There have been many adaptations of everyone’s favorite web-head, when I was a
kid it was the 1967 Spider-Man series that had a couple season produced by Ralph
Bakshi, and it still has one of the best theme songs that asked, “Can he swing
from a thread? Take a look overhead.” Then
the 70s gave us a live action series starring Nicholas Hammond but sadly the
effects of the time and the fairly low
budget pretty much made this an impossible venture. After that several more
animated attempts, some better than others. Then enter Greg Weisman and Victor Cook who together developed I believe to
be the most faithful adaptation to date.
Now I’m not saying this show was slavishly accurate to how
the stories were depicted in the comics but these two managed to capture the
pure joy of Spider-Man. Sure Peter
Parker (Josh Keaton) has his teen-age angst filled moments but when he puts on
that costume to swing through the canyons of New York he explodes with the fun
and excitement that one would hope to have if they were given the proportionate
powers of a spider.
One can’t expect any producer to stick to the canon of a comic
book character that has run several decades, in various titles, with countless
changes to characters and origins. So in
2008 The Spectacular Spider-Man aired
with a slew of recognizable characters but with some nice tweeks to their
origin to make them fit into this animated world. Gwen Stacey (Lacey Chabert) is one of Pete’s
best friends but who would really like to be more than that, Harry Osborn
(James Arnold Taylor) is Peter’s other close friend and in a nod to the comics
has a drug problem, but this time out it’s an Oscorp performance enhancing drug
that turns him into the Green Goblin.
Of course Venom, a
fan favorite, has to make an appearance but now he’s not a disgraced journalist
that wishes Peter harm, now Eddie Brock (Ben Diskin) is an almost older brother
figure to Peter but who feels betrayed when Peter’s Spider-Man action cause
problems for the people around him.
Two other key villains in the series is of course Norman
Osborn (Alan Rachins) who is secretly supplying the criminal underworld with
Oscorp tech to create super villains such as the Sandman and Rhino. The other major player is known as “The Big
Man” who uses these created super villains to keep Spider-Man busy and away
from his criminal enterprises. The
reveal as to whom “The Big Man” is for me the only disappointing element in the
entire run of the series, and I’m betting it is a rights issue. For any fan of the comic knows that a large
shadowy figure that runs a criminal empire while keeping an honest business façade
is Wilson Fisk aka The Kingpin, as Fox owns the rights to Daredevil and through
him Kingpin, I’m guessing that’s why he doesn’t appear in this Sony series. Who did they chose to replace him? *No Spoilers here go and watch it yourself* let’s
just say he would really have a hard time pulling of the nice philanthropist
act.
That this show got cancelled after just two seasons is a
crime and that The Avengers: Earth
Mightiest Heroes, my other favorite super-hero cartoon also got cancelled
after two seasons I’m crying, “Conspiracy!”
So for those who loved it and for those that missed it during
its original run, the complete series is now available on Blu-ray, and it
simply looks gorgeous.
"Face it Tiger, you hit the jackpot." |
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