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Spider-Man
Spider-Man2002Poster
Theatrical release poster
Directed bySam Raimi
Screenplay byDavid Koepp
Produced by<templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • Laura Ziskin
  • Ian Bryce
Starring<templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
CinematographyDon Burgess
Edited by<templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Music byDanny Elfman
Distributed bySony Pictures Releasing[1]
Release dates
<templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • April 29, 2002 (2002-04-29) (Mann Village Theater)
  • May 3, 2002 (2002-05-03) (United States)
Running time
131 minutes[2]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$139 million[3]
Box office$821 million[3]

Spider-Man is a 2002 American superhero film based on the Marvel Comics character of the same name. Directed by Sam Raimi, it is the first installment in the Spider-Man trilogy, and stars Tobey Maguire as the title character, alongside Willem Dafoe, Kirsten Dunst, James Franco, Cliff Robertson, Rosemary Harris, and J. K. Simmons. The film centers on an outcasted teen named Peter Parker, who develops spider-like superhuman abilities after being bitten by a genetically-altered spider. He is later driven to use his new abilities for a good purpose, as the vigilante Spider-Man, to atone for his uncle's murder.

After progress on the film stalled for nearly 25 years, it was licensed for a worldwide release by Columbia Pictures in 1999 after it acquired options from Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer on all previous scripts developed by Cannon Films, Carolco, and New Cannon. Exercising its option on just two elements from the multi-script acquisition (a different screenplay was written by James Cameron, Ted Newsom, John Brancato, Barney Cohen, and Joseph Goldman), Sony hired David Koepp to create a working screenplay (credited as Cameron's), and Koepp received sole credit in final billing. Directors Roland Emmerich, Ang Lee, Chris Columbus, Jan de Bont, M. Night Shyamalan, Tony Scott, and David Fincher were considered to direct the project before Raimi was hired as director in 2000. The Koepp script was rewritten by Scott Rosenberg during pre-production and received a dialogue polish from Alvin Sargent during production. Filming took place in Los Angeles and New York City from January 8 to June 30, 2001. Sony Pictures Imageworks handled the film's visual effects.[5]

Spider-Man premiered at the Mann Village Theater on April 29, 2002, and was released in the United States on May 3, 2002. It received generally favorable reviews from critics, who praised its action sequences, romantic moments, visual effects, direction, performances, and Danny Elfman's score. The film became a financial success: it was the first film to reach $100 million in a single weekend, and became the most successful film based on a comic book. With a box office gross of over $821 million worldwide, it was the third highest-grossing film of 2002 and,in theory, could be the seventh highest-grossing film of all time. Spider-Man is credited for redefining the modern superhero genre, as well as the summer blockbuster.[6][7][8][9] It was followed by the sequels Spider-Man 2 and Spider-Man 3 in 2004 and 2007, respectively.

Plot[]

High-school senior Peter Parker, an orphan, lives with his aunt May and his uncle Ben. On a school trip to Columbia University, he visits an Oscorp genetics laboratory with his best friend Harry Osborn and classmate and neighbour Mary Jane Watson. While Peter impresses Harry's father, billionaire and Oscorp founder Norman Osborn, with his scientific knowledge, he struggles with his awkward social status among his peers and relies on Harry to protect him from bullies. During the tour of the labs, Peter is bitten by a genetically engineered and irradiated spider.

Meanwhile, Norman struggles to impress U.S. Army General Slocum to secure funding for an advanced weapons program; Slocum reveals that they are only interested in a chemical performance enhancer with the potential to amplify physical prowess. Norman's lead scientist, Dr. Stromm, highlights side effects and recommends returning to early development. Slocum offers Norman two weeks to prove the formula, otherwise threatening to give his contract to Quest Aerospace, a rival company. With Dr. Stromm's help, Norman uses the enhancer on himself, but becomes unstable and enraged, killing Stromm.

