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Spider Man 3 Movie Trailer
Spider-Man 3 is a 2007 superhero film written and directed by Sam Raimi, with a screenplay by Ivan Raimi and Alvin Sargent. It is the third film in the Spider-Man film franchise based on the fictional Marvel Comics character Spider-Man. The film stars Tobey Maguire, Kirsten Dunst, James Franco, Thomas Haden Church, and Topher Grace.
The film begins with Peter Parker basking in his success as Spider-Man,
while Mary Jane Watson begins her Broadway career. Harry Osborn still
seeks vengeance for his father's death, and an escaped convict, Flint
Marko, falls into a particle accelerator and is transformed into a
shape shifting sand monster. An alien symbiote crashes to Earth and
bonds with Peter, influencing his behavior for the worse. When the
symbiote is abandoned, it finds refuge in Eddie Brock Jr., a rival
photographer, causing Peter to face his greatest challenge.
Spider-Man 3 was commercially released in multiple countries on May 1,
2007, and released in the United States in both conventional and IMAX
theaters on May 4, 2007. The film received generally mixed reviews from
critics, in stark contrast to Spider-Man 2's highly positive reviews,
yet the film broke most of the opening weekend records, both in the
United States, and in foreign markets, including records held in IMAX
theaters.
Plot
Peter has begun to feel secure in his life and plans to propose to Mary
Jane. One night in a park, while Peter and Mary Jane are on a date, a
small meteorite crashes nearby, and an alien symbiote oozes out,
attaching itself to Peter's moped. Meanwhile, escaped convict Flint
Marko falls into a particle accelerator which transforms him into a
shape shifting sand monster. Peter's best friend, Harry Osborn, who
seeks vengeance for his father's death, which he believes Peter caused,
attacks him. The battle leaves Harry with short-term amnesia, making
him forget his vendetta.
Later, during a festival honoring Spider-Man for saving Gwen Stacy’s
life, Marko attempts to rob an armored car, and overpowers Spider-Man.
Captain Stacy later informs Peter and Aunt May that Marko is the one
who killed Ben Parker, and a vengeful Peter waits for Marko to strike
again. The symbiote bonds with his costume while he is asleep, and
Peter discovers that not only has his costume changed, but his powers
have been enhanced as well. The black suit also alters Peter's
personality, making him more violent, exemplified by a near lethal
attack on Marko during a battle underground.
Affected by the suit, Peter exposes and humiliates Eddie Brock Jr., a
rival photographer at the Daily Bugle, who sells fake pictures of
Spider-Man. The shift in Peter's personality alienates Mary Jane, whose
stage career is floundering, and she finds solace in Harry. Harry then
recovers from his amnesia and threatens to kill Peter unless MJ breaks
up with him. After Mary Jane leaves Peter, stating she is in love with
another man, Harry meets him at a restaurant and claims to be the other
man. Later, Peter finds him at the Osborn mansion and with the help of
the black suit, Peter is victorious in a brutal fight, which leaves
Harry's face disfigured.
In an effort to make MJ jealous, Peter brings Gwen to the nightclub
where Mary Jane works and gets into a fight. In the scuffle, he
accidentally throws MJ to the floor. Peter realizes the symbiote-suit
is changing him for the worse. He runs out of the nightclub and goes to
a church bell tower to be rid of it. Initially he is unable to pull the
suit off, but the sound waves from the church bells weaken the
symbiote, freeing Peter. Eddie Brock is at the same church, praying for
Peter’s death, and the symbiote falls from the tower and takes over his
body. The newly powered Eddie finds Marko and suggests that they join
forces to destroy Spider-Man.
The pair use Mary Jane as bait to lure Spider-Man to confront them.
Peter approaches Harry for help, but is turned down and leaves.
However, Harry learns the truth about his father's death and arrives in
time to rescue Peter, teaming up against Brock and Marko. As the fight
progresses, Brock attempts to impale Peter with the glider, but Harry
sacrifices himself and is fatally wounded. Peter recalls how the church
bell's toll weakened the symbiote, and frees Eddie from it by clanging
several pipes together. Peter throws a pumpkin bomb at the symbiote
just as Eddie, who has grown attached to its power, attempts to re-bond
with it. Eddie and the symbiote are destroyed in the explosion.
After the battle, Marko tells Peter that he had no intention of killing
Ben Parker, and that it was an accident born out of a desperate attempt
to save his daughter's life. Peter forgives Flint, who dissipates and
floats away. Peter and Harry forgive each other as Harry dies with Mary
Jane and Peter by his side. Afterward, Peter and Mary Jane begin to
mend their relationship.
