Does evil fall into the world like a rock from outer space? Does it spring from within us? Or is it merely the residue of our blunders--our trespasses, literally--which we commit while coping with circumstance? These are large questions for a comic-book movie to raise, especially when it's the sequel to a sequel. But whatever faults I can uncover in Spider-Man 3 (just give me a minute), lack of ambition isn't one of them.
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Closely Watched Water
Stuart Klawans: Hurricane Katrina seen from an eye in the storm.
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The Disasterplex
Stuart Klawans: Superstars and superheroes fight and flounder through Hollywood's season of wanton destruction.
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Playing Politics for Laughs
Stuart Klawans: Reviewing a homegrown war documentary, a portrait of Native American life and a pair of spy comedies.
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Twilights
Stuart Klawans: Who are films like Speed Racer, Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull and The Edge of Heaven really aimed at?
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Photo Ops
Stuart Klawans: Errol Morris's new documentary Standard Operating Procedure lacks critical distance but produces masterful evocations of Abu Ghraib.
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Un Ballon Est un Ballon
Stuart Klawans: In Flight of the Red Balloon, filmmaker Hou Hsiao-hsien takes on an unmistakably Parisian story with unbridled creative abandon.
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Our Troubled Youth
Stuart Klawans: Exploring the unexpected: Chop Shop, Paranoid Park, Vantage Point.
As we know from the earlier films, young, mutated Peter Parker was always apt to be self-involved and vengeful. Now, in Spider-Man 3, these faults begin to dominate his personality. Peter grows infatuated with celebrity, pursues a personal vendetta and ignores the feelings of his beloved Mary Jane. The result is further mutation, as he changes into jerk Peter, floppy-haired Peter, Peter with a ladies' man swagger and a sense of entitlement. You may judge the nature of the transformation by its critical site: a men's discount clothing store. But if personal emotion should seem too weak a cause for the existence of evil, Spider-Man 3 offers a more elaborate explanation, in which Peter is a victim of malevolent goo from a meteorite. In this scheme--alternative to the first as an idea but simultaneous with it on the screen--Peter's worst traits would have been nothing more than weaknesses, had they not left him vulnerable to an alien intruder: some black, bloblike stuff, with a texture that's reminiscent of a fetishist's vinyl.
Despite its kinky sci-fi trappings, this is the metaphysical evil of old-time religion: an uncanny force beyond our power to comprehend, which may mimic its victim (as the space goo sometimes imitates a spider's scurrying) but comes from outside him. The opportunistic blob has a will of its own, and like Satan goes to and fro in the earth, walking up and down in it. Here again, mutation occurs and reveals its nature by its critical site: a church steeple.
The third major site of mutation--yes, there's still another, the most impressive of all--looks like a huge concrete mixing bowl, overhung by a glowing electronic eggbeater. The sign posted on the fence outside claims this apparatus is an experimental physics station; but it's more like the place where bad luck, poverty and common ignorance get stirred into a threat to society. A poor brute named Flint Marko stumbles into this installation, wearing the most baffled expression that Thomas Haden Church can give him, and an outfit apparently copied from a 1930s French movie about the poetry of the lower depths. Marko enters the mixing bowl as an escaped convict, already presumed to be a danger to the public. He exits as a shape-shifting mass of sand: an invisible man, ground down by a world he doesn't understand, but newly capable of living outside the law.
I write these words and hear the groans and chortles of incredulity. Can a mere corporate product like Spider-Man 3 be so layered with psychology, sociology and religious conviction? Of course it can--if you'll admit that the man charged with spending two years and a gazillion dollars on it might have thought about what he was doing. No one who watches without prejudice this extravaganza of doppelgängers, moral preaching and existential dread will complain that it's mindless. On the contrary: My complaint is that Raimi has loaded too many big ideas into Spider-Man 3. They drag this bag of kittens right down to the river's bottom.
The heaviness of the production is visible all too plainly at a vulnerable point, where Tobey Maguire's jawline is now softening into a jowl. I know, I don't look so great myself--but then, I'm not supposed to be a college student endowed with miraculous athletic gifts. With every close-up that Raimi takes of Maguire, especially those from a low angle, you're reminded that the Spider-Man series itself has aged, and like Peter can't pretend to have much ingenuousness to lose. Every once in a while, Raimi still manages a flash of the first movie's youthful charm: in a view of a parade reviewing stand, for example, where Cub Scouts seated in the front row blithely pass the time by kicking their legs. Just like Cub Scouts, you think. But quirky, naturalistic details like this one have now been almost abandoned, along with the first movie's bracing sense of New York's neighborhoods. A touristic view of Times Square passes for local color. The film's "downtown jazz club" is a storefront restaurant with a dance floor and singing waitresses. Not even in Portland--though the worst part of this scene isn't the bogus setting but the tortured editing that's required to make Maguire look like he's dancing.
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