Spot on.
Decent
Meh
Terrible
And Garfield came off as the most natural Spiderman quipper.
Tobey was okay but you could tell, that kind of humor was not Tobey's strongest acting style, however what made Tobey the best is because he represented the most human and relatable aspect of Peter Parker and Spiderman.
Honestly I cannot think of any 3 comic film scenes that moved me to tears when Tobey's Spiderman stopped that fast train in Spiderman 2. that scene to me is what defines Spiderman as arguably the greatest comic book hero of all time.
Maguire's Spider-man was given more quips in the tie-in video games and I actually kind of liked his delivery in those. He just sounded like a regular smartass New Yorker. The movies though used them sparsely which I can understand from a tonal perspective.
Garfield's Spider-man was definitely the quippiest and he tried to play the role with a bit of cartoonish physical comedy (If I am not mistaken, he said he modeled his performance off of Bugs Bunny.) But there were also complaints about the jarring shifts in tone throughout his movies (especially the 2nd.)
How so?
Uh huh.
Because it was a logical continuation of Spider-Man's introduction in Civil War? Because it made for a decent story arc? Because maybe something can be good even if you don't personally like it? Take a number.
Doctor Strange: "You are the right person to replace Logan."
X-23: "I know there are people who disapprove... Guys on the Internet mainly."
(All-New Wolverine #4)
Because Holland's spiderman is written in a way that is too childish and simplistic , meaning not much substance. In the comics, Spiderman even the teen version always appeared far more mature than his peers.
Dafoe brought a horror, mystery, evil and darkness to the film that made him scary for real. This is a much superior villain, so high way up. I can assure you that this scene would never make it to any MCU Spiderman filmUh huh.
No, because Spiderman has a richer universe than Iron Man and does not need Iron Man, that fact does not change in any incarnation of Spiderman and it is not really a decent spiderman story arc when he is hung up over Iron Man.Because it was a logical continuation of Spider-Man's introduction in Civil War? Because it made for a decent story arc? Because maybe something can be good even if you don't personally like it? Take a number.
Garfield may not have been given the best material or best films to work with, but there was more Spiderman stuff about Garfield than Holland has ever done.
I think the films of Garfield as well looked too cartoonish. I can not watch the lizard fight scene in Amazing Spiderman 1 and not get turned off.
Another reason just to appreciate Raimi Spiderman 1 and 2 at least. this is the only Spiderman film where mostly nothing felt cartoonish.
So a 15-year-old questioning their place in things and trying to find their way in the world is childish, simplistic, and substance-less. Good to know.
Depends on the writer. (Also, if you're talking 616, you need to consider Ultimate, the thing the movie was actually based on,
Dafoe brought a horror, mystery, evil and darkness to the film that made him scary for real. This is a much superior villain, so high way up. I can assure you that this scene would never make it to any MCU Spiderman film[/quote]
And yet Vulture in the car proves that false. Try again.
The movie needs to mold itself to work with the TV show, not replicate the comics "just because" (remember how X-Men suffered when it did the comics "just because"?).
The cringier elements, certainly.
Doctor Strange: "You are the right person to replace Logan."
X-23: "I know there are people who disapprove... Guys on the Internet mainly."
(All-New Wolverine #4)
I think MCU Peter does have an issue with them infantilizing him because of so much emphasis being put on his age and the active adult figures in his life that you usually don't see with Spider-Man. Not even Ultimate.
I'd like to believe there was a way of integrating him into the MCU without the Iron Man dynamic but so much about MCU Spider-Man has been event-driven by the needs of the MCU rather than the core of the character in my opinion.
I think they could've done his dynamic with Iron Man more like in the Civil War comics, where they're friends and Tony helps him with the Iron Spider, but isn't really a mentor so much as a fellow hero. IMO that would've been better, although the whole hero who doesn't need help from anybody thing doesn't really work in the MCU