Spider-Man 2
Spider-Man 2 | |
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File:Sm2 peter onesheet.jpg | |
Directed by | Sam Raimi |
Written by | Comic Book: Stan Lee Steve Ditko Screen Story: Alfred Gough Miles Millar Michael Chabon Screenplay: Alvin Sargent |
Produced by | Avi Arad Laura Ziskin |
Starring | Tobey Maguire Kirsten Dunst James Franco Alfred Molina |
Cinematography | Bill Pope |
Edited by | Bob Murawski |
Music by | Danny Elfman Bart Hendrickson |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures Sony Pictures Entertainment |
Release dates | June 30th, 2004 |
Running time | 127 minutes |
Language | English |
Budget | $200 million USD |
Spider-Man 2 is the Academy Award-winning sequel to the popular 2002 film Spider-Man and was released in the U.S. on June 30th, 2004. Its soundtrack was a major hit in the United states and elsewhere.
Credits
The film, directed by Sam Raimi, stars Tobey Maguire, Kirsten Dunst, James Franco and J.K. Simmons reprising their roles of Peter Parker (Spider-Man), Mary Jane Watson, Harry Osborn and J. Jonah Jameson, respectively. Alfred Molina plays the role of the villain, Doctor Octopus ("Doc Ock").
The screenplay is credited to Alvin Sargent, with screen story credit given to Alfred Gough, Miles Millar, and Michael Chabon. Stan Lee and Steve Ditko receive additional screen credit for "comic book & characters
Plot summary
It has been two years since the end of the last film, and Peter Parker is finding a double life very difficult. He loses a job, faces financial difficulties, is having trouble with his estranged friend, Harry Osborn, who still blames his father's death on Spider-Man (Harry doesn't know that Norman was actually the villanous Green Goblin of the first film), struggles with his studies and school work, as Professor Curt Connors reprimands him, and finds that he is losing his powers. Moreover, he has learned that Aunt May is being threatened with foreclosure on her house and his potential girlfriend, Mary Jane, has acquired a new boyfriend, John Jameson, the son of Peter's employer, J. Jonah Jameson. M.J. turns increasingly hostile to Peter after he fails to keep a promise to see a play in which she is the female lead. Further, he questions if he could ever have what he "needs," a life as Peter Parker, which climaxes in a flashback with Uncle Ben.
Peter's idol, a brilliant, gentle scientist named Otto Octavius becomes a mechanically-controlled lunatic as the result of a fusion accident. "Doc Ock", as he is now called (due to the metal tentacles wired to his spine), desperately wants to rebuild his experiment, and Spider-Man must stop him from robbing a bank. Peter's morale hits a nadir when Harry lashes at him in a drunken rage, M.J. and Jameson Jr. announce their engagement and he loses his powers due to a form of burn-out syndrome. Peter temporarily gives up Spider-Man, shirking his responsibilities.
As Peter has much more spare time now, not only does he excel at his physics courses, but at least one of his his relationships improves. Peter and M.J. connect once again, but as M.J. is engaged, it seems too late. On the other hand, Aunt May is distressed by Peter's confession that he was somewhat responsible for Uncle Ben's death. Soon after though, she sees his bravery in admitting the truth and inspires him to become Spider-Man once more. In the meanwhile, Doc Ock and Harry Osborn make a deal: Harry supplies him with tritium for his experiment, and the Doctor agrees to capture Spider-Man for him.
M.J. remembers the upside-down kiss she had with her savior Spider-Man in the first film, and that Peter's kiss suspiciously felt the same. She arranges a meeting with Peter, and although she is very fond of him, Peter's secretive behavior estranges and intrigues her. But before things can go on, they are attacked by Doc Ock. Because he knows that Peter and Spider-Man are close (although he does not know that they are the same person), he attacks Peter. Doc Ock threatens Peter and tells him to tell Spider-Man to fight him, unless he wants M.J. killed. Then he abducts her.
