Tempest19
Superhero
- Joined
- Aug 25, 2006
- Messages
- 7,350
- Reaction score
- 2
- Points
- 31
The way Raimi develops it is for the audience to think it's fun though... think about it for a second.
If Peter was "evil", him hitting MJ to the ground would not be as impactful as it is in the film. It would just be evil Peter being a prick again.
But, if you make the audience take the power trip with Peter and display it as fun... when he hits MJ to the ground, that moment is more horrifying and shocking than it would be if it was presented in the context of the "evil" scenario.
Every audience I am in has the audience having fun with Peter going on the power trip and then the second he hits MJ to the ground everything goes quiet with lots of, "oh my god, did he just do that?!" Thus, the audience is almost metaphorically slapped across the face with the message that the symbiote is bad news.
Thus, the fun is essential for the pay off to have more of an effect. Hope that makes sense...
If Peter was "evil", him hitting MJ to the ground would not be as impactful as it is in the film. It would just be evil Peter being a prick again.
But, if you make the audience take the power trip with Peter and display it as fun... when he hits MJ to the ground, that moment is more horrifying and shocking than it would be if it was presented in the context of the "evil" scenario.
Every audience I am in has the audience having fun with Peter going on the power trip and then the second he hits MJ to the ground everything goes quiet with lots of, "oh my god, did he just do that?!" Thus, the audience is almost metaphorically slapped across the face with the message that the symbiote is bad news.
Thus, the fun is essential for the pay off to have more of an effect. Hope that makes sense...

t:


I like being bad. It makes me happy.