Amazing Spider-man II on Blu Ray

Lefisc

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Amazing Spider-Man #2

This is a review from a student of comics, mostly, 1961- 1977, who will not discuss spoilers, but will try to place this within the frame of the Marvel Movie Universe. For a regular review you can go to Rotten Tomatoes

Amazing Spider-Man #2 is not the worst superhero movie of this modern era. The Spirit was. This doesn't really even come close to being that bad, but it does rival Superman Returns, and in my opinion, Man of Steel. And like Man of Steel they have changed the title character so much I don’t recognize him. This is just not a good movie. If you haven't seen it in the theater and you're compelled to see it wait till it comes on cable.

I realize that continuity, after 50 years, is a very difficult and unfair burden for writers to have to endure. I bought Amazing Fantasy #15 on the stands all those years ago. And I bought the next 175 issues of Spider-Man. I certainly don’t expect the character to be quit the same. But while the first Spider-Man series got things basically right, the rebooted Amazing Spiderman completely eradicated all the things that I had enjoyed about Spider-Man.

Steve Ditko, the co-creator of Spiderman, always got it right. He developed, or re-developed, Iron Man and the Hulk when they were not very successful. He was able to see, keep and build on the essence of the character. He recognized the essential things about their personality that we felt were compelling, and develop a fresh new world around them. He introduced new supporting characters and emphasized their motivations. And he created situation where the characters would conflict or bond and sometimes both! Somehow you felt he kept intact their inner qualities that had made the characters interesting and compelling.

Not so here. The first thing that strikes me here is that we have people 30 years old playing 18 year olds. Their look, actions and dialogue don’t fit. Instead of being shy and aloof, he is an overconfident show off who has none of the reserve or the doubts of the original Peter. He has none of the qualities that I related to… change the environment, add new characters, but keep the original person! Here, in high school he already has a permanent great relationship with a gorgeous woman. In any age, 1964 or 2014, Parker should be having trouble dealing with woman.

Electro is the major villain (one of three) in the piece. But they dehumanize him so much that you cannot relate to him whatsoever.. Speaking of being overdone they bring back the Green Goblin. The original Goblin was not a super-villain, but a gangster who had incredible gadgets. Not so here.

So the movie was completely empty. Sally Field playing Aunt May is completely miss-cast or underused. The director in his commentary says that he wanted her to be Peter’s mentor but they don't give her the opportunity to do that.

The movie is two hours and 20 minutes; they have added an additional five minutes to the DVDs. They used very quick editing to add to the tension, but it destroyed any chance of characterization, zipping around so fast. I was actually bored after 10 minutes.


The special effects were wonderful and almost always look great. There were times when Spider-Man did look animated. The Blu-ray disc has great images and a powerful soundtrack. There is a 100 minute behind the scenes feature which divided into seven chapters. There is nothing really new here; you’ve seen this sort of thing before. There are 25 minutes of outtakes. There’s e a scene with Peter Parker meeting his now dead father which is an alternative ending to the movie. Here the father gets to say… “With great power comes great responsibility.” The rest of the deleted scenes are narrated by the director who tells why they were not used.

Those who buy the DVD will be a little bit shortchanged. The Behind the Scenes is not on the disk and instead of having 25 minutes of outtakes there are only nine minutes. While the visuals on the DVD are excellent the Dolby Digital soundtrack is not very good, the DTS soundtrack on the Blu-ray is so much better
 
Before the year 2000….While the original Superman and Batman movies of years ago were big hits, I always felt that Hollywood and its writers never understood and didn’t read the comics they were bringing to the screen. (Actually this holds true for Superman II).

That is they look through the comics saw the costumes, locations and the characters but never read the actual text. So they didn’t know the characters they were developing or writing about. Be it Dick Tracy or Supergirl, Batman and Robin or those dumb Captain America movies, they mimicked the look of the comic, but never the content. It’s as if they decided that the writing, the character development were for kids and can be ignored. So the characters on screen were underdeveloped, or even silly. And they never had real human motivations, reactions or emotions.

