What if Spidey did feature in a future MCU film but he was masked the whole time? Of course, that would mean it's just a supporting role and not a major one at all, but at least that way Marvel wouldn't have to cast an actor in the role just yet while having the character still appear. It would allow Spidey to feature and show that he's part of the connected universe and audiences could take it or leave it as to whether he's the same Spidey from the Webb movies.
Then later on, once Spidey is established in the MCU, Marvel could cast an actor in the role that they themselves want, rather than having to rely on Garfield and carrying over any baggage from TASM movies.
Any kind of confusion like that should be quashed immediately, establish a new MCU take on the character with new actor. Nobody drags the baggage of the TASM series in.
The other thing is ...
...If/when Sony and Disney/Marvel formalize a deal on this, It's going to make whatever crossover movie is to come of it a huge talking point, and a guaranteed box-office success...
...Does anyone else think that could be the point at which Fox get asked to bring Wolverine to the table?
Doughtful, it doesn't seem like fox and Disney are on the greatest of terms and sharing characters is always a pain.
What if Spidey did feature in a future MCU film but he was masked the whole time? Of course, that would mean it's just a supporting role and not a major one at all, but at least that way Marvel wouldn't have to cast an actor in the role just yet while having the character still appear.
The way I see the options of Spidey in the MCU:
1) Sony voluntarily gives/sells the rights back to Marvel.
2) Sony stops making Spidey movies and the rights revert back to Marvel.
3) Sony let's Marvel take over Spidey but retains distribution rights and/or back-end deals.
4) Sony lets a rebooted/recast Spidey appear in Marvel event films but retain control of said rebooted Spidey for their own Sony films (which are only loosely connected to the MCU, if at all).
5) Sony lets Spidey appear in Marvel event films but if and only if they use TASM Garfield version.
6) Sony doesn't cut a deal now but waits instead for the box office of Sinister Six. If it tanks then they cut a deal; if it somehow succeeds then they continue with their gameplan.
7) Sony just continues with their gameplan and no deal occurs.
Personally I'd prefer #1 but realistically speaking #4 is quite enticing. I think it is the only true compromise for both sides and truly everyone wins.
With #4 Marvel gets:
-Spider-Man, their top draw character, in major MCU event films...watch out Avatar!
-A closer approximation to their comic universe
-More incentive to support Spider-Man films besides just merchandising money
-Some creative control over the character after Sony's recent failures
With #4 Sony gets:
-A reinvigorated fanbase for the character
-A feeling that his adventures mean something in the large MCU
-To keep the character longer
-A soft reboot to cleanse the audiences pallet from recent failures
-A cut of the insanely profitable MCU
With #4 The fans get:
-Spider-Man in The Avengers and/or The Infinity Gauntlet on the big screen!! 'nuff said
Honestly, I think the Spider-Man ship has long sailed.
It may have looked like a more likely outcome during Phase 1, or even as early as last year, but I don't think we'll see Spidey in the MCU at this point until the rights revert.
First, I don't think Marvel would want to associate themselves with a dying franchise. TASM2 was the least successful Spider-Man film, both critically and monetarily. This could have a big affect on TASM3. Then there's the fact Sony wants to release 2 villain spinoffs prior to it, a very risky shot in the dark at this point that even Webb fans are skeptic of, and if those fail that puts TASM3 at greater risk.
Second, I think the MCU's need for Spider-Man has reached its lowest. That's not to say they wouldn't need him at all, just that he isn't as much of a necessity today as he was in the MCU's previous history. The gap between Iron Man and their other properties is shrinking. Cap is almost up there, Guardians became a top franchise, Doctor Strange is on his way. Marvel is turning more and more of their characters into A-lists.
Third, and this kind goes in hand with the second point, I feel like Marvel is at a point where they want full creative control over their properties, and would prefer starting fresh than using another studio's version of their characters. Judging from their recent films and the way Phase 2's been structured, I think that's the case.
Fourth, the rumor overall seems preposterous. "Soft" reboot or not, there's no way Sony would reboot again so soon, for obvious historical reasons. Plus Garfield's performance is also generally well received, despite the franchise's reception as a whole. So why would they replace him with a new actor that would be a complete wild card and with no setup?
...
why? I don't like the Sony version anyway and don't watch it (legally). So having a MCU version that might be better is just a win since at least one version will be see. Sony doesn't lose money with me just because I watch a different version when I didn't plan to see future Garfield movies anywayAgreed. To those who would rather see a different Spider Man in the MCU, I don't think Sony would lend him to the MCU while maintaining his own solo version. It's just bad business to have two competing Spider Men. I'm sure there will be viewers who don't like Sony's version and will only watch the MCU version (or vice versa). If there is only one version, it will deter that from happening.
as far as the age issue, Garfield is a much younger 30 than Tobey was, imo