Throughout the next day, Peter discovers his new abilities, such as superhuman speed, strength, reflexes, a heightened ability to sense danger and webbing through spinnerets in his forearms. Ignoring Ben's advice that "With great power comes great responsibility", Peter participates in an underground fighting tournament, hoping to buy a car to impress Mary Jane. He wins his match, but the promoter cheats him and refuses to pay him the reward money. A robber attacks the promoter and steals the evening's earnings; Peter allows him to escape with the money out of spite. Moments later, Peter discovers that Ben was carjacked and killed. Peter catches the culprit, and finds it to be the robber that he previously let escape; the thief falls out of a window to his death. After graduation, Peter begins using his abilities for a good cause to atone for Ben's death, donning the costume of Spider-Man. Desperate for pictures of the newly-dubbed "Spider-Man" to boost sales, Daily Bugle editor-in-chief J. Jonah Jameson hires Peter as a freelance photographer since he has the only high-quality images.

Meanwhile, Norman interrupts a military experiment by Quest, using a weaponized glider from Oscorp to kill several QUEST scientists and Slocum. Learning that Oscorp's board members plan to sell the company to Quest, Norman assassinates them at the World Unity Festival in Times Square. Peter, as Spider-Man, arrives and battles Norman, managing to force him to escape and save members of the crowd and Mary Jane. Jameson dubs the mysterious killer "the Green Goblin." Sensing Spider-Man's potential as an ally, Norman battles him at the Daily Bugle office and a burning building, proposing that they join forces and warning that the public will eventually turn against him; Peter dismisses him and is wounded but escapes.

At Thanksgiving dinner, May invites Mary Jane, Harry, and Norman. Norman notices Peter's injury, realizing his identity, and later attacks and hospitalizes May. Mary Jane admits she is infatuated with Spider-Man, who has rescued her twice, and asks Peter whether Spider-Man ever asked about her. Harry, who is dating Mary Jane, arrives and presumes she has feelings for Peter after seeing them hold hands. Devastated, Harry tells his father that Peter loves Mary Jane, unintentionally revealing Spider-Man's biggest weakness.

Norman holds Mary Jane and a Roosevelt Island cable car full of children hostage at the Queensboro Bridge. He forces Peter to choose who to save before dropping them. Peter manages to save both Mary Jane and the tram car, while Norman is pelted by bystanders who defend Spider-Man as a fellow New Yorker. Norman then grabs Peter and throws him into an abandoned Smallpox Hospital building and rants that he will kill Mary Jane. An enraged Peter uses several attacks and regains the upper hand, but Norman reveals himself to Peter. He begs for forgiveness but deceptively controls his glider to attack Peter. Peter dodges the glider as it impales Norman, killing him; he asks Peter not to tell Harry who he is and dies from his injuries. Peter takes Norman's body back to his house, and Harry arrives to find Norman and Spider-Man, who immediately escapes.

At Norman's funeral, Harry vows revenge on Spider-Man, deeming him responsible for Norman's death, while confiding that Peter is the only family he has left. Mary Jane confesses to Peter that she is in love with him. However, Peter feels that he must protect her from the unwanted attention of his enemies. He hides his true feelings and tells Mary Jane that they can only be friends. As Peter leaves, he recalls Ben's words and accepts his new responsibility as a superhero.

Cast[]

"I felt like I was an outsider. I think what happened to me made me develop this street sense of watching people and working out what made them tick, wondering whether I could trust them or not. I went to a lot of schools along the coast in California, made few friends and stayed with aunts, uncles and grandparents while my folks tried to make ends meet. It was tough. We had no money."
— Tobey Maguire on identifying with Peter Parker.[10]

Joe Manganiello, Bill Nunn and Elizabeth Banks portray Peter's bully Flash Thompson, Daily Bugle editor Robbie Robertson and Jameson's secretary Betty Brant, respectively. Michael Papajohn appears as The Carjacker, the criminal who murders Ben Parker. In Spider-Man 3, it is learned that his name is Dennis Carradine. Bruce Campbell, a long-time colleague of director Sam Raimi, cameoed as the announcer at the wrestling ring Peter takes part in. Raimi himself appeared off-screen, throwing popcorn at Peter as he enters the arena to wrestle Bonesaw McGraw, played by former professional wrestler "Macho Man" Randy Savage.[12] Spider-Man co-creator Stan Lee also had a cameo, in which he asks Peter, "Hey kid, would you like a pair of these glasses? They're the kind they wore in X-Men." The scene was cut, and Lee only briefly appears in the film to grab a young girl from falling debris during the battle between Spider-Man and the Green Goblin in Times Square. R&B/soul singer Macy Gray appears as herself. Lucy Lawless also appears as a punk rock girl. One of the stunt performers in this film is actor Johnny Tri Nguyen.[13] Kickboxer Benny "The Jet" Urquidez has an uncredited cameo as a mugger.

