Spider-man 3

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Spider-Man 3

Spider-man 3.jpg Spider-Man 3 lenticular teaser poster

Directed bySam Raimi
Produced byAvi Arad
Stan Lee
Laura Ziskin
Grant Curtis
Written byComic Book:
Stan Lee
Steve Ditko
David Michelinie
Todd McFarlane
Story:
Sam Raimi
Ivan Raimi
Screenplay:
Alvin Sargent
Music byChristopher Young
Cinematography Bill Pope
Editing by Bob Murawski
Distributed by Sony Pictures Entertainment
Release date(s) May 4, 2007
Country USA
Language English
Budget $250 million (reportedly)
Preceded by Spider-Man 2
Official website
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

Spider-Man 3 is a 2007 superhero film that is the third film in the Spider-Man film franchise based on the fictional Marvel Comics character Spider-Man. Sam Raimi, who directed the previous two Spider-Man films, takes up the helm again with a returning cast that includes Tobey Maguire, Kirsten Dunst, James Franco, and J. K. Simmons. The film also stars franchise newcomers Topher Grace and Thomas Haden Church.[1] Spider-Man 3 is scheduled to be released in both conventional and IMAX theaters on May 4, 2007.[2]

Contents

[edit] Plot

Template:Spoiler Peter Parker basks in the spotlight with his public success as his superhero alter ego, Spider-Man. Mary Jane Watson and Gwen Stacy pursue Parker for his affections, and Parker begins to grow overconfident, neglecting those who care for him.[3] When the police tell Parker and his aunt that new evidence shows Sandman as being responsible for killing Uncle Ben, Parker goes after the alleged perpetrator personally.[4] As Spider-Man, he battles Sandman and his former friend Harry Osborn.[5] During this time, astronaut John Jameson brings back an "alien life force" to Earth with him.[6] The force forms a symbiotic relationship with Peter's costume, influencing his behavior for the worse. As a result, Spider-Man has to fight the villain within, until he finally tears the symbiote from his body.[7] After parting from Spider-Man, the symbiote finds a new host in Eddie Brock, Junior, and the resulting merger creates Venom.[8] Template:Endspoiler

[edit] Cast and Characters

  • Tobey Maguire as Peter Parker / Spider-Man: Peter Parker is a photographer for the Daily Bugle and leads a double life as the superhero Spider-Man, protecting New York City from crime.
  • Kirsten Dunst as Mary Jane Watson: Mary Jane Watson is Peter Parker's on-and-off love interest with aspirations to act. She is one of the few who knows that Parker is Spider-Man.
  • James Franco as Harry Osborn: Harry Osborn, the son of Norman Osborn, is Peter Parker's former best friend who believes that Spider-Man murdered his father. After learning Peter Parker is Spider-Man, Harry targets his former friend directly, seeking revenge.
  • Topher Grace as Eddie Brock Jr. / Venom: Eddie Brock, Jr. is a photographer at the Daily Bugle who has grown increasingly venomous toward Peter Parker, who beats Brock to photography gigs and has attracted the attention of Brock's girl, Gwen Stacy.[6]
  • Thomas Haden Church as Flint Marko / Sandman: Flint Marko is a small-time thug who has a wife and daughter.[9] An accident gives him the ability to change his body into malleable sand, transforming him into Sandman.[6] He is now believed to be the person responsible for Uncle Ben's death.[4]
  • Bryce Dallas Howard as Gwen Stacy: The daughter of a police captain, Gwen Stacy competes with Mary Jane Watson for Peter Parker's love, despite Eddie Brock, Jr's feelings for her.
  • Dylan Baker[10] as Dr. Curt Connors: Dr. Curt Connors is a college professor under whom Peter Parker studied and with whom he has maintained a good friendship.
  • Rosemary Harris as May Parker: May Parker is the aunt of Peter Parker and the widow of Ben Parker, Peter's uncle. She is unaware of her nephew's vigilante role in protecting New York City as Spider-Man.
  • J. K. Simmons as J. Jonah Jameson: J. Jonah Jameson is the chief of the Daily Bugle who carries a personal vendetta against Spider-Man, who he considers a criminal.
  • Daniel Gillies[11] as John Jameson: The son of J. Jonah Jameson, John Jameson is an astronaut who was left at the wedding altar by Mary Jane Watson. He brings back the symbiote with him to Earth from outer space.[6]
  • Bill Nunn as Joseph "Robbie" Robertson: "Robbie" Robertson is an employee of the Daily Bugle and friend to many of his coworkers. He believes in Spider-Man despite his boss's resentments about the vigilante superhero.
  • Ted Raimi as Hoffman: Hoffman is an employee of the Daily Bugle who is frequently harassed by his boss, J. Jonah Jameson.
  • James Cromwell[12] as Captain George Stacy: George Stacy is a police captain and father of Gwen Stacy. He shares the news with Peter and May Parker that new evidence indicates that Flint Marko killed Uncle Ben.[4]
  • Elizabeth Banks[13] as Betty Brant: Betty Brant is the secretary to J. Jonah Jameson at the Daily Bugle.
  • Cliff Robertson as Benjamin "Ben" Parker: Believed to have been killed by a carjacker, Uncle Ben was the husband to May Parker and uncle of Peter Parker. Spider-Man lives by Ben's words: "With great power comes great responsibility." The police find new evidence that indicates that Flint Marko, not the carjacker, had killed Uncle Ben.[4]
  • Tim DeZarn as Philip Watson: Philip Watson is the abusive father of Mary Jane Watson.
  • Michael Papajohn as Carjacker: The carjacker is a criminal who was thought to have killed Peter Parker's Uncle Ben in the first film, though new evidence suggests someone else murdered Ben Parker.[4]

