Man, the scene was well-explained and all and it beat Raimi's cheese version of new yorkers helping Spider-man in every possible way. Goes without saying.
In all honesty, I feel like the movie is getting some bad reception because it's a movie that shows more than it tells.
In all honesty, I feel like the movie is getting some bad reception because it's a movie that shows more than it tells.

I think it's good that it showed more than told.
But it also may put off children, so I dunno.

I think it's good that it showed more than told.
But it also may put off children, so I dunno.
If Raimi had directed this movie, the skateboard montage would have been scored to 'Raindrops'

Personally, I thought it was at least a scene where the movie tried to do something a bit different. It's not a bad idea: Peter has his powers, but he needs help from the city he has been protecting to succeed.
Still has its problems, though, I think. It's hard to suspend disbelief that this random guy who Spidey helped earlier on would be watching the news and just happen to be able to operate those cranes, or know the people who do. It all happens implausibly fast.
And the whole idea that Spidey has become a hero to the people is insufficiently developed prior to this. Yes, this guy is supposed to be a stand-in for "the people" (again, obvious), but that doesn't prevent it from being a bit eye-roll inducing![]()
The idea is not new...
No, if by "the idea" you mean: ordinary citizens helping Spiderman. However, by "trying something a bit different," what I meant was: the execution here is more ambitious. It involves Spiderman's trademark web-slinging, and one has the impression that the city structures themselves are involved, not just individual people.
Beyond that, the comparisons with Raimi's movie don't really matter much, at least not to me. The only relevant question is: did this scene work, within the context of this movie? Personally, I thought it did, but only to an extent. It is, at least, memorable. The concept needed more development prior to that scene for it to really work imo, however.

I wouldn't call implausible that someone whose child was saved by this masked man would remember him and try to help him back. Nor it is implausible that the average new yorker would be watching the news. And well, again, in SM1 a crowd magically appeared there defending Spider-man. THAT is 'implausibly fast.'
not what I felt was impassible about the scene...but then again why would there be people on a bridge?????
What do you mean. He saved people in that bridge. And one of them helped him back. That's all you need and is certyainly much more than we had in SM1 (not so in SM2 when people in the train saw Spider-man helping them. Although then you could call implausible that people would face Dr. Octopus just like that).
Yeah, he's class of 2012. The movie's probably set fall-winter 2011.
Man, the scene was well-explained and all and it beat Raimi's cheese version of new yorkers helping Spider-man in every possible way. Goes without saying.

The movie's set in 2012 too, you can see that when Peter looks at the copy of the Daily Bugle on the ground.