Andrew Garfield Reacts To The Negative Response To THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 2

Mad Good Dro

Superstar
Supporter
Joined
Feb 18, 2013
Messages
10,502
Reputation
5,737
Daps
46,166
Reppin
NULL
Andrew Garfield Reacts To The Negative Response To THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 2
ASM212.jpg


Saying he was "taken aback" by the reaction, Andrew Garfield responds in detail to the criticism levelled at The Amazing Spider-Man 2, perhaps laying some of the blame on studio bosses who "had problems with certain parts of it". Hit the jump for his comments in full...

Follow Josh:
View CBM Profile Follow on Twitter Follow on Google
By Josh Wilding - 9/10/2014


In an interview with The Daily Beast at the Toronto Film Festival to talk about his new movie 99 Homes, Andrew Garfield was quizzed on how he felt to see the very divided (and mostly negative) response to The Amazing Spider-Man 2. "It’s interesting," he told the site. "I read a lot of the reactions from people and I had to stop because I could feel I was getting away from how I actually felt about it. For me, I read the script that Alex [Kurtzman] and Bob [Orci] wrote, and I genuinely loved it. There was this thread running through it. I think what happened was, through the pre-production, production, and post-production, when you have something that works as a whole, and then you start removing portions of it—because there was even more of it than was in the final cut, and everything was related. Once you start removing things and saying, “No, that doesn’t work,” then the thread is broken, and it’s hard to go with the flow of the story. Certain people at the studio had problems with certain parts of it, and ultimately the studio is the final say in those movies because they’re the tentpoles, so you have to answer to those people."

I think it's fair to say that none of us will be surprised to hear that many of The Amazing Spider-Man 2's problems are a result of inteference from the studio or producers Avi Arad and Matt Tolmach. They forced Venom into the critically panned Spider-Man 3 and made major changes to The Amazing Spider-Man in 2012 leading to it feeling extremely disjointed in places. The Amazing Spider-Man 2 meanwhile was a complete mess. "But I’ll tell you this," Garfield added, "Talking about the experience as opposed to how it was perceived, I got to work in deep scenes that you don’t usually see in comic book movies, and I got to explore this orphan boy—a lot of which was taken out, and which we’d explored more. It’s interesting to do a postmortem. I’m proud of a lot of it and had a good time, and was a bit taken aback by the response."

Asked to elaborate on this, the British actor said: "It’s a discernment thing. What are the people actually saying? What’s underneath the complaint, and how can we learn from that? We can’t go, “Oh God, we [frick]ed up because all these people are saying all these things. It’s sh*t.” We have to ask ourselves, “What do we believe to be true?” Is it that this is the fifth Spider-Man movie in however many years, and there’s a bit of fatigue? Is it that there was too much in there? Is it that it didn’t link? If it linked seamlessly, would that be too much? Were there tonal issues? What is it? I think all that is valuable. Constructive criticism is different from people just being dikks, and I love constructive criticism. Hopefully, we can get underneath what the criticism was about, and if we missed anything." I've given The Amazing Spider-Man 2 a hard time, and I think it deserves one because it had some serious issues in terms of tone and story. However, it's refreshing to see an actor address these issues directly and show a genuine concern about what needs to now be done in order to fix the franchise moving forwards. With it unclear whether or not Garfield will appear in The Sinister Six and The Amazing Spider-Man 3 given no firm release date, what happens next remains to be seen. What do you guys think? Share yoru thoughts in the usual place!

http://www.comicbookmovie.com/fansites/JoshWildingNewsAndReviews/news/?a=107411#ZxqdfC3CDAoYLicc.99
 
Joined
Sep 12, 2013
Messages
11,695
Reputation
-72
Daps
29,218
Reppin
NYC
Asked to elaborate on this, the British actor said: "It’s a discernment thing. What are the people actually saying? What’s underneath the complaint, and how can we learn from that? We can’t go, “Oh God, we [frick]ed up because all these people are saying all these things. It’s sh*t.

eloquently put.