[edit] Cameos

  • Stan Lee has a cameo in Spider-Man 3, as he did in the previous Spider-Man films.[14] Unlike his previous Spider-Man cameos, he has dialogue with Peter Parker in his cameo for this film. Lee has referred to it as his "best cameo" in an interview.[15]
  • Bruce Campbell, who has had cameo roles as a wrestling ring announcer in Spider-Man and as a rude usher in Spider-Man 2, returns in Spider-Man 3 with a new cameo.[16]

[edit] Spider-Man's villains

[edit] Harry Osborn

Template:See also

Image:HarryGG2.jpg
Harry Osborn in his suit

Following the events of Spider-Man, Harry Osborn blames Spider-Man for the death of his father Norman Osborn. In Spider-Man 2, Harry negotiates with Doctor Octopus to have Spider-Man delivered to him. Upon discovering that his best friend Peter Parker was under Spider-Man's disguise at the end of Spider-Man 2, Osborn recoils in shock and eventually stumbles across his father's hidden lair, in which all his father's Green Goblin gear was kept. Though Harry takes up his father's mantle as the Green Goblin in most comic book adaptations, director Sam Raimi stated at Comic-Con 2006 that Harry Osborn would not be the Green Goblin or the Hobgoblin (as he became in the Ultimate Marvel comics continuity), but instead "somewhere between" the two. Raimi also said that Harry's storyline would conclude with Spider-Man 3.[17] However, before filming Raimi has said before he was unsure of whether or not Harry would truly follow his father's legacy, and the persona may even be called "Night Surfer".[6]

[edit] Venom

Template:See also

Originally, director Sam Raimi had opposed the inclusion of the villain Venom in Spider-Man 3 due to his "lack of humanity".[18] Marvel producer Avi Arad convinced Raimi to reconsider, informing the director that Venom had a strong fan base. As Raimi included Venom in Spider-Man 3, the director began to appreciate the character that Venom had become, based on Alvin Sargent's script treatment and Topher Grace's performance.[19] At Comic-Con 2006, Venom was described to be based on "an amalgamation of Venom stories". Eddie Brock, Jr., Venom's human host, serves as a mirror to Peter Parker in having similar employment and romantic interests. Grace's character was revealed to differ from Parker in having a "terrible childhood".[18]

Image:Sm3 wp2 1280x1024.jpg
The symbiote envelops Eddie inside a church

Topher Grace was first announced in May 2005 to join the cast of Spider-Man 3, though his character was not revealed until later.[20] While the appearance of Topher Grace as Venom in Spider-Man 3 was officially confirmed at Comic-Con 2006, Kirsten Dunst had originally revealed the news at a September 2005 press conference for Elizabethtown.[21] Prior to Dunst's statement, production photos had shown Topher Grace carrying a camera during shooting scenes.

Venom was first showcased at Comic-Con 2006 in San Diego when the studio showed incomplete footage of the film to Spider-Man fans.[22]

[edit] Sandman

Template:See also

Tobey Maguire had first expressed interest in battling Sandman (alias Flint Marko) in 2004.[23] Thomas Haden Church was first revealed to be playing the character by Kirsten Dunst in a September 2005 press conference for Elizabethtown.[21] Church's role as Sandman was later confirmed, first by pictures released by Sony and again by the teaser trailer released for the film. Church revealed in an August 2006 interview that the studio approached him for the role of Sandman after Church's award-winning performance in Sideways. Church also said that the film's Sandman was a villain with more depth than the character from the comics, and that Sandman's issues brought him into conflict with Spider-Man.[24]

To portray Sandman, Church worked out for 16 months to improve his physique for the role.[25] For scenes involving visual effects, Church was super-imposed onto the screen, where computer-generated imagery was then applied.[24] In a fight where Spider-Man punches through Sandman's chest, amputee boxer Baxter Humby took Tobey Maguire's place in filming the scene. Humby, who was born without his right hand, helped deliver the intended effect of punching through Sandman's chest.[26]

[edit] Production

[edit] Budget

Reportedly, the film's budget is $250 million, which would make it the most expensive film ever made in nominal U.S. dollars, breaking King Kong's budget record of $207 million. It would also be third, in adjusted dollars, to War and Peace's budget of $560 million.[27]

