- Joined
- Aug 26, 2010
- Messages
- 3,054
- Reaction score
- 25
Couldn't disagree more. The ending was so inspiring, heroic and uplifting. It showed him coming back from his emotional grief, moving on, and protecting the city he loves. He even threw in some typical Spider-Man comments and mannerisms (I can't remember exactly, but he did something with the megaphone and said something funny to Rhino). He wanted to show everyone that he's still Spider-Man and he will always be there. Then the cut to black with the theme coming full force and the logo appearing... perfect.
To end the film on such a downer with Peter simply grieving would've been a bad move. This is Spider-Man. We don't want a Dark Knight Batman depressing ending. We don't want our hero on the run. We don't want him emotionally traumatised. We don't want a hero that disappears for 8 years.
Spider-man's return was what was needed here. And an inspiring return it was.
It seems kind of silly like in the first movie the man dying wish is for him to leave his daughter alone and since he cannot help himself he still pursued her which caused her to be roped into his ongoing struggle with the villains. It just seems kind of strange how at the end of the movie it has to end on a positive note. And if you wanna follow the comic he is devastated with the death and it takes Mary Jane to bring him out of that. When he recovers in 5 months of the death of his beloved it seems as though you know it was all for naught. They could have used his grief to fuel him in the third movie.
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