The Spider-Man Films, Why A Reboot Is Necessary

The Spider-Man Films, Why A Reboot Is Necessary

I just want to start this article by saying that I love Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man films. I grew up with them, and it was only after watching his films so much that my obsession with Spider-Man grew to what it is today. If one were to look at my room, they would be shocked at the number of Spider-Man themed posters, comic books, and video games that I have laying around.

Editorial Opinion
By Elysium - Jan 15, 2011 12:01 PM EST
Filed Under: Spider-Man

The Spider-Man Films, Why A Reboot Is Necessary

I just want to start this article by saying that I love Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man films. I grew up with them, and it was only after watching his films so much that my obsession with Spider-Man grew to what it is today. If one were to look at my room, they would be shocked at the number of Spider-Man themed posters, comic books, and video games that I have laying around.



Sam Raimi made me believe in a hero with faults, one that could perform superhuman feats yet suffer the pangs of adolescence. The Spider-Man films were my first exposure to this character, until I branched out to reading comic books, watching the television shows, and even playing the video games. Except for Spider-Man: Friend or Foe, that video game is an abomination, and doesn’t deserve to exist.

Anyway, this isn’t about video games or television shows, or even comic books. It’s about the movies. The films succeeded in bringing our wallcrawler to the silver screen, this marked the first time Spider-Man had ever been portrayed realistically in a live-action film.

On May 3, 2002, Tobey Maguire, James Franco, Kirsten Dunst, and Sam Raimi swung into our hearts, and evidently, into the audience’s wallets, making over $800 million dollars at the box office. The success lead to a critically acclaimed sequel to be released in 2004, which infinitely improved on the previous film in a multitude of ways. It introduced a much needed action element that culminated in one of the greatest fight scenes in an action/comic-book movie, the clocktower/train fight scene at the end of the movie*, and introduced a wonderfully complex villain that threatened the very structure of Peter Parker’s life.

Spider-Man 2 is one of the best comic book films ever created, and is personally one of my favorites. How could Spider-Man 3 possibly top it? Filmmakers promised a “darker” sequel, where Peter Parker would finally tap into his evil side, and longtime fan-favorite villain, as well as my own, Venom would finally make an appearance. The entire United States (and even Tokyo), held their breath as they waited in line to watch the movie. Plainly stated, the movie wasn’t very good. It suffered from featuring too many storylines, and made the movie too convoluted for its own good.




If you want to know more, please direct yourself to this YouTube video created by user Dukklord: “145 Reasons Why Spider-Man 3 Sucks” (Beware, it’s over 10 minutes long, but it’s worth a watch. It’s quite funny, and exposes this movie’s abundant flaws.)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LVn9d87TlPU

Three years later and it was official, Sam Raimi and Tobey Maguire were gone, and a reboot directed by Marc Webb was to be released in 2012. I’m not going to lie; I was devastated to hear the cast that I grew up with suddenly vanished overnight. I love Tobey Maguire, he is, and always will be my Spider-Man. Nothing will ever change that. However, I believe that Marc Webb has an opportunity to do something really special. There are some things that Sam Raimi got fundamentally wrong about Spider-Man and his story that I wish to address.

1. The Title Of The Movie Is Spider-Man, Not Peter Parker.

In the comics, Peter Parker is a shy, nerdy orphan who is constantly bullied at school. After acquiring his “spider-powers” from a radioactive spider bite, Peter is able to live through his alter-ego Spider-Man, abandoning his quiet adolescent life to fight super villains and protect the people of New York City. Peter becomes a crime-fighting superhero with a sharp tongue while still trying to keep balance with his adolescent life.

In the movies, Peter Parker follows a similar storyline. On a fieldtrip to a genetics laboratory, Peter is bitten by a genetically engineered spider that changes his entire life overnight. He wakes up with perfect vision (he’s a nerd, so he has to have poor eyesight), superfast reflexes, an extremely muscular body, and is able to shoot webs from his wrists. It isn’t long before Spider-Man is born, and Peter begins to fight crime throughout the city.
Here is where the problem begins; Sam Raimi never showed a noticeable difference between the two personas, Spider-Man and Peter Parker. In the comics, Spider-Man is always throwing out humorous lines, making fun of his opponents as he beats the living the hell out of them (and sometimes the other way around). As the films progressed, Spider-Man’s numbers of witty one-liners gradually decreased. And in the last film, it’s hard to recall any of them.
Spider-Man isn’t supposed to be such a serious character; he’s a fun-loving superhero that is able to find the bright side of any situation. Raimi’s Spider-Man rarely talked, and became a creepy, silent figure that came to save New Yorkers in dire situations (it’s actually a little creepy, isn’t it?).

2. The Suit
Yes, how can I find issues with Spider-Man’s suit? It’s one of the most faithful comic-to-film costume adaptations ever. Don’t get me wrong the suit looks beautiful and completely perfect. But this is where the issue lies, the suit is too perfect. It just doesn’t look believable, much less possible that a genius teenager was able to create it within the confines of his bedroom.

3. The Villains
My complaints of the way the villains were handled in these films ties into my next complaint as well, the writing. Most of the villains portrayed by Sam Raimi were written very poorly. I’m going to put it very bluntly for you.

A. They pretty much all died except for Sandman. If there were any future films, they would never be able to return. Sinister Six anybody?

B. They all had some sort of personal connection to Peter Parker. Seriously, why can’t they just be villains looking for some trouble? Why must they all have personal ties to Peter Parker somehow?