Thomas Haden Church knew Raimi as he had been approached for the
director's film The Gift years before and was approached for Sandman
because of his award-winning performance in Sideways: Church accepted
the role of Sandman despite the lack of a script at the time. The
film's Sandman possesses sympathy similarly exhibited by Lon Chaney in
his portrayals of misunderstood creatures, as well as Frankenstein's
monster, the Golem, and the 2000s incarnations of Gollum and King Kong.
Church worked out for 16 months to improve his physique for the role,
gaining 28 pounds of muscle and losing 10 pounds of body fat.
Topher Grace was cast in May 2005 as Venom, impressing the producers
with his performance in In Good Company (2004). Grace spent six months
working out to prepare for the role, gaining 24 pounds of muscle,
though in terms of characterization, he was a big comic book fan and
had read the first Venom stories as a boy. Grace approached Venom as
someone under the influence, similar to an alcoholic or drug addict,
and interpreted him as having a bad childhood, which is the key
difference between him and Peter.
As Gwen Stacy, Bryce Dallas Howard had the trouble of portraying a
character whom many fans knew as Peter Parker's first love in the
mainstream comics continuity, yet had the role of being another woman
in his life in the film. Howard strived to create a sense that Gwen
could potentially be a future girlfriend for him, and that, "I was not
acting like some kind of man-stealing tart." Howard performed many of
her stunts, unaware of the fact she was pregnant.
Filming
The film's budget is officially $258 million, which makes it one of the
most expensive films ever made in nominal U.S. dollars. Camera crews
spent ten days from November 5, 2005 to 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.
Principal photography for Spider-Man 3 began on January 16, 2006 and
wrapped in July 2006 after over a hundred days of filming. The team
filmed in Los Angeles until May 19, 2006. In spring 2006, film location
manager Peter Martorano brought camera crews to Cleveland, due to the
Cleveland Film Commission offering production space at the city's
convention center at no Immediately after Spider-Man 2's release, Ivan
Raimi wrote a treatment over two months, with Sam Raimi deciding to use
the film to explore Peter learning that he is not a sinless vigilante,
and that there also can be humanity in those he considers criminals. He
took the opportunity to make Mary Jane Watson's life torturous, similar
to Peter's various problems during
Production
Development
In March 2004, with Spider-Man 2 being released the coming June, Marvel
Studios had begun developing Spider-Man 3 for a release in 2007. By the
release of Spider-Man 2, a release date for Spider-Man 3 had been set
for May 2, 2007 before production on the sequel had begun.The date was
later changed to May 4, 2007. In January 2005, Sony Pictures
Entertainment completed a seven-figure deal with screenwriter Alvin
Sargent, who had penned Spider-Man 2, to work on Spider-Man 3 with an
option to write a fourth film.
the second film. Sandman was introduced as an antagonist, as Raimi
found him a visually fascinating character. While Sandman is a petty
criminal in the comics, the screenwriters created a background of the
character being Uncle Ben's killer to increase Peter's guilt over his
death. Harry Osborn was brought back as a more formidable adversary for
Spider-Man as Raimi wanted to conclude his storyline, but Raimi felt
that Harry would not follow his father's legacy, but be instead
"somewhere between". Overall, Raimi described the film as being about
Peter, Mary Jane, Harry and the Sandman, with Peter's journey being one
of forgiveness.
Raimi wanted another villain, and Ben Kingsley was involved in
negotiations to play the Vulture before the character was cut. Marvel
Studios chairman and CEO Avi Arad convinced Raimi to include Venom, a
character whose perceived "lack of humanity" had initially been
criticized by Sam Raimi. Arad told the director that he had a strong
fan base, and Raimi included him to please fans,and even began to
appreciate the character himself. The film's version of the character
is an amalgamation of Venom stories. Eddie Brock, Jr., the human part
of Venom, serves as a mirror to Peter Parker, with both characters
having similar jobs and romantic interests. Brock's actions as a
journalist in Spider-Man 3 also represent contemporary themes of
paparazzi and tabloid journalism. Raimi had to graft the symbiote onto
Peter in order to introduce Venom, and Maguire relished the opportunity
to play a less timid Parker. The producers also suggested adding rival
love interest Gwen Stacy, filling in an "other girl" type that Raimi
already created. With so many additions, Sargent soon found his script
so complex that he considered splitting it into two films, but
abandoned the idea when he could not create a successful intermediate
climax.