Spider-Man I and II were a refreshing change from that. They understood the characters and brought them to the screen. Not just the costumes and the powers, but the personalities. I thought the first X-Men movies did the same, as well as most of the new Marvel movies. And the Black Knight.

Amazing Spider-Man is a step back. They didn’t use the depth of the comics, just the characters and the colors. Note that every Spider-man movie since Spider-Man 2 has attendance decrease by at least ten percent. They don’’t get it.
 
I'm in the movie. Here's a true story about how this happened.

My (then) 16 year old daughter heard about a casting call for Noah on the north shore of Long Island, so I took her there. We all filed into a room and sat down. They handed us papers to fill out and I told them I'm just here with her, but they said "why not fill one out anyway". So I did. Well, in the last 2 years I've gotten about 30-40 casting calls for various shows and movies. Unfortunately my daughter hasn't received any (yes, she is pissed at me).

I've never actually gone to one because they are always during working hours, and they only pay about $100 for a full days time. But this call came and it was for a Saturday, so I said I would try it. Amazing Spiderman II, the graduation scene in the beginning of the movie. I'm sitting front row center in the audiance right behind the graduating kids. I haven't seen the movie myself yet but I suspect that I am a blurry shape if I am visible at all.

It was a unique experience but there were probably 1000 extras there that blazing hot summer day. I got sun burned. Not something I would do again unless it was with a much smaller group, like 10 or less.

Oh well, that's my claim to fame in the movie world. I suspect that if you are a middle aged man you too can easily get casting calls, since there are few enough willing to do this for such little pay. Plenty of kids, not so many typically working people available. It could be a fun thing to do in retirement though.
 
Finally rented the movie last night. Here's a picture of me over Emma Stone's left shoulder in the graduation scene of The Amazing Spiderman 2.

Spiderman 2 Circle.jpg
 
I watched it on PPV last week. It goes down as one of the worst flicks I have ever seen.
 
I'm in the movie. Here's a true story about how this happened.

My (then) 16 year old daughter heard about a casting call for Noah on the north shore of Long Island, so I took her there. We all filed into a room and sat down. They handed us papers to fill out and I told them I'm just here with her, but they said "why not fill one out anyway". So I did. Well, in the last 2 years I've gotten about 30-40 casting calls for various shows and movies. Unfortunately my daughter hasn't received any (yes, she is pissed at me).

I've never actually gone to one because they are always during working hours, and they only pay about $100 for a full days time. But this call came and it was for a Saturday, so I said I would try it. Amazing Spiderman II, the graduation scene in the beginning of the movie. I'm sitting front row center in the audiance right behind the graduating kids. I haven't seen the movie myself yet but I suspect that I am a blurry shape if I am visible at all.

It was a unique experience but there were probably 1000 extras there that blazing hot summer day. I got sun burned. Not something I would do again unless it was with a much smaller group, like 10 or less.

Oh well, that's my claim to fame in the movie world. I suspect that if you are a middle aged man you too can easily get casting calls, since there are few enough willing to do this for such little pay. Plenty of kids, not so many typically working people available. It could be a fun thing to do in retirement though.

Speaking of this my daughter appears in the movie "The Lovely Bones." Her mom got the extra casting bug when Peter Jackson's company send out flyers to their neighborhood announcing the intent to film the movie on their street (which they did). My daughter was 15 at the time and they have her in a scene with Mark Wahlberg at the mall, she has a separate director from Mark and she is cast as a mother with two kids! Heck, she was 15! She waited 10 hours and got paid $100.
 
Yeah, I got $100 for 10 hours of work, plus the added benefits of a sunburn. It was an experience, but I doubt that I would do this again. Especially not with a large group of people (there were about 2000 of us that day in the audiance). Perhaps if there were only 5-10 extras needed for a scene.
 
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