THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN: 10 Reasons The Short-Lived Franchise Is Better Than You Remember

THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN: 10 Reasons The Short-Lived Franchise Is Better Than You Remember

It wasn't around for long, but The Amazing Spider-Man franchise left a lasting impact on fans. While it's since been widely derided, we're making an argument for why these movies were actually pretty good!

Feature Opinion
By JoshWilding - Mar 25, 2023 12:03 PM EST
Filed Under: The Amazing Spider-Man

Spider-Man: No Way Home brought back Tobey Maguire and Andrew Garfield's Variants of Peter Parker for an epic team-up with Tom Holland's web-slinger and it was amazing.

While Spider-Man 3 was a disappointment, Sam Raimi's trilogy is still widely loved by fans. For some, though, Andrew Garfield is their Spider-Man...even if The Amazing Spider-Man movies weren't that spectacular! They were certainly rife with issues, but there were also a lot of great ideas, moments, and characters that actually did this beloved superhero justice. 

So, rather than taking another look back at what didn't work in the 2012 origin story and 2014's The Amazing Spider-Man 2, we're shining a positive light on Marc Webb's short-lived time with this character. We think you'll be surprised by some of the points made here, especially as there were ideas we'd argue were better than what both Raimi and the MCU have delivered.

To take a look through this feature, all you guys need to do is click on the "Next" button below! 
 

10. The Costume

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No, we're not talking about the costume in The Amazing Spider-Man (though it certainly wasn't the worst redesign for the wall-crawler's iconic suit in fairness). The one in The Amazing Spider-Man 2, however, is still widely considered to be Peter Parker's best big screen look and is 100% comic-accurate.

Not even the Marvel Cinematic Universe could say that until Spider-Man: No Way Home's closing moments, and this one still looks truly amazing in action. 

Garfield donned this outfit once again in 2021 and that was a smart move on Marvel Studios' part. Sometimes, it doesn't really matter when a costume is changed from what we're used to seeing on the page (Captain America, for example), but with Spider-Man, taking an "if it ain't broke" approach is for the best, and this sequel did that.
 

9. Spider-Man Protects New York City

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In Spider-Man: Homecoming, it was established that the MCU's webbed wonder is a "neighbourhood" superhero. He does a great job protecting Queens, but never really ventures into New York City. Clearly, Marvel Studios was looking to get away from the familiar imagery of Spidey swinging through the Big Apple, but that was still sorely missed. 

In the sequel, we did see a little more of Spider-Man in Manhattan, but with most of his adventure taking place overseas, that didn't really happen until those final few minutes. 

In The Amazing Spider-Man franchise, Peter was very much a hero protecting his city, and that led to some astonishing moments. Whether it was using those cranes to get to Oscorp in the first movie or just the sight of him hanging out atop a skyscraper to keep an eye on Gwen Stacy (still creepy), this Spidey felt like a hero who was needed in New York. 
 

8. Web-Slinging

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Sam Raimi mastered those epic web-slinging scenes in his Spider-Man trilogy, but The Amazing Spider-Man movies deserve some credit as well. Marc Webb definitely made good use of the comic books for inspiration, recreating some iconic poses and doing an impressive job of making us feel what it would be like to actually be Spider-Man. 

We're still not sure why those highly touted POV scenes were ditched, as they would have been incredible in 3D (which was still pretty popular back in 2012).

Despite that, if you didn't get a buzz watching this Spider-Man swinging through New York City in the sequel's opening, well, are you even a fan of Marvel's most iconic superhero? There's a lot that didn't work in these movies, but if you can find a compilation on YouTube, we're sure you'll agree with this point!
 

7. "The Untold Story"

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On the one hand, there's no getting around the fact that Spider-Man never needed an overly complicated origin story involving his parents. Making it so that Peter only gained his powers because his father used his own DNA in those spiders was goofy as hell, but this whole "Untold Story" aspect did add an interesting new element to the mythos in other ways. 

While it was disappointing to see the wall-crawler seemingly abandon his mission to find Uncle Ben's killer by the time The Amazing Spider-Man 2 rolled around, that subplot with him learning more about his father's relationship with Oscorp made for an entertaining, albeit unnecessary, subplot.

