Here's the thing...the TASM faithful are hypocrites not for preferring one brand of cheese over the other, but for their attitudes in the buildup to this film over the last couple years.
What was the rhetoric after the first movie came out? That the more grounded, less campy tone was perfect for Spider-Man, and then in came the exaggerated ridicule about how the cheese ruined the previous trilogy. You guys acted as if your preference in movies was more mature and on some higher echelon of film tier, and that camp & cheese was beneath you. Yet when this movie breaks, and proves to be the most ridiculous of all the Spidey films, you defend it to the hilt.
That's inconsistent to me. Sure, you can prefer one brand of cheese over the other, but back then, the prevailing, snooty little attitude was more along the lines of "I hate cheese in all its forms, not just Raimi cheese".
I've said before that this movie jumped the shark for its various inconsistencies and blunders, but now, I'll also say that the fans jumped the shark right along with it. A lot of what I'm seeing here proves that some of you will defend anything this franchise puts out unconditionally, and to me, that's a problem. I stepped out for a minute to take care of something and only skimmed the last several replies, but I'm fairly certain I read that someone already decided (and proudly, it seems) that they would love Rhino in the next entry as much as they did in this one. Nice to see that some minds are already made up, but that's very telling about one's mindset. Not to make this an us vs. them thing, but most Raimi fans will at least agree on the problems in that series, but the TASM faithful right now are acting like cultist zealots. This is the sort of thing I see from the Man of Steel diehards, who swear by the gods that their movie, as glaringly flawed as it was, is the best thing to ever grace the silver screen. Richard Donner be damned.
Sad to see some of my fellow Spider-Man fans sink to those levels, but I guess it's just a sign of the times. I've noticed that in the last two years or so, fans in general have become a lot more defensive about these properties...it's as if everyone has a phobia of admitting that they like a sub-par movie, so they go into attack mode during the fallout. I sincerely believe that if Green Lantern was released today, it would have a cultist defensive barricade not unlike that of this movie and Man of Steel, and I'm sure I'd see a handful of members calling it the best genre film ever in their sigs...until the inevitable sequel, anyway.