This shock brings back Peter's powers. He has a great fight with Doc Ock, and the insane scientist forces Peter to rescue a rogue train. With an utmost effort, Peter stops the train before it falls from an unfinished bridge. Before that, he took off his mask to avoid burning himself, but the people on the train return his mask, promising not to tell anyone. Unfortunately, he is weak from stopping the train and is captured easily by Doc Ock, and brought before Harry. Harry unmasks him and is shellshocked that Spider-Man is Peter Parker. Peter implores him to tell him where Doc Ock went, or M.J. will be killed. But this is a conflict that hasn't been resolved yet, and will no doubt be explored later on as Harry realizes his best friend murdered his own father.
Peter finds Doc Ock in an abandoned warehouse, where he holds M.J. hostage and has just launched his doomsday experiment, which is clearly going rogue, just as the one at the beginning of the film (extending flares, sucking up and incinerating anything metal). They fight a second time, and in the end, Doc Ock regains his sanity. He also understands Parker's laziness, as the student leads a double life. Old advice dispensed from the doctor to Parker and some of Aunt May's words are repeated by Parker that forces Doc Ock to realize the monstrosity of his actions. Determined to end his doomsday experiment by drowning it, Octavius destroys it and ends up dying a hero ("I will not die a monster!"). M.J. finds out that Peter is Spider-Man, and is stunned and full of joy at the same time. But Peter tells her they can never be together, as he will always have deadly enemies, and M.J. should spare herself the grief of coming too close to him.
As he hears of the warehouse disaster in the media in his penthouse, a distraught Harry meets face to face with his own father, the late Norman Osborn in a mirror. Norman demands his son to kill Parker, which prompts Harry to lash out and throw a dagger through the mirror. This, for the first time, marks Harry's possible departure into mental decline, furthered when he finds that the mirror is actually a passageway. The passageway reveals Norman Osborn's secret lifestyle as the Green Goblin, as a full assortment of his weapons and gear can be found, as Harry realizes who his father really was. This also marks the possibility of Harry becoming the next Green Goblin for the 3rd movie as he does in the comics.
In the end, M.J. runs away from her marriage with John Jameson. She gatecrashes Peter's apartment, telling him that she has decided to live with him - despite the risks - because a full dangerous life is better than a half, carefree life. She - almost forcefully - persuades Peter to finally be her boyfriend while accepting the need of his vows by letting him respond to a sudden call for help. As Peter joyfully swings to the rescue, Mary Jane remains, still somewhat apprehensive of the bizarre and potentially dangerous relationship they have committed themselves to. Template:Endspoiler
Box office success
In its first six days, Spider-Man 2 generated a record $180 million at the North American box-office, which is a record as of 2005. It generated $88 million at the box office in its first weekend of sale, and on its first day, it garnered a whopping estimate of $40 million, a record for a movie on opening (it was beat a year later by Revenge of the Sith, which grossed about $10 million more). Altogether, Spider-Man 2 made $373,585,825 in North America, making it the highest grossing movie of 2004 and the 9th highest grossing movie in the U.S of all time. Worldwide, Spider-Man 2 made $783,964,497, which made it the 2nd highest grossing movie of 2004 worldwide (behind Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban), as well as the 16th highest grossing movie worldwide of all time. Though this is not as much as its predecessor, it should still be considered excellent, considering it is a sequel to a very highly regarded movie, and those usually do not do that well in the box-office (such as Jaws 2).
Budget
- Story rights: $20 million
- Screenplay: $10 million
- Producers: $15 million
- Director: (Sam Raimi): $10 million
- Cast: $30 million
- Tobey Maguire: $17 million
- Kirsten Dunst: $7 million
- Alfred Molina: $3 million
- Rest of cast: $3 million
- The shoot: $45 million
- Special effects: $65 million
- Music: $5 million
- Composer (Danny Elfman): $3.5 million.
