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STICKY TANGLE: SPIDER-MAN 3 and WHAT COULD COME NEXT
SPIDER-MAN
3 may well be the weirdest superhero movie ever. Yes,
even weirder than Ang
Lee’s 2003 misfire, HULK,
which was at least interesting because of its bizarre eastern-sensibility
meets western pop culture tenor. That Sam
Raimi went so far off the deep end with Spider-Man’s third
installment (especially after crafting a pitch perfect second film)
makes it all the more confusing.
First of all, while there’s a tendency for female leads in superhero
films to mistakenly refer to the project (as Kim
Basinger did in every interview for BATMAN)
by saying, “It’s a love story,” this movie truly
is; the hearts of the characters take center stage. Peter and MJ love
each other and Harry and Harry loves his father and MJ and ultimately
Peter and Aunt May loves everyone and the Sandman loves his daughter
and Eddie Brock loves himself and ENOUGH ALREADY!
And then there’s all that crying. I mean, Jesus, EVERY SINGLE
MAJOR CHARACTER with the exception of J.
Jonah Jameson weeps at least once in this film. Spidey cries (a
lot). MJ
cries. Aunt
May cries. Harry cries. The Sandman cries. Uncle
Ben cries in flashback. Even freakin’ Venom cries! Maybe
the symbiote suit works better for the web spinner. He wears black
on the outside because black is how he feels on the inside!
But if S3 is a romance first, it’s a musical second. From the
opening scene, with MJ’s awkward crooning on Broadway, the tone
is off. I could practically hear the kids squirming in their seats
as they tried to deal with a scene better suited for the
Thin Man than Spider-Man. And while I did enjoy Dark Peter’s
Maneroesque
strutting montage, I wasn’t prepared for his humiliating (in
more ways than one) dance routine at “the Jazz Club” (great
name).
Believe me, I appreciate that Sam Raimi’s esthetic is different
from Michael
Bay’s. I like that he’s an old school filmmaker with
a quirky style and a weird sense of humor. I appreciate his off beat
casting and attention to detail. I like that he brings a retro feel
to very modern movies. But he totally lost the balance this time.
There’s very little that’s super in this superhero film.
But even the action in this movie is pretty bad. The FX scenes are
all so jumbled with hard-to-read, yet obvious CG that they carried
no oomph at all. I can barely even remember anything from any of Spidey’s
various fights with any of the villains. The only really exciting
sequence involves the runaway crane. I jumped in my seat as the various
pieces of building and office furniture came crashing onto the streets
of Manhattan. So how come when Spidey swoops in, all he does is save
Gwen
Stacy and then swing away? Is that poor crane operator still stuck
up there? It’s such a missed opportunity. Like much of the movie.
SPIDER-MAN 3 ironically falls into the standard superhero
movie traps that the first
two
Spidey films so smartly avoided. The main one being, of course, too
many villains. One gets the sense that Raimi only wanted the
Sandman and the New Goblin,
but the studio got tired of having too few characters to license,
so they pushed him to include the fan-favorite Venom.
Now, Raimi's a little older than I, but it seems as if we had a similar
relationship with Spider-Man
comics. I read Spider-Man regularly from the early
1970s into about 1982, which means, like Raimi, I was long done by
the time Venom
was introduced. It’s already been widely reported that Raimi
wasn’t interested in including the character, as Venom wasn’t
a part of his nostalgia either, and it shows. Even I could tell the
character was underdeveloped (and I don’t mean physically).
You could also feel the egos of the leads on display, no longer willing
to sublimate their faces to masks. Spider-Man spends more time with
his mask off than on (I guess the people who saw his face on the subway,
uh, el train he saved in S2 promising to keep his
secret identity gave him an exaggerated sense of security) and the
new Goblin actually has a mechanism that allows his mug to be on display…
to what end? Hey, lookit me! I’m Harry!
I know, I know, Superman
puts on glasses and nobody knows he’s Clark
Kent, but every movie, especially a genre film has its own internal
logic, and suspension of disbelief is a relative thing. So we can
buy that a kid bitten by a genetically altered super-spider takes
on its powers and abilities. Fine. But Peter Parker’s just a
bit to blasé about using his Spidey powers in public (the web
in Central Park?). Also, the alien symbiote just happening to crash
land near Peter Parker’s moped and Eddie Brock just happening
to be in the same church where Spidey’s ripping off the costume
in the bell tower are too coincidental to buy.
Anyway. It’s just sad to see a once great franchise fall so
far. You know it’s a weird superhero movie when the most memorable
part of it is Bruce
Campbell’s cameo as the funny French Maitre D’.
