6.7
Peter Parker is an outcast high schooler abandoned by his parents as a boy, leaving him to be raised by his Uncle Ben and Aunt May. Like most teenagers, Peter is trying to figure out who he is and how he got to be the person he is today. As Peter discovers a mysterious briefcase that belonged to his father, he begins a quest to understand his parents' disappearance – leading him directly to Oscorp and the lab of Dr. Curt Connors, his father's former partner. As Spider-Man is set on a collision course with Connors' alter ego, The Lizard, Peter will make life-altering choices to use his powers and shape his destiny to become a hero.
Andrew Garfield
Spider-Man / Peter Parker
Emma Stone
Gwen Stacy
Rhys Ifans
The Lizard / Dr. Curt Connors
Denis Leary
Captain Stacy
Martin Sheen
Uncle Ben
Sally Field
Aunt May
Irrfan Khan
Rajit Ratha
Campbell Scott
Richard Parker
Embeth Davidtz
Mary Parker
Chris Zylka
Flash Thompson
Max Charles
Peter Parker (Age 4)
C. Thomas Howell
Jack's Father
Jake Keiffer
Jack
Kari Coleman
Helen Stacy
Michael Barra
Store Clerk
Leif Gantvoort
Cash Register Thief
Andy Pessoa
Gordon
Hannah Marks
Missy Kallenback
Kelsey Asbille
Hot Girl
Kevin McCorkle
Mr. Cramer
Andy Gladbach
Physics Nerd
Ring Hendricks-Tellefsen
Physics Nerd
Barbara Eve Harris
Miss Ritter
Stan Lee
School Librarian
Danielle Burgio
Nicky's Girlfriend
Tom Waite
Nicky
Keith Campbell
Car Thief
Steve DeCastro
Car Thief Cop
Jill Flint
Receptionist
Mark Daugherty
OsCorp Intern
Milton González
Rodrigo Guevara
Skyler Gisondo
Howard Stacy
Charlie DePew
Philip Stacy
Jacob Rodier
Simon Stacy
Vincent Laresca
Construction Worker
Damien Lemon
Taxi Driver
Ty Upshaw
Police Officer with Sketch
James Chen
Police Officer
Alexander Bedria
Officer (SWAT)
Tia Texada
Sheila (Subway)
Jay Caputo
Subway Guy
John Burke
Newscaster (News Chopper)
Terry Bozeman
Principal
Jennifer Lyons
Second Girl (Subway)
Michael Massee
Man in the Shadows
Amber Stevens West
Ariel
Max Bogner
Scientist (uncredited)
Ethan Cohn
Lab Technician (uncredited)
Miles Elliot
Billy Connors (uncredited)
Miranda LaDawn Hill
Cheerleader (uncredited)
Amanda MacDonald
Goth Girl (uncredited)
Maury Morgan
Tina (uncredited)
Michael Papajohn
Alfie (uncredited)
Director
Marc Webb
Characters, Comic Book
Stan Lee
Characters, Comic Book
Steve Ditko
Screenplay
Alvin Sargent
Screenplay
Steve Kloves
Screenplay, Story
James Vanderbilt
May 14, 2013
6
“The Amazing Spider-Man” has no reason to exist. Spider-man is a hero everyone knows. He´s been around for so long everyone is familiar with his origin, comic fan or not. Its basic pop culture. Then you have the Sam Raimi´s movies. Everyone saw them. They made loads of money and they´re always on tv. They are entertaining movies. “Spider-Man” gave us a good origin story in 2002. This movie simply wasn't needed. Now I gave it the benefit of the doubt. There´s Burton´s Batman and Nolan´s. Maybe this was a different Spider-Man. A more “dark” vision perhaps! Maybe the movie spent a few minutes on the origin and then wisely moved on with its story. Maybe... well maybe it wasn't just another rehash. A shameless attempt to remake, or how they say it these days, reboot the same idea with minimal changes except the cast. I was naive. The whole movie is about Spider-Man´s origin. They traded Mary Jane for another love interest and held off on “The Green Goblin” because that would be too much “rubbing it in the face” for the fans, I guess. We get Gwen Stacy and “The Lizard”. The rest is same old, same old. The same uncle Ben plot, the same scenes about making the suit, learning how to control powers, the search for the criminal Spider-man lets get away with horrific results. Same thing. Except everything is done without a spark of energy or creativity. Raimi´s movies were energetic, flowing with excitement. They were “new”. Seeing Spider-Man on the big screen, webbing all over the city, fighting “The Green Goblin”, it was amazing. We didn't have “The Avengers” back there, or “Iron Man”. This was like a dream come true for comic fans. “The Amazing Spider-Man” smells of old cheese. I tried to take the movie for what it was but it was impossible. My mind would not let me. I knew what was going to happen next. I knew all the plots! I´d seen it all before! But even ignoring that the movie just does not work. Its slow, turgid with an unlikable Peter Parker and a CGI lizard for a villain. Parker is a whiny, self centered idiot. His relationship with aunt May and uncle Ben is never fully explored and what little there is consists of Parker being a rude jerk for no reason at all. The movie has one thing going for it. The cast. Sally Field and Martin Sheen are great with what little material they have. Emma Stone is sexy and sweet which is “her thing” and again she pulls it off brilliantly. Rhys Ifans is decent as Curt Connors and surprisingly enough I loved Andrew Garfield as Spidey. Yes, seriously! He looks perfect for the part and he did his best with the horrible script. He´s charismatic and brought his own touch to the role instead of copying Toby Maguire. If the movie is even slightly original its because of him. Some of the action in the last third of the movie is also spectacular. Spider-man´s movements when fighting are really well done as is the web-slinging. The action is well directed and exciting and the movie sets up a sequel rather nicely. But its asking a lot to go over the material everyone knows for two hours for a few minutes of cool action. The movie plays it so safe it hurts. Its competent but never brilliant. Tedious but far too long with little spots of action but few and far between. I hope in the sequel this “Spider-Man” can find its own style and its own place. Given space to grow and evolve, on the strength of the character and Garfield´s acting this could be the weak start to a new amazing super-hero trilogy. Then again, maybe i´m just naive.
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$215,000,000.00
Revenue:
$757,930,663.00