- Total: $200 million
Source: [1]
Critical reaction
The general critical reaction to the film was enthusiastic, with many critics saying the film had a dramatic power and emotional content that many summer blockbusters lack. Metacritic gave the film a collective rating of 80 out of 100 based on an average of 41 reviews. [2] Rotten Tomatoes gave it a rating of 93%, based on 195 reviews. [3]
Roger Ebert who panned the first film praised the second movie giving the movie four stars. He went on to call it the 'greatest super-hero movie since Superman'[4]
The film received excellent critical reviews from the following newspapers: Baltimore Sun, Chicago Sun-Times, Dallas Observer, Entertainment Weekly, Miami Herald, Newsweek, The Onion A.V. Club, Premiere, San Francisco Chronicle, USA Today, Variety, Portland Oregonian, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, The Hollywood Reporter, The New York Times, Slate, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, Austin Chronicle, Chicago Tribune, The Globe and Mail The New York Daily News, The New York Post, Rolling Stone Magazine
The following publications have given the film good reviews: Film Threat, LA Weekly, Los Angeles Times, TV Guide, Boston Globe, Christian Science Monitor, The Philadelphia Inquirer, ReelViews, Chicago Reader, New York Magazine, Charlotte Observer
The movie was listed in AFI's Top Ten Films of 2004
The New Yorker rated it as average while Salon.com and Village Voice rated it as poor.
In the 77th Academy Awards, the movie won the Academy Award for Visual Effects. It was also nominated for the Academy Award for Sound and the Academy Award for Sound Editing.
Featured cast
Actor | Role |
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Dylan Baker | Dr. Curt Connors |
Elizabeth Banks | Miss Brant |
Elya Baskin | Mr. Ditkovich |
Bruce Campbell | Snooty Usher |
Willem Dafoe | Green Goblin/Norman Osborn |
Kirsten Dunst | Mary Jane Watson |
Vanessa Ferlito | Louise |
James Franco | Harry Osborn |
Daniel Gillies | John Jameson |
Rosemary Harris | May Parker |
Tobey Maguire | Spider-Man/Peter Parker |
Alfred Molina | Doc Ock/Dr. Otto Octavius |
Donna Murphy | Rosalie Octavius |
Bill Nunn | Joseph "Robbie" Robertson |
Ted Raimi | Hoffman |
Hal Sparks | Man in Elevator |
Cliff Robertson | Ben Parker |
J.K. Simmons | J. Jonah Jameson |
Mageina Tovah | Ursula |
Notes and trivia
- At different points in the film, Peter and Harry both sport the same outfit as Ash from the Evil Dead films, which were the first films by Spider-Man film franchise director Sam Raimi.
- Promotion, marketing and anticipation for this film had grown so much in late 2003, Sony was considering putting webbing along with the Spider-Man 2 logo on the bases at the 2003 World Series.
- Elements of the film's plot are taken from the Stan Lee written Spider-Man storylines "If this be My Destiny" (Amazing Spider-Man (vol. 1) #31-33), Amazing Spider-Man (vol. 1) #50, and the first Spider-Man annual.
- Fans were somewhat skeptical when Alfred Molina was cast as Dr. Octopus, because Molina is of Spanish-Italian lineage and speaks British English, unlike his comic counterpart, who is a Caucasian American and speaks American English. However, after the film, Molina was widely lauded for his performance.
- Before the film was released, it was well-publicized that Tobey Maguire may have had to pull out of doing the film due to severe back pain. At one point, the producers had Jake Gyllenhaal on standby to take up the part. However, Maguire was in the end cleared to reprise his role as Peter Parker. The controversy was rumored to have made early shooting on the movie somewhat uncomfortable, as Kirsten Dunst was dating Gyllenhaal at the time, but the actors were eventually able to put the controversy behind them.
- Throughout the whole movie, the only points when Otto Octavius is called 'Doc Ock' or 'Doctor Octopus' are when Jonah Jameson suggests the names at the Daily Bugle, and in the final battle at the docks, where Spider-Man calls him "Ock." One of the suggested names is Doctor Strange, which is Steve Ditko's other major co-creation for Marvel Comics.
- The name of Peter's landlord, "Ditkovitch", was an obvious hat-tip to Spider-Man co-creator Steve Ditko.
- Spider-Man creator Stan Lee makes yet another cameo appearance (as he did in Spider-Man) during Spidey's first battle with Doc Ock at the side of building walls.
- Actor Bruce Campbell also makes another cameo as the usher who won't let Peter into Mary Jane's play.
- Voice actor Phil LaMarr makes a cameo as an extra. He is the man in the far right during the scene where Spider-Man stops the train.