for example if someone were to say they didn't like jamie foxx's character cause he was all goofy and over the top and shyt, underneath that layer is perhaps just a dude who was hoping for a more "mature" movie.

but if the movie never SET OUT to be a "mature" movie, then in reality that criticism has no merit.
 

wire28

Blade said what up
Supporter
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
52,602
Reputation
12,360
Daps
194,784
Reppin
#ByrdGang #TheColi
eloquently put.

for example if someone were to say they didn't like jamie foxx's character cause he was all goofy and over the top and shyt, underneath that layer is perhaps just a dude who was hoping for a more "mature" movie.

but if the movie never SET OUT to be a "mature" movie, then in reality that criticism has no merit.
Or they didn't like him because he was horrible character. He was better as electro. Sometimes it's just a surface layer, ain't no deeper meaning to it.

You already know you were getting the emo teen angle going in if you saw the first one. The tone was already set. Nobody was going in expecting the dark knight.

Edit: gah even that screenshot pisses me off because it reminds me of that kid in the Spider-Man suit stepping to rhino :heh: I hate stuff like that they stick into movies :snoop:

Some criticism was just cause but a lot was justified
 
Joined
May 2, 2012
Messages
6,167
Reputation
-11,105
Daps
13,955
Reppin
123
I think the main problem with Spider-man is the villains. In every other comic book movie, the villains are super strong and are threat to the entire universe, not just earth but in Spider-Man the villains are underwhelming and people can't seem to care as much.

Comic book movies need to be a lot darker. I would really love an entire movie of black suit Spider-Man. Would be pifff
 
Joined
Sep 12, 2013
Messages
11,695
Reputation
-72
Daps
29,218
Reppin
NYC
Or they didn't like him because he was horrible character. He was better as electro. Sometimes it's just a surface layer, ain't no deeper meaning to it.

i know, everyone has their own reasons.

but a popular criticism of the electro character was that they thought he was too cartoony and too over the top. you know too simplistic.
 

Heelmatic

The Carolina Blueprint
Joined
May 3, 2012
Messages
9,132
Reputation
1,161
Daps
17,032
Reppin
NC
I really liked the movie, with only two real criticisms....the opening police chase scene wasn't funny and was over the top corny and the Spidey suit just seemed off. The color, the fabric, and the way it fit all just seemed a little off.

Other than that I really enjoyed the movie and thought Jamie Foxx was great.


Disclaimer- I don't read the comics
 

Poetical Poltergeist

Precise and cold hearted
Joined
May 7, 2012
Messages
37,416
Reputation
5,507
Daps
121,815
Reppin
Mile in the Sky
Still havent seen this shyt. I have a grip of spider man comics tho. the movies didnt translate well for me. or i just grew out of liking the character.
 

MartyMcFly

What's up doc, can we rock?
Joined
May 29, 2012
Messages
59,888
Reputation
9,202
Daps
161,032
Reppin
P.G. County
eloquently put.

for example if someone were to say they didn't like jamie foxx's character cause he was all goofy and over the top and shyt, underneath that layer is perhaps just a dude who was hoping for a more "mature" movie.

but if the movie never SET OUT to be a "mature" movie, then in reality that criticism has no merit.
I liked it:yeshrug:

As life long Spider-Man fan, the shyt just felt to me like... Spider-Man
Same way I feel about the 1st Amazing

:smugbond:

I'd say more but the brehs handled it for me, especially the last comment

However, while studios are known to mangle with films especially big films and I get that it's a part of the investment but the issue here is, it's hurting the product in the long run. I liked the film a lot, mostly because of him and he captured Spidey perfectly. It's a fun flick, has some real poignant moments and went to a place most comic book flicks refuse to go and I appreciated the hell out of that and it was kinda touching for personal reasons. But I do recognize that it could be better and cutting stuff for the sake of cutting so that it lines up with your future plans bugs me. If everything works in the script when its streamlined and has a nice through line and actually aims for some deeper moments, leave those in, don't cut them because you decide to do other stuff. I was surprised to hear him throw the studio under the bus though..:leon:
 
Top