Watching this movie as a middle-aged person will have a very different feeling.
It's not that whoever bites a spider can become Spider-Man.
Going to class, working, paying rent, who still has the strength to fly and walk the wall when a person returns home alone at night? I don’t want to pay me overtime, let alone it’s free? Please, I just want to nest in the house and pet the cat...
In the movie, Peter Parker, who had just been fired by a pizzeria, couldn't deliver a report and was about to be punished by a professor, found in the laundrette that his iconic Spiderman one-piece suit would fade, and other regular clothes were dyed red and blue. Mottled and messed up. Personal life is so mourned, the young Peter Parker did not expect to use his superpowers to grab a treasury or rob a local tyrant-he can rationalize this into charging a little superhero service fee. In the end, he did not choose to ignore his fluctuating superpowers and return to his private life: write a good report, a scholarship, pay rent on time as an excellent worker, and capture Mary Jane’s heart and focus on "small luck"...
In the face of personal frustration and terrible reality, he can still see the dangers of others, and he did not choose to turn a blind eye. And extended a helping hand again and again. This is why he became Spider-Man.
The strong fend for themselves, and the saint fend for others.
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