- Tobey Maguire is a vegetarian. In the scene where Parker watches police cars go by, he is actually eating a tofu hot dog.
- At the end of the movie, when Harry Osborn, played by James Franco, discovers his father's hidden Green Goblin hideout, he walks up to a wall of shelves filled with pumpkin bombs. When he turns to look down the enormous wall of shelves and bombs, his reflection can be seen in a mirror used to create the illusion of a wall of pumpkin bombs.
- Before Spider-Man 2 was even released, it was announced that Spider-Man 3 would be released in 2007. Reports claim that the studio hopes to make at least six films.
- When Doctor Octopus kidnaps Mary Jane, he knocks down a banner attached to a building. Moments later, when Peter exits the ruined cafe, the banner has reattached to the building.
- A hospital scene with the attempted removal of Octavius' tentacles is an allusion to scenes in Raimi's earlier Evil Dead films.
- Spider-Man 2 is the first movie to be released in UMD format for the PSP. The first one million copies of the U.S. PSP included the movie free.
- Doctor Octopus (Alfred Molina) uses tritium to create nuclear fusion. The device he uses seems to be inspired by those used for inertial confinement fusion.
- In the film, Peter Parker is a physics major at Columbia University, interested in experimental nuclear physics and fusion power, while his comic book counterpart studies biochemistry/biophysics at the fictitious Empire State University
- When M.J. runs through the park in her wedding dress, she passes a man in black on the right side of the screen. That's Thomas Jane's stunt double from the Punisher, a covert reference to the character (since Sony Pictures didn't have the film rights to use him explicitly).
- The movie includes multiple references to the comic story arc where John Jameson becomes Man-Wolf. Jameson wears the same medallion that in the comics turned him into Man-Wolf. Jameson is portrayed next to a full moon in one scene, and in John Jameson's final scene, he makes a mildly-superhuman leap from the docks onto a platform while coming to the aid of Mary Jane.
- When Peter stops the runaway subway, he makes references to two separate characters from literature/history. His first attempt, sticking his foot out onto the tracks, is reminiscent of Superman's usual method of stopping a train by catching it by the locomotive and planting his feet until it stops. His second attempt, when Peter fires webs against the buildings and uses himself as the lynchpin to stop the train is reminiscent of Jesus Christ's crucifixion; his physical appearance with feet down and arms outstretched is very much like a man on the cross. Also, when he is passed back through the car afterwards, the wound Doc Ock inflicted on his side is very similar to the stigmata inflicted when a Roman guard stabbed Christ with a spear.
- The second time Spider-Man lost his spider-powers, he fell down into a back alley. That alley was the same place he discovered his powers.
- When Peter went up to the rooftops to test his powers, the building he was on was the same building used in the first movie, where Peter was practicing his web slinging.
- Some of the ideas in this movie were also in the Spider-Man animated cartoon (with 3D buildings).
- Major plot points about Doctor Octopus were from the episode "Doctor Octopus: Armed and Dangerous", including Octavius being a good man and Peter's mentor before the accident and the idea of Doc Ock creating a dangerous machine is used.
- The scene in which Peter is late for M.J.'s theater performance was taken from the animated episode involving the Chameleon (with the Chameleon disguising himself as Peter).
- The scene with Aunt May receiving bills was from the animated episode in which Peter is asked to take a photograph of the Lizard.
- The scene with Peter losing his powers was taken from the animated episode where he had problems with his powers, prior to turning into a six-armed monster.
- The woman with the violin sings a song about Spider-Man. That song was actually the theme song of the original early cartoon series. The tone and tempo was changed in the movie. It was also used in the first movie with the guy singing inside the subway station.
- The scene in which J.K. Simmons (as J. Jonah Jameson) shouts "Spider-Man was... A THIEF!", caused much hilarity. During shootings, Simmons is wearing false teeth for Jameson's trademark scrooge smile, and whenever he tried to form the "TH", he spat out his false teeth. These scenes can be seen on the blooper reel of the DVD.
- Spider-Man's costume is different from the first movie: This time his outline shines all the time, and the spider sign on his chest has increased in size.
- The typeface used for publicity and title purposes within the film is also used for the logo of PlayStation 3, also made by Sony.