Production[]

Development[]

In April 1999, although Sony Pictures optioned from Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer all preceding script versions of a Spider-Man film, it only exercised the options on "the Cameron material," which contractually included a multi-author screenplay and a forty-five page "scriptment" credited only to James Cameron. The studio announced they were not hiring Cameron himself to direct the film nor would they be using his script.[14] The studio lined up Roland Emmerich, Tony Scott, Chris Columbus, Ang Lee, David Fincher, Jan de Bont and M. Night Shyamalan as potential directors. Fincher did not want to depict the origin story, pitching the film as being based on The Night Gwen Stacy Died storyline, but the studio disagreed.[15] Sam Raimi was attached to direct in January 2000,[16] for a summer 2001 release.[17] He had been a fan of the comic book during his youth, and his passion for Spider-Man earned him the job.[18]

Cameron's work became the basis of David Koepp's first draft screenplay, often word for word.[19] Cameron's versions of the Marvel villains Electro and Sandman remained the antagonists. Koepp's rewrite substituted the Green Goblin as the main antagonist and added Doctor Octopus as the secondary antagonist.[20] Raimi felt the Green Goblin and the surrogate father-son theme between Norman Osborn and Peter Parker would be more interesting, thus, he dropped Doctor Octopus from the film.[21] In June, Columbia hired Scott Rosenberg to rewrite Koepp's material. Remaining a constant in all the rewrites was the "organic webshooter" idea from the Cameron "scriptment".[22] Raimi felt he would stretch the audience's suspension of disbelief too far to have Peter invent mechanical webshooters.[23]

Rosenberg removed Doctor Octopus and created several new action sequences.[24] Raimi felt adding a third origin story would make the film too complex. Sequences removed from the final film had Spider-Man protecting Fargas, the wheelchair-using Oscorp executive, from the Goblin, and Spider-Man defusing a hostage situation on a train.[15] As production neared, producer Laura Ziskin hired award-winning writer Alvin Sargent, to polish the dialogue, primarily between Peter and Mary Jane.[25] Columbia gave the Writers Guild of America a list of four writers as contributors to the final Spider-Man script: Rosenberg, Sargent and James Cameron, all three of whom voluntarily relinquished credit to the fourth, Koepp.[19]

Filming[]

With Spider-Man cast, filming was set to begin the following November in New York City and on Sony soundstages. The film was set for release a year later,[26] but when the film was postponed to be released on May 3, 2002,[27] filming officially began on January 8, 2001[25] in Culver City, California. After the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, certain sequences were re-filmed, and images of the Twin Towers were digitally erased from the film.[28][29] Sony's Stage 29 was used for Peter's Forest Hills home, and Stage 27 was used for the wrestling sequence where Peter takes on Bonesaw McGraw (Randy Savage). Stage 27 was also used for the complex Times Square sequence where Spider-Man and the Goblin battle for the first time, where a three-story set with a breakaway balcony piece was built. The scene also required shooting in Downey, California.[30] On March 6,[31] 45-year-old construction worker Tim Holcombe was killed when a forklift modified as a construction crane crashed into a construction basket that he was in. The following court case led to the California Division of Occupational Safety and Health to fine Sony $58,805.[32]

In Los Angeles, locations included the Natural History Museum (for the Columbia University lab where Peter is bitten and receives his powers), the Pacific Electricity Building (the Daily Bugle offices) and Greystone Mansion (for the interiors of Norman Osborn's home). In April, 4 of the Spider-Man costumes were stolen, and Sony put up a $25,000 reward for their return.[33] They were recovered after 18 months and a former movie studio security guard and an accomplice were arrested.[34] Production moved to New York City for two weeks, taking in locations such as the Queensboro Bridge, the exteriors of Columbia University's Low Memorial Library and the New York Public Library, and a rooftop garden in the Rockefeller Center.[30] The crew returned to Los Angeles where production and filming ended in June. The Flatiron Building was used for the Daily Bugle.[25]

Design[]

OriginalGreenGoblin

The original animatronic headgear for the Green Goblin was created by Amalgamated Dynamics

