I doubt Sony is going to fire Garfield...
According to this report, Sony may have already fired Garfield...
Garfield might have gone down as the definitive Spider-man if only he had had decent scripts to work with.
I don't think that's necessary -- just do better stories in the same continuity. A lot of what they did in ASM2 was perfect. They shouldn't throw the baby out with the bathwater.As it stands now, I wouldn't have any problems with Sony/Marvel disregarding the current continuity and starting over.
That said, though, this new Flash show has got me thinking about whether Spidey's ideal home would be TV. Lots of people who, unlike me, actually know about comics have said that Grant Gustin's Barry Allen is a lot closer to Peter Parker than older generations' Barry Allen, and if you think about it, Spider-Man 2 kinda feels more like a two-parter season finale than a movie in its own right. Obviously, budget concerns alone would make a live-action Spidey show pretty much impossible, but it's an interesting thought regardless.
Of course - and now I'm gonna argue against my own point here - I'd imagine the whole Harry Osborn melodrama stuff was a lot of people's least aspect of ASM2, particularly since it felt like yet another rehashed element of the Raimi movies. My own favorite Spidey movie is ASM1, in significant part because it doesn't have any Osborn family squabbling at all. So, while TV might indeed be Spider-Man's ideal medium, trying to start a show with lots of Osborn drama now would probably be a pretty unpopular move.A TV Spidey series would have to rely less on high-swinging action and more on personal melodrama.... And the TV format would be a better fit for the ongoing soap opera of Peter Parker's life than the movie format.
Of course - and now I'm gonna argue against my own point here - I'd imagine the whole Harry Osborn melodrama stuff was a lot of people's least aspect of ASM2, particularly since it felt like yet another rehashed element of the Raimi movies. My own favorite Spidey movie is ASM1, in significant part because it doesn't have any Osborn family squabbling at all. So, while TV might indeed be Spider-Man's ideal medium, trying to start a show with lots of Osborn drama now would probably be a pretty unpopular move.
That being said however there is the recognition that he's going to be if he isn't already in his early 30s and it's going to be harder and harder for him to keep playing a teenaged or even college aged hero. So I think we all know recasting was coming sooner or later.
True... and at least Iron Man can travel. On a related note, I stand by what I said back in 2008:In fact even watching Spidey swing through the city doesn't give me nearly the thrill that it used to (just like watching Tony do his thing in the Iron Man suits has become much less thrilling by his fourth or fifth appearance).
I think the series needs a change of locale... how many times can we see Spidey swooping around buildings and firing webs? I'd like to see some freak experiment turn NYC into a huge jungle, with trees as big as skyscrapers, vines as big as buses, and thirty-foot insects for Spidey to fight.
It would be too bad if Garfield were to be replaced. I think he made a more spot on Spider-Man than Macguire.
Firing Garfield won't solve anything. The faults of TASM2 can be laid at the feet of Orci and Kurtzman. Garfield is stellar.
There is no downside to Sony and Marvel agreeing to work together for mutual benefit, artistically or financially.
There is no downside to Sony and Marvel agreeing to work together for mutual benefit, artistically or financially.
Other than the fact that currently Marvel seems to have no freaking clue how to write Peter Parker.
I think the series needs a change of locale... how many times can we see Spidey swooping around buildings and firing webs? I'd like to see some freak experiment turn NYC into a huge jungle, with trees as big as skyscrapers, vines as big as buses, and thirty-foot insects for Spidey to fight.
Marvel Studios is about to launch a multi-Netflix series MCU pocket franchise based in and around NYC, so it'd probably be pretty weird if Spider-Man just turned up out of the blue at some point, saying he'd already been around for a while. And if the MCU were to reboot Spidey, Sony would also have to go back to square one, making the general public even more suspicious of future solo Spidey movies from Sony. And if Sony were to collaborate on crossover Spidey appearances on the regular, that'd entail a lot of potential planning and logistical scheduling and negotiations, over who gets to do what to NYC when, and with what ramifications.There is no downside to Sony and Marvel agreeing to work together for mutual benefit, artistically or financially.
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