Maybe they can go the TSSM route and make Shocker one of the Enforcers. That way it's not just Spider-Man fighting one minor bad guy in a movie.
That would be cool. And if not Tombstone then maybe Kingpin or Silvermane.I suggested that a few pages back. Shocker, Ricochet and Ox would be good villains for the reboot. Have them employed by Tombstone after Spider-Man starts interfering with his criminal activity.

As I said earlier. I'm not actually pushing him as the main villain. I merely stated that hypothetically he could work easily enough with the right story. There are a couple of quick examples off the top of my head the type progression his story could have in the post you quote.
I never found any of Spider-man's villains to be scary either and I don't know why you're hung up on sympathy since we've had five films already where they've played that angle.
I'm not really interested in this nonsensical 'victimless crime' perception you seem to have with bank robberies or your own personal hang up that they aren't compelling. Many would argue that Spider-man versus the angry nerd would be far less compelling. If you don't find bank robberies compelling then that's fine for you.
I suggested that a few pages back. Shocker, Ricochet and Ox would be good villains for the reboot. Have them employed by Tombstone after Spider-Man starts interfering with his criminal activity.
Shocker is nothing like Electro in personality, nor in powers/abilities though. He uses vibration blasts which is nothing like electricity.
You have not really explained how Shocker would escalate over the course of a film.
Also saying Shocker could carry a film without explaining how is kinda of an easy statement make. I could say Big Wheel could carry a film on his own, but I think its fair if people ask how he could and have doubts whether he could.
Green Goblin or even Carnage can be scary in right circumstances.
Also I didn't find Norman Osborn sympathetic in Spider-Man 1.
If you have a villain that is neither sympathetic nor scary or creepy or evil to the point the audience really hates the character, what makes them compelling? Why should I care about Shocker as the main villain of a movie?
If you are going to have a villain who is unsympathetic, you may as well go in the opposite direction and make him really unsympathetic. If the villain is unsympathetic, but just robs banks and doesn't do anything that makes him really scary or creepy or anything, why should I care? I don't like him because he is unsympathetic, but I have no reason to hate him either because he is just a petty thief, I shouldn't be neutral towards a villain in a film, that is the makings of a bland villain.
There is nothing wrong with Spidey foiling a bank robbery in the course of the film, in the beginning or the middle of the film, but the villain needs more to his MO then just that to carry a film. Dr. Octopus robbed a bank in the middle of the second movie, but that is not all he did. His actions escalated towards a climax.
This why Shocker is best used henchman, he just not compelling enough to be a main villain, if he just a henchman, then he can be just the guy who tries to blast Spidey and that is it. Frankly I never really found Shocker compelling in the comics.
And like I said, bank Robbery is not the common place crime it used to be, nowadays its a major risk for a small reward, its easier to use a laptop to break into the bank's mainframe and steal the money electronically. Really nowadays only idiots rob banks and they usually get caught in a matter of days, if they are not caught on the scene. Shocker can make more money with his laptop then he could with his super villain outfit.

Really Shocker is just not epic enough to be the main villain of a film, I think if he were, then that movie would have the same problem Star Trek Insurrection had, where it felt like a rather bland TV episode rather then a film.
Shocker is nothing like Electro in personality, nor in powers/abilities though. He uses vibration blasts which is nothing like electricity.
But his vibro shots look nothing like electricity so I don't understand why people would mistake him like that.
I don't think people would confuse Shocker with the Electro we were given in TASM2 though.
Like I said in my brief examples. Shocker could start off as a simple bank robber and be foiled by Spidey. At that point it could turn into a vendetta where he tries to hunt down Spider-man or maybe he lures him out for a confrontation.
Or he could be a bank robber who is determined to move up in the world and plan bigger heists. Maybe he gets word of some Oscorp tech he can either sell or incorporate into his suit and gauntlets or whatever. A final confrontation at Oscorp over some MacGuffin could easily make a good set piece. It could be in part a sort of anti-heist film.
Well I gave a couple of brief examples, but you seem determined not to see the possibilities and say "where's the escalation?".
I'd say maybe you're over thinking it, but from your posts it's more like you're fixated on certain viewpoints and can't see anything past that. You've made an entirely arbitrary decision that anyone who doesn't fit into the tragic case or maniacal psychopath. It's not such a binary dilemma. There are other types of characters. Personally I don't see the problem with the simplicity of a determined bank robber if they have an interesting personality and the stakes are raised in confrontation with Spider-man.
Also bank robbery is not petty theft. It's grand larceny.
You keep jumping to conclusions without exploring the possibilities (and that's without mentioning your particular hang up with bank robbery). At no point have I or anyone here said that Shocker must simply rob banks all the way throughout as though he has no character arc or doesn't even change behaviour after confrontations with Spider-man.
This is such a silly point to make really. One I don't think you really know anything when it comes to the world of crime and have just fixated on this. Secondly as I've tried to point out is that it's not relevant if bank robbery is an every day occurrence. Neither is a guy threatening to turn people into giant lizards, but it is the kind of thing Spider-man is known for tackling.
I doubt that's going to change any time soon because someone thinks they're out of fashion. That's hipster Spider-man you're thinking of.![]()
Honestly if you don't find Shocker interesting that's all fine. You don't need to. I'm not doing this to shove my opinion down your throat, but I don't understand how you can be so fixated on certain concepts you can't see past what you've already built up in your imagination.
Agreed. It would be refreshing to see him in a Spider-Man movie.One thing I like about Shocker is that he's not a psychopathic and ruthless maniac. Yet he's also not one of those sob story villains. He's a man who had potential but who feels he has to rely on crime to make himself a living. He doesn't seek out to kill people, actually he'd avoid that if possible. He'd kill Spider-Man though if that's what it takes to succeed in whatever plan he's involved in, or if that's what he's hired to do.
