Thursday, May 8, 2014

A Nerd 5 Review: The Amazing Spiderman 2

The Good: Overall I can’t say there’s too much to like about Marc Webb’s follow up to The Amazing Spiderman; I can say that it’s not all bad and even fun, at times. What works about this film is its sense of nostalgia, the suit is closer to the comics then it’s ever been, Peter Parker himself is very reminiscent of the comic character fans have grown to love, finally this film is uniquely a Spiderman film, not a generic superhero.

Andrew Garfield is a good Spiderman, but not the best Peter Parker. He really understands the duality of the character, his moral struggles and his need to do the right thing while still struggling with the characters selfish teenage nature. Garfield is great at delivering the one-liners his fight scenes need to stay fresh. Unfortunately, he doesn’t have the same grasp on the character when out of costume; Garfield just can’t quite be the nerd Parker needs to be. But, this is the good section so let’s talk about what makes the non-web-slinging scenes work, Emma Stone. She is a nearly flawless Gwen Stacy; Stone is an actress that can raise the level of any script she works with and that’s certainly the case with Stacy. One of the most tragic and iconic characters in the Marvel universe is brought to life with grace, glamour, humor, compassion by Stone (and it doesn’t hurt that her chemistry with real life boyfriend Garfield is off the charts.)

A final shout out goes to the city of New York; it’s very common for a film to set in NYC, but not very often is the city featured as beautifully as it is here. Amazing Spiderman 2 really takes it time in showing us all sides of the big apple, from beautiful skylines to dark allies and from quite moments in the cement jungle to terrifying crowd scenes straight out your worst nightmare.  

The Bad: Sadly, the bad outweighs the good for this not-so-amazing sequel; diving deeper into what doesn’t work with Spidy misadventure we find the rest of the cast, director and writers. Above I mentioned both Garfield and Stone as giving good performance and creating good characters. That is sadly where it ends. I can’t say that any of what Jamie Foxx (Electro), Dane DeHaan (Harry Osborn), Paul Giamatti (The Rhino), Colm Feore (Donald Menken), and Sally Field (Aunt May) bring to the screen is worth the price of admission. All the characters except for Parker and Stacy feel extremely one-note, they serve a purpose to the plot, but not a purpose to the film; it’s hard to care about characters like these. However, even the best of actor can only do so much with a poor script.

Alex Kurtzman, Robert Orci, Jeff Pinker, and James Vanderbilt are the scribes behind this logjam of ideas. Woven into the piece are at least 4 messy, undeveloped subplots that could have easily been their own film. There is simply not time to deal with all of Peter’s daddy issues, all of Harry Osborn’s daddy issues, all of Gwen’s daddy… well you get my point. Besides everyone having enough glitches to keep Sigmund Freud in business for years, the characters are make giant logic leaps and assumptions that leave gaping plot holes. On top of this *WARNING NERD RANT COMING* Amazing Spiderman 2 takes the heart and soul of Peter Parker and tosses it out the window. Uncle Ben gives Peter his drive, his purpose, his mantra “with great power comes great responsibility;” But with this series Peter is so caught up with his dead parents, Gwen’s dead father (Dennis Leary who died in the first film), and his never-ending string of dreadful father figures that he completely disregards the death and words of his Uncle Ben and makes the little spider-fan in me cry.

But I can’t completely lay the blame on the screenwriters because many of the films issues are a total team effort. What’s holding this film series back? Director Marc Webb is my current answer (which is sad because 500 Days of Summer – his one non-spidy feature length effort—is an amazing film). Amazing Spiderman 2 is inconsistently shot; it ranges between beautifully composed shots and shots that came straight from an iPhone (credit to Jeff for that analogy). Even in dialogue scenes it seemed the crew couldn’t be bothered to set up two quality shots, instead we get a film full of great mashed up with rushed and lazy. As if the lack of quality shots weren’t enough the film is all over the place in tone. Comedy and drama can be mixed beautifully, but here they are not. The film gives us some of the campiest moments in all of superhero film history mixed in with some of the heaviest and most daring moments in superhero film history and it simply falls flat.

I can’t leave this section without mentioning the atrocious score. This film might have received an overall higher score from me if it was not for the his mix of electronic sounds, orchestral tones and vocal whispers that motivate our villains (I’m not joking that happens)

The Random: Tying up a few odds and ends.
·         The film is up and down to say the least, but if you can make it to the final third it’s an enjoyable final 45 minutes.
·         We are clearly working towards more Spiderfilms, with Sinister Six being the end game. We may be in for a long ride with this franchise (which is solely around so that Sony can keep the property and not have it revert back to Marvel and Disney), but is it a good idea to wrap an entire franchise around the villains of the universe?
·         ***SPOILER POINT DON’T READ IF YOU’VE NOT SEEN THE FILM*** I’m kind of surprised by the internet’s reaction to the fate of Gwen Stacy. It’s a pretty basic storyline in the Spiderman universe; one of the most famous arcs in all of comic history is The Death of Gwen Stacy, so to see come to life on the screen was a joy, since it was the part of the film that worked the best. I know it’s a risk to kill off a main character, but this one should have been one that Spiderfans should have seen coming. ***END SPOILER SECTION***
·         The Amazing Spiderman franchise is 0 for 2 vs. Sam Rami’s Spiderman franchise, but they have some good pieces in place, Garfield being one of them, and it shouldn’t be too hard to be better than Spiderman 3… wait… maybe that’s all this franchise needed! Get past these first two films and really hit your stride.


Overall Rating/Recommendation: B-. Be like Peter Parker, save the world show up late, enjoy the end.