Spider-Man 3 Movie Review
Spider-Man 3 Review

"Spider-Man 3" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Sam RaimiProducer : Stan Lee,Joseph M. Caracciolo Jr,Kevin Feige
Screenwiter : Sam Raimi,Ivan Raimi,Alvin Sargent
Starring : Tobey Maguire,Kirsten Dunst,James Franco,Topher Grace,Thomas Haden Church,Bryce Dallas Howard
Did Batman & Robin teach us nothing?
Universally considered the worst superhero sequel ever, Joel Schumacher's
bloated monstrosity temporarily derailed Warner's lucrative Dark Knight
franchise when it tried in vain to fill gaping plot holes with a multitude of
C-list villains and unnecessarily whiny sidekicks.
Spider-Man 3 never balloons to B&R proportions, though director Sam Raimi's
third installment in Columbia's cash-cow definitely appears overstuffed. Three
villains, two love interests, and one venomous drop of black alien goo compete
for screen time in the longest (by 20 minutes) and most disjointed of the
Spidey films. Factor in a costume change, multiple musical numbers for a
warbling Kirsten Dunst, and an embellished dance routine in a seedy jazz joint
and you're guaranteed plenty for your money, though in this case that's not for
the best.
Cliffhangers attached to 2004's Spider-Man 2 would have provided Raimi with
more than enough material to explore as he brought natural closure to this
reported trilogy. A romantic riff still exists between mild-mannered Peter
Parker (Tobey Maguire) and his attention-starved girlfriend Mary Jane (Dunst).
Meanwhile Harry Osborn (James Franco) continues down a vengeful path believing
Parker's alter-ego, Spider-Man, had killed his father (Willem Dafoe), the
original Green Goblin.
But sequels sell themselves on the promise of more, and so Spider-Man 3 crams
in subplots with reckless abandon. Rival news photographer Eddie Brock (Topher
Grace) wants Peter's job at the Daily Bugle, while Parker is smitten with
Brock's statuesque girlfriend, Gwen Stacey (Bryce Dallas Howard). We're
introduced to street thug Flint Marko (Thomas Haden Church), whose molecules
are morphed into grains of sand when he stumbles into a particle physics test
facility during a late-night experiment. Marko uses his new powers to rob banks
because his estranged and sickly daughter requires expensive medicines. And
because Parker's plate seems pretty full, it's hard to fault him for not
noticing an asteroid that crashes in Central Park -- mere feet from where he
and Mary Jane are star-gazing -- or the animated black substance that attaches
itself to his motorbike as he speeds away.
As has been the case with the earlier Spider-Man movies, I'm bothered by
Raimi's creative decisions, both large and small. You should know before you
continue reading that I've always disagreed with Raimi's approach to the
amazing Spider-Man because I grew up worshipping the original comic books and
am irked by unnecessary character changes the director continues to make.
Believing Spider-Man needs deeper motivation to go after Marko, Raimi positions
the crook as the real killer of Peter's Uncle Ben -- a ludicrous suggestion
that contradicts a cornerstone of Spider-Man's history. Casual fans also
understand the impossibility of a Gwen Stacey-Eddie Brock pairing. For one,
they exist during different decades of Spider-Man’s storyline. In addition, she
was killed by the Green Goblin in a bridge-top confrontation reminiscent of the
one Raimi desecrated during the first Spider-Man movie. And the alien symbiote
that possesses Peter's body in this film, giving him the spiffy black suit and
eventually creating the vicious villain Venom, didn't piggyback to Earth on a
falling rock. Spider-Man actually obtained it during the Secret Wars, a 12-part
comic series fans of these movies should read to see how the Venom saga really
begins.
Not that Raimi ever concerned himself with the details of these cherished comic
characters, a point I was reminded of when Sandman somehow flies in this film
(that's new). The director makes Parker-centric movies, only including
Spider-Man when it's absolutely necessary. And while there is more action in
this film, Raimi counters five minutes of thrilling skirmishes with 25 minutes
of mopey dialogue from dull Dunst or single-note Franco. Maguire, to his
credit, has matured from film to film. His main co-stars, however, peaked in
the first movie and have since relied on regurgitating their past performances.
As for Venom, his treatment is going to anger rabid fans. A popular villain
from the comic side, the character comes to life when Parker removes the living
symbiote and it attaches itself to Brock, creating a dark monster in
Spider-Man's likeness. Raimi has said in interviews he was coerced to include
Venom in this film, and the director's disinterest in the villain shows. We get
-- at most -- 10 minutes of Venom footage, most of which has been seen online.
For eight of those 10 minutes, the creature's mask is peeled back to show
Grace's less-than-intimidating face. I thought I was going to throw up when
Brock leers at a captured Mary Jane and growls, "I think my Spidey sense is
tingling, if you know what I mean!" Sadly, we do. Of course, Venom rips
Spider-Man's mask off during their final fight, which amounts to Tobey Maguire
vs. Topher Grace -- not exactly the battle royale fans have been dreaming
about. Add in the underwhelming resolutions conceived for Harry and Mary Jane,
and the end of Spider-Man 3 can only be described as anti-climactic.
Back to Batman for a second. The franchise, long thought dead, enjoyed a
creative rebirth when Christopher Nolan stripped away Schumacher's gloss for
Batman Begins, a scaled back origin story that pleased audiences and fans
alike. Spider-Man deserves a reboot. Should Columbia feel the need to continue
Spidey's swinging adventures -- and plans for part four already are underway --
then it's time for Raimi to do what he should have done after the first misfire
movie: Pass the torch.
Aka Spiderman 3.
Please Venom, don't hurt 'em.
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Review by Sean O'Connell
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