but he is still responsable for good things from TASM and Raimi trilogy right?
Agreed, Arad is responsible in some areas with Raimi's trilogy and TAS-M. It's good and bad when it comes to Avi Arad, and the ironic thing is all of those bad areas had to do with Spidey mostly, and not any other Marvel property that he's produced. Perhaps while he says he understands the character(Spider-Man), majority of the time he really doesn't.
Just searched it up and watched it. I don't see how that's a hint Richard kept the serum away from him. All he says is that Richard knew Connors felt incomplete and didn't trust him due to that. But from what we know, Connors didn't even know Richard had the formula developed at that time or if Richard even had it developed at that time. Connors could've been talking about Richard's research up until that point or at least the research Connors thought Richard had at that point. Remember that he just accepted that Peter came up with the formula when Peter showed it to him for the first time and took credit for it. Connors didn't ask any questions like "Are you lying? Is this from Richard?"
Then Connors may have thought Richard was keeping any research away from Connors knowing how Curt could have abused this power which, imo, would've been a great plot point in showing Connors' lab partner believing he would abuse any power instead of re-growing his arm as it showed that Connors did in fact become power hungry. I just find certain areas that could've been explored that we didn't get in the film.
It doesn't matter if Curt wasn't as corruptible as Ratha or Osborn. That doesn't mean Richard would trust him. Like I said, I have secrets that I don't even trust my best friends and my closest family members with. Does this mean that I don't love my family or that I don't get along with my best friends? No. If Richard felt no one should have the formula, then no one should have the formula. In fact, Connors himself is proof that Richard shouldn't have given his formula to even a good trustworthy man like him. Look what happened.
But when two people are working on one goal, you'd think such information would be shared; that's very different from keeping secrets from family or friends. Richard and Curt were lab partners working on one job; to hide anything from one or another shows that there is some mistrust between these two co-workers that could have been explored.
Why does it have to be so complicated? Richard doesn't want anyone to have the formula because he doesn't feel comfortable with anyone else having his formula, including his lab partner. I don't see why Richard intentionally keeping it away from Connors is such an unlikely thing.
Because as I said...there had to be a reason to keep the algorithm out of the hands of his lab partner. There wasn't a reason, but there really should be. It's not very realistic to say a co-worker will keep something so important away from the other just for no reason. Richard obviously was keeping this away and it should've ben explored why Richard didn't trust Connors. Yes, we see what happened once Connors found out, but some backstory as to Richard knowing how Connors would be power hungry would have been nice to witness.
And like I said, we don't even know if Richard had time to even inform Connors about the formula. He could've discovered it shortly before leaving.
That's a
huge assumption, don't you think? Saying Richard discovered it right before he had to leave.
What exactly are you expecting? Are you expecting a Victor Frankenstein-like scientist who lives in a creepy castle with no contact from the outside world, always looks tired and with messed up hair due to no rest, and literally works 24/7? Showing him as a hardworking man was enough IMO. We know it's something he has been researching and studying very hard for many years (for at least over a decade, since he worked with Richard 10 years prior to the story). When he discovers the formula, he doesn't become more obsessed but more excited and fascinated because he believes the formula took him more closer than ever to a serum that would restore his arm (which it did). Prior to that, he had no idea how long it would take until he would discover something. It could have been anywhere from 1 year to 10 years (this doesn't mean he was any less motivated to develop a serum or that he didn't work as hard).
Very odd choice, but no, I did not expect something like that, but at least showing us how physically and mentally demanding it was being obsessed with a cure and that was never showed. We just got a mild-mannered scientist that was only focused and then he quickly, leaps and bounds, changed his demeanor. Before he knew the algorithm, we never saw a Curt Connors that tried anything to perfect his algorithm, only talk, but not enough show.
Isn't that like complaining Harvey Dent is useless in Batman's battles with Two-Face? Or hell, isn't that like saying that Connors is useless in Spider-Man's battles with the Lizard sometimes in the comics? There are a lot of stories where Connors has zero control over the Lizard's personality. There are also many stories where similar characters turn into uncontrollable monsters and the same thing occurs until they're changed but it's not a problem. Bruce Banner also becomes useless in the third act of Avengers once he transforms into the Hulk. I consider Bruce Banner and Connors to not be developed separately from their counterparts. They get developed together in my book and in this film's particular case, I don't have a problem with the final fight just being a Spidey vs. Lizard fight.
Not once did I mention Connors should be "there" during a Lizard v Spidey fight, but something to further along Connor's psyche and development, maybe trying to actually fight his Lizard side, then it just being Lizard driving the rest of the film as soon as Connors took the serum.
At that point, it was just the island of Manhattan affected by the serum. As you saw in the movie, there was plenty of that gas in the canister (which was a hell of a lot bigger than the injections Connors would take) to create a cloud that spread over the entire island or Manhattan or at least most of Manhattan (can't remember). No, it probably won't keep everyone in lizard mode forever but definitely a hell of a lot longer than the time it kept Connors in lizard mode. I'm assuming that if Connors' plan would've worked, a month or several months later when the serum was about to ran out, he would've just refilled the big canister and redo the procedure but this time no one would stop him because everyone would've been a lizard and, at least according to what he believed, no one would've tried to stop him because everyone would realize they've reached perfection. The final plan definitely makes sense.
The final plan even makes less sense now since you just brought up Lizard re-filling the canister after a couple or so months. That seems like a quite tiring plan and not so much as a master plan than as a plan just "for the now" to keep trying to make a paradise that'll never be perfect with keeping the citizens of NY as giant lizard men and women. With that knowledge, it's even more a comic book-y idea that Lizard would have to re-fill canisters every now and then.
Also whether you agree with the idea that the Lizard's master plan cannot be translated well onto the big screen or not, you can't say the plan doesn't make sense and then say the comics did it great. If his plan to turn everyone into a lizard in the movie doesn't make sense, then why would it make sense in the comics too? The only difference between movies and comics is that they're different mediums. You can tell a story in the same way in both mediums (a few changes here and there for adaptation purposes but most of the story would stay intact). Going by your logic, a lot of Lizard stories are flawed and the Lizard himself is partly flawed in the comics to begin with.
Why would it make sense in the comics? Because it's science fiction that was started back in the 1960s and have only become sillier since then where you have to just read it and shrug your shoulders, because it's only a silly piece of fiction whereas in a movie, where you strive to be a little more grounded and real, as Webb even mentioned where he took a very science fiction vibe with Lizard's master plan that just shoots down the "grounded" talk Webb wanted for the first installment of his trilogy.