Movies are among my few recreations. I’m not particularly
into action movies, but I do admit to a certain fondness for traditional
Superhero movies – that is, movies about traditional superheroes (really
traditional superheroes like Superman). Having appreciated Andrew Garfield’s
superb performance in The Social Network,
and having enjoyed the earlier Spiderman movie, I figured it was worth giving
the newest incarnation of the Spiderman genre, The Amazing Spiderman a try. I was not disappointed.
Of course, like all films aimed at contemporary audiences,
it had as little too much action and too many special effects for my more
old-fashioned story-line tastes. But the film rose above the endless action
sequences and de rigeur massively
destructive urban violence to tell a great Spiderman story, that actually
almost made much of the special-effects stuff somewhat redundant. It was aided
in this by some superb casting – most notably Martin Sheen and Sally Field as
uncle Ben and Aunt May, and, of course, Andrew Garfield himself as Peter
Parker/Spiderman. Garfield effectively captures the peculiar pathos of
adolescence in painful institution which is the American high school – his
pre-spider experience of being bullied and his initial awkwardness in
connecting with his eventual girlfriend – as well as his emotionally fraught
relationship memory of the father who abandoned him and with his resultingly
complex relationship loving aunt and uncle.
Suddenly endowed with surprising and unique abilities and
transformed by real-life tragedy into a good-guy vigilante, Peter always
remains an awkward adolescent at heart – a characteristic constantly on display
in his inability to communicate his core struggle, an inability overcome very
gradually and only with his girlfriend. The other characters all retain their
humanity and complexity – even Parker’s father’s former partner, who could
easily have been reduced to a stereotypical mad/bad scientist, something which
never really happens.
Finally, there is the happy, post-modern ending. A
classic, solitary hero would be expected to keep his promise and go on alone.
Peter is a post-modern contemporary, who feels in his heart that it just isn’t
worth it to do that – and acts accordingly!
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