Compared with Disney and Warner, which have a lot of superhero rights from Marvel and DC, Sony is too hard. Seeing the other two big factories build their own superhero system step by step, I can only fiddle with that poor "little spider" over and over again. In just ten years from 2002's Tobey Maguire's first "Spider-Man" to 2012, the civilian hero has already begun the road to reboot.
To be honest, although the first reboot version of "The Amazing Spider-Man" in 2012 bears the signs of Andrew Garfield and Emma Stone's youthful sunshine, the highlights seem to be nothing more than that. Compared with the old version, the new version is almost like fried rice with old wine in a new bottle. It does not bring anything innovative, and the portrayal of the characters is not as good as the old version. Even if the two new generations have a good audience, but when it comes to acting, I am more willing to vote for Maguire and Dunst.
And this "The Amazing Spider-Man 2" still continues the relatively rough fast food movie mode. Mark Webb can guide the classic "500 Days with Summer", but his grasp of superheroes is really not very good. Although superhero movies are basically fast food movies, the audience will not be stupid enough to ask such movies to reach the height of hitting the Oscars, but fast food is also divided into high and low, take it with "The Dark Knight" or "Captain America 2" and other word-of-mouth works. In contrast, its quality is like a cloud of mud.
In the process of watching this film, one of the biggest feelings is that the characters in the film are a little neurotic, so that the character's emotional changes and behavioral motives are very blunt. Take the two villains Electron Light and Little Green Goblin as an example. Their hatred for Spider-Man came abruptly. The former went from admiration to hatred, and the latter from friend to enemy. The transformation was almost completely completed in an instant, full of Extreme and willful means, unconvincing. The breakup and reconciliation between Peter and his girlfriend Gwen, as well as the misunderstanding between Peter and Aunt May, are also described in a simple and rude manner, making it difficult for the audience to mobilize their emotions, let alone a sense of substitution.
On the one hand, this is caused by the limited availability of Spider-Man itself. The old version of the trilogy has already said everything that needs to be said. Spider-Man's life experience and personality are completely familiar, and there are no more new perspectives. Of course, a larger part of the reason lies with the studio and the director. As we all know, Sony has been seeking cooperation with Marvel, hoping to integrate Spider-Man into the Avengers team to achieve a win-win goal (it is reported that it has been negotiated). Therefore, for the "Amazing Spider-Man" series, I am afraid that Sony will not be too concerned, at most just extract the residual value. I don’t know if it was influenced by the positioning of the studio, or it was indeed limited. The director Mark Webb’s perfunctory handling of the film is obvious to all. Except for the special effects of the battle between Spider-Man and Electron Man, the special effects are quite unsatisfactory. Parts are really not worth watching.
In fact, the "Amazing Spider-Man" series is a victim of superhero over-consumption, turning an otherwise lovable character into a stagnant, self-defeating textbook. According to the agreement reached between Marvel and Sony, Spider-Man will appear in a movie in the Marvel Universe, and then create a new Spider-Man movie, which basically announced that the originally expected "The Amazing Spider-Man" trilogy was unfinished. ending. Ironically, Andrew Garfield and Emma Stone, who were attached to the first "The Amazing Spider-Man", officially announced their split in October this year, and their three-year relationship has come to an end. Normally, the unfinished end of "The Amazing Spider-Man" and the unfinished love of the two leading actors are completely different things, but who can guarantee that there is no certainty? Because of the drama, the predestined relationship ends, and the so-called predestination arises when the predestination arises, and the predestination ends. Life is like a play, nothing more than an ear.
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