Movie Review - "Spiderman 3"
Oh, What a Tangled Web We Weave....
I’ve always taken a jaundiced view of the Marveltm superheroestm as opposed to the DCtm variety. Where the spandex crowd from Detective Comicstm sprang from pulps and adventure fiction, Marvel’s were derived from Stan Lee’stm previous job--writing romance comics. Back when I picked up the occasional Marvel in the 60’s it was always apparent that they were soap operas with fights, and that it was only a short spidey-jump from “*SOB!* I forgot to have children!” to “*SOB!* I will be Spiderman…No More!” The Marvel Superheroestm are drama-queenstm. This was never more apparent than the ending of the first “Spidermantm” movie when Peter Parkertm walks away from the girl who’s just professed her love to him (and in a graveyard *SOB!*), because “with great power comes great responsibilitytm-okay I'll stop”(as with the soaps, this sentiment lasted until the next movie, which ended with them together—I guess responsibility ain’t so great, after all). “Spiderman” was a soap opera punctuated by brutal, ugly fist-fights (which don’t look so cool when not freeze-framed in pop-art patterns) I vividly recall reading the geek-reviews saying “Spiderman” is just like US!” Ri-ight. I’ll bet they didn’t have two gorgeous co-eds fighting over them in high school, as the comics character did. Where that movie worked was “Spidey” in action—especially in the ending where the camera followed him morphing into so many iconic poses favored by various artists over the years—Ditko, Romita, Kane, Andru, McFarlane. There, the true potential of a movie “Spiderman” paid off.
So, when the second movie, combining “Doc Ock/Spiderman…No More!/Mary Jane’s getting hitched,” came out, the screenplay (co-written by Alvin Sargent and Michael Chabon) practically sang. It was a perfect balance between character/melodrama/action and spectacle. In fact, “Spiderman II” is probably the best comic-book movie ever…and the most enjoyable since the first “Superman.” With the creators knowing what worked now, one anticipated “Spiderman III.”
Now, here it is—the most expensive movie ever made (supplanting even “Superman Returns”**) and what does it show for all that money being thrown around? A bit, actually. The cast is uniformly good given the material with James Franco finally relaxing and having fun with his role as Harry Osborne. Thomas Hayden Church takes his role as The Sandman VERY seriously—he acts like he’s in an Ibsen play—though the most effective performance is by the “Particle-Matter Generator” Gizmo that created the sequence of him first emerging and pulling himself together. Topher Grace makes the most of his non-CGI moments as Eddie Brock/Venom. And Bryce Dallas Howard (Opie’s kid), after looking like something the cat dragged in for M. Night Shamyalan’s movies, cleans up very nicely as Gwen Stacy, as that essential character of the comics finally shows up.*
There are welcome returns (from the grave, flashback-style) of Cliff Robertson and Willem Dafoe, and J.K. Simmons proves once again he’s the perfect embodiment of Daily Bugle Editor J. Jonah Jameson.
Now, for Tobey McGuire and Kirsten Dunst, here's the problem. For the third in the series the writers were obviously looking for something interesting for the two leads to do. "We'd left them in No.2 happily in love. So....let's shake that up a bit." In this one Peter is going bad (didn't Superman do that in his third movie?) and "MJ" is hitting acreer set-backs to star-dom. Spiderman's popularity is up, while hers is down. Wasn't this "A Star is Born?" Only Tobey is Judy Garland, and Kirsten is James Mason. Getting kinda sudsy there, isn't it? McGuire is allowed to cut loose as "Bad Peter" (under the influence of a "symbiote"--that's how they say it--from outer space. Kirsten Dunst gets to sing in an opening sequence that Sam Raimi stages like its right out of MGM. There are some great fights (some of them are more...dust-ups) that lacked the zanily ferocious wit of the ones in II, go on too long, and are marred by some too-intricate camera-work (or camera simulation) for the sake of too-intricate camera work. Finalley, the whole thing ends in another "Spidey's Gotta Save MJ" grudge-match with the web-head up against Sandman, Venom and Son-of-The-Goblin. It far overstays its welcome and ends in what seems like an interminable wallow.
Anything else wrong? YEAH! Too much Stan Lee screen-time! Stan's cameos are getting longer and longer to the point where he might as well have a running character as a street-sermonizer. Stan! Y'know that phrase "'Nuff said?" Mean it next time!! Oh! And have we managed to get EVERY member of Sam Raimi's family on-screen yet? Next movie, Spidey's going to be fighting The Nepotist!
There's an awful lot to enjoy in fits and starts, but you have to be a certifiable card-carrying true-believer to be completely satisfied with this movie. It's a case of the film-makers throwing as much webbing as they can on-screen and seeing what sticks. Unfortunately, not much. What was promising to be the best comics franchise in movies is making the same mistakes as all the others: Too many villains, too much "business" and "busy-ness," and not enough care for the strengths of the characters and what has been done before. They've attempted too much and accomplished too little...while spending as much money as possible.
"Nuff said.
"Spiderman 3" is a rental, and no, you're not going to miss any details on the small-screen--everything's moving so fast you can't see it on the BIG screen either--not even IMAX!