Casting
cost. In Cleveland, they shot the battle between Spider-Man and Sandman
in the armored car. Afterwards, the team moved to Manhattan, where
filming took place beginning 26 May 2006 until July 1, 2006. Shooting
placed a strain on Raimi, who often had to move between several units
to complete the picture. Shooting was also difficult for
cinematographer Bill Pope, as Spider-Man, Venom and the New Goblin were
costumed in black during fight scenes taking place at night.
After August, pick-ups were conducted as Raimi sought to film more
action scenes. The film then wrapped in October, although in the
following month, additional special effects shots were taken to
finalize the production. At the start of 2007, there were further
pick-up shots regarding the resolution of Sandman's story, amounting to
four different versions.
Effects
John Dykstra, who won the Academy Award for Visual Effects for his work
on Spider-Man 2, declined to work on the third film as visual effects
supervisor. Dykstra's colleague, Scott Stokdyk, took his place as
supervisor, leading 200 programmers at Sony Pictures Imageworks
designed specific computer programs that did not exist when Spider-Man
3 began production, creating to 900 visual effects shots. In addition
to the innovative visual effects for the film, Stokdyk created a
miniature of a skyscraper section at 1/16 scale with New Deal Studios'
Ian Hunter and David Sanger. 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.
To understand the effects of sand for the Sandman, experiments were
done with 12 types of sand, such as splashing, launching at stuntmen,
and poured over ledges. The results were mimicked on the computer to
create the visual effects for Sandman. For scenes involving visual
effects, Thomas Haden Church was super-imposed onto the screen, where
computer-generated imagery was then applied. With sand as a possible
hazard in scenes that buried actors, ground-up corncobs were used as a
substitute instead, meaning Arizona sand was used as the CG model as it
most closely resembled it. In a fight where Spider-Man punches through
Sandman's chest, congenital 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.
The suit Topher Grace had to wear as Venom had a webbing motif unlike
the comic incarnation. The motif was added by the film design
department to give a sense of life to the symbiote, giving it the
appearance of gripping onto the character's body. Grace found his
costume unpleasant, as it had to be constantly smeared to give a
liquid-like feel. The costume took an hour to put on, though
prosthetics took four hours to apply. Grace also wore fangs for his
character, which bruised his gums. James Franco does not wear the
costume of his character's father, but wears a streamlined costume
solely for the intent of killing Spider-Man instead of terrorizing
people. His snowboard-styled glider was dubbed the "Sky Stick" by the
filmmakers.
Music
Originally, Danny Elfman, the composer for the previous installments,
did not plan to 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.Christopher Young was then announced to
score Spider-Man 3 in Elfman's absence. In December 2006, however,
producer Grant Curtis announced that Elfman had begun collaborating
with Christopher Young on the music for Spider-Man 3. Young kept the
themes for Spider-Man and the Green Goblin, and he composed new themes
for Sandman, Venom, and the love story.
Marketing
Further information: Spider-Man 3 (video game) and Spider-Man 3: The Official Soundtrack
The first teaser trailer for Spider-Man 3 was released on the Internet
on June 27, 2006. The first full-length trailer premiered on November 9
on various channels and websites, with an exclusive high-definition
version on iFilm, which became available after the premiere. On March
3, 2007 a second theatrical trailer was shown at WonderCon in San
Francisco, California, which was attached to the film 300. The final
trailer debuted on March 23, 2007 on a special website designed by
Comcast for the movie.
In New York City, the hometown of Spider-Man's fictional universe,
tourist attractions arranged events and exhibits on April 30, 2007 to
lead up to the release of Spider-Man 3. The unique campaign include a
spider exhibit at the American Museum of Natural History, workshops on
baby spider plants at the New York Botanical Garden, Green Goblin
mask-making workshop at the Children's Museum of Manhattan, and a
scavenger hunt and a bug show at Central Park Zoo.
Hasbro, which holds the license for Marvel characters, has released
several toys to tie-in with the film. They include a deluxe spinning
web blaster, along with 3 different action figures. Toys of the Green
Goblin and Doctor Octopus from the first two films have been
re-released, as have been toys of the Lizard, the Scorpion, and the
Rhino in a style reminiscent of the films. Techno Source created
interactive 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". Japanese Medicom Toy Corporation produced
collectibles, which Sideshow Collectibles distributed in the US.
