The Amazing Spider-Man

Marc Webb’s superhero reboot puts a romcom spin on a familiar story

The Amazing Spider-Man

(C) 2012 Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc. MARVEL, and all Marvel characters including the Spider-Man character (tm) & (C) 2012 Marvel Characters, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Director: Marc Webb
Starring: Andrew Garfield, Emma Stone, Martin Sheen
Time Out rating:

It’s web 2.0. Five years since Sam Raimi hung up his ‘I Love NY’ cap and Tobey Maguire ditched the spandex, it’s the turn of director Marc Webb (500 Days of Summer) and British actor Andrew Garfield (The Social Network) to turn back the Spidey-clock and start the whole thing again. Memories are short in Hollywood, and generations are measured in dog years.

This version of the Marvel Comics staple is an origins tale (dead dad, classroom bullying, spider-bite) which is low on psychological trauma and high on regular teen woes. Again we learn how Peter Parker (Garfield) lost his parents and gained a mask. But the evolution into a swinging, slinging city vigilante is framed squarely by recognisable adolescent awkwardness and romantic troubles involving his schoolmate and new girlfriend, Gwen (Emma Stone), daughter of Captain Stacy (Denis Leary), the city’s chief of police. Garfield is more robust and charming as Parker than Maguire, and here he forms a pleasing Brit-acting axis with Rhys Ifans, who plays his adversary Dr Curt Connors, later The Lizard.

Webb and the film’s writers have done a smart job of making a snappy blockbuster with few obvious pretensions: The Amazing Spider-Man is light on its feet and feels both intimate and expansive, smoothly making the transition from hanging out in school corridors to hanging off the sides of buildings. Webb offers no radical rethink about how to craft a comic-book summer movie, but still he delivers an enjoyable rush over a patchwork of genres – romance, action, sci-fi, horror and comedy (there’s almost one for every leg of a spider) – while avoiding bumps at the joins. The action sequences are gripping and have a bouncy, parkour-style giddiness to them.

Garfield gets the best lines and is a comic, often slapstick, presence for much of the movie as he learns how to cope with his new powers. There’s a great scene on the subway as he thumps and bumps into fellow commuters (only a Brit could deliver the ‘I’m so sorry’ line that follows). Webb gives the Spider-Man story a distinctly light touch: even when Spider-Man and The Lizard are smashing their way through a school, he allows us momentarily to view the scene from the perspective of an oblivious, elderly librarian wearing headphones. We’re never far from romance or laughs, and at times The Amazing Spider-Man feels like a romcom upgraded to include 3D and industrial cobwebs.

Spidey is the ultimate New York superhero, and The Amazing Spider-Man is full of nods to the city’s movie heritage. There’s a touch of Woody Allen to some of Garfield’s more twitchy scenes, while King Kong looms over Spidey’s skyscraper-top encounter with The Lizard. There’s even a scene where Parker mopes down the street with his shoulders hanging low like DeNiro in Taxi Driver. This lone gun with a red sock over his head also feels an urge to clean up the streets – but his New York is mostly benign, a place where crane drivers and cops wave him on his way and the skyline sparkles in approval. Soft, yes, but also satisfying.

The Amazing Spider-Man opens nationwide on June 30, with advance screenings on June 23-24



By Dave Calhoun
Please note: All information is correct at the time of writing but is subject to change without notice.

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