SPIDER-MAN
DVD Features:
- Commentary by director Sam Raimi, Kirsten Dunst, producer Laura Ziskin, and co-producer Grant Curtis
- Commentary by special effects designer John Dykstra and visual effects crew
- Theatrical trailer(s)
- Disc 1:
- "Weaving the Web": subtitled pop-on production notes and historical facts
- Branching web-isodes
- Music videos: Hero (Chad Kroeger featuring Josey Scott), What We're All About (Sum 41)
- TV spots
- Filmographies and character files
- DVD-ROM features
- Disc 2:
- HBO Making of Spider-Man
- Spider-Mania, an E! Entertainment Special
- Director profile: Sam Raimi
- Composer profile: Danny Elfman
- Screen tests for Tobey Maguire, J.K. Simmons, and CGI Spider-Man
- Costume and makeup tests
- Gag/outtake reel
- Conceptual art and production design gallery
- Comic book artist pin-up gallery
- "Spider-Man: The Mythology of the 21st Century" historical documentary
- The Spider-Man Comic Book Archives
- Rogues Gallery
- The Loves of Peter Parker
- Activision game hints and tips
- Widescreen anamorphic format
- Number of discs: 2
For devoted fans and nonfans alike, Spider-Man offers nothing less--and nothing more--than what you'd expect from a superhero blockbuster. Having proven his comic-book savvy with the original Darkman, director Sam Raimi brings ample energy and enthusiasm to Spidey's origin story, nicely establishing high-school nebbish Peter Parker (Tobey Maguire) as a brainy outcast who reacts with appropriate euphoria--and well-tempered maturity--when a "super-spider" bite transforms him into the amazingly agile, web-shooting Spider-Man. That's all well and good, and so is Kirsten Dunst as Parker's girl-next-door sweetheart. Where Spider-Man falls short is in its hyperactive CGI action sequences, which play like a video game instead of the gravity-defying exploits of a flesh-and-blood superhero. Willem Dafoe is perfectly cast as Spidey's schizoid nemesis, the Green Goblin, and the movie's a lot of fun overall. It's no match for Superman and Batman in bringing a beloved character to the screen, but it places a respectable third.
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