*Curiously, the two women’s roles are completely reversed in the translation from the comics to the screen. In the comics, Gwen is the sincere hometown knockout, while Mary Jane was the flighty supermodel (“Romance” comics, remember? With a little “Archie” thrown in)** I'm wrong here. Incredibly, the second most expensive movie in history is "X-men 3: The Last Stand." Hell, "X-men 3" didn't even LOOK good!
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Post-Script: It's always alarming to see how well crap--even well-constructed crap--sells. Now, "Spidey3" is tearing up the box-office with enough momentum that it could very well become one of the "Largest Earning Films in History." In doing some research for an earlier post, I was alarmed to see what is now on the list of the "Big Boffo" films: "Shrek 2" is #3? It wasn't as good as "Shrek 1!" The second "Pirates of the Caribbean?" It was bad--not even fulfilling the promise of the first one, but it's at #6! "Independence Day" at 21? "Narnia" at 24? "Meet the Fockers?" At 29! ("Spidey 3" at the time of this writing is at #33).It's also interesting to note how sequels seem to fare better than the originals--as if their popular momentum has increased (something that might be attributable to more people seeing it initially on home-video than the theater)--certainly "Spiderman 3" bares that out even more than "2" did.
But one can't get too exercised about this: "Norbit" was the top box-office draw one weekend, after all. And as James Aubrey once said: "No one ever went broke under-estimating the intelligence of the American people" (I believe that was right after he green-lit "The Beverly Hillbillies" for CBS).
And one can always take comfort in the odd bit of cleverly-disguised bit of satiric commentary, as provided here by David Letterman the other night. It might take a while to load, but it's priceless.
6 comments:
I have not seen it yet. I will with the kids this weekend. Curse of the threequel in the works here? Steve B
Yup. And I had hopes because I thought Spidey II was much better than Spidey I.
I can't think of a third movie in a series that didn't exhibit a precipitous drop in quality.
Godfather III. Batman III (Forever). Superman III (with Richard Pryor). Austin Powers III (which dropped even lower than the first two). I don't think "Lord of the Rings" counts--it's all one movie. Those are the ones I can recall.
Okay..."Goldfinger" was the third in a series.
You were more generous than I was... I was grossly disappointed in Spidey3. I thought the only parts that worked were the nudge wink comedy bits. Bruce Campbell was hillarious, and Peter's funk walk was pretty entertaining. The rest of this thing stunk worse than French goat cheese on a hot day.
And for the record, X-Men 3 (while totally different in style than 1&2 - different director) was a MUCH better movie than Spiderman 3. Franchise needs to be handed off to other folks. Raimi indulged in more disgustingly sentimental crying scenes than Peter Jackson in LoTR 3.
But then it IS soap opera, isn't it?
And the name "Joel Schumacher" gives lie to handing off a franchise to another director--same with Brett Ratner.
I didn't like "X-men 3"--at the time the most expensive movie ever made and it still looked like garbage. I didn't think it was possible to screw up the "Dark Phoenix" story, but Brett Ratner (and, no doubt, Bryan Singer with THAT screenplay) found a way. It felt like nothing was at stake, and everybody was going through the motions. And they killed Cyclops? WTF!
Ul;timately, "X-men" had the same quality arc as the "Spiderman" series. The first one they deconstruct, and see how much they can get away with before they piss off the fans, then in the second one they relax and go about the difficult task of telling a good story. Then, the overconfidence kicks in and they back-slide. Still, its better than most DC adaptations that sink with #2--then the series turns into a rotting shambling corpse for the next two movies. Marvel came out with a comics series "Marvel Zombies." DC beat 'em to it with the third and fourth Batman/Superman films.
Oh they killed Cyclops did they? Did you ever see a body? C'mon now... you know the tropes. They didn't even REALLY kill Xavier.
I guess I was just REALLY REALLY disappointed in Spidey3. Not even the addition of "web bullets" could make me happy. I skipped Ghost Rider... I'm depressed about FF2, but I'll see it just to see a glipse of Galactus. The whole Marvel enterprise seems to be hitting market gold, but the quality is dropping precipitously.
RE: your Marvel Zombies joke... Oooh, snap!
Well, there was no body but just the same 3-D mapped pixels that Xavier turned into, and Scott doesn't have the advantage of fifth-level mental faculties.
But, really, the issue is using the same gimmick 3 times. Jean dies and comes back. Xavier dies and comes back. Think they're going to use the same old trick with Scott? Yeah, you're right (unfortunately). Probably.
"Ghost Rider" looked stupid--another idea that looks cool on the comics page that doesn't translate. We'll see what happend with The Silver Surfer, but I flashed today that, yes, we all love TSS, but what a STUPID idea! And I've heard rumors that there may not be a Galactus Galactus.
I wish I was making a joke about "Marvel Zombies!" There was a mini-series where the Marvel soops turned into festering, falling-apart zombies (complete with an action figures line). But instead of "Marching Marvel Zombies" they just shamble, like the ones in the movies...
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