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It's easy to get turned off by the
super-hype that precedes the summer blockbuster movie releases. Reams of newspaper pulp
about the stars, about the making of the film, about the gazillion dollar box office
competition. Endless trailers on TV and in the movie houses. (And all the tie-in
promotions. Yes, we're guilty, too. Just look to the left. We gotta pay the bills somehow,
don't we?)
For once at least, rest assured that a blockbuster lives up to the
hype. Spider-Man is a winner. The movie is. The character, of course, has a
somewhat more complicated destiny. As fans of the comic book will remember, "With
great power comes great responsibility."
Director Sam Raimi (A
Simple Plan, The Gift)
delivers a fast-paced, elegantly produced and thoughtful film based on a firmly focused
screenplay by David Koepp (The Panic Room,
Stir of Echoes) that tells
a cogent story and even offers gratifying character development beyond what is generally
expected or offered in the realm of comics.
Peter Parker (Tobey Maguire) is a classic nerd, Mr. Everyloser in dorky
black-rimmed eyeglasses. He moons over the girl next door Mary Jane ("M.J.")
Watson (Kirsten Dunst), but is too shy to express his feelings. He's the butt of the
bullies at school. On a class trip to an exhibit of spiders, he is bitten by a genetically
manipulated spider and finds himself with the attributes of a spider-man. He can leap, he
can spin webs and powerful silken threads, and he has precognition--a sense of what will
happen just before it actually does. That's a great help if you're in a physically
confrontational situation and never doubt that there's plenty of that to come. Peter was
raised by an uncle (Cliff Robertson) and aunt (beautiful Rosemary Harris) who taught him
the down home virtues, including the one about power and responsibility. The force of good
is established.
Superheroes are required by the rules of comicry (and good drama) to
have supervillains. Superman has Lex Luthor, Batman has The Joker, and Spider-Man has The
Green Goblin, a vicious megalomaniac who is the alter ego of Norman Osborn (Willem Dafoe),
a hyper-ambitious defense contractor who desperately experiments on himself only to
emerge from a cloud of green vapor with a Jekyll and Hyde duality and some fancy
superpowers of his own. The subtext that he's sold his soul to the devil is writ large.
Thus protagonist, antagonist, and romantic interest are all
established. Certain other paradigms are required of the genre. It is a given that good
will triumph over evil. It is a given that boy will ultimately win girl's heart. It is a
given that the conclusion will leave a wide opening for the sequel. Within those
parameters, it's a question of style and it's style that distinguishes Spider-Man.
No attempt is made to create a new environment as in the Batman films. Spider-Man
is set in New York City, whose skyscraper canyons make an ideal backdrop for a muscle man
in red tights to swing about on his own spun silk filaments like a big-city Tarzan on the
way home from a Halloween ball. The city never looked better, although frequent bombs
exploding in buildings do lead to unfortunate associations. The stunt work/flying/digital
effects are stunning and graceful, calling to mind the fight movements in Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.
The use of New York landmarks like the Public Library, the Chrysler Building and the
Queensborough Bridge situates the fantasy in familiar realities; the contrast heightens
the fantastic element.
With just the right amount of give and take between the action scenes,
the romantic scenes and the family scenes, Raimi doesn't linger overlong in any one place.
He makes his point and moves right along--the pace seems fast even at almost two hours
running time. Koepp keeps tongue firmly in cheek, his script offering satirical jabs at
everything from professional wrestling to corporate wolves to unprincipled newspaper
editors.
Tobey Maguire (Wonder
Boys, The Cider House
Rules) has often displayed a quality of nerdiness onscreen, so he does well with
Parker; as Spider-Man it doesn't matter much since you can't see him anyway, behind all
that latex. He capably handles the added touch of wry that Koepp provides in Parker's
outlook, as well as the double-edged challenge of his powers and the sheer fun of finding
himself capable of extraordinary physical prowess. Kirsten Dunst--at age 20 credited with
41 films including the current The Cat's Meow--is
charming, sexy, and completely at ease as M.J. Dafoe (Shadow of the Vampire, Pavilion of Women), in the
schizoid role of Osborn/Goblin ranges nicely from evil to super-evil. And it isn't often
that you will see the bad guy literally hoist by his own petard. Ouch.
- Arthur Lazere