Thank God the studio forced Venom in Spider-Man 3. Along with Harry Osbourne, it gave the film an interesting villain.
Venom sucks out loud in every single one of his incarnations, so it's hardly surprising that he was terrible in the movie.
Thank God the studio forced Venom in Spider-Man 3. Along with Harry Osbourne, it gave the film an interesting villain.
Just like he created a good story with The Sandman? Yet another Raimi "I'm not an evil man" villain. The Sandman was such a cliched character that Raimi had to come up with more cliches (the sick child, the "I'm not an evil man" bit ) just to make him interesting and failed.
Worse, he completely pissed on the Spider-Man mythos he so claims to cherish with the Uncle Ben killer revisionism.
Thank God the studio forced Venom in Spider-Man 3. Along with Harry Osbourne, it gave the film an interesting villain.
When you look at it, Spider-Man's rogue gallery can't hold a candle to Batman's. Although at least Spider-Man can actually fight his entire rogues gallery, unlike Superman.
I think that's the problem with the majority of Spider-Man's villains. They're all memorable no doubt but when you get past Green Goblin, Doc Ock, and Venom, whose left? The rest of Spider-Man's villains are either criminals or have a psychotic desire to destroy him. Not exactly characters with much depth to them.
There's nothing wrong with Venom. He's Peter Parker's "dark side" given form via the symbiote, basically. The problem is he got overexposed in the comics
There's nothing wrong with Venom. He's Peter Parker's "dark side" given form via the symbiote, basically. The problem is he got overexposed in the comics
No, the problem is that Venom is a hilariously retarded, over-the-top villain, even by Spider-Man standards.
Let's not forget that at one point, Venom discovered that eating chocolate was a substitute for human brains.
With comic-book movie news sparkling last night (the appearance of the Iron Man 2 trailer, Bryan Singer confirming he's directing X-Men: First Class) apparently your friendly neighborhood webslinger cannot bask in the glory.
IESB reports that Sony Pictures has put Spider-Man 4 on "indefinite hold", citing creative differences with series director Sam Raimi. Apparently the script is incomplete, and with a shooting date drawing near (spring next year), and a release date locked in (May 2011), Sony and Raimi once again are butting heads. Last time, it was Venom, and this time it is The Vulture.
The studio does not agree with Raimi and his choice of villain: The Vulture. This is something Raimi wanted in Spider-Man 3 but instead upon the insistance of producers Avi Arad and Laura Ziskin the character was removed and replaced by Eddie Brock/aka Venom. Raimi is pushing hard for The Vulture but the studio isn't budging.
So the studio has halted production on the newest installment until a compromise can be made.
http://iesb.net/index.php?option=co...te-hold&catid=43:exclusive-features&Itemid=73
This has to be one of the few times where I actually agree with the studio. The Vulture is a lame villain. I can see him as a second tier type of bad guy but someone headlining the film? I don't think so. Especially since there are still much more interesting villains in the Spider-Man villain pantheon (Kraven The Hunter, Mysterio, Electro, The Kingpin, The Lizard... anyone other than The Vulture...). I hope Raimi & Sony can reach a mutual understanding, one that results in Raimi choosing another villain. At this point, if he won't budge, I wouldn't be too sad to see him go. I trust his judgment, and I am wholly supportive of him directing the film, but maybe it is time for some new creative blood.
I think Kraven would be a great villain - someone hired to hunt Spider-man through the streets of New York. Imagine the cool scenes they could make with that concept.
I think Kraven would be a great villain - someone hired to hunt Spider-man through the streets of New York. Imagine the cool scenes they could make with that concept.
The most popular idea involving Kraven that I've heard revolves around Dr. Connors finally becoming The Lizard, and Kraven coming to New York to hunt him.
I like that.
agreed I like that idea as wellI think Kraven would be a great villain - someone hired to hunt Spider-man through the streets of New York. Imagine the cool scenes they could make with that concept.
The most popular idea involving Kraven that I've heard revolves around Dr. Connors finally becoming The Lizard, and Kraven coming to New York to hunt him.
I like that.
Now that could be compelling. Spider-Man and Kraven both hunting The Lizard and then coming into conflict with each other.
More costly than the CGI for the Sandman?I suppose the other problem with The Lizard is that, basically, for every moment he's on the screen, it has to be a CGI creation. The budget considerations for that are probably massive.
The last time a director wanted to go only with his style, we ended up with Superman Returns!
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