Let me briefly recap the villains for you:
a. Green Goblin – Peter’s best friend’s father
b. Doc Ock – Peter’s best friend’s work associate
c. Venom – Peter’s work “rival”
d. New Goblin – Peter’s best friend

The only villain to not fall under these two categories is Sandman. However, I find it necessary to add that the writers got this character completely wrong. Flint Marko, a small time crook in the comic books, was suddenly transformed into a fugitive looking for money to save his daughter from dying of cancer.

What?



4. The Writing

Cheese! I don’t have to dedicate much writing to this, this should already be totally obvious to you if you’ve seen the third film. Every Spider-Man/Peter Parker dancing scene, the reporters, the kids, and pretty much anything that Peter Parker ever said. It just wasn’t written well. The writing never felt particularly realistic, and the films never seemed grounded, as if this could actually happen.

5. Retconning

Retconning, “A retcon is when a later writer changes the history of a comic book to accommodate their own storyline.**”

In Spider-Man 3, Sam Raimi retconned Uncle Ben’s killer. This one decision completely undermines everything that Spider-Man believes in. Let me explain it for you:

Original: Peter lets the robber go. Robber kills Uncle Ben. Peter swears to fight for good after seeking revenge which resulted in the death of his Uncle.

Raimi’d: Peter lets the robber go. Robber is working with Flint Marko (Sandman). Flint Marko kills Uncle Ben while the robber leaves with Uncle Ben’s car.


Seriously?

Yes, these films do have some serious flaws, and I believe that Marc Webb (director of the new film) has the ability to do something really special here. Despite all of my complaints, I do really love these films. I am eagerly anticipating this reboot.

Are you?



*If you haven’t already, please watch Spider-Man 2.1, it adds two or three extra minutes to this fight scene, and it looks absolutely glorious.
**http://comicbooks.about.com/od/glossary/g/retcon.htm
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MrGuyX
MrGuyX - 1/15/2011, 3:26 PM
I agree completely. I was really disappointed when all the major villains died.
3087208
3087208 - 1/15/2011, 4:20 PM
As much as I want to believe otherwise the new films are gonna suck as well. Webshooters, the Lizard, Garfield's age, and the sheer magnitude of the story. The lizard has no agenda. How can he make the suit number one..then make the webshooters-the chemicals etc. Then the problem is we're now gonna see an iconic falling spidey momment without spray web. Smh. As much as that appeals they need to get it together
Elysium
Elysium - 1/15/2011, 5:15 PM
@3087208:
I believe in the comic books his parents (who were killed) were working on some sort of chemical formula that could produce webbing. Peter just finished it. He's a science genius, he can do anything he wants!

As for the Lizard having no agenda... I guess we'll have to wait for the movie's synopsis to make that judgement.

Garfield is playing Peter around the same age Tobey did. He'll pass as a high schooler just fine.
Denn1s
Denn1s - 1/15/2011, 7:33 PM
the reboot is certainly NOT necessary. they could redeem themselves with a good 4th film.
kyle
kyle - 1/15/2011, 8:49 PM
wat a coincedence! i watched the whole triliogy all over again, and can say that they all sucked: they weren't close to the comics is the biggest, parker isn't supposed to be sad all the time, every villian died, and venom was a [frick]ing puny crybaby. wat kind of bs is that?

trust me. look wat nolan did with batman. now, look at wat webb is doing with spider-man. nolan's had similarities to burton's and shumacher's. webb's will do the same thing. just darker and more realistic. also, i dont think that the second villian is van atter. even the actor was like that's who it is. still believe it was kraven and lizard. problem is is that his statement is all i cud find within each article.
Suzanne
Suzanne - 1/15/2011, 11:22 PM
I completely disagree while sure there were some changes nothing major that took away from the films. They could have continued. Why they didn't have Tobey tied up to do more movies then he did is beyond me. He was needed to continue the franchise. The next movie could have worked easily with the new directer and without Mary Jane. It looked like in the 3rd movie they were going in that direction anyway.
2cool4school
2cool4school - 1/16/2011, 10:54 AM
I hate the fact that they are going back to high school. I'd like to see a mid-aged Spidy and even see one where he get old and retires. I'm tired of high school love stories. I just want to see him at 33 and maybe with children and how he deals with being Spidy. Something we never get to see.
kyle
kyle - 1/16/2011, 1:10 PM
just found out that proto-goblin is the bad guy in the new spider-man, but the thing is is that they never confirmed lizard was the other bad guy. they just assumed.

wat if they do a tdk thing, were proto-goblin is the main bad guy while lizard comes at the end and is the bad guy to the rebooted sequel along with kraven. then the third is the green goblin. i mean think about it
Daev
Daev - 2/7/2011, 5:35 PM
A reboot of the series this soon is completely unneccessary and a huge slap in the face. Two of the three Spider-Man movies were fantastic and everything that Spider-Man fans had always wanted. The third movie didn't live up to the previous two, and it wasn't great, but it wasn't AWFUL either! It's not like it was one of the Batman movies! Raimi should have had another chance at the series after the fantastic first two movies he made. How are we supposed to have any faith that Webb is going to do a better job? From his big romance movie? PLEASE! This is just an example of Hollywood being too greedy and having too short an attention span, i.e. the Batman reboot has been so successful lets do a Spider-Man reboot to make more money!
Nighmarewalking117
Nighmarewalking117 - 5/26/2012, 3:22 PM
Agreed @Daev and "aimed for kids" are you guys serious? So the "Web-Shooters" weren't made and they didn't start with "Gwen Stacy" as: Peter's First-Loved-interest" I know the comics and I've read the comics; so don't bitch at me. Not you @Daev, the "others".

With a "Spider-Man 4" you could see: Peter Parker and Spider-Man growing-up even more; as him going to high school and so on.
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