Before settling on the look used in the film, the original headgear created for the Green Goblin was an animatronic mask created by Amalgamated Dynamics. The design was much more faithful to the comics than the finished product, and allowed for a full range of emotions to be expressed by the wearer. Ultimately, the mask was scrapped before an actor was chosen to play the Green Goblin, and a static helmet was produced for the film instead.[35][36]

Although it wound up being faithful to the comics, many designs were made for Spider-Man's costumes: one concept costume designer James Acheson became fond of was the idea of having a red emblem over a black costume. Another, which would eventually lead to the final product, featured an enlarged logo on the chest and red stripes going down the sides of the legs.[15] To create Spider-Man's costume, Maguire was fitted for the skintight suit, being covered with layers of substance to create the suit's shape.[37] It was designed as a single piece, including the mask. A hard shell was worn underneath the mask to make the shape of the head look better and to keep the mask tight while keeping the wearer comfortable. For scenes where he would take his mask off, there was an alternate suit where the mask was a separate piece. The webbing, which accented the costume, was cut by computer. The mask eye lenses were designed to have a mirror look.[38]

Visual effects[]

Visual effects supervisor John Dykstra was hired to produce the film's visual effects in May 2000.[39] He convinced Raimi to make many of the stunts computer-generated, as they would have been physically impossible. Raimi had used more traditional special effects in his previous films and learned a lot about using computers during production.[18] Raimi worked hard to plan all the sequences of Spider-Man swinging from buildings, which he described as, "ballet in the sky." The complexity of such sequences meant the budget rose from an initially planned $70 million to around $100 million.[13] Shots were made more complicated because of the main characters' individual color schemes, so Spider-Man and the Green Goblin had to be shot separately for effects shots: Spider-Man was shot in front of a greenscreen, while the Green Goblin was shot against bluescreen. Shooting them together would have resulted in one character being erased from a shot.[15]

Dykstra said the biggest difficulty of creating Spider-Man was that as the character was masked, it immediately lost a lot of characterization. Without the context of eyes or mouth, a lot of body language had to be put in so that there would be emotional content. Raimi wanted to convey the essence of Spider-Man as being, "the transition that occurs between him being a young man going through puberty and being a superhero." Dykstra said his crew of animators had never reached such a level of sophistication to give subtle hints of still making Spider-Man feel like a human being.[40] When two studio executives were shown shots of the computer generated character, they believed it was actually Maguire performing stunts.[15] In addition, Dykstra's crew had to composite areas of New York City and replaced every car in shots with digital models. Raimi did not want it to feel entirely like animation, so none of the shots were 100% computer-generated.[41]

Release[]

Bannedposter

Original Spider-Man teaser poster, which was recalled from theatres following 9/11 (the World Trade Center is reflected in Spider-Man's eyes)

After the terrorist attacks on the United States on September 11, 2001, Sony had to recall teaser posters which showed a close-up of Spider-Man's face with the New York skyline (including, prominently, the World Trade Center towers) reflected in his eyes. The film's original teaser trailer, released in 2001 and shown before Atlantis: The Lost Empire, Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within, Jurassic Park III, Planet of the Apes, and American Pie 2, featured a mini-film plot involving a group of bank robbers escaping in a Eurocopter AS355 Twin Squirrel helicopter, which gets caught from behind and propelled backward into what at first appears to be a net, then is shown to be a gigantic spider web spun between the World Trade Center towers. According to Sony, the trailer did not contain any actual footage from the film itself and is consequently one of the most popular "Special Shoot" trailers since Terminator 2: Judgment Day.[42] The trailer and poster both had to be pulled after the events of the attacks, but can be found on the internet on websites such as YouTube.[43]

Before the film's British theatrical release in June 2002, the British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) gave the film a "12" certificate. Due to Spider-Man's popularity with younger children, this prompted much controversy. The BBFC defended its decision, arguing that the film could have been given a "15". Despite this, North Norfolk and Breckland District Councils, in East Anglia, changed it to a "PG", and Tameside council, Manchester, denoted it a "PG-12". The U.S. rated it "PG-13"[44] for "stylized violence and action". In late August, the BBFC relaxed its policy to "12A", leading Sony to re-release the film.[45][46]

Reception[]

Box office performance[]