Moving forward, there are some interesting places this could have gone, but as bad as the sequel was, it did make up for the lack of answers about Richard and Mary Parker in that first instalment. Norman Osborn eventually returning to target Peter because of the power inside him feels very Ultimate Spider-Man-esque, and, in some respects, it's shame that didn't pan out.
 

6. Peter's Dynamic With Aunt May

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The Amazing Spider-Man movies didn't exactly put the freshest of spins of Peter Parker's dynamic with his Aunt May, with those hints that she knows he's secretly Spider-Man as hit-and-miss as they were throughout the course of Raimi's trilogy. Some fans appreciated that, though, and Peter's relationship with his aunt was otherwise a solid part of these movies. 

Garfield and Sally Field had a tonne of chemistry, and that emotional scene in the sequel where she talks about him being her boy...well, in a mostly bad movie, that's a moment we can't really fault.

There was also a lot of humour in this relationship; in the first movie, May mostly spent her time fretting over how badly beaten her nephew was. However, in The Amazing Spider-Man 2, their squabble over the washing machine felt like a pitch-perfect take on how they should interact on screen.
 

5. Gwen Stacy

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We're still not thrilled with how Gwen Stacy's story ended because it was a very underwhelming take on "The Night Gwen Stacy Died." Simply put, the character deserved better, and this iconic comic book moment simply didn't resonate the same way in a clock tower that felt entirely out of place. 

The emotion in the scene was superb, though, so we're not going to fault Garfield's performance. Stone was also brilliant as the character, growing increasingly frustrated with the way Peter seemingly couldn't make his mind up about whether being with her was the right thing to do (tragically, Captain George Stacy's warning proved to be completely accurate). 

By no means a damsel in distress, this fierce, intelligent Gwen was a pleasure to spend time with, and up there as one of Spider-Man's best big screen love interests. Sony dropped the ball by the time all was said and done, unfortunately, but this part of the franchise should be appreciated. 
 

4. Amazing Action (Even When The Villains Weren't)

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The Amazing Spider-Man movies had a real issue with its bad guys, with overly complicated or downright dreadful origin stories for characters like the Green Goblin, Electro, and The Lizard. 

Despite that, one thing we can't fault is the action scenes. That battle with The Lizard in the library was nothing short of epic, while the fight in the school hallway was also expertly choreographed. Electro sucked, but we loved seeing him clash with the webbed warrior as well, and Webb proved himself a dab hand at action over the course of these two hit-and-miss movies. 

In the first instalment, Sony tried to up the level of non-CGI web-slinging, which was only partially successful. The fight scenes, however, were primarily CG in both, and never disappointed. 
 

3. Battle-Damaged Spider-Man

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One of the coolest things about Spider-Man is that, when he gets beaten up, his costume usually winds up in tatters. That made the final battle between Spidey and the Green Goblin in 2002's Spider-Man all the more enjoyable, while both of these movies had fun putting the iconic hero through the wringer.

Maybe it's just me, but seeing Spider-Man bloodied, battered, and with a torn-up costume is always fun, and Webb did an effective job of showing what would happen to this teenager when the odds are stacked against him. 

Ultimately, this is a minor part of the franchise, but like the MCU, it showed that this superhero is different to the likes of Thor and Iron Man and doesn't emerge from his fights mostly unscathed. Those scratches from The Lizard ended up being a cool part of The Amazing Spider-Man's marketing campaign, too.
 

2. A Wise-Cracking Spider-Man

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Raimi's Spider-Man movies were superb (well, the first two were, anyway), but Maguire's Peter Parker never really became a wise-cracking superhero when he suited up. That added confidence has always been a big part of the comic book character's personality, and The Amazing Spider-Man franchise was the first to embrace that. 

Garfield's Peter was perhaps a little too confident and sure of himself, but in the suit, he had a swagger, arrogance, and level of humour that felt wholly appropriate for this version of the masked menace.

Whether it was him hitting that guy in the nuts with his webbing in the first movie or mocking Aleksei Sytsevich in the follow-up, this side of the character just worked. Hopefully, this attitude carries over into this Spider-Man's return because it made spending time with him a lot of fun. 
 

