Let's try this again. Apologies for any unclear or unformed thoughts. I'm doing this between work stuff.cdnchris wrote:In regards to my concerns about any special appearances in the new Spider-Man simply being cameosTo the film's credit, it really could have just phoned it in but it's not just fan servicing (though the parts that are there specifically for that reason stand out, one sequence going on for far too long with too many winks). It takes its premise down an interesting, even thoughtful, path. Still, having said that, I did feel some glee in seeing everyone again, even from the films I didn't care that much for.SpoilerShowI was pleasantly surprised to see that was not the case at all! Not only do Dafoe and Molina get big parts,, Foxx. Ifans and Church also get a lot of screen time, though the latter two mostly supplying their voices to CGI creatures onscreen. Even the other big appearances get a lot of screen time, a surprise for me because I figured one of them would have been only game for a walk-on, if appearing at all.
This all probably leads to the film being a bit too long, though, and there's some exposition there only for people who haven't seen the other films, some of which is awkwardly inserted.
cdnchris, I, too, was surprised by my delight with this film.
If I was asked to rank the Spider-Man films, I'd probably have a hard time deciding between Raimi's Spider-Man 2 and Into The Spider-Verse as the best, and since both approach the story/myth so differently, yet so perfectly, it seems a disservice to choose either as being better than the other, so I won't.
I will, however, say that while the other films are varying degrees of successes and frustrating failures, the Tom Holland MCU versions work a bit better for me as whole films, at least compared to Raimi's front half-successful first film, his disastrous third, or Marc Webb's two attempts at super-emo. I suppose it could be argued that, by their very nature, the MCU films need to have a bit less personality in them to fit within their corporate IP, but Jon Watts's voice shines abundantly through with the same humour and heart that creators like Lee/Ditko and Roger Stern brought to the comics, and quite honestly, the positive energy that often bursts from these three films found only in youth. The actors always seem game for what's needed, and I do think his trilogy starts on an appropriately low "neighborhood" level, organically builds to a "get out and see the world" middle, and then grows, again, to the much grander word of young adulthood and the "multiverse" of the finale.
Things I love, all appropriately hidden:
It wisely addresses the fact that there never was, nor did there need to be, an origin story for the MCU version, since not only do we already know Spider-Man's origin from decades of comics and and film incarnations that have seeped into our collective unconscious, but No Way Home also acknowledges that we're now firmly within the MCU version of this multiverse. There are other heroes here. This version of Spider-Man is for the people who are already well...versed (pun intended) with Peter Parker and his world of superpowers and alien invasions.
And while Tobey Maguire was a terrific Peter, Tom Holland may be the perfect Spider-Man. He embodies everything the character is supposed to be; funny, sweet, respectful, without a whole lot of confidence, and he also doesn't look like a man shaving twice a day and dressing down to play a teenager.
I, like most viewers at the time, was annoyed by Andrew Garfield's two overly emotional performances in his Amazing Spidey films, which wavered between too weepy or too hip, due either to his or Webb's choice for him to deliver Peter's dialogue with sarcastic "street" edge, probably the one thing in the world that Peter Parker would never claim to be.
But here, it was a delight to see the other two actors reprise the roles that made (and perhaps broke) their careers; aged, tired, and beaten up by life. And oddly enough, it was extra exhilarating to see Garfield's Peter again. No Way Home wisely addresses the criticisms levelled at his version of the character, then even sort-of redresses the audience for having those criticisms, valid though they may have been, by giving him the most emotionally resonant moment in the entire picture, when he saves Michelle Jones from her fall, and brings a beautiful sense of closure to something left dangling from another film, another time and another universe, almost a decade earlier. It actually made me love his version of the character, and it made every film in the series feel part of a whole, even if they were retrofitted in.