Spider-Man became the first film to pass the $100,000,000 mark in a single weekend, even when adjusting for inflation, with its $114,844,116[47] mark establishing a new opening weekend record.[48][49] The gross surpassed the previous record holder's Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone $90,000,000 opening; on this, Rick Lyman of The New York Times wrote, "while industry executives had expected a strong opening for the film because there was little competition in the marketplace and prerelease polling indicated intense interest from all age groups, no one predicted that Spider-Man would surpass the Harry Potter record."[49]

The film also set a record for crossing the $100,000,000 milestone in 3 days, at the time being the fastest any film had reached the mark.[50] This opening weekend haul had an average of $31,769 per theater, which at time, Box Office Mojo reported as being "the highest per theater average ever for an ultra-wide release."[48] The film's three-day record was surpassed by Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest four years later.[51] The $114.8 million opening weekend was the highest at the North America box office film for a non-sequel, until it was surpassed eight years later by Alice in Wonderland.[52]

With the release in the United States and Canada on May 3, 2002 on 7,500 screens at 3,615 theaters,[49] the film earned $39,406,872 on its opening day, averaging $10,901 per theater.[53] This was the highest opening day at the time until it was surpassed by its sequel Spider-Man 2's $40.4 million haul in 2004.[54] Spider-Man also set an all-time record for the highest earnings in a single day with $43,622,264 on its second day of release,[48][53] a record later surpassed by Shrek 2 in 2004.[55] On the Sunday during its opening weekend, the film earned an additional $31,814,980,[53] the highest gross a film took in on a Sunday, at the time.[48]

The film stayed at the top position in its second weekend, dropping only 38% and grossing another $71,417,527,[56] while averaging $19,755.89 per theater. At the time, this was the highest-grossing second weekend of any film.[56] During its second weekend, the film crossed the $200 million mark on its ninth day of release, also a record at the time.[56] At the end of its second weekend, the film brought in a 10-day total of $223,040,031.[56]

The film dropped to the second position in its third weekend, behind Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones, but still made $45,036,912, dropping only 37%, averaging $12,458 per theater, and bringing the 17-day tally to $285,573,668.[57] Its third weekend haul set the record for highest-grossing third weekend, which was first surpassed by Avatar (2009).[58] It stayed at the second position in its fourth weekend, grossing $35,814,844 over the four-day Memorial Day frame, dropping only 21% while expanding to 3,876 theaters, averaging $9,240 over four days, and bringing the 25-day gross to $333,641,492.[59] In the box office, Spider-Man became 2002's highest-grossing film with $403,706,375 in the U.S. and Canada, defeating The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers and Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones.[60]

Spider-Man currently ranks as the 29th-highest-grossing film of all time in the U.S. and Canada, not adjusted for inflation. The film also grossed $418,002,176 from its international markets, bringing its worldwide total to $821,708,551,[61] making it 2002's third-highest-grossing film behind The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers and Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets and the 58th-highest-grossing film of all time, worldwide.[62] The film sold an estimated 69,484,700 tickets in the US.[61] It held the record for most tickets sold by a comic book movie until The Dark Knight topped it in 2008. Later few movies from the Marvel Cinematic Universe did surpass it. It is still the 5th highest grossing comic book movie of all time adjusted for inflation. Only Avengers: Infinity War, The Dark Knight, Black Panther and The Avengers have sold more tickets than Spider-Man. Spider-Man was the highest-grossing superhero origin film, a record it held for 15 years until it was surpassed by Wonder Woman (2017).[63] It is the eighth-highest-grossing superhero film, as well as eighth-highest-grossing comic book adaptation in general.[64][65]

International markets which generated grosses in excess of $10 million include Australia ($16.9 million), Brazil ($17.4 million), France, Algeria, Monaco, Morocco and Tunisia ($32.9 million), Germany ($30.7 million), Italy ($20.8 million), Japan ($56.2 million), Mexico ($31.2 million), South Korea ($16.98 million), Spain ($23.7 million), and the United Kingdom, Ireland and Malta ($45.8 million).[66]

Spider-Man became the highest-grossing superhero film of all time at the time of its release, both domestically and worldwide. Its domestic gross was eventually topped by The Dark Knight (2008). Its worldwide gross was first surpassed by Spider-Man 3 (2007).

In April of 2018, This film was Sony's highest grossing movie domestically until it was surpassed by Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle with $404 million.

