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An Interview with Greg Weisman, Producer of The Spectacular Spider-Man
Airs Saturday Mornings, 10:00 EST, on Kids' WB A hit with both audiences and critics, The Spectacular Spider-Man recently premiered on Kids WB. We spoke with Greg Weisman, who developed the series, about what its like to work with such an established canon and why this show is all about schooling Spidey
Firefox News: I was impressed with the voice-overs opening declaration in the first episode: I am the spectacular Spider-Man. It seemed to present a Spidey who unapologetically loves action, a kind of update for the X-Games generation. He may not have been an adrenaline-junkie before becoming Spider-Man but he is now. Is this a fair assessment?
Greg Weisman: The second half, yeah. Im not sure how much of an update it is if you look at the original Lee-Ditko stuff. Since then, sooo many tragedies, one after the other. Its easy to look at a [COLOR=green ! important][FONT=Verdana,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif][COLOR=green ! important][FONT=Verdana,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif]Peter [/FONT][/FONT][FONT=Verdana,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif][COLOR=green ! important][FONT=Verdana,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif]Parker[/FONT][/color][/FONT][/color][/color] for whom Spider-Man is this huge weight he carries, that he feels obligated to carry and cant put down. Our sense of who he was in the beginning is someone who actually kind of liked it. It really was a thrill. I think for us a lot has to do with where he is in his career. And these are such early days that this is a guy who very much thrills to be doing this. The second part, the adrenaline-junkie part, I completely agree with. Not that fifteen year old Peter Parker was an adrenaline junkie, I dont think he was, but yes, our sixteen year old heroabsolutely. It is a huge release for him.
Youre right. It might not be an update per seits sort of the so old its new deal. I want to return to comics later but to stay on this track, I liked the affirmation of full-tilt action-for-actions sake because I heard it as Yes, maybe well explore personal demons, moral responsibility, and so on at some point, but thats not what were going to lead with. How accurate is that, both in terms of character development and the overall tone of the show?
Well, I think again it all comes out of where we started. The theme of our entire series is the Education of Peter Parker. Thats the themeEducation with a capital E. Hes been on summer vacation and when you meet the character specifically in the scene youre referring to, which is the last night of his summer vacation, thats the mode hes in. He has been having a good time. Hes been fighting muggersthere was that one liquor store holdup that was pretty coolbut [theres been] no one thats really presented a challenge to him. The man who killed Uncle Ben, that was an emotional challenge, but it wasnt a physical challenge. Theres been no one who has physically presented any kind of challenge to Spider-Manand now, schools in session in every sense of the word. We are going to take Peter Parker to school, and that means literally, obviously, hes going to school. Hes got classes and hes got to navigate the hallways of Midtown High. Butwe are also going to take Spider-Man to school. So were going to begin to teach these lessons of responsibility in a way that matters. But where is he coming fromto get back to your original questionand wheres hes coming from out of the summer is still a place where Spider-Man is a kick. Its just fun.
[laughing] Sounds like thats going to be short-lived, though, from the way youre saying it.
I think for us theres a bit of a catch-22 to it for Peter. Spider-Man is a huge release from being Peter Parker. Its frustrating to be a teenager, to be anyone, really, because Spider-Mans "everyman." Now, the irony, the catch-22 of the whole situation, [is] the more time he spends as Spider-Man, the more complicated his life as Peter Parker becomes. And the more difficult it becomes. The more difficult it becomes, the more he wants to put on the blue-and-red and go swing off as Spider-Man because its such a thrill. And thats gonna be true forIm working on season two and its true nowthat Spider-Man is still a huge release for Peter but it very much complicates his life.
Its interesting listening to youI feel that if you return Spider-Man to his roots, its the only truly iconic coming-of-age story told in superhero form. The parallel between Peters education and Spider-Mans and ultimately how he must resolve the two, thats part of being a grown-up. Making them both work instead of one side messing up the other. Theres a timeless resonance there that I hope todays audiences respond to. I think they will
I think they will, too. Im not saying theyll all be conscious of it um, unless they all hear this interview
[laughing] I wasnt conscious of it until you made those last couple of points.
But I think it will resonate with them. Again, Spider-Man is one of the few modern archetypal characters. There are a lot of great archetypal superheroes, and a lot that are just variations on a theme.
Yes.
But Spider-Man is not a variation on Batmans theme. Spider-Man is an archetype is his own right. Its a very medieval archetypeits very much everyman. It goes back to that.
I agree. And I guess were again returning to the early 60s roots of the character.
Which is very important to us. People have notedobviously Ive been all over the Internet this week, obsessively looking to see what people thought of the show [laughing]! People have noted the influence of the [COLOR=green ! important][FONT=Verdana,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif][COLOR=green ! important][FONT=Verdana,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif]movie[/FONT][/FONT][/color][/color], the influence of Ultimate Spider-Man, and all thats true. But fundamentally, what we looked at as our primary source for this show are the original Lee-Ditko and Lee-Romita, Sr. issues of Amazing Spider-Man. Ill look at the current continuity, Ill look at Ultimate Spider-Man, Ill look at the movies. Ill look at anything that seems like a good idea, and Im not going to be shy about, lets say borrowing, from any of those sources, but fundamentally the bulk of what were doing is taking 1962 and translating it into a very contemporary 2008. But going back to those early issues and saying, Okay, weve got the virtue of hindsight, we can borrow from all these sources, but what would Spider-Man be like if Stan and Steve were doing it today? And on some level I know thats somewhat arrogant, but thats the approach. Thats what Bendis did also.
He completely did that and the comparison is natural because theyre both relaunches to a certain extent. But I feel yours is obviously a much lighter version than Ultimate Spider-Man, which turns fairly dark fairly quickly. I was glad to see that with Spectacular Spider-Man we arent dark right out of the gate. Regarding the early 60s feel, one of the other things I really like is the emphasis on the scientific side of Peter Parker. I know thats appeared from time to time in his various incarnations but what I liked was the juxtaposition. Meaning, Peter Parkers motto here seems to be work hard, play hard. How important is it to understanding, or writing, Peter Parker is that notionthe two sides of his personality?
Thats a good question. Im not sure that hes conscious of that. In other words, that falls into the same category of what we were talking about before, about that vicious circle. He feels a need for this release. You can see in the teaser of the first episode, which is certainly the only time when we see the character purely in the summer, the very next days schools startedtheres the Vulture, the Enforcerers. And even after that, in any episode that follows, he may come up against a few thugs here and there that again present no real threat to him, no real problem, but that he just has a good time with. But if you look at his attitude there, theres a slight change because he now knows that the worlds a more dangerous place than he ever thought it was even after the death of Uncle Ben, which is important to cite. We reference it a couple times in the first episode. We made a conscious choice to set our series a few months after Uncle Bens death so that its still this huge motivational, emotional factor in his life.
But hes not mired in it from the get-go.
Its not an open, bleeding wound. And again, its the metaphor of the summer. I dont know that hes conscious of the notion of, Hey, I work hard so I play hard. I dont think hes thinking that way. I just think that its a much more unconscious thing than Man, I cant figure out how to earn any money to help Aunt May Im just gonna go swingin. Because theres the release. He cant solve the problems of Peter Parker, but he can swing over a tall building in a single bound. And thats kinda cool. So I think hes still enamored of his own powers, and thats fun. And I think thats very human, and again thats absolutely what Stan and Steve were doing. Thats the metaphor of adolescence: someone who has gained new powers. Theyre not quite an adult and yet theyve now got powers that they didnt have as a kid, and theyre enamored of those powers.
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