Andrew Garfield, Emma Stone and the cast of "The Amazing Spider-Man" discuss the upcoming web-slinging reboot's focus on personal moments, on-screen chemistry and, of course, mechanical web-shooters.
Full article here.
Andrew Garfield, Emma Stone and the cast of "The Amazing Spider-Man" discuss the upcoming web-slinging reboot's focus on personal moments, on-screen chemistry and, of course, mechanical web-shooters.
Full article here.
Yes! No twins!!
Also, I hope Gwen survives.
Nightcrawler, Jean Grey, Gwen Stacy, Peter Parker, Professor X, Mar-Vell, Richard Rider- Bring Them Back!!!
Dammit, Emma always wanted to play Mary Jane? Now that just makes me sad. But on the bright side, loving everything I hear about this movie. Looks like everyone had a great time filming together and hopefully their joy and energy shows onscreen as well.
Seeing as how Emma specifically said this- "It is so incredibly epic and tragic and incredible in the way that [Peter's relationship with Gwen] affects Peter going forward with Mary Jane", I think it is safe to assume that they are going with the unique Peter/Gwen/MJ dynamic with the tragic loss of Gwen bringing Peter and MJ together. Which raises the question- Does this confirm that Mary Jane will indeed be introduced much before Gwen's death in the franchise, giving her enough time to grow into Peter and Gwen's closest friend before her status quo change to Peter's ultimate lover after Gwen's death?
Last edited by Confuzzled Mutie; 06-14-2012 at 09:55 AM.
Good, good.
Reel in them twi-fans.
Look at it this way. Peter Parker's romances with Gwen Stacy and Mary Jane Watson are far more complex and substantive than any of the romances in Twilight, so if Twi-fans twig onto Amazing Spider-Man and see a relationship with actual depth, complexity, and substance beyond an impressionable (and dumb) teenage girl fawning over her "super-hot" vampire crush that's really kind of a jerk if you think about it hard enough, we could be doing the next generation a service.
Back in black, the hunter is ready to claim his prey.
Were that scene to be adapted into a sequel to The Amazing Spider-Man, it would be positively beautiful, and perhaps help viewers who've had to deal with the death of a loved one in real life. Plus, it would show the upcoming generation that love is a lot deeper and more complicated than vacuously staring into each other's eyes, spellbound by each other's supposed beauty.
Back in black, the hunter is ready to claim his prey.
Bookmarks