Critical response[]

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 90% based on 239 reviews, with an average rating of 7.6/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Not only does Spider-Man provide a good dose of web-swinging fun, it also has a heart, thanks to the combined charms of director Sam Raimi and star Tobey Maguire."[67] On Metacritic, the film has an average score of 73 out of 100, based on 37 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[68] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A–" on an A+ to F scale.[69]

The casting, mainly Tobey Maguire, Willem Dafoe and J. K. Simmons, is often cited as one of the film's high points. Eric Harrison, of the Houston Chronicle, was initially skeptical of the casting of Maguire, but, after seeing the film, he stated, "within seconds, however, it becomes difficult to imagine anyone else in the role."[70] USA Today critic Mike Clark believed the casting rivaled that of Christopher Reeve as 1978's Superman.[71] Owen Gleiberman, of Entertainment Weekly, had mixed feelings about the casting, particularly Tobey Maguire. "Maguire, winning as he is, never quite gets the chance to bring the two sides of Spidey—the boy and the man, the romantic and the avenger—together."[72] The Hollywood Reporter's Kirk Honeycutt thought, "the filmmakers' imaginations work in overdrive from the clever design of the cobwebby opening credits and Spider-Man and M.J.'s upside down kiss—after one of his many rescues of her—to a finale that leaves character relationships open ended for future adventures."[73]

Conversely, LA Weekly's Manohla Dargis wrote, "It isn't that Spider-Man is inherently unsuited for live-action translation; it's just that he's not particularly interesting or, well, animated."[74] Giving it 2.5/4 stars, Roger Ebert felt the film lacked a decent action element; "Consider the scene where Spider-Man is given a cruel choice between saving Mary Jane or a cable car full of school kids. He tries to save both, so that everyone dangles from webbing that seems about to pull loose. The visuals here could have given an impression of the enormous weights and tensions involved, but instead the scene seems more like a bloodless storyboard of the idea."[75] Stylistically, there was heavy criticism of the Green Goblin's costume, which led IGN's Richard George to comment years later, "We're not saying the comic book costume is exactly thrilling, but the Goblin armor (the helmet in particular) from Spider-Man is almost comically bad... Not only is it not frightening, it prohibits expression."[76]

Entertainment Weekly put "the kiss in Spider-Man" on its end-of-the-decade "best-of" list, saying, "There's a fine line between romantic and corny. And the rain-soaked smooch between Spider-Man and Mary Jane from 2002 tap-dances right on that line. The reason it works? Even if she suspects he's Peter Parker, she doesn't try to find out. And that's sexy."[77] Empire magazine ranked Spider-Man 437 in its 500 Greatest Movies of All Time list the following year.[citation needed]

Awards[]

The film won several awards ranging from Teen Choice Awards to the Saturn Awards, and was also nominated for two Academy Awards (Best Visual Effects and Best Sound (Kevin O'Connell, Greg P. Russell and Ed Novick), but lost to The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers and Chicago, respectively.[78][79] While only Danny Elfman brought home a Saturn Award, Raimi, Maguire, and Dunst were all nominated for their respective positions. It also took home the People's Choice Award for "Favorite Motion Picture."[79] The film was nominated for Favorite Movie at the Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards, but lost to Austin Powers in Goldmember.

 
Award Date of ceremony Category Recipients Result
Academy Awards

[80]

March 23, 2003 Best Sound Kevin O'Connell, Greg P. Russell and Ed Novick Nominated
Best Visual Effects John Dykstra, Scott Stokdyk, Anthony LaMolinara and John Frazier Nominated
BMI Film and TV Awards

[81]

May 14, 2003 BMI Film Music Award Danny Elfman Won
British Academy Film Awards

[82]

February 23, 2003 Best Achievement in Special Visual Effects John Dykstra, Scott Stokdyk, Anthony LaMolinara and John Frazier Nominated
Broadcast Film Critics Association

[83]

January 17, 2003 Best Song Chad Kroeger ("Hero") Nominated
Empire Awards

[13]

February 5, 2003 Best Actress Kirsten Dunst Won
Golden Trailer Awards

[84]

March 14, 2002 Best Action Spider-Man Nominated
Best Music Spider-Man Nominated
Best of Show Spider-Man Nominated
Best Voice Over Spider-Man Won
Grammy Award

