Picard Sisko
Prepare to be Assimilated
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I disagree, but to each his own.
If they saved Lizard for a sequel, they could have really made him a deep character, introduce his family, and make longer action scenes. Didn't Connors have a wedding ring on his finger?
They could have at least showed his wife answering the door and saying "Curt, there is a boy named Peter here to see you" and just have her walk away, and show him interacting with his son Billy, maybe helping with his homework. So perhaps later in the film the Lizard would be going after his own family and Spider-Man would have to stop him.
That would have been a really smart way to short but effectively show his family!
The problem would be though that if that's the only scene with them, you'd later think "hey what the hell happened to them?" and be another unresolved subplot.
If they saved Lizard for a sequel, they could have really made him a deep character, introduce his family, and make longer action scenes. Didn't Connors have a wedding ring on his finger?
They could have at least showed his wife answering the door and saying "Curt, there is a boy named Peter here to see you" and just have her walk away, and show him interacting with his son Billy, maybe helping with his homework. So perhaps later in the film the Lizard would be going after his own family and Spider-Man would have to stop him.
The problem would be though that if that's the only scene with them, you'd later think "hey what the hell happened to them?" and be another unresolved subplot.
According to an interview with the kid who had been cast as Billy -- I don't have the link on-hand now, but it's in the deleted scenes thread somewhere -- it sounds like they did film a scene with him and Martha visiting Curt at the mental institution, presumably in the aftermath of the finale, obviously. Along with several other scenes with Billy, but it's not clear what exactly.
Well that's why I had mentioned that Lizard would be going after his family later in the film. I understand what you are saying though, because it could have felt like Sandman's daughter in Spider-Man 3. You see her once and that's it. Here, they could have easily involved his wife and son throughout the film.
It was a pretty intricate, well designed suit. The mask was good, ditto the glider and his weaponry.
Ock's arms was a visual treat. His trenchcoat was pretty boring. I don't think one really has the edge over the other designwise.
"Butterfingers" is a great quote?
Are you serious?
It's incrediby cheesy, average dialogue, as are lines like "She'll be just fine", "let's talk" and "You have a train to catch". The last one is a pun.
And these are hardly all their lines of dialogue. The Goblin in general has more interesting exchanges, dialogue that explores the nature of heroism/villainy better, and is just generally a more sadistic and interesting villain characterization, thanks in part to the multiple personalities and those exchanges.
Octavius's best dialogue and character moments come in his talk with Peter Parker, and his call and response line, "The power of the sun in the palm of my hand". For the entire rest of the film, his dialogue is basically just exposition, as he's talking about his plan, or he's talking to his limbs, or the dialogue itself is just very, very average point A to point B stuff.
Oh, and let's not forget the untentionally silliest line ever.
"I will not die a monster!"
(He said, dying a monster)
I get what they're going for, but it always makes me giggle.
I have no idea what species Connors used for his experiment, but many lizards do love water: iguanas, basilisks, some monitors... not to mention the water dragons.
"The process began with taking a look at what kind of lizard we wanted him to be," Chen told MTV News. "What kind of reptile is he? Is he a komodo dragon, which has a dryer look with different types of scales? Is he an iguana? Is he a chameleon? Is he some type of frog? We looked at all types of creatures."
But Lizard is such a cool villain and he got shafted for the origin.
I think the best way still would have been to have the Lizard be a monster with half-intelligence/memories trying to cure himself while being hunted by Kraven. Thus Spidey has to save Lizard as they're friends (and for Curt's family) from himself and Kraven while also becoming a target of Kraven's to bury alive.
Oh well. I doubt Lizard will be used again in a movie, so I have to settle with what I got in this one.
It's so unbelievably, ridiculously forced. It's the perfect example of "tell, don't show" film-making.![]()
It's so unbelievably, ridiculously forced. It's the perfect example of "tell, don't show" film-making.![]()
TASM definitely had a montage, but it wasn't the montage aspect in SM1 that bothered me. It was the random, documentary-style interviews with New Yorkers of all shapes and colors. At the time, I thought it was funny, but when I watch it again I'm just... ugh.Didn't TASM have a montage? I've only seen it once but I thought the whole sequence between his first night out after Ben's killer to Stacy chasing him swinging through the city to his buying the costume was one long montage. There was no "interviews" with everyday New Yorkers, but they both used the montage in that sense.
Not criticizing TASM, just thought they both had similar sequences.
Full agreement with all of that.Having just seen the movie, I enjoyed The Lizard but I wish he had been given a more interesting plan than just turning everyone into lizard people. Ifans was good but he wasn't on the level of Alfred Molina, who is still the best actor to do a villain in a Spidey movie, IMO.
Rhys Ifans did the best with what he was given, and I applaud him for his performance. However, I don't feel that the Lizard was the worst villain despite having the most wasted potential. I'd choose him over Sandman or Venom any day.Worst villain in a Spider-Man movie, in my opinion ... And I'm only saying this because if the movie had given Dr. Connors any depth, then The Lizard could have EASILY become one of the best villains on screen. This movie completely and utterly dropped the ball on this one, and I'm so ticked off about it because Lizard is one of my all-time favorite comic book villains. What wasted potential ...
I don't think that Rhys Ifans had much to work with at all, so I'm not holding anything against him.
did'nt avengers do same thing?TASM definitely had a montage, but it wasn't the montage aspect in SM1 that bothered me. It was the random, documentary-style interviews with New Yorkers of all shapes and colors. At the time, I thought it was funny, but when I watch it again I'm just... ugh.
"Guy with eight hands? Sounds hot."
I don't get why people think ASM is the best Spider-Man movie while it has the weakest villain in a Spider-Man movie ever! At least we got to know Sandman's backstory but Lizard? Okay we know he worked with Spidy's father, Spidy helped him because of it and he got fired because he wasn't finished with the cure yet. But there was no depth whatsoever and I don't get why he suddenly saved Peter's life when Peter just beat him.