3 Ways Spider-Man 3 Could Have Been Saved
Here’s my take on the way Spidey part 3 should have gone down, thus prolonging the shelf life of the original franchise and avoiding the reboot route.
Youve got to love Spider-Man. I mean, who doesnt? Hes one of Marvels most enduring icons, standing for all that is good, and representing the little man in his fight against evil. Were not talking about the orphan son of a millionaire here, Peter Parker is the every man. Any one of us could have filled his shoes had we been bitten by that famed radioactive spider. No privileged background or alien birthrights required. Directed by prolific music video director Marc Webb, whose only other film credit was 2009s 500 Days of Summer, the latest spin on the Spider-Man story with 'The Amazing Spider-Man' is currently in post production and will swing into cinemas in July of this year. It is promised to be the most faithful interpretation ever. Gone is tiny mouthed man child Toby Maguire, replaced by The Social Networks Andrew Garfield an actor whose slight frame so perfectly fills the boots of the friendliest of all neighbourhood superheroes. But how did a franchise reboot actually come about? And why did Marvel feel the need so soon after the Sam Raimi trilogy? We all know there was originally going to be a fourth installment in Raimis vision but that was dropped by Sony in favour of a total do-over. The answer, as usual in these things, is money. With Maguire, Kirsten Dunst and Sam Raimi taking up something like $50 million in salary requirements alone (their deals increased with every film), Sony were always prepping to reboot the series for younger actors who could come on minimal pay deals thinking that it is the characters fans are coming back for and not the actors portraying them. Whilst Sam Raimi had his Spider-Man 4 in development, Sony made sure screenwriter James Vanderbilt (Zodiac) was working on a reboot for them to pull the trigger. Financially the most successful Spider-Man movie of all time, Raimi's last movie Spider-Man 3 had all the potential to be the greatest comic book movie of all time. A well established back story for its hero, a plethora of villains to chose from and some of the most brilliant source material from which to draw inspiration. Instead it was an over saturated, self aware parody of itself that left many bored to tears. But what would have happened if Sam Raimis 3rd Spidey flick hadnt been so poorly received by fans? Would The Amazing Spider-Man actually have been Spider-Man 4? The answer is probably not... Raimi would have got to make the movie he had wanted to since 2004 by using The Vulture (John Malkovich was attached) and with the added spice of Anne Hathaway as The Vulturess (a mix of Black Cat and a new character... a casting that would have ruled out Hathaway for the Catwoman role in The Dark Knight Rises) but the idea was to reboot the franchise and Sony would have pulled the trigger eventually. I guess well never know for sure if any movie could have convinced Sony not to reboot when so much money in salaries were involved, but because we always like to day dream around here, heres my take on the way Spidey part 3 should have gone down, thus prolonging the shelf life of the original franchise. Sony, I hope youre taking notes as it may help you when you get to The Amazing Spider-Man 3.