[edit] Filming

Columbia Pictures officially announced that the main filming for Spider-Man 3 started on January 2, 2006.[28] Principal photography wrapped up on August 2006 after over a hundred days of filming. Principal photography had begun on January 16, 2006, on Stage 30 at Sony Pictures Studios in Culver City, CA. The team filmed in Los Angeles until May 19, 2006. In spring 2006, film location manager Peter Martorano brought camera crews to Cleveland to film for Spider-Man 3.[29] Afterward, the team moved to Manhattan, where filming commenced until July 1, 2006.[30] Kirsten Dunst confirmed on October 2, 2006 that principal photography was completed, though there would be additional special effects shots in November for which she would return.[31]

[edit] Visual effects

Visual effects supervisor John Dykstra, who won the Academy Award for Visual Effects for his work on Spider-Man 2, declined to work on the third film. Scott Stokdyk, who had worked with Dykstra on the previous Spider-Man films, took over as visual effects supervisor.[32] Camera crews spent ten days between November 5, 2005, and November 18, 2005, to film sequences that would involve intense visual effects so Sony Pictures Imageworks could begin work on the shots early in the project. The same steps had been taken for Spider-Man 2 to begin producing visual effects early for sequences involving the villain Doctor Octopus.[30]

Scott Stokdyk, Spider-Man 3's visual effects supervisor, created a miniature of a skyscraper section at 1/16 scale with New Deal Studios' Ian Hunter and David Sanger. According to producer Grant Curtis, Stokdyk chose to design the miniature instead of using computer-generated imagery so damage done to the building could be portrayed realistically and timely without guesswork involving computer models.[33]

For the film's visual effects, Sony Pictures Imageworks had designed specific computer programs that did not exist when Spider-Man 3 began production. The company used the groundbreaking visual effects programs to create the performances and shots needed to complete the film.[33]

[edit] Film score

Composer Danny Elfman did not return for the third installment of Spider-Man because of difficulties with director Sam Raimi. Elfman said that he had a "miserable experience" working with Raimi on Spider-Man 2 and could not comfortably adapt his music.[34] Instead of reprising his role as composer for Spider-Man 3, Elfman took on the project of composing for Charlotte's Web.[35] Christopher Young scores Spider-Man 3 in Elfman's vacancy.[36]

[edit] Promotion

Image:SpiderManhangingComparison.JPG
Images from the film and animated series

[edit] Footage

The first teaser trailer for Spider-Man 3 was released on the Internet on June 27, 2006 and also accompanied the theatrical release of Superman Returns. At Comic-Con 2006 in San Diego, the studio showed an incomplete piece of the film that contained temp sound and temp visual effect shots.[37] The first full-length Spider-Man 3 trailer premiered on November 9 on various channels and websites, with an exclusive high-definition version on iFilm, which became available after the premiere.[38] The trailer also will be attached to Casino Royale when the James Bond film premieres on November 17, 2006. A second Spider-Man 3 trailer will also be attached to Ghost Rider on February 16, 2007.[39]

At one point, first teaser trailer shows Spider-Man waking up, hanging upside down in his now symbiote-coated suit and looking at his non-symbiote suit reflection in a skyscraper window. Apart from the different reflection in the window, this image is reminiscent of an almost identical scene from "The Alien Costume: Part 1", an episode of Spider-Man: The Animated Series. Also shown in that episode is the suit attaching itself to Peter while he is sleeping; the trailer shows the symbiote doing the same, but coating his suit instead of his skin.

[edit] Posters

New Spider-Man 3 posters will be advertised to the public around the November 17, 2006 release of Casino Royale.[39]

[edit] Merchandise

[edit] Video game

A video game based on Spider-Man 3 will be released in May 2007 to coincide with the film's release. The video game will be available on the Wii, Xbox 360, and PS3.

[edit] "Making of" book

On October 21, 2006, producer Grant Curtis announced on the official movie blog that he was working on a book that would detail the account of bringing Spider-Man 3 to the screen. The book, published by Chronicle Books in time for the release of Spider-Man 3, will contain "chapters on the script, casting, production design, costume design and visual effects and will include a day-by-day journal [Curtis] wrote while filming".[33]

[edit] Toys

At the American International Toy Fair in October 2006, Techno Source unveiled its line-up of interactive Spider-Man 3 toys, including a "hand-held Battle Tronics device that straps to the inside of a player’s wrist and mimics Spidey’s web-slinging motions", which would come out in spring in time for the film's release.[40]

[edit] Sequel

In an August 2006 interview with MTV, Marvel producer Kevin Feige anticipated more sequels to the Spider-Man films "because of the wealth of stories in the comics." However, Feige stated that Tobey Maguire may not return to portray Spider-Man in the future.[41] In addition, Maguire expressed the sentiment that the film franchise could not continue as strongly in the future. "I'm not sure if there are more stories for this character that are interesting enough to be excited about doing more," said Maguire.[7] Kirsten Dunst said she would only be interested in being back for another sequel if director Sam Raimi returned to the helm. [31] J. K. Simmons said, about future sequels, that Raimi was "certainly open to doing more".[42]

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Template:Spider-Man Template:Marvel comics films

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