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Spiderman
2
Dir. Sam Raimi, U.S., Columbia
Spiderman 2 is
the most moral movie I’ve seen this year. Unlike the
alienating glamour of Batman’s playboy aestheticism,
unlike the distancing optimism of Superman’s
escapism, director Sam Raimi’s sequel—a movie about
fists and webbing, an unwaterproofed miniature sun,
and cybernetically sentient tentacles—is a curiously
empathetic superhero movie. That it is a superhero movie,
in fact, would not be immediately obvious if not for
the pliably virtual figurines bashing fervently against
each other, against train tracks, against insistently
vertical clock towers, against dockside wave-scooped
piers. These comfortingly tense fight scenes—between
Spiderman and mad scientist number 16, Doctor Octopus—are
actually subservient to the far more raucous, angsty
violence of Spiderman’s secret identity, Peter Parker.
Will he be able to shake off his guilt over Uncle Ben’s
death? Will he get the girl? Most importantly, to New
Yorkers, can he pay the rent?
These are purely private suspenses. The action movie’s
usual engine has been switched with the usual purely
ornamental chassis: Peter Parker’s quotidian woes (not
the action movie genre elements) drive the narrative.
The film’s plot thus jerks anxiously around in ways
less like Schwarzenegger than Austen—the intrigue is
more soap-operatic than operatic, the always insistent
vector nearly that of a romantic comedy’s cutely goal-oriented
theatrics. Spiderman (Tobey Maguire) finds that his
dream job isn’t actually, well, as Spiderman; he has
higher aspirations and dreams instead to someday be
the boyfriend of the smitten but jilted Mary Jane Watson
(Kirsten Dunst), a proper friend to revenge-bent, Hotspur-via-90210
Harry Osborn (James Franco), and the filially respectful
nephew of his grieving Aunt May (Rosemary Harris). That
his secret identity gets blown a few times, that Doc
Octopus (Alfred Molina), a nuclear physicist driven
nuts by his impervious cybernetic limbs, nearly destroys
the world—these catastrophes seem almost like narrative
afterthoughts, the dashed off signature to Peter Parker’s
late rent check.
The chief adversaries in Spiderman 2 aren’t Spiderman
and Doc Ock: they are private life versus public life.
His grades take second priority to sleepless car chases,
his eyes wilt baggily from too much dutiful vigilantism,
and Mary Jane all but abandons him for the odd way he’s
always disappearing on her—Maguire’a character has to
choose between being Spiderman or being Peter Parker.
In other words, Spiderman 2 is a four-color allegory
about distributive justice. As Peter Singer has argued,
every time we eat foie gras (as I do, every day,
for every meal, including midnight snacks and dessert)
we waste resources on ourselves that could more usefully
go towards AIDS research, famine relief, or, say, postcolonial
debt adjustment. We are used to making our only defense—excuses.
Our own lives are so puny, our ability to help so scant,
we tell ourselves, that we must draw the line somewhere—otherwise,
how would we be able to experience our own lives? This
excuse is instantly vitiated by Spiderman’s love life:
a date for him, means death for someone else.
This type of learning, the school of when to live one’s
role and one’s desires—when to be Spiderman and when
to be Peter Parker—is the drama of maturation. Spiderman
2 is really a sort of Confucian coming-of-age story,
the Marvel comics movie that Ang Lee should have directed—superhero
as bildungsroman. Consequently, though it is
unembarrassed by its rampant cheesiness and brazen formula,
the plot is “inspiring”—heroic while still being human,
the soppy, endearingly underdog heroism of films like
Tampopo, Waterboys, and most Jackie Chan
movies. The film’s flush of afterglow isn’t adrenal—it’s
moral. Spiderman’s ultimate victory occurs when he rejects
both the tragedy of selflessness and of selfishness.
He “wins” the movie by learning that his identities
are not mutually exclusive. He can be both Spiderman
and Peter Parker—by loving his American darling Mary
Jane and whispering against all his private longings,
“There is something more important, something bigger,
than you and I.”
The film, in fact, is flauntingly interested in this
type of union. Even ignoring the chief scientific spectacle
(nuclear fusion), Spiderman’s two villains are
villains only because of their failure to unite their
warring selves. The soothingly upper-middle-class Doctor
Octopus can’t fend off the hubris embodied in his obviously
allegorical, tempting, serpentine arms. The obnoxiously
upper-upper class Harry Osborn doesn’t know how to reconcile
his roles as friend and failed son. Octopus, Osborn,
and Spiderman are all, incidentally, traumatized by
a dead relative. Dominated by what they believe that
person would expect of them, the three of them are all
jailed in the same cage of guilty, self-flagellating
alienation. Thus, the film’s most moving (and dangerously
sentimental) scenes happen when the individual observers
around them swell into a single, affirming group—a group
that accepts them. When, for example, a group of subway
riders all vow not to give away Spiderman’s secret identity—and
let us ignore, for a moment, the unintentionally funny
“mosh pit” sequence that occurs contiguous to this one—the
movie gains the perks of moral didacticism, while remaining
somehow tender, humane.
These are, in fact, the virtues of the original Spiderman
comic book series after which the film so boyishly adheres.
While it’s now fashionable to diss superhero comic books—a
sort of backhanded compliment to the supposedly far
more naturalistic indie graphic novel—the Spiderman
of artist Steve Ditko and writer Stan Lee was always
notable for its realism. As the historian’s clichés
go, Spiderman was an aesthetic breakthrough:
the first comic of proper nouns (“New York” rather than
“Metropolis” or “Gotham City”); the first comic where
the teenager (i.e. the character mirroring the reader)
was the hero rather then the sidekick; the first comic
where the hero was masked and alienated—in fact, the
first superhero comic about alienation, rather than
about the hysterical or noir wonders of Superman
and Batman. Read almost any of the “canonical”
Marvel superhero titles—X-Men is an easy example
of this—and you are almost instantly overcome by the
deluge of wounded sensitivity. But, in Spiderman
2, watching Peter Parker never get the paycheck,
the last hors d’oeuvres at the cocktail party, or the
girl, I couldn’t help thinking that maybe the best analog
for Spiderman wasn’t any of these clumsily vulnerable,
emo boys in spandex. Who is the other, most darkly inept
comic book character of all time, the most endearing
loser? I am speaking, of course, of Charlie Brown, like
Spiderman, an icon of terrifying resignation served
in the more charming packages of costume and cartoon.
—KEN CHEN |