Thursday, July 5, 2012

The Amazing Spider-Man in 3D

The Amazing Spider-Man Poster
source




As a lot of you know by now, my six year old loves superheroes.  He has a hard time deciding who his favorite is between the Hulk and Spider-Man, so he was obviously really excited and looking forward to seeing Spider-Man in the theater.  He's been counting down to the day it came out since the date was released!  We weren't able to go on the 3rd, since my husband was at work late, but we did go yesterday afternoon and we all three really enjoyed it.

First off, let me admit that no one in my immediate family has read any of the Spider-Man comic books.  We've seen some of the cartoons, and the three films that starred Tobey Maguire, but that's pretty much it.  So we know that the storyline is quite different than those films, but we don't know how much it stuck to comic book roots.

Andrew Garfield plays Peter Parker/Spider-Man.  This was the first thing we had ever seen him in, and we all thought he did a good job.  He wasn't the same type of Peter Parker we are used to, but that's not necessarily a bad thing.  Other stars included Emma Stone as Gwen Stacy, Denis Lear as Captain Stacy, Martin Sheen as Uncle Ben, Sally Field as Aunt May and Rhys Ifans as the Lizard/Dr. Curt Connors.

This film starts with Peter as a child, on the night he moves in with Uncle Ben and Aunt May. It just shows that single night, before fast forwarding to when Peter is in high school, but it proves to be a very important night. Peter's parents drop Peter off, along with a briefcase, that Uncle Ben and Aunt May store in the basement and forget about.

Peter is a pretty good child and generally does what's expected of him.  He stands up for the underdog, even if it lands him in trouble.  He seems to have a pretty good relationship with boy his aunt and his uncle.  As he is helping his uncle he stumbles upon the briefcase that belonged to his dad, and his world starts changing.

The briefcase leads him to the company where his father worked.  He meets his father's best friend and fellow scientist, Dr. Curt Connors.  This is where Peter gets bit and develops his powers.  He forms a friendship with Dr. Connors and helps him with some stuff, without giving away that he found it in his father's notes. Before he knows it, things get out of hand.

With a little bit of help from his girlfriend (the only one he tells about his secret powers) Spider-Man manages to save the day.  The movie ends in a way that leaves no doubt that there WILL be a sequel.

Like I said before, my family and I all liked the movie. We saw it in 3D, and while some of the scenes were pretty awesome, I'm still not positive it was necessarily worth the extra cost.  My guys both seem to think all movies are better in 3D, though, so they both disagree with me on that.

Elliott liked that this was a funnier, sillier Peter Parker than he was used to.  He thought the movie was just a little bit scary, but not too bad.  The scariest part for him was when someone died.  He says the movie was appropriate for kids 5 and up, as long as their parents are around to talk about the scary parts after the movie is over.








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