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Discuss: Why One Size Does Not Fit All For Superhero Franchises & Where Sony Went Wrong With ‘Amazing Spider-Man’

The Amazing Spider-ManThough
they’ve been made since the very beginning of the medium, studios are
still learning how to craft sequels. Follow-ups used to be frowned
upon, perceived as nakedly commercial tactics that frequently didn’t involve the
participants of the originals. Then they became elaborate, ongoing
serialized stories, ones where filmmakers were permitted to present a
full saga in chapters. And now, “franchises” have become
something else, a lifeblood of Hollywood, one that has flummoxed Sony in
regards to the “Spider-Man” movies.

Sam
Raimi
‘s first three “Spider-Man” films featured one basic,
somewhat malleable storyline: here was Peter Parker, the young
crimefighter who battled baddies like Doctor Octopus, Sandman, and a
really inattentive super in a crummy New York apartment. There was
continuity, but was it really going anywhere? “Spider-Man 3
ended up grossing $890 million, a series best, but in America it was
the weakest performer in the series. When Raimi pitched a fourth film
that played out like a James Bond film, with only a tenuous nod
towards an ongoing story, Sony passed.

At
this time, Marvel was building their massive multi-film empire. When
“Spider-Man” debuted, he was the only superhero on the block, and
fans would merely get excited by the idea of a follow-up. But Marvel
had people talking about “Easter eggs” and post-credit sequences,
minutiae that had no place in the broadly-drawn “Spider-Man”
world Sony had established. Sony’s attempt at imitating this approach
was “The Amazing Spider-Man," which re-aligned and rejiggered the
basic “Spider-Man” origin to allow for additional layers. In the
first “Spider-Man,” as in the comics, Parker’s Uncle Ben is shot
dead during a carjacking, leading our hero to learn an important
lesson about responsibility as the killer fell to his death. But
“Spider-Man 3” “retconned” this by establishing that we
hadn’t seen the full story, that the trigger was pulled by the
villainous Flint Marko. This was Raimi’s sideways path into the
movie’s themes of reconciliation and forgiveness, but most couldn’t
forgive him for the random last-minute revelation.

Never
again, said Sony, fully planning out the new “The Amazing Spider-Man”
universe. Now Parker’s powers were the result of his
previously-unmentioned parents. Now he would become obsessed
(temporarily!) with the questions of his own lineage. Now that
lineage could be tied to a scientist who eventually becomes the
villain the Lizard. And that villain could work at OsCorp, an
organization that longtime fans easily understand will factor into
future installments. Oh, and don’t get too attached to Parker’s cute
new girlfriend Gwen Stacy. Well, get attached enough to follow her to
a sequel, please.

At Marvel, events of
Iron Man 2” set up revelations in “The Avengers," which were
eventually discussed in “Captain America: The Winter Solder," and
so on. The difference was that Marvel could space this out over a few
years and take the time to develop movies and stories that appealed
to fans. Sony seemed ready to shove everything into “The Amazing
Spider-Man,” to the point where whispers all over the internet
spoke of fully-developed deleted sequences based on unaccounted-for
footage in the promotional material.

Even though the worldwide and domestic gross was lower
than the previous Raimi films, Sony somehow felt emboldened by their reboot’s $757 million gross. “The Amazing Spider-Man 2” was
still in extensive post-production when the studio announced their
plans: “The Amazing Spider-Man 3” and “The Amazing Spider-Man
4
” would hit theaters within two years of each other, accompanied
by spinoff films for “The Sinister Six” (based on plot strands
teased by “The Amazing Spider-Man 2”) and “Venom." Sony crowed about the “braintrust” attached to
the franchise, which included the superstar hit factory Alex Kurtzman
and Roberto Orci (writing the second, third and fourth films), Ed
Solomon
(co-writing “Venom”), Drew Goddard (writing and directing
“The Sinister Six”) and Jeff Pinkner (co-writer on part two). And
privately, the studio predicted a billion dollar earning for ‘Amazing Spider-Man 2,’ the biggest
film in the series. Instead, it was the lowest-grossing of the the entire series. By a considerable margin too.

But Sony isn’t the only studio rushing into world-building tentpoles. Earlier this year, Paramount suggested the Kevin
Costner
character in “Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruitcould be used to
populate future
Tom Clancy adaptations where Ryan would interact with
other Clancy heroes. And Universal has been trying to cobble together
its classic monsters into a fully-realized universe, without once
considering why they exist independent of each other. The former didn’t work out when ‘Shadow Recruit’ failed at the box office, and the latter approach is unproven at the moment, but it underscores the one size fits all approach going around Hollywood.

