PalmerTheThing
Pilot for US POST #31
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I think reboot was the way to go, but quality has to be ensured for that game plan to work. These films are dancing pretty hard around that line.
My main issues with the Raimi films is the fact that the first film no longer holds up (it's a camp-fest with horrible acting) and the cast was much weaker than the Webb movies. Tobey Maguire has the charisma of a jellyfish and Kirsten Dunst is worthless.
Why am I not surprised that you would say that. If you know Spider-Man like you let on, you would know that there are an innumerable amount of stories, villains, and supporting characters that could have been implemented. Venom and Harry Osborn getting killed in no way throws the mythos into any sort of gridlock. Don't sit here and try to act like Spider-Man 3 was the final nail in the coffin; the way things played out was due to circumstance, nothing more.
Several other franchises have recovered from worse, I see no reason why this should be any different. Either way, for better or for worse, we're stuck with what we've got for the foreseeable future.
This whole time I thought I was the only one.
It's interesting to me that some of the common criticisms and the praise apply to the opposite movie for me. Whereas I didn't really see the Twilight parallels in the first film, it's glaring in the second. The romance, while forced, stilted, and unbelievable in the first, it was a lot more organic and endearing in the second. Then again, so much emphasis was placed on it that it managed to bog the whole story down anyway; it's a bit of a zero-sum game when all is said and done. So many missed opportunities, and all so they could say that they [BLACKOUT]killed Gwen Stacy[/BLACKOUT].
This whole time I thought I was the only one.
It's interesting to me that some of the common criticisms and the praise apply to the opposite movie for me. Whereas I didn't really see the Twilight parallels in the first film, it's glaring in the second. The romance, while forced, stilted, and unbelievable in the first, it was a lot more organic and endearing in the second. Then again, so much emphasis was placed on it that it managed to bog the whole story down anyway; it's a bit of a zero-sum game when all is said and done. So many missed opportunities, and all so they could say that they [BLACKOUT]killed Gwen Stacy[/BLACKOUT].

I think all films in a franchise either benefit or take on deficits based on the lasting impression of the previous installment. I think audiences were tired of a retelling of the origin again. And since the villain was not interesting enough to compensate the difference, the franchise is paying for it now. And I think putting the film out less than two years before the last is also a mistake. Had this come out next Summer, we would most likely have had a much better opening weekend, because there would have been more of an appetite for this character. I really AMS2. And its ultimate fate will really be felt next weekend domestically speaking. This could be a film that gets all of its success overseas. Pretty much like the last Pirates film did.
Franchise fatigue isn't just a "cop-out." Although I am pro-reboot, I still hear a ton of people complaining about it being too soon. Spider-Man 4 wouldn't have gotten as much crap as TASM1 even if it was the same quality film. The reboot series came too quickly and people seem to not want it to even exist.
I just keep hearing people who know others that lost interest due to the reboot of such a well known franchise this soon, i myself know people saying that, at this point i don't think it's just conjecture.
Most other cases consisted on the ressurrection of dead franchises, and even then, it was usually needed a critically aclaimed film to win fans back, Spider-Man was big during the 2000s, it has a style and energy that won the general public, even with bigger special effects, the franchise still doesn't feel as impressive in terms of spectacle than the previous trilogy did.
And come on, reboot fatigue sounds very plausible to me, i don't think it's just about having too much super hero competition.
Yes...it really is. I know you'd like to come up with any excuse that justifies this franchise underperforming, but that's not how it works. For every one you could point out, I'm sure that there are several who would say otherwise. There are those who are perfectly content with both universes, you know, and I do believe they outnumber the fanboys on both sides of the fence.Go on Rotten Tomatoes and look at how many reviews say that rebooting was unnecessary. It is NOT just my perspective.
Thank you. Fact of the matter is, the reboot did come very quickly and it really pissed off a lot of people. The Raimi films were very popular and having yet another origin story only 5 years after Spider-Man 3 wasn't very appealing to critics and the GA.
I still hear a lot of people at my school saying, "why are they still making more?" Or, "Tobey Maguire is the true Peter Parker!"
Recasting Bond wasn't a new thing, rebooting James Bond was just that easy, not to mention how great it was. A better comparison for Spider-Man is if Disney suddenly decided to reboot Iron Man and Pirates of the Caribbean in 2017, or if Transformers was rebooted with a Cybertron film and no role for the military or humans, i think it's unrealistic to believe it they would still be grossing 1 billion so easily, yeah, people know what reboots are, doesn't mean they will easily accept them 10 years after the first classic, and with some of the public having grown with the movies.
So franchise fatigue, as another user pointed out the Fast and Furious franchise should be suffering too then right;
The Fast and the Furious (2001) Opening ~$40 million, Total B.O. ~$144 million
2 Fast 2 Furious (2003) Opening ~$50 million, Total B.O. ~$127 million
The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006) Opening ~$24 million, Total B.O. ~$62 million
Fast and Furious (2009) Opening ~$71 million, Total B.O. ~$155 million
Fast 5 (2011) Opening ~$86 million, Total B.O. ~$210 million
The Fast and the Furious 6 (2013) Opening ~$97 million, Total B.O. ~$238 million
Six movies and the past 3 continue to improve on the box office of the previous one, coming out every two years. Franchise fatigue is just a cop out for a bad movie. ASM 2 was also has the lowest RT score of every Spidey movie. If franchise fatigue was a factor the MCU movies would be declining, but they're BO is increasing.
Yes...it really is. I know you'd like to come up with any excuse that justifies this franchise underperforming, but that's not how it works. For every one you could point out, I'm sure that there are several who would say otherwise. There are those who are perfectly content with both universes, you know, and I do believe they outnumber the fanboys on both sides of the fence.
Took the words right out of my mouth. Imagine if Disney decided to reboot Iron Man and re-tell his origin story in 2016? It would get slammed so hard.
Or if Kevin Feige was fired and his replacement decided to reboot The Avengers with a re-hashed origin.
There would me mobs of fanboys demanding blood and rooting for the reboot to fail.
The case was worse with Sony because people would prefer they lose the rights to Spider-man.
You don't remember how divisive the reboot was even before ASM1 was released?
Or if Kevin Feige was fired and his replacement decided to reboot The Avengers with a re-hashed origin.
There would me mobs of fanboys demanding blood and rooting for the reboot to fail.
The case was worse with Sony because people would prefer they lose the rights to Spider-man.
This. The whole rights situation kind of makes things a little bit more frustrating.