The New Gold Standard: Spider-Man the Movie
In the early 1960s, Marvel Comics' Stan Lee and his artistic collaborators, most prominently Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko, came up with a unique hybrid of kid-friendly adventure and grown-up character development that revolutionized comics and, to a large degree, all popular media. It's a hybrid that's in successful use to this day.
Strangely, movies such as Star Wars and TV shows such as Buffy the Vampire Slayer long ago realized that if you combine soap opera, science-fiction and the right kind of humor, you'd have the essence of a Marvel-style story. But when it came to adapting the template to films based on the comics themselves, movie studios always got gun shy, and decided that no sizable audience could possibly take a comic book-based superhero story seriously. This kind of thinking led to self-parodying movies that lost the underlying thematic truths that sparked the characters.
The Spider-Man, Batman, Batman Beyond and Justice League cartoons got it, and get it, right. And the first Superman and Batman movies had great moments of drama, humor and action. But feature filmmakers always seemed embarrassed about taking the material seriously. For whatever the reasons, though