The Amazing Spider-man 2 Review
By Rich Cline
As with the too-early franchise reboot in 2012, this sequel struggles to balance the demands of a teen romance with a superhero blockbuster. The interpersonal storylines are sharply written and skilfully played by the gifted cast, but the eye-catching effects sequences feel like little more than a shiny distraction. Action fans will love the way digitally animated Spidey swings more realistically than ever down the streets of New York, but the fact remains that these scenes are cartoons. And a new template is badly needed for this genre.
It kicks off as Peter (Andrew Garfield) nearly misses his high school graduation to save the city from another crazed nutcase. His girlfriend Gwen (Emma Stone) is fed up, and then crushed when Peter breaks up with her because he's worried about her safety. So she considers taking a place at Oxford University to get away. Meanwhile, Peter is also trying to understand the truth about why his parents (Campbell Scott and Embeth Davidtz) left him to be raised by his Aunt May (Sally Field). But he's interrupted from all of this by the arrival of old pal Harry (Dane DeHaan), back in town to inherit the family business from his dying dad (Chris Cooper) and in need of moral support from Peter.
In each of these three plot strands, Peter faces a significant dilemma that's beautifully played by Garfield as a cheeky, good guy who worries about the darkness all around him. And there's also a nefarious side-plot trying to take over the movie, as nerdy technician Max (Jamie Foxx) is transformed by an electric shock from Spider-man's biggest fan to a spark-emitting villain called Electro. This shift doesn't make sense on any level, and Harry also has a sudden personality change that's badly under-explained, forcing the film into a series of huge action showdowns along with a completely irrelevant aside about two colliding airplanes that feels tacked on to up the human stakes.
The problem is that this mix of personal drama and enormous spectacle is unlikely to truly please anyone. Action fans will hate dramatic emotional scenes that are cleverly underplayed by Garfield, Stone, Field and DeHaan, while more discerning filmgoers will grow impatient with the flashy battles and rampant destruction. Of course, this also means that there's something both audiences can enjoy as well. But is this enough to build anticipation for a third instalment in the saga? Let's hope gifted filmmaker Marc Webb can come up with a new formula.
Watch 'The Amazing Sider-Man 2' Trailer

Facts and Figures
Year: 2014
Genre: Action/Adventure
Run time: 142 mins
In Theaters: Friday 2nd May 2014
Box Office USA: $202.9M
Box Office Worldwide: $705.7M
Budget: $200M
Distributed by: Sony Pictures
Production compaines: Columbia Pictures, Sony Pictures
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 3 / 5
Rotten Tomatoes: 53%
Fresh: 136 Rotten: 121
IMDB: 7.0 / 10
Cast & Crew
Director: Marc Webb
Producer: Avi Arad, Matthew Tolmach
Screenwriter: Alex Kurtzman, Roberto Orci, Jeff Pinkner
Starring: Andrew Garfield as Spider-Man / Peter Parker, Emma Stone as Gwen Stacy, Jamie Foxx as Electro / Max Dillon, Dane DeHaan as Green Goblin / Harry Osborn, Colm Feore as Donald Menken, Felicity Jones as Felicia, Paul Giamatti as Aleksei Sytsevich, Sally Field as Aunt May, Embeth Davidtz as Mary Parker, Campbell Scott as Richard Parker, Marton Csokas as Dr. Ashley Kafka, Louis Cancelmi as Man in Black Suit, Max Charles as Young Peter Parker, B.J. Novak as Allistar Smythe, Sarah Gadon as Kari, Stan Lee as Graduation Guest, Chris Cooper as Norman Osborn, Frank Deal as Agent Berkley, Denis Leary as Captain Stacy, Martin Sheen as Uncle Ben, Chris Zylka as Flash Thompson
Also starring: Avi Arad, Alex Kurtzman, Roberto Orci