[85]

February 23, 2003 Best Score Soundtrack Album for a Motion Picture, Television or Other Visual Media Danny Elfman Nominated
Best Song Written for a Motion Picture, Television or Other Visual Media Chad Kroeger ("Hero") Nominated
Hugo Awards

[86]

August 30, 2003 Best Dramatic Presentation – Long Form Spider-Man Nominated
MTV Movie Awards

[87]

May 31, 2003 Best Female Performance Kirsten Dunst Won
Best Kiss Kirsten Dunst and Tobey Maguire Won
Best Male Performance Tobey Maguire Nominated
Best Movie Spider-Man Nominated
Best Villain Willem Dafoe Nominated
People's Choice Awards

[88]

January 12, 2003 Favorite Motion Picture Spider-Man Nominated
Satellite Awards

[89]

January 12, 2003 Best Film Editing Eric Zumbrunnen Nominated
Best Visual Effects John Dykstra Nominated
Saturn Awards

[90]

May 18, 2003 Best Fantasy Film Spider-Man Nominated
Best Actor Tobey Maguire Nominated
Best Actress Kirsten Dunst Nominated
Best Director Sam Raimi Nominated
Best Music Danny Elfman Won
Best Special Effects John Dykstra, Scott Stokdyk, Anthony LaMolinara and John Frazier Nominated
World Soundtrack Awards

[91]

October 19, 2002 Best Original Soundtrack of the Year – Orchestral Danny Elfman Nominated
World Stunt Awards

[92]

June 1, 2003 Best Fight Chris Daniels, Zach Hudson, Kim Kahana Jr., Johnny Nguyen and Mark Aaron Wagner Nominated
Young Artist Awards

[93]

March 29, 2003 Best Family Feature Film - Fantasy Spider-Man Nominated

Sequels[]

In January 2003, Sony revealed that a sequel to Spider-Man was in development, and would be produced and directed by Sam Raimi. On March 15, 2003, a trailer revealed that the film, Spider-Man 2, would be released in June 30, 2004. Spider-Man 3, the second sequel to Spider-Man and the final film in the series to be directed by Raimi, was released on May 4, 2007. Spider-Man: The New Animated Series was an alternate sequel to the film unrelated to the events of the later Spider-Man 2 and 3.[94]

Home media[]

Spider-Man was released on DVD and VHS on November 1, 2002. A Blu-ray release was followed on July 5, 2011.[95] Spider-Man was also included in the Spider-Man Legacy Collection, which includes 5 Spider-Man films in a 4K UHD Blu-ray collection, which was released on October 17, 2017.[96]

The film's American television rights (Fox, TBS/TNT) were sold for $60 million.[97] Related gross toy sales were $109 million.[97] Its American DVD revenue by July 2004 was $338.8 million.[97] Its American VHS revenue by July 2004 was $89.2 million.[97] As of 2006, the film has grossed a total revenue of $1.5 billion from box office and home video sales.[98]

Video Game[]

Spider-Man (also known as Spider-Man: The Movie) is a 2002 action-adventure video game based upon the Marvel Comics character Spider-Man, and is also loosely based on the film Spider-Man.[99] The game was developed by Treyarch and published by Activision, and released in 2002 for Game Boy Advance, GameCube, Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 2, and Xbox. The game has many scenes and villains that did not appear in the film. It was followed by Spider-Man 2 two years later to promote the release of the second film. In 2007, to promote the release of the third film, Spider-Man 3 was released. Tobey Maguire[lower-alpha 1] and Willem Dafoe were the only actors who reprised their roles from the film.

The critical reviews for the game were positive. By July 2006, the PlayStation 2 version of Spider-Man had sold 2.1 million copies and earned $74 million in the United States. Next Generation ranked it as the 15th highest-selling game launched for the PlayStation 2, Xbox or GameCube between January 2000 and July 2006 in that country. Combined sales of Spider-Man console games released in the 2000s reached 6 million units in the United States by July 2006.[100]

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. Josh Keaton was considered for the role as Peter Parker / Spider-Man, but Keaton's role was given to Harry Osborn, similar to how James Franco was considered for the role as Spider-Man.

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Spider-Man". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. American Film Institute. Retrieved February 8, 2019.<templatestyles src="Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css"></templatestyles>
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External links[]



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