Spider-Man (2002)

Spider-Man (2002)

Taglines: Turn your world upside down.

Based on Marvel Comics’ superhero character, this is a story of Peter Parker who is a nerdy high-schooler. High-school senior Peter Parker lives with his Aunt May and Uncle Ben, and is a school outcast. On a school field trip, he visits a genetics laboratory with his friend Harry Osborn and love interest Mary Jane Watson. There, Peter is bitten by a genetically engineered “super spider.” Shortly after arriving home, he becomes unconscious. Meanwhile, Harry’s father, scientist Norman Osborn, owner of Oscorp, is trying to secure an important military contract. He experiments on himself with an unstable performance-enhancing chemical. After absorbing the chemical, he goes insane, and kills his assistant.

The next morning, Peter finds that he is no longer near-sighted, and his body has metamorphosized into a more muscular physique. At school, he finds that his body can produce webs, and his quickened reflexes let him avoid injury during a confrontation with Flash Thompson. Peter discovers he has developed superhuman speed, strength, the ability to stick to surfaces, and a heightened ability to sense danger.

Spider-Man (2002)

Brushing off Ben’s advice that “with great power comes great responsibility,” Peter thinks of impressing Mary Jane with a car. He enters an underground fighting tournament and wins his first match, but the promoter cheats him out of his money. When a thief suddenly raids the promoter’s office, Peter allows him to escape. Moments later, he discovers that Ben was carjacked, and killed. Peter pursues and confronts the carjacker, only to realize it was the thief he let escape. After Peter disarms him, the carjacker flees, but dies in the process. Meanwhile, a crazed Norman interrupts a military experiment, and kills several scientists and the military’s General Slocum.

Upon graduating, Peter begins using his abilities to fight injustice, donning a costume and the persona of Spider-Man. J. Jonah Jameson, a newspaper company headmaster, hires Peter as a freelance photographer, since he is the only person providing clear images of Spider-Man. Norman, upon learning Oscorp’s board members plan to sell the company, assassinates them at the World Unity Fair.

Spider-Man (2002)

Jameson quickly dubs the mysterious killer the Green Goblin. The Goblin offers Peter a place at his side, but Peter refuses. They fight, and Peter is wounded. At Thanksgiving dinner, May invites Mary Jane, Harry, and Norman. During the dinner, Norman sees the wound and realizes Peter’s identity. Shortly after he leaves, the Green Goblin attacks, and hospitalizes May.

Mary Jane admits she has a crush on Spider-Man, who has rescued her on numerous occasions, and asks Peter whether Spider-Man ever asked about her. Harry, who loves Mary Jane, arrives and learns she has feelings for Peter. Devastated, Harry tells his father that Peter loves Mary Jane, unintentionally revealing Spider-Man’s biggest weakness.

The Goblin holds Mary Jane and a Roosevelt Island Tram car full of children hostage alongside the Queensboro Bridge. He forces Peter to choose whom he wants to save, and drops Mary Jane and the children. Peter manages to save both Mary Jane and the tram car, while the Goblin is pelted by civilians who side with Spider-Man. The Goblin then grabs Peter and throws him into an abandoned building where they battle. When the Goblin boasts about how he will later kill Mary Jane, an enraged Peter overpowers the Goblin.

Spider-Man (2002)

Spider-Man is a 2002 American superhero film directed by Sam Raimi and based on the Marvel Comics character of the same name. The film stars Tobey Maguire as Peter Parker, a high school student living in New York City, who turns to crimefighting after developing spider-like super powers. Spider-Man also stars Kirsten Dunst as Peter’s love interest Mary Jane Watson, Willem Dafoe as Norman Osborn/Green Goblin, Rosemary Harris and Cliff Robertson as Aunt May and Uncle Ben, and James Franco as his best friend Harry Osborn.

After progress on the film stalled for nearly 25 years, it was licensed for a worldwide release by Columbia Pictures in 1999 after it acquired options from MGM on all previous scripts developed by Cannon Films, Carolco and New Cannon. Exercising its option on just two elements from the multi-script acquisition (a different screenplay was written by James Cameron, Ted Newsom, John Brancato, Barney Cohen and “Joseph Goldman”), Sony hired David Koepp to create a working screenplay (credited as Cameron’s), and Koepp received sole credit in final billing.

Directors Roland Emmerich, Ang Lee, Chris Columbus, Jan de Bont, M. Night Shyamalan, Tony Scott and David Fincher were considered to direct the project before Raimi was hired as director in 2000. The Koepp script was rewritten by Scott Rosenberg during pre-production and received a dialogue polish from Alvin Sargent during production. Filming took place in Los Angeles and New York City from January 8 to June 30, 2001.

Spider-Man premiered in the Philippines on April 30, 2002 and had its general release in the United States on May 3, 2002. It became a critical and financial success; at the time, it was the only film to reach $100 million in its first weekend, had the largest opening weekend gross of all time, and was the most successful film based on a comic book. With $821.7 million worldwide, it was 2002’s third-highest-grossing film and is the 56th-highest-grossing film of all time (seventh at the time of release).

The film was nominated at the 75th Academy Awards ceremony for Best Visual Effects and Best Sound. The film is credited for redefining the modern superhero genre, as well as the summer blockbuster, and due to its success it was followed by two sequels, Spider-Man 2 (2004) and Spider-Man 3 (2007).

Spider-Man Movie Poster (2002)

Spider-Man (2002)

Directed by: Sam Raimi
Starring: Tobey Maguire, J.K. Simmons, Kirsten Dunst, James Franco, Willem Dafoe, Rosemary Harris, Stanley Anderson, Joe Manganiello, Gerry Becker, Michael Papajohn
Screenplay by: Stan Lee, Steve Ditko
Production Design by: Neil Spisak
Cinematography by: Neil Spisak
Film Editing by: Arthur Coburn, Bob Murawski
Costume Design by: James Acheson
Set Decoration by: Karen O’Hara
Art Direction by: Tony Fanning, Scott P. Murphy
Makeup Department: Jane Aull, Sandy Bailey
Music by: Danny Elfman
MPAA Rating: PG-13 for stylized violence and action.
Distributed by: Columbia Pictures
Delease Date: May 3, 2002

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