These two statements, not in complete and total agreement, they are.
Maybe not. I haven't watched 2002's
Spider-Man in a while. I'm only going by memory. Although I do remember feeling very underwhelmed by
The Amazing Spider-Man so there's that as well.
Well, that's just about the most subjective standard possible by which to rate a movie. I myself don't think the
Transformers concept merits the existence any movies at all, but who's asking
me? (Note to all: don't answer that.

)
I enjoy
ASM1 a hell of a lot more than
SM1, so for me, that's enough existence-validation in of itself.
There's also an interesting philosophical question there, namely: is it really fair to judge one movie against a prior adaptation? Isn't it equally fair to judge movies as if they were the only ones of their kind? Marc Webb's commentary for
ASM1 convinced me that he genuinely cares for the characters and franchise. Raimi didn't invent
Spider-Man - I'm not sure he really invented
anything significant to do with
SM1 - but because he happened to have been born first, and got the opportunity to make his movie first, some people act as though Webb is less necessarily less creative for having gone second.
Well, to be fair, it seems like the entire purpose of this thread is to ask people what movie they liked more: 2002's
Spider-Man or 2012's
The Amazing Spider-Man. With that premise, you are inviting and asking for comparison which is inevitable.
I don't think my main problem with
The Amazing Spider-Man is that it is a remake or a second attempt. I've seen plenty of remakes which I think it is either a very valid and solid movie or in some ways even better than the original. For example, I love Zack Snyder's
Dawn of the Dead and this is coming from someone who considers the original a classic. I thought Snyder and screenwriter James Gunn took the basic premise of the original and expanded upon it so the new version still felt new and compelling without feeling like a retread.
The problem with
The Amazing Spider-Man is that it stays
too closely to the formula and structure of 2002's
Spider-Man. It tries to add new elements - such as the concept of Peter Parker's parents, but even that plot element is abandoned mid-way through the movie. I remember reading press for the film and seeing the advertisements - it was describing this "Untold Story" that was suppose to separate this movie from 2002's version - but the movie we eventually got completely abandoned that in favor of telling an origin story that felt very familiar and rehashed. If you're going to try and do something new, then go all out - don't half-ass it or lose faith. I've actually read some articles that go into detail about how Sony & Columbia re-structured the movie as it got close to release for fear that the movie might alienate fans, so maybe it isn't entirely the fault of Marc Webb and the filmmakers. Regardless, though, the final product just felt very pedestrian and unnecessary to me. If you're going to remake something, might as well add something so it feels remotely fresh.
I've been hearing mediocre reviews for
The Amazing Spider-Man 2 so far, which concerns me as well. It makes me think maybe my problem with these movies is more on the story & execution rather than it being a retread of what came before. The sequel will have a clean slate - since the origin story is behind us - so there won't be any preconceptions going into it. However, I had many problems with
The Amazing Spider-Man on both a story & filmmaking level - for example, I thought The Lizard was a dull & uninteresting villain, a lot of the action sequences felt unexciting without much sense of momentum or pacing and there definitely felt like huge gaps in the story. There's a character called Mr. Rafta, for example, who works for Oscorp. He vanishes during the bridge sequence and is never seen or heard of again. Now, this is another example of story & character elements that got truncated or edited out during post-production -
this article by Devin Faraci goes into great detail about how the film was re-structured close to release and many plot elements were removed or altered, creating weird gaps in the story. It made the film feel uneven, disjointed and even incomplete.
I am looking forward to the sequel, though, so I am curious if Marc Webb and his team can make an enjoyable & entertaining film without the 2002 movie hanging over their heads. I'm cautiously optimistic given my tepid feelings over the first movie and the lukewarm-to-mediocre reviews so far, but I plan to go into the movie with an open mind. So we'll see.