Release
Spider-Man 3 had its world premiere in Tokyo on April 16, 2007, which
garnered positive reaction from Japanese viewers. The film held its UK
premiere on April 23 at the Odeon Leicester Square, and the U.S.
premiere took place at the Tribeca Film Festival in Queens on April 30.
Spider-Man 3 was commercially released in 16 territories on May 1,
2007.The film was released in Japan on May 1, 2007, three days prior to
the American commercial release, to coincide with Japan's Golden Week.
Spider-Man 3 was also released in China on May 3, 2007 to circumvent
market growth of pirated copies of the film. The studio's release of a
film in China before its domestic release was a first for Sony Pictures
Releasing International. The film was commercially released in the
United States on May 4, 2007 in a North American record total of 4,253
theaters, including 53 IMAX theaters. Tracking data a month before the
U.S. release reflected over 90% awareness and over 20% first choice
among moviegoers, statistics that estimated an opening weekend of over
$100 million for Spider-Man 3. Online tickets for Spider-Man 3 were
reported on April 23 to have been purchased at a faster rate -- three
times at Movietickets.com and four times at Fandango -- than online
ticket sales for Spider-Man 2. On May 2, 2007, Fandango reported the
sales rate as six times greater than the rate for Spider-Man 2. The
strong ticket sales have caused theaters to add 3:00 AM showings
following the May 4, 2007 midnight showing to accommodate the demand.
By May 6, 2007, Spider-Man 3 has opened in 107 countries around the
world. The FX channel signed a five year deal for the television rights
to Spider-Man 3, which they plan to start airing at the beginning of
2009. The price will be based on the film's box office performance,
with an option for three oppurtunities for Sony to sell the rights to
one or more other broadcast networks.
Box office performance
On its international opening day on May 1, 2007 in 16 territories,
Spider-Man 3 grossed $29.2 million, an 86% increase from the intake of
Spider-Man 2 on its first day of release. In 10 of the 16 territories,
Spider-Man 3 set new opening day records. In Asian territories, the
film surpassed the opening-day record of Spider-Man 2 in Japan and
South Korea. Spider-Man 3 also set opening-day records in Hong Kong,
Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, Taiwan, and the Philippines. In India,
where the movie was released in English, Hindi, Tamil, Telugu and
Bhojpuri, the film grossed $4.66 million over the opening weekend,
breaking the record set by Casino Royale in 2006 ($3.63 million). In
Europe, the film broke Italy's opening-day record set by 2006's The Da
Vinci Code. In Germany, the film surpassed the opening day gross of
Spider-Man 2. In France, Spider-Man 3 broke the opening day record set
by Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith in 2005. The film broke
the opening weekend records in 29 countries, while being at least #1 in
all 107 countries that it opened, which brought its international total
to $231 million.
Spider-Man 3 set a record $59.8 million take for its opening day in the
United States, breaking Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest 's
$55.8 million record. The movie also took the worldwide opening day
record with $117 million. The US opening day take includes a record $10
million in Thursday midnight showings. Spider-Man 3 broke Pirates of
the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest's all-time weekend debut by grossing
$151.1 million. The film also set a new worldwide record for opening
weekend, with a final total of $382 million. As of May 19, 2007, the
worldwide total was $646.78 million.
Critical reaction
On the movie review aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes, Spider-Man 3 has a
61% critic rating from 200 reviews, with a 46% Cream of the Crop rating
based on 39 reviews from major news outlets. On Metacritic, Spider-Man
3 has received a 60% rating based on 39 reviews. On Yahoo! Movies,
Spider-Man 3 is graded a B- among 15 film critics. In an early,
positive review, posted April 25, 2007, Roger Friedman of Fox News
called the film a "4 star opera", noting that while long, there was
plenty of humor and action. Andy Khouri of Comic Book Resources praised
the film as "easily the most complex and deftly orchestrated superhero
epic ever filmed... despite the enormous amount of characters, action
and sci-fi superhero plot going on in this film, Spider-Man 3 never
feels weighted down, tedious or boring." Jonathan Ross, a big fan of
the comic books, felt the film was the best of the trilogy. Richard
Corliss of Time commended the filmmakers for their ability to
"dramatize feelings of angst and personal betrayal worthy of an Ingmar
Bergman film, and then to dress them up in gaudy comic-book colors."
Wesley Morris of the The Boston Globe, who gave the film 4 out of 5
stars, wrote that it was a well made, fresh film, but would leave the
viewer "overfulfilled". Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly felt
the action sequences had a story patched around them, calling
Spider-Man 3 "a product, but it's a machine that tickles your eyes."
