PSYLENTGuardian
El Pollos Hermano
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Would've worked a lot better without the "OH DARN!" but I still laughed 



Lol! Nice one, lol.
Pwahaha!

Reminds me of the fishing net he wore in AF15
DittoHahahahahaha!!! Their faces kill me.
You should do a version without the "Oh Darn". Just have Capt. Stacy's face like that. It would be even funnier.
Would've worked a lot better without the "OH DARN!" but I still laughed![]()
yeah I'll try that
"We haven't gone for gritty, we've gone for grounded. If we try and make Batman, we'll fail. The new Batman is it's own thing - and also in terms of tone, Spider-Man is nothing like that character.
Spider-Man is witty, Spider-Man is a kid, Spider-Man wants to have fun, he's a teenager and he needs to go through first love and piss around. I don't give a frick about making money and all that: I care about the character being served, being treated with respect!"
"The movie's a full meal, but there are things and mysteries that won't get resolved until the next movie. I mean, there's too much to look at, in a good way!"
Thank you. May the gritty/Batman/dark-movie talk cease.Andrew Garfield said:"We haven't gone for gritty, we've gone for grounded. If we try and make Batman, we'll fail. The new Batman is it's own thing - and also in terms of tone, Spider-Man is nothing like that character.
This interview should at least reduce the comparison between TASM and Nolan's Batman.
lol I guess what I should have said is complainers/haters can't just say that TASM is copying Nolan's Batman. Well, they can say it, but Garfield confirmed that it won't be gritty like Batman. But yeah, you're right. There will always be comparison.
I wonder what things won't be answered unti lthe sequel?
Okay, like I said over in another thread on a similar topic, if the idea is to show that Peter is fighting crime before his Uncle Ben gets murdered as means of getting revenge and challenging his anger after years of being bullied and feeling abandoned, I think it's understandable and wouldn't have much of a problem with it--if it was depicted right, that is. However, what was great about Stan Lee's origin, and what Sam Raimi clearly understood with his Spider-Man film, was that once Peter Parker got his powers, the last thing on his mind was fighting crime. He was so caught up in having these great powers that he only thought about how they would benefit himself rather than how they could be used to help other people. And the best way to illustrate this is for Peter not to be fighting any crime at all until after his Uncle Ben gets murdered. Because if you have him fighting crime before his Uncle Ben gets murdered and the circumstances that led up to that murder, then the tragic lesson of "with great power comes great responsibility" get diluted because he, technically, is already using his powers responsibly.
Exactly.
This is an excellent point. Not to say its impossible to show something internal through a visual narrative, but certainly the idea of Peter using his powers recklessly or selfishly prior to learning with his Uncle's death the value of personal responsibility comes across much more effectively by having him not be a full-blown crime fighting superhero before his Uncle's death.