ThaGrandCow
Diamond Member
- Dec 27, 2001
- 7,956
- 2
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<< was friggin great and can't wait until the sequel.
****WARNING******SPOILER************
At the end of the movie, the Green Goblin's son is going to turn into a villian (my guess), in the comic book who is the GG's son? I'm hoping they say screw who he really is and make him Venom.
**********End Spoiler************* >>
Why should they? Eddie Brock is already in the Spider-Man universe. They even mentioned him in the movie. Harry doesn't have to become the new GG yet... he can wait a movie or two before he "finds" his dad's enhancing drug and glider and secret. They also won't be stupid enough to put the same villian in 2 movies in a row. That would lose appeal to the masses (but they'd still see it).
<< Anyone else find it strange that hardly anyone has a bad word to say about Spiderman? >>
Not at all. Sam Raimi is an incredible director who is a definite fan of the Spider-Man comics. He knows the story, and he had a vision from the beginning to make it a serious, thought provoking movie. Basically what you had was the right director, with the perfect story, at the right time (we can finally do lifelike CG in a movie that doesn't look like crap), along with near perfect actors who knew their characters, and also a perfect timing. This is the kind of movie we needed to start the Summer blockbuster season with, and one of probably 3 movies I've seen in my life so far that I'll be paying multiple times to see in the theatre.
<< Now that is good news because it means more sequels (which could turn out to be bad news if they turn into Batman-like sequels). >>
Sam Raimi knows Spider-Man, and I'm sure after this movie breaks the $300 million mark he'll have so much cash flowing in that he'll start using it for toilet paper and firewood. I have no doubt that he'll be tapped for a second and possibly a third sequel, and with a movie that popular he'll be able to negotiate for a backend deal where he makes a percentage of the total sales (instead of just a flat $20 million). He knows where he's going with the movie series and that is definitely not into the comedy area. Tim Burton did the first and second Batman movies, when the series was serious. Joel Schumacher was brought in for the 3rd and fourth. The Batman franchise was popular, but it was believed that by playing to the masses and making it campy they could being in more money. Not so with Spider-Man. This movie has prettymuch entrenched the series in a serious setting, which is good. I don't like campy superheroes and with X-Men out and now Spider-Man I'm glad that the comic movies are now in good territory.
BTW: the Hulk will rock in 2003