One thing I like about Shocker is that he's not a psychopathic and ruthless maniac. Yet he's also not one of those sob story villains. He's a man who had potential but who feels he has to rely on crime to make himself a living. He doesn't seek out to kill people, actually he'd avoid that if possible. He'd kill Spider-Man though if that's what it takes to succeed in whatever plan he's involved in, or if that's what he's hired to do.
Oh I don't think anyone really thinks of Shocker as main villain material. He could be the villain who stands for the main action scenes, but he's basically a henchman level villain. That doesn't mean he couldn't have great scenes and be an enjoyable villain though. Think of Scarecrow in Batman Begins.
It's not about being greedy, it's about changing the life situation in desperate ways. There are people not living up to their potential everywhere, making irrational choices in life for various reasons. A criminal using his inventions in criminal ways to make quick cash instead of getting involved in business is a very believable and real motivation.
There are many theories on what makes people act criminally, and I won't get into them. But it's definitely not like Herman woke up one morning and started robbing banks, that's oversimplifying the characteristics of the current Shocker we know and love. We already know he has a criminal history pre-Shocker.
One thing I like about Shocker is that he's not a psychopathic and ruthless maniac. Yet he's also not one of those sob story villains. He's a man who had potential but who feels he has to rely on crime to make himself a living. He doesn't seek out to kill people, actually he'd avoid that if possible. He'd kill Spider-Man though if that's what it takes to succeed in whatever plan he's involved in, or if that's what he's hired to do.
I agree with your second paragraph, many criminals act the way they do because of the context of their lifes such as living conditions. There are several reasons why Shocker could come from a poor area and still have the skills to invent such gadgets. The stuff he created his prototype out of actually ain't his own, it's from the prison. He'd need money to get the material though after the prison break to invent the real stuff, hence the continuation of his criminal career. He could realise how much easier it is to rob banks with his new invented gadgets and be inclined to continue the criminal path instead of going the business route (in which talent alone often isn't enough in the harsh reality), simply because it's easier for him and because that's the way HE knows and where he's most used to. People when given options most often chose the easiest and quickest one. That's believable and very real. That's how I interprete Shocker's background and motivations.
Don't missunderstand me though, I agree with you that I'd like to see more of his background in the comics. It doesn't have to be present in a film though.
He's a lot like Captain Cold, really. Just a blue collar criminal who got frustrated working in the confines of industry and turned his mechanical ingenuity to crime. My proposed arc for him was to introduce him in Movie 1, as Mysterio's "tech help". After his boss gets captured, he hires himself out to Kingpin, builds the Shocker tech, and leads The Enforcers. I don't think he would work with The Sinister 6, though, as he couldn't care less about "revenge".One thing I like about Shocker is that he's not a psychopathic and ruthless maniac. Yet he's also not one of those sob story villains. He's a man who had potential but who feels he has to rely on crime to make himself a living. He doesn't seek out to kill people, actually he'd avoid that if possible. He'd kill Spider-Man though if that's what it takes to succeed in whatever plan he's involved in, or if that's what he's hired to do.
Well how ruthless would he be in this vendetta, how fair would he take it? Would he be willing to endanger several people to kill Spidey? That would at least raise the stakes a bit.
If Oscorp is run by scummy people, would that tech be worse off in Shocker's hands? Heck Shocker is ripping off Norman Osborn, its a unsympathetic crook ripping off an even more unsympathetic crook. How are those big stakes? What is he going to do with that tech that makes stopping him an exciting climax for Spidey.
The whole anti heist film doesn't work, because in a heist film the robbers are the protagonists, we get to see their personal lives and maybe see them care about each other.
You want Shocker to be unsympathetic? Does that mean he has no loved ones, he is never humanized at all, he has no one he cares about besides himself? If you are going to give a villain no redeeming qualities and only commit robberies, I don't see any reason to care about.
That is a big problem with in comics, he has no real back story, so it just seems like he woke up one morning and starting robbing banks. He is just not a very interesting character and half the time they portray him as a loser in the comics anyway, so even the writers don't seem to respect him. This is why he just would not make a good main villain for a film, but he could work as a henchman, where he is not carrying the film. Doesn't that role fit him better?
I think you are trying to fit a round peg into a square hole, there are tons of other villains who are far easier to fit into an escalating 3 act movie with an exciting climax. Not every villain is cut out to be the main villain in a film.
And how is this unsympathetic Shocker compelling anyway? Would he have any personality traits beyond being greedy? How he is menacing if all he does is commit robberies?
I'm more interested in Spidey saving lives then chasing after some marked, insured bills. Really the way Shocker is presented in the comics, he seems like someone the cops can deal with if they were not written as totally incompetent.
Except the Marvel Universe always tried to reflect the real wold to some degree, otherwise Reed Richards technology should have made the Marvel Universe into a sci fi wonder land that is completely foreign to us. Plus the Marvel Universe reflects the changing world doesn't, people have Iphones in the modern MU right? Why wouldn't there be cyber crime in the Marvel Universe and why wouldn't it over take regular bank robberies?
Well we all have our preferences, but the why you describe Shocker, he just seems like some jerk
Well let's face it, it is very unlikely that Shocker will ever be the main bad guy in a film, ever.
He's a lot like Captain Cold, really. Just a blue collar criminal who got frustrated working in the confines of industry and turned his mechanical ingenuity to crime. My proposed arc for him was to introduce him in Movie 1, as Mysterio's "tech help". After his boss gets captured, he hires himself out to Kingpin, builds the Shocker tech, and leads The Enforcers. I don't think he would work with The Sinister 6, though, as he couldn't care less about "revenge".