 |
Spiderman
2 Movie Review
| Director
: |
Sam Raimi |
| Starring
: |
Tobey Maguire, Kirsten Dunst,
Alfred Molina |
|
In Spider-Man 2 director
Sam Raimi successfully flirts with his dark side while
creating a boffo comic-book movie as well, unseating
X-Men 2 as the best of the genre.
In many ways Raimi already
made Spider-Man 2 in 1990 as Darkman (much as he remade
the schlocky and scary Evil Dead into the much better
Evil Dead 2). The bombastic, jarring Darkman, starring
Liam Neeson, was about a scientist who, with the intent
of doing good, becomes a victim of his own experiment,
and is turned into a deformed vengeful creature. Darkman
was too full of self-conscious directorial moments,
and sadistic cruelty, to become much more than a cult
film. At the wheel of a box office and cultural diesel
truck Raimi (with Sony back-seat driving) eases up on
stark violence of his earlier film but keeps the driving
forces behind it.
He has a scientist in
Spider-Man 2, a man intending to do good. Dr. Otto Octavius
(Alfred Molina, this was just inspired casting) is creating
a new fusion power source with his lovely wife, Rosalie
(Donna Murphy). The venture is funded by OsCorp, the
evil conglomerate formerly run by Norman Osbourne aka
The Green Goblin (Willem Dafoe, who appears briefly)
and now run by his son, Harry (James Franco, a bit pouty
here). Harry is still pals with scrappy photojournalist
Peter Parker (Toby Maguire) who spends a lot of his
time saving people as Spider-Man. Harry knows Peter
is an admirer of Dr. Octavius and invites him to watch
his triumphant unveiling of his new fusion power generator.
The experiment goes horribly wrong, killing Rosalie
and fusing the four mechanical arms onto Dr. Octavius,
grafted into his spinal chord. The arms, in a nice twist,
have a mind of their own and begin to take Octavius
over, turning him into the evil Dr. Octopus, or Doc
Oc (as Parker's boss, Jonah Jameson (the best bit-part
creation in a while, by J.K. Simmons) remarks, "What
are the odds of that?").
But Peter Parker's main
troubles stem from his inability to share his secret
identity with the world and the thankless role of a
superhero. Parker has to stand-by and watch the girl
of his dreams, M.J. (Kirsten Dunst, whose non-conventional
looks just add to the realism here) beginning to make
it as an actress and getting engaged to Jameson's son,
John (who is also an astronaut, of all things). Beat
up, depressed, and broke Peter realizes that Spider-Man
is killing him and, most importantly, he doesn't have
to do it. No one is forcing him. So, he quits.
There really is a lot
to recommend this satisfying and entertaining summer
film. It, much like its predecessor, retains the themes
of the comic book, making Parker a nobody, a loser,
without his Spider-Man identity and with Parker resenting
both his alter-ego and the responsibility of having
to maintain the duality. He loses many confrontations,
or, at best can claim a brief draw, and his costume
by the end of it all is in tatters, like the bandages
streaming off the Neeson's Darkman. But the most interesting
parallel of 2 to Raimi's earlier comic book film is
Molina's Doc Oc. Much like Darkman he is a ruined scientist
who sequesters himself on a dilapidated wharf to attempt
to rebuild his work, first, and to recreate himself
as a man. Desiring immortality with his experiments
he foregoes all allegiance to humanity making the job
of the evil devils just off of his shoulders, his mechanical
arms, all the easier. And when Doc Oc is bad, he's really
bad.
The scene where a group
of doctors attempt to remove the arms off Octavius is
one big fat Raimi smorgasbord. It's also rather scary
and cruel, making this a darker film than the first
one. That's offset, however, by the otherwise light
and humorous approach of most of Parker's mishaps (it's
a much funnier film than the first one), which border
on the overdone. Other flaws include one out-of-place
music montage, seemingly dictated by Sony's music division,
and a bit-much sequence featuring B.J. Thomas's "Raindrops
Keep Falling on My Head" which ends in a '70s freeze-frame.
Of note and worthy of
praise, however, are the numerous battles Spidey gets
into with Doc Oc. They are fast and vicious, with barely
time to see where the next punch or web shot is coming
from. The CGI of Spider-Man is vastly improved; the
folks at Radium and Imageworks (responsible for the
truly believable web-crawler) employing physics this
time around, so the red and blue superhero doesn't just
look like a flying Gumby.
There's also tantalizing
leads to the inevitable third film, with hints of a
new Green Goblin and even the appearance of the Lizard.
As long as they let Raimi direct it, and as long as
they sit on him, it should be just as good as Spider-Man
2.
|
More Movie Reviews links for Spiderman 2 |
|
|