★★½
Disclaimer: reviewer is not what one would refer to as a
“fanboy.”
My only knowledge of how the stories in these comic book
movies work is solely based on what the filmmakers bring to the table each
time. That and a quick search of Wikipedia before and after the screening never
hurt either. I can also say that I’ve never been really big on the Spider-Man
adaptations that have been brought to the screen in the past. “Spider-Man 2” in
2004 is the one very big exception. That’s still one of my favorite superhero
movies of all time, placing fourth on my Best Ten of 2004 list.
Outside of that, the series has been pretty stagnant.
“Spider-Man 3” in 2007 killed Sam Raimi’s interest in it with Sony not even
wanting to continue on with him and Tobey Maguire. So they did what any of us
would have done: they rebooted it. Also, they had to make another movie pretty
quick or else they’d lose the rights to the franchise. That might now have been
so bad. The rights would have gone back to Marvel Studios. Then we could have
had Spider-Man hanging out with Iron Man, Hulk, Thor and Captain America. Oh
well. I bet they really do regret selling the rights to some of their most
valuable property now.
“The Amazing Spider-Man” in 2012 was yet another bland
telling of the Spider-Man character. This time, Peter Parker (Andrew Garfield)
was updated to the modern times (since 2002-2007 was oh so long ago). Now we
have Spider-Man keeping up with his loved ones via cell phones and searching
the Internet for clues with Bing (who uses Bing?). He also seems like a bit of
a hipster. Maybe I’m wrong, but that’s how I see it. Or maybe I’m just getting
old and have nothing in common with the high school kids these films are about.
Nevertheless, “The Amazing Spider-Man 2” opens the summer
movie season this year on a weekend that’s been pretty much synonymous with
comic book action movies for the last several years. Here we find New York
criminals being hunted down by Peter Parker, once again played by Andrew
Garfield. One this particular day he’s running late to his high school
graduation because he’s trying to stop a mad Russian criminal named Aleksei
Sytsevich (Paul Giamatti) from stealing plutonium from Oscorp.
But things aren’t going so well for him and his girlfriend
Gwyn Stacy (Emma Stone). He promised her father (Denis Leary) as he was dying
at the end of the first film that he’d stay away from Gwyn to protect her and
that’s weighing heavily on his mind everyday. Every time he kisses her, he can
see her father in his mind, watching him and judging him – literally.

Dillon loves Spider-Man. He’s obsessed with him. When Spider-Man
saves his life one day, Dillon can’t believe it. When taking a ride up the
elevator with the beautiful Gwyn Stacy, he can’t believe she remembers his
name. He wants to be liked. He wants to be needed. He wants to be remembered.
All this is a bit difficult for him since Oscorp has used his new power grid
designs and gave him no credit for it.
Eventually an accident happens which turns Dillon into an electrically
charged energy bomb. He calls himself Electro.
It would be rather easy to get the story completely
oversaturated at this point with what appears to be three different villains.
However, everything is pretty evenly spaced out. Personally, I was surprised
with the handling of the story. A script from the likes of Alex Kurtzman,
Roberto Orci and Jeff Pinkner usually spells convoluted disaster (see
“Transformers” and their much-loved-yet-much-maligned TV series “Lost” and
“Fringe”). Spider-Man only faces one villain at a time rather than all three ganging
up on him on different fronts.
But that’s about the only thing they did right. When the
film isn’t showing high-octane action sequences of nothing but CGI, the movie
is nothing but plotting exposition. We’re treated to scenes of people talking
that don’t do much to drive the plot forward. I suppose everything might be
trying to set up what will ultimately be “The Amazing Spider-Man 3” or the
spinoff series featuring the Sinister Six. But this is “The Amazing Spider-Man
2” and it should be handled as its own stand-alone film. That’s the problem with
most of these mega film franchises: they’re always looking ahead to the next
film instead of focusing on this film.
And maybe that’s what director Marc Webb likes about these
scripts. Maybe he prefers to see the characters evolve and grow throughout the
entire series, however long it may be. His only other big movie outside of the
new Spider-Man franchise is “(500) Days of Summer” which was nothing but growth
and evolution of characters. That might work well enough for one movie, but if
they keep it up for an entire franchise, that might be rather dull.
Still, “The Amazing Spider-Man 2” pays off well enough when
they’re in the midst of action sequences. And that’s really what people are
paying for, right? Webb uses the CGI to
lift his action sequences up to a level that’s exciting for every viewer. But
who isn’t tired of CGI by now? The climactic battle sequences of this film feel
like big screen cartoons. Filmmakers can integrate live action and CGI better
than this. We’ve seen it before with Christopher Nolan in his Dark Knight
Trilogy or Joss Whedon in “The Avengers.” So it can be done.
It’s hard for me to say this is a bad movie though. The 100
drawn out minutes of muddy exposition are indeed boring, but there are some
good moments (especially one great scene in particular between Peter Parker and
Aunt May, played by the great Sally Field); the other 40 minutes are quite
enjoyable. There are some tense moments and the action sequences are well put
together (even if it’s from a team of animators rather than a film crew).
Looking ahead at a summer full of unimpressive titles, I guess it’s a good
thing that we started out on a half way decent note.
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