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    Home ยป Looking Out For The Little Guy | SPIDER-MAN HOMECOMING Review
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    Looking Out For The Little Guy | SPIDER-MAN HOMECOMING Review

    Jordan TiniBy Jordan TiniJuly 12, 20173 Mins Read
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    Homecoming was always an apt title for the new Spider-Man film.

    After a successful return in 2012, then a web undone in 2014, Marvel and Sony came together to see what they could do with ol’ Web-head.

    With a distribution deal struck, and Marvel taking creative control of one of their most valuable characters, the wall-crawler swung back onto the scene in Captain America: Civil War.

    Heralded as the coming of the new wunderkind, will the ‘Benjamin Button’-ing of Spider-Man prove a success?

    Or is it a tangled mess?

    It’s about time Spider-Man found himself a little bit more grounded.

    With 5 films under his belt, he’s popped the web cartridges of old to replace them with a new spin on your friendly, neighborhood Spider-Man.

    While many commented on the exclusion of Spidey’s character defining statement

    “With great power comes great responsibility”

    from Civil War, it finds itself told in a way that makes it synonymous with the character himself.

    Much like the character’s de-aging (ed. Or as fans see it, a return to his true origin), the hero’s journey is almost told in reverse-like fashion.

    The lack of exuberance normally shown by the Marvel films takes Holland’s Spider-Man back to his roots. He’s not some hero with grand plans and actions. He’s a boy with grand thoughts and dreams.

    He doesn’t so much as jump from building-to-building, but kind of assumes he can while tripping over himself.

    It’s this subtlety that drives Peter toward a destiny we know is much bigger than what he sees in front of him.

    The tiny discoveries he makes, learning the ropes (ed. or webs) of what makes him a hero are both thrilling and hilarious.

    The trade-off between huge set-pieces for the smaller things sees classic questions answered like “What happens when there’s no buildings?”, “Does Spidey need a car?”, “Does he eat?”, and the best one “What happens to his backpack?”.

    And it’s this along with his student-life that builds up the foundation for a hero who will embody the classic Spidey-mantra.
    A boy who can’t change the life he has versus the hero that can change the lives he saves.

    Surrounded by a wonderful supporting cast, it’s greatest member is Keaton’s ‘Vulture’.

    With motivations a little closer to home than most, and a nature that is very much “evil”, the Vulture has to be one of the best villains Marvel has produced in a while.

    Intentionally grey (with tinges of green), Spidey is sure to have a rogues gallery befitting of his legacy soon.

    And with so much going right, it looks like our Marvel neighborhoods just a got a bit more friendlier.

    10 WEBSLINGTASTIC

    A Spider-Man who's willing to throw himself off a building while anxious about it, along with cautionary action that finds Spidey using his trademark humour to deal with it; Spider-Man Homecoming tries to ground the wall crawler who quickly learns how to soar.

    Jordan Tini
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    Positivity and pop-culture daily; Nonsense fills the gaps in-between.

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