- The film is often compared to another superhero film, Superman II, in that there are some basic plot elements that are apparent in both films, including the hero losing his powers, the love interest finding out the secret identity, etc. This film is not looked at as trying to copy those, as the story stands on its own in a very profound way.
- Several scenes in Spider-Man 2 can be compared to the original King Kong film. One scene has Doc Ock kidnapping Mary Jane, and carrying her screaming to the top of a small building. This is reminiscent of the scene in King Kong in which Kong carries a screaming Ann Darrow to the top of a motel. Also, the scene where Doc Ock nearly causes an elevated train to go off the terminus is similar to a scene in King Kong, where Kong smashes a section of the elevated tracks and the train partially goes off.
- There is a cameo of Queer as Folk star Hal Sparks, in the elevator scene when Spider-Man had lost his powers, as a reference to the character of Michael Novotny, a comic nerd in the television series. Although in the DVD audio commentary for the film, the director says that he picked Sparks for his stand-up rountine, and does not mention the television series.
Awards and nominations
2005 Academy Awards (Oscars)
- Won - Best Visual Effects — John Dykstra, Scott Stokdyk, Anthony LaMolinara, John Frazier
- Nominated - Best Sound Mixing — Kevin O'Connell, Greg P. Russell, Jeffrey J. Haboush, Joseph Geisinger
- Nominated - Best Sound Editing — Paul N.J. Ottosson
2005 Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films (Saturn Awards)
- Won - Best Actor (Film) — Tobey Maguire
- Won - Best Director — Sam Raimi
- Won - Best Special Effects — John Dykstra, Scott Stokdyk, Anthony LaMolinara, John Frazier
- Won - Best Writing — Alvin Sargent
- Nominated - Best Supporting Actor (Film) — Alfred Molina
- Nominated - Best DVD Special Edition Release
- Nominated - Best Music — Danny Elfman
- Nominated - Best Sound — Kevin O'Connell, Greg P. Russell, Jeffrey J. Haboush, Paul N.J. Ottosson
- Nominated - Outstanding Achievement in Special Visual Effects — John Dykstra, Scott Stokdyk, Anthony LaMolinara, John Frazier
- Won - BMI Film Music Award — Danny Elfman
2005 Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards
- Won - Best Popular Picture
- Nominated - Family Film (Live Action)
2005 Cinema Audio Society
- Nominated - Outstanding Achievement in Sound Mixing for Motion Pictures — Joseph Geisinger, Kevin O'Connell, Greg P. Russell, Jeffrey J. Haboush
- Won - Best Director — Sam Raimi
- Nominated - Best Actor — Tobey Maguire
- Nominated - Best Actress — Kirsten Dunst
- Nominated - Best Film
- Nominated - Scene of the Year — Spider-Man battles Doc Ock on the train
- Nominated - Best Dramatic Presentation, Long Form
2005 Kids Choice Awards (Blimp Award)
- Nominated - Favorite Movie
- Nominated - Favorite Movie Actor — Tobey Maguire
2005 Motion Picture Sound Editors (Golden Reel Award)
- Nominated - Best Sound Editing in Domestic Features: Sound Effects/Foley — Paul N.J. Ottosson, Christopher Flick, Scott G.G. Haller, Ruben Simon, Jussi Tegelman, Lisa Hannan, Ai-Ling Lee, Martin Lopez, Bernard Weiser
Movie Facts
- Release Date: June 30th, 2004
- Dvd Release: Date November 30th, 2004
- Running Time: 127 minutes
- Rating PG-13 for stylized action violence
External links
- Official Spider-Man Movie Network
- Spider-Man movie message boards
- Spider-Man Downloads wallpapers, screensavers, buddy icons
- Spyder-25.com :: Ultimate Resource For Spider-Man Fans
- Spider-Man Crawl Space, All Spidey, All The Time
- Spider-Man Mobile Ringtones, wallpapers
- Spider-Man 2 at IMDb
- Template:Shh
- Spider-Man 2 at Rotten Tomatoes
- Metacritic Spider-Man 2 review summary
- Allmusic.com soundtrack review
- Video game
- IMNO Interviews Ryan Woodward Storyboard Artist for Spider-Man 2