I can’t help but compare this film to SUPERMAN
RETURNS in how it’s being received by the general
public, far more accustomed to slam-bang action in a superhero movie
than any kind of emotional heft. The impatience of the audience was
palpable at the sold out showing of SPIDER-MAN 3
I saw, to the point where people were leaving after the action ended
but before the movie was over. And I get the feeling that, record
breaking opening weekend aside, this movie is going to have terrible
word of mouth and fade pretty fast.
Still, that crazy money of the opening weekend pretty much guarantees
that we’ll see SPIDER-MAN 4, but based on the
ennui that the principals have outwardly shown during the press junket
for this one, it seems unlikely they’ll be along for the ride.
Which means that 4 could well be the
BATMAN AND ROBIN of the Spidey franchise (with
this film kinda being its SUPERMAN
III).
But, assuming there will be another, where does Spider-Man go from
here?
First and foremost, who could take over for Tobey
Maguire, Kirsten
Dunst and Sam Raimi? While I always thought Maguire was good casting
and did a great job, it does feel like someone else could fit under
the mask. Jake
Gyllenhaal (once rumored to take Maguire’s place when he
hurt his back before S2) would actually be okay.
What about Justin
“I’m a Mac” Long or THE
OFFICE’s John
Krasinski? It’s too bad Daniel
Radcliffe isn’t a little older, he’d be perfect (you
watch, though, it’s gonna get offered to Shia
LaBeouf)... For MJ, I’ve only got one pick: Laura
Prepon. And behind the camera… maybe KUNG
FU HUSTLE’s Stephen
Chow or, call me crazy, but I’d like to see what Richard
Linklater would do with a comic book movie, especially one with
a geeky outsider as its hero.
Now that the precedent has been set of multiple villains, it seems
unlikely they’ll go back. So I again have to suggest aping Bond
films and including an all-action pre-credits sequence with a lesser
villain who requires no exposition, but allows for the requisite merchandising.
Have 4 open with Spidey in an all-out bash with the
Rhino or a sparky confrontation with Electro
that concludes quickly and doesn’t clog up the main story.
So who could be the next major villain? How about Kraven
the Hunter, who comes to Manhattan to stalk the web-slinger and
releases a bunch of wild animals from the Central Park Zoo to give
Spidey something new to battle? Maybe Clive
Owen or LAW
& ORDER’s Christopher
Meloni? Maybe the
Kingpin could be done right, erasing the memory of the abysmal
DAREDEVIL (too bad James
Gandolfini would never touch it). If Mary Jane’s acting
career picks up again, she could get a movie gig and become the object
of obsession of a re-worked (and redesigned) Mysterio,
a special effects guy turned villain in the comics.
Regardless of Dr. Curt Connors’ appearances in the film (played
by Dylan
Baker), it seems as if his transformation to The
Lizard might be too much of a stretch for a movie. Similarly,
while I’ve always liked the character of Morbius
the living vampire, he also doesn’t seem like a live translation
would work. And despite the fact that at one point, Ben
Kingsley was in talks to play the
Vulture in S3, trust me, it’s a good thing
that didn’t happen.
Maybe it’s time Spidey fought a female villain… of course,
his primary female adversaries (at least the ones I know) ended up
becoming good guys or at least anti-heroes (much along the lines of
the
Catwoman). Still, it’d be nice to see him tussle with Medusa,
the
Black Widow or (most likely) the
Black Cat (may I suggest Rose
McGowan?).
The notion of Spider-Man teaming with a Marvel
B-lister could bring something fresh to the franchise. While there
aren’t too many of Marvel’s big name superheroes left
to be optioned for film or TV, there are a handful of Marvel Universe
dwellers that could work. Dr.
Strange, the master of the mystic arts, is a good enough of a
character to headline his own movie, but he’s also a great foil
for ol’ Web Head (my favorite team up of theirs remains the
1972 Buddah
Records Rockcomic, From Beyond the Grave in which
the Kingpin kidnaps Aunt May in order to force photographer Peter
Parker to bring him Spider-Man, who teams with Doc, who ends up sending
the villain to Hell!). Dr. Strange (a fellow Manhattan dweller) could
bring something otherworldly to the series, breaking fresh ground
for Spidey (besides, he was also, like Spidey, co-created by artist
Steve
Ditko). And Hugh
Laurie would be perfect.
Spidey and the
Human Torch have always had a cantankerous but brotherly relationship
in the comics, and the prospect of Chris
Evans from the FANTASTIC
FOUR movies (the only good casting in those films) trading
barbs with Peter Parker is intriguing. But considering that Spidey
is produced by Columbia and FF is a 20th Century Fox franchise, that
seems unlikely.
If Sam Raimi is truly done with ol’ web-head, however, it is
inevitable that one super villain, first featured in SPIDER-MAN
#2 in 1963, will be the one to rear his ugly head: The
Terrible Tinkerer. Only he’ll be behind the camera. 'Nuff
said. |
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