Empire film critic Chris Hewitt found the film satisfactory, feeling
Maguire and Franco did well in their roles, though he criticized the
decision to have so many villains. John Hartl of MSNBC gave Spider-Man
3 a good review, but stated that it has some flaws such as having "too
many storylines". His opinion is echoed by Houston Chronicle's Amy
Biancolli who complained that "the script is busy with so many
supporting characters and plot detours that the series' charming
idiosyncrasy is sometimes lost in the noise." Tom Charity of CNN also
gave the film a mixed review, stating that it "represents the best and
worst of the series." Jack Matthews of New York Daily News thought the
film was devoted too much to the "quiet conversations" of Peter and
Mary Jane, but that fans would not be disappointed by the action.
Among less enthusiastic reviewers, James Christopher of The Times
labelled the movie "a towering disappointment", while Sean Burns of
Philadelphia Weekly felt that the director "substituted scope and scale
for the warmth and wit that made those two previous pictures so
memorable." Manohla Dargis of The New York Times deplored the film's
pacing as "mostly just plods" and a lack of humor. Richard Roeper of
the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film only 2 out of 4 stars, feeling,
"for every slam-bang action sequence, there are far too many sluggish
scenes." David Edelstein of New York Magazine misses the "centrifugal
threat" of Alfred Molina's character, adding that "the three villains
here don’t add up to one Doc Ock." James Berardinelli felt director Sam
Raimi "overreached his grasp" by allowing so many villains,
specifically saying, "Venom is one bad guy too many."
Cast and characters
Tobey Maguire as Peter Parker / Spider-Man: A brilliant physics student
at Columbia University and photographer for the Daily Bugle who leads a
double life as the superhero Spider-Man, protecting New York City from
crime. As he grows arrogant with the city starting to embrace him for
the first time in his career, an alien symbiote attaches itself to
Peter's costume and influences his behavior for the worse.
Kirsten Dunst as Mary Jane Watson: Peter Parker's girlfriend and a
Broadway actress, whom he has loved since childhood. Mary Jane loses
her job after bad reviews regarding her singing voice, but does not
tell Peter, feeling his success has gone to his head.
James Franco as Harry Osborn / New Goblin: The son of Norman Osborn and
Peter Parker's former best friend who believes that Spider-Man murdered
his father. After learning Peter Parker is Spider-Man, Harry becomes
the New Goblin to battle his former friend directly.
Thomas Haden Church as Flint Marko / Sandman: A small-time thug who has
a wife and sick daughter, whom he steals money to help get the
treatment to cure her. He transforms into the Sandman following an
accident, and incurs Peter's wrath when Peter learns he was his uncle
Ben's true killer.
Topher Grace as Eddie Brock, Jr. / Venom: A photographer at the Daily
Bugle who becomes Peter's rival in getting photos of Spider-Man. He
creates a fake image in the process, but an angry Peter exposes his
photo as a fake, and he is fired. Having lost his job and his would-be
girlfriend to Peter, Eddie leaps at the opportunity to exact his
vengeance when he becomes Venom.
Bryce Dallas Howard as Gwen Stacy: The daughter of a police captain, a
model, and Peter Parker's lab partner. When Spider-Man rescues her from
a construction accident and then kisses her at the following award
ceremony, Mary Jane grows suspicious of whether Peter is cheating on
her. Eddie is attracted to her, but Peter asks her out to spite Mary
Jane. Horrified, she leaves him.
Rosemary Harris as May Parker: The aunt of Peter Parker and the widow
of Ben Parker, Peter's uncle. She gives Peter her engagement ring so he
can propose to Mary Jane, and gives him lessons of forgiveness.
J. K. Simmons as J. Jonah Jameson: The aggressive chief of the Daily
Bugle. He carries a personal vendetta against Spider-Man, whom he
considers a criminal, and fires Eddie Brock as he is forced to
apologize for fake incriminating photos of Spider-Man Eddie made.
James Cromwell as Captain George Stacy: A police captain and father of
Gwen Stacy, George Stacy holds a ceremony in honor of Spider-Man after
he rescues his daughter.
Dylan Baker as Dr. Curt Connors: A college physics professor under whom
Peter Parker studies. He examines a piece of the symbiote and tells
Peter it increases aggression.
Spider-Man co-creator Stan Lee has a cameo in Spider-Man 3, as he did
in the previous Spider-Man films, which he referred to as his "best
cameo". Actor 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 as a French maître d'.
Producer Grant Curtis also has a cameo as the driver of an armored car
that Sandman attacks.
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