Personally think it is the best part of the trilogy.
A hero can be, but there is a price.
You must give up your friends, your family, your beloved ones.
In secret, Peter Parker is Spider-Man, the hero of the city, and is always on the front line of fighting crime. On the bright side, Peter Parker is a part-time college student who is often late and always looks exhausted.
To be a hero or yourself?
The director's handling here is actually not good. After making up his mind to be an ordinary person, MJ was arrested; Peter Parker had to put on the Spiderman's uniform again in order to save his love, but isn't this an escape? ? It's a pity that the director skipped this supposedly complicated psychological journey.
The reason Spider-Man is so special is because he is a small person, he comes from the bottom. He is troubled by life, troubled by the various problems of adolescence.
He is not a knight, he is just a child, carrying a burden that does not belong to him.
Being a hero is more of a challenge of heart and emotion.
When the greater the ability, the greater the responsibility has become a creed and a principle, and then become enemies with former friends; watching one's love go to the palace of marriage; being regarded as lazy by the teacher; being criticized and cursed by the boss, these All should be burdened silently.
Spider-Man is destined to be the hero of the entire city, and Peter Parker is destined to be a loser.
Unfortunately, the director couldn't make it.
He chose to skip.
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