1. A True Hero

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This feature isn't about comparing The Amazing Spider-Man movies to the wall-crawler's MCU adventures because, ultimately, the latter would win hands down every time. However, there are times when it feels like Holland's Peter only heads into action when something happens; in other words, he's more reactive than proactive.

Over the course of these movies, Garfield's Spider-Man proved himself a true hero, which was most evident during his interactions with children.

In the first movie, Spidey unmasks in front of a child about to plummet into the water below in order to reassure him. The follow-up, meanwhile, sees the hero fend off some bullies and walk a kid home after fixing his science project; this just feels right for Spider-Man, and showed a different side of the character we hadn't seen before, and arguably haven't since. 
 

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GhostDog
GhostDog - 3/25/2023, 12:03 PM
It really isn’t though
ThorArms
ThorArms - 3/25/2023, 12:04 PM
Ehhhhhh
Th3Batman
Th3Batman - 3/25/2023, 12:09 PM
The first one was good enough, it had its issues, but it had the potential to start a great series. Then the second one was released, and it was honestly one of the worst comic book movies I ever saw. It was basically Spider-man's Batman & Robin.
Spike101
Spike101 - 3/25/2023, 6:24 PM
@Th3Batman - agreed 👍
philinterrupted
philinterrupted - 3/25/2023, 12:10 PM
I’ve seen it a few times. It’s not.

At best Andrew Garfield is a great Spider-Man. He’s not a great Peter Parker.

And the family conspiracy stuff is cringy.
mountainman
mountainman - 3/25/2023, 12:13 PM
The “untold story” was a stupid attempt at giving Spider-man a darker story a la Batman. It was easily the worst part about that series.

But Garfield and Stone were great in their roles, the costume, swinging, and action were mostly good, and it was the best Spider-man wisecracking we’ve seen on screen.

I’ve always said the first one was pretty good. Some issues (with the mystery of peters parents and the lizards horrible look) but I still like it overall. The first person perspective scenes were always unique and fun.

The second one though…Ugh. The chemistry between the two leads was the only good thing about it. All three villains were terrible in that one, which brought down any good parts.
DarthAlgar
DarthAlgar - 3/25/2023, 12:14 PM
The first one was an okay film, and the sequel was just hot garbage IMO.

I didn't like that it was based somewhat on Ultimate Spider-Man. I really disliked the villain redesigns for that series.
Spike101
Spike101 - 3/25/2023, 6:25 PM
@DarthAlgar - agreed the villain designs were awful.
tb86
tb86 - 3/25/2023, 12:16 PM
I like the first one. The second one was kind of a mess.
thewanderer
thewanderer - 3/25/2023, 2:32 PM
@tb86 - I love the second one. Has some of my favorite moments from any superhero movie.
FireandBlood
FireandBlood - 3/25/2023, 12:18 PM
The fact Garfield saving MJ in NWH managed to elicit the response it did is a testament to how great the Peter/Gwen relationship was in this series, and how well Gwen’s death was even handled in an otherwise crappy movie.
mountainman
mountainman - 3/25/2023, 12:25 PM
@PlusUltra - Agreed. Andrew Garfield and Emma Stone were great in those roles. If they had been given better written movies with villains who were more accurate to the source material, those movies could have been really special.
Ryguy88
Ryguy88 - 3/25/2023, 12:24 PM
Where that video of Josh interviewing Webb? I remember him saying it was the best spiderman movie ever made
marvel72
marvel72 - 3/25/2023, 6:02 PM
@Ryguy88 -

