churchillian style voices that just goes on resonating, and Rhys Ifans makes for an OK mad scientist. As a stand alone adventure this works fine. Maybe a bit too long, but a cinema experience to be relished - then, maybe, just put away again for seven years.