* yes, the animation is continuously impressive, and very clever in concept and execution. This is the main reason for an adult to see the movie.
* The story is OK: I do get the feeling, though, that American critics really go a bit overboard for the father-son reconciliation themes that seem to be a speciality of Phil Lord, who wrote the (also somewhat overrated) Lego Movie. Rottentomatoes give this 97% though? A bit extreme.
* I think the very silly additions (the anime Spider girl, and Spider-ham) were a bit funny, but I think the movie would have been better tonally without them.
* The worst aspect, by far, was the ridiculous character design of Kingpin; especially when his family was portrayed in the same realistic human fashion as all other characters (Spider-ham and anime girl excepted.) His wife and son were shown driving in a car which he would have had trouble getting one buttock into. I really do not understand this decision - it broke any sense of semi-realism in every scene in which he appeared.
* Some of the climatic fight animation was too cluttered for its own good.
* This post sounds crankier than intended - I don't regret seeing it at all, as I do get quite a kick out of gorgeous, innovative looking animation. (Unfortunately, the novelty does wear off - Pixar style semi-realism was, for a while, a big motivation to see anything they put out. That's no longer the case.) There was also plenty of genuinely good humour in a movie that, like all Spiderman movies really, are good-natured at heart. So, I don't want to discourage anyone who might be interested from seeing it - it's just that I like to think about how I would improve movies (or TV series.) And I really did dislike the Kingpin design.
1 comment:
your right. Do not spend much time on this topic
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