MCUKnight11
MCUKnight11 - 3/25/2023, 12:24 PM
First one is still pretty good.
Odin
Odin - 3/25/2023, 12:25 PM
Garfield and Stone casting, as well as their chemistry on screen, was the only redeeming thing in this duology. And even their romance was stretched out way too much in the second movie. Their romance scenes really started to feel repetitive, like didn't I just see this exact same scene ten minutes ago. By the time of the third act, I just wanted to shout to the screen, "Oh my god, we get it! They are soulmates who are meant for each other, and your setting up some tragic and/or bittersweet ending here. On with the damn story!"
Forthas
Forthas - 3/25/2023, 12:45 PM
I thought the first one is better than most of the Tom Holland Spiderman films. The second one, not so much despite having really good potential, great chemistry between Andrew Garfield and Emma Stone and the hints of an interesting take on Green Goblin. The Electro angle and the intrigue revolving around his parents...they could have left out.
ModHaterSLADE
ModHaterSLADE - 3/25/2023, 12:47 PM
Never was crazy about Garfield's take on Parker,but his Spider-Man nailed the quip and joke making tone of the comic.
MosquitoFarmer
MosquitoFarmer - 3/25/2023, 12:57 PM
The pedestrians in at least that 2nd movie though were dumb as a washing machine in a dryer factory. They stuck around to watch danger and applaud like it's a show. And don't get me started on that terrible mother.

https://i.insider.com/5367d0c26bb3f7850716ebc4?width=600&format=jpeg&auto=webp
OrgasmicPotatoe
OrgasmicPotatoe - 3/25/2023, 12:57 PM
I liked the first one well enough. Some rough spots, but overall still enjoyable. I liked how they made him "act" like a spider, meaning, the big web he spins in the sewers to find Lizard, and they way he crawls all over him to wrap him in webbing in the high school fight.

I absolutely loved ASM2's suit, but with time, I've noticed some details that made me like it a lot less. The webbing is barely curved, which gives the impression of a checkered pattern more than webbing, and the logo on the chest is too low, it makes it look like his entire chest is drooping. They nailed the eyes though, as far as non-moving eye lenses go.
AC1
AC1 - 3/25/2023, 1:57 PM
I feel like I remember you reviewing TASM quite well, then consistently trashing it in articles and comments sections when the majority opinion seemed to sway towards disliking the movie, and now you seem to be pro-TASM again now that this version of the character has been redeemed to the majority by MWH.
Origame
Origame - 3/25/2023, 3:31 PM
@AC1 - in fairness, I think a lot of people let their perception that this series was keeping Spiderman out of the mcu to prevent them from seeing the good. My evidence is no way home. People are now saying he's redeemed but they didn't really do anything to him. They just let him be himself. Not to mention people were warming up to the idea of a third movie even before garfield was confirmed for no way home.
AC1
AC1 - 3/25/2023, 6:54 PM
@Origame - yeah I feel like being caught between the Raimi trilogy ending and not being in the MCU created a really unfair public perception against this version of Spider-Man. Granted the second movie was a bit of a mess but the first was pretty good and it was sad to see it being so unfairly criticised.
DocSpock
DocSpock - 3/25/2023, 2:09 PM


The ASM movies were garbage. No further examination needed.

Feralwookiee
Feralwookiee - 3/25/2023, 2:28 PM
Sony rushed these movies out in an effort just to keep the rights.
They are really not good at all imo.

Hey, at least Josh accurately put this one under the "Opinion" label this time though! 😝
grif
grif - 3/25/2023, 2:59 PM
who says its over? we still have all of the sequels and spinoffs they promised to look forward to.
bkmeijer1
bkmeijer1 - 3/25/2023, 3:04 PM
The second costume, the swinging, the quipping, Gwen Stacy, Lizard's quite tragic story (up until ''let's make all of New York lizards!''), Harry's quest for healing, the cranes lining up for Spider-Man and Spider-Man randomly wearing a firefighter hat is all great, but unfortunately the franchise was never more than the sum of it's parts.
MyCoolYoung
MyCoolYoung - 3/25/2023, 3:16 PM
@bkmeijer1 - well said. There's things to enjoy throughout, but they never come together well enough.
MyCoolYoung
MyCoolYoung - 3/25/2023, 3:07 PM
Despite the untold story being a bit of a jumbled mess, I still enjoyed Part 2. This was mainly due to the chemistry between Peter and Gwen, which was the best out of any other Spider-Man and up there with any other superhero romance. Their allergy season scene was particularly adorable, much like the bridge scene between Tom Holland and Zendaya in 'Far From Home'.
FinnishDude
FinnishDude - 3/25/2023, 3:30 PM
Nah, it was awful, Garfield is overrated as Spider-Man and I'm glad that the franchise died.
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