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‘Spider-Man 3’ spins a fun, familiar web

New villains great additions, Maguire has a ball exploring his dark side

"Spider-Man 3"
Columbia Pictures
Venom (Topher Grace) takes on Spider-Man (Tobey Maguire) in "Spider-Man 3."
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‘Spider-Man 3’
Tobey Maguire takes on two new villains in ‘Spider-Man 3.’

Columbia Pictures

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  December movies
James Cameron’s spectacle “Avatar” hits theaters, along with George Clooney, who is “Up in the Air,” and Robert Downey Jr. as “Sherlock Holmes.”

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REVIEW
By John Hartl
Film critic
msnbc.com
updated 2:15 p.m. ET May 4, 2007

Born in the turbulent 1960s, Spider-Man has become a 21st Century phenomenon. The first theatrical movie version broke all opening-weekend box-office records in 2002. The 2004 sequel did almost as well commercially, while earning stronger reviews.

“Spider-Man 3,” which according to some reports is the most expensive movie ever made, has its problems — most of them to do with trying to draw together too many storylines — but it’s expected to have a huge worldwide success as well.

Stan Lee’s durable Marvel Comic character has also had an impact off the screen. Julie Taymor is now planning to direct a Broadway musical version of “Spidey,” with songs by U2’s Bono. In Alan Rickman and Katharine Viner’s play about a young, doomed Palestinian sympathizer, “My Name Is Rachel Corrie,” Corrie’s diaries mention not Superman or Batman but Spider-Man as a favorite fantasy figure.

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  Quick facts
Save it for a matinee

Starring: Tobey Maguire, Thomas Haden Church, Topher Grace, Dylan Baker, Elizabeth Banks
Director: Sam Raimi
Run time: 2 hours, 19 minutes
MPAA rating: PG-13

He may be for all ages, but he’s clearly a young person’s superhero. In spite of the semi-successful “Superman Returns” and “Batman Begins,” there’s just something so middle-aged about comic-book heroes created during the Depression. Spidey (aka Peter Parker), especially as played by Tobey Maguire in these three movies, is a complicated boy-man, refreshingly ambivalent about his powers.

He also brings speedy justice. While Superman rarely appears to be moving “faster than a speeding bullet,” Spider-Man can turn himself into a human slingshot. With his webs crossing canyons of skyscrapers, he does seem to move in a flash. His dizzying flights, recorded by a swooping “Spydercam,” carry the audience into his adventures, in a way that the gravity-defying voyages of other superheroes simply don’t.

The third “Spider-Man” movie retains the actors and much of the creative team that turned the first two entries into must-see events. Sam Raimi is back as director, although he and his brother Ivan for the first time share credit as screenwriters. Alvin Sargent, who wrote the second and most coherent film, also gets script credit.

The central drawback in “3” is the amount of baggage left over from the earlier films — especially the animosity surrounding the deaths of Peter’s genial uncle (Cliff Robertson) and the maniacal father (Willem Dafoe) of Peter’s best friend, Harry Osborn (James Franco). Flashbacks and ghostly incarnations attempt to fill in the blanks, but if you haven’t seen the previous films, you’ll never guess why so much screen time is spent on long-deceased characters.

More intriguing are the new villains: Eddie Brock (Topher Grace), an unscrupulous hotshot photographer who tries to replace Peter at the Daily Bugle, and Flint Marko (Thomas Haden Church), an obsessed fugitive who steals to help his ailing daughter. Both characters are rather spectacularly transformed into monsters.

Eddie’s personality is taken over by slithering black aliens who wrap themselves around him and bring out his hateful side. Flint, who unwittingly takes part in a disastrous scientific experiment, emerges as the powerful Sandman, who has the rigid gait of the monsters in such German expressionistic films as “The Golem.” Both actors almost literally chew the scenery, and they arrive just in time to pick up the pace.

Also new and lively is Bryce Dallas Howard as Gwen Stacy, an endearing dumb blonde who is saved by Spider-Man and promptly becomes a romantic rival for Mary Jane Watson (Kirsten Dunst), Peter’s off-and-on girlfriend.

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  'Spidey's' gang
Meet the characters that make up the world of 'Spider-Man.'

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In the previous movie, Mary Jane almost married someone else. This time, after Peter violates their most precious romantic memory by performing his upside-down kiss on Gwen, Mary Jane is on the rebound again.

In the first scenes, their romance appears to be running smoothly. Gone are the career problems they struggled with last time (he’s a crimefighter, she’s an actress, and he has trouble showing up at curtain time). Indeed, Dunst and Maguire come across as almost too goofy and giddy, as Mary Jane turns up headlining in a Broadway musical and Peter talks about becoming her No. 1 fan (“I’m in love with the girl of my dreams”), rooted to his front-row seat.

But then the bad reviews come in, Mary Jane is replaced in the show, and Peter, who is once more consumed with his job and the perils of fame, doesn’t listen well to her complaints. So it goes for much of the rest of the film.

Maguire has compared the ending of the second “Spider-Man” to the finale of “The Graduate,” with its runaway bride and her rescuer jumping on a bus and appearing suddenly ambivalent about their prospects together. The final scene in “3,” with Mary Jane belting out a pessimistic torch song, has a similar quality.


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