Now the future of this new “Spider-Man” series is
up for grabs” according to Kurtzman, and Orci is no
longer
involved with the series. The fate of the franchise is very
much in doubt, with rumors of “The Amazing Spider-Man 3” being
bumped to a later date and “The Sinister Six” being canceled. The
Disney/Marvel universe is vast, with several characters and stories
at the studio’s disposal. Sony’s gamble has been that “Spider-Man”
is comparatively richer, but the new movies do not bear that out—we’re already recycling Green Goblin, and sequences with Mary Jane Watson filmed for ‘Amazing Spider-Man 2’ were excised during editing (though she’s sure to turn up in the sequels). 


In fact, if you were to
look anywhere for reasons as to how Sony went wrong, maybe Marvel
isn’t to blame. Maybe it’s “Harry Potter.” The ‘Potter’ films
influenced an entire generation of studio executives as Warner Bros.
released a new, massive ‘Potter’ film almost every year,
allowing the audience to grow with the characters and the stories.
But the corporate thought behind that concept was that the WB had a
captive audience, one who wouldn’t look elsewhere for their thrills
when the latest adventure wasn’t too far away. J.K. Rowling and
the WB got away with this because of prophecies, promises, the idea
of destiny carrying Harry’s actions forward moreso than his actual
actions. Why do you think most YA adaptations are built around
kingdoms, lineages and preordained missions? (It certainly didn’t hurt the series was based on one of the biggest book phenomenons in recent memory.)


Sony foolishly applied
those principles to “Spider-Man” just as that trend was dying
out. The face of today’s YA adaptation isn’t one character assuming
his or her position of power within a mighty kingdom. It’s material
like “Divergent,” “The Hunger Games,” “The Giver,” movies
where the youth grow into a comfortable position only to learn it is
a lie, that the kingdom and power promised to them is an illusion.
The generation watching these films doesn’t care about rising up to
assume a birthright, but establishing your own against the wishes of
selfish, vain adults and parental figures. See how Raimi’s Spidey
seemed desperately in search of a father figure, from Doc Ock to
Norman Osborn. Now see how the new Spidey routinely interrupts the
search for the truth about his father, see how indifferent he is to
the villains/mentors that surround him. See him stumble upon hidden
train sets inexplicably left behind by his late dad that tell him
nothing that advances the plot. If Spider-Man has a lack of agency,
you could easily spit out a movie a year where he does the same thing
over and over and over again. Rinse, repeat, collect profit.


The answer to Sony’s
“Spider-Man” riddle is the same as the answer to all major
Hollywood problems: spend less money. When you have to gross $800
million to simply break even theatrically, you’re making poor
decisions. But they maybe waited too long for the “discount”
installment in the series, so what do they do now? Interestingly,
“The Sinister Six” and “Venom” give Sony a chance to make a
big blockbuster without Spider-Man. But it was never certain if those
movies would or wouldn’t feature Spider-Man, and if they didn’t it
would be difficult to tie them into the “Amazing Spider-Man”
movies. So chuck ’em.


Sony needs to give
“Spider-Man” a break. Do the minimum required to keep the rights
from Marvel, but sit on it. Spider-Man fights crime in New York, so
have “Sinister Six” (presumably starring Dane DeHaan, Felicity
Jones
and Paul Giamatti) and “Venom” (with a familiar leading man
of choice) take place somewhere else. Craft stories around these
characters so that by the time they do face Spider-Man, the conflict
is relatable, understandable. Spidey has starred in five movies over
the course of twelve years. Comparatively, the “X-Men” have been
featured in seven films over fourteen years, but characters like
Wolverine have been seen in previous decades, new genres, Westchester
to Japan to Washington D.C. Fox has kept that property fresh by
diversifying. Sony needs to take these steps, to make something that
costs less and makes less like “X-Men: First Class,” which
sidelined the wildly popular Wolverine. Only then will people want to
see the wall-crawler again.

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21 COMMENTS

  1. I feel like most people are just tired of Spider-Man. Me and most of my friends agree, he's a very whiny hero. All that "with great power comes great responsibility" stuff gets old after a while. Just have some fun da**it.

  2. I disagree. Sony doesn't need to sit on Spiderman, they need to let the rights revert back to Marvel Studios so we can get a Spiderman movie done right.

  3. Most superhero characters are male which makes them a godsend for the fairys and woofters who unfortunately run Hollywood and the media, they`re able to use the comic book characters as a subliminal way of poisoning millions of peoples minds with their own loathsome and odious faggotry, the dirty pansy queer bastards.

  4. I've always thought that they were originally gonna do smaller budgeted Indie Romance centric Spidey movies and that's why they hired Marc Webb in the first place. Then when The Dark Knight and the Marvel movies became popular the studio started inflating everything to imitate it's competitors losing the what would have made their movie unique in the process.

  5. I'm guna disagree with this article. I very much loved the two new spidey films. I thought Toby was a terrible spider man. He didn't scream hero to me. Adam Garfield is perfect for the role, tall, lanky, adoreble and awkward just how peter Parker should be portrayed. The fight scenes, the choreography and the acrobatics for his web slinging are 80xs better then Sam's film adaptations. I do agree spend less money you can make it pretty without spending SHIT TON of money. I think sinister six should have its time taken to film cuz it could be epic and give us Venom next and Carnage for that matter. I mean we've already been introduced to the asylum where Carnage's host is locked up. I think we should get a Symbiote film with Venom and Carnage. That would be a sick ass film. Then in Spiderman 3 have him take on carnage and venom.

  6. The irony of this is that these new Spiderman films were much more faithful to the real comics, but keeping a realistic Spiderman universe to develop. Raimi's Spiderman was pretty much about Mary Jane, Osbourne wanting to avenge his father's death, and cheesy villains. Here the characters were much more grounded, the villains were human (and we had characters that were mentioned on Raimi's trilogy, but never used), and not people being evil for the sake of it.

    The problem here, is the studios, who keep messing the original ideas of the screenwriters and the directors. It's like Sony didn't learn after Spiderman 3. The article mntions Harry Potter, but Warner never cared for the franchise, and cut lots of scenes from the books, scenes that were going to be filmed, and some that were filmed but wanted them to cut because they were too gritty.

    The studios doesn't want to take risks and wants to be in charge of every project, controlling the filmmakers, to make sure that the films can be profitable, instead of letting them to be as the directors wanted to be in first place. How many book and animated franchises FOX has botched because they wanted to make money? Most of filmmakers on these days are turning into hired guns, people who can't make their vision of a story coming true because otherwise, they're bashed (Like Shyamalan, who went from doing personal films, to products like Airbender and After Earth because of the people bashing his risky -but original- ideas).

    And notice how some of the recent franchise reboots of the past 5 years have crashed because of messed up sequels (ASM 2, The Muppets 2, Star Trek Into Darkness, The Dark Knight Returns), ruining a new take of a old story because of fanservice or interference from the studios.

    And by the way, for the bit of the article mentioning about Hunger Games, read Mockingjay.

  7. Spiderman isnt the problem, its thsame darn rehashing crap dont dont wanna see….no more goblin…serious, the ads showed so much promise….electro, and rhino…but you get a big famed character lkke jamie fox and expect big promise, I rather have a unknown talent than some like fox who doesnt add much at all to a movie.as for rhino, he is garbage becuase you setup the audiance to see two new villians, and ya get Goblin….same weapons, same fights, nothing but back to what you see in almost 3 movies now….please stop wearing out goblin…..poor rhino dont even get but a few small scenes, and nothing worth a true fight screen wise.

  8. Oh yeah cause it was totally Raimis fault Spiderman 3 sucked. No man that's sarcasm. Raimi mistankingly finally gave into doing shit for the producers and they messed the movie up. The guy who wrote this article doesn't know anything

  9. They need to give the rights back to Marvel so he can be incorporated into The Avengers. Though I do love that Fox finally got their sh!t together with the X-Men w/ First Class; my alternative route would be to see a darker Spiderman when Marvel focuses it's Marvel Knights imprint.

  10. Why would you do Spider-Man spinoffs when you're having trouble getting Spider-Man right? The screenplay for The Amazing Spider-Man 2 was all over the place with no clear coherent story to tell. I think Sony's focus should be on developing a great screenplay for The Amazing Spider-Man 3. They should get the franchise on track before trying to expand it into their own Marvel universe.

  11. But personally I'd love to see a more grounded, darker Spider-Man movie for adults. With villains like Kraven, Hammerhead or Sin-Eater. After all that movie should cost 80-100m less than that piece of s*** called The Amazing Spider-Man 2.

  12. The primary problem is that Amazing Spiderman 2 looked silly, was badly advertised, and the product was an underwritten, lumpy rehash. There should be no surprise that this was a cash speedbump; the film is bad. People respond to fresh looking advertising, and give repeat viewings to good films (Apes 2, for instance); this is not magic. If ASMan 2 had been a brilliant film that underperformed, that would be a mystery to solve, but that's not the case. Sure people go to see all kinds of cruddy movies (Transformers) in droves — but this is because Transformers gives people what they want to see — nifty new variations on giant robots fighting; it delivers as advertised. They would love it to be better — no one thinks those are good films. But they are getting, minimally, what they want. Spiderman 2 had none of this — it offered a clunky refried thrills, and it was obvious from the ads this was the case.

  13. 1. This article is some SEO nonsense
    2. Who cares about Spiderman?
    3. What happened to you guys posting about Terry Mallick movies. Haven't heard anything about Knight of Cups in some time!

  14. In order to be different I wished they had focused on Spiderman's human organized crime enemies. Would have loved to see Peter pulling on the threads of Uncle Ben's murder and have it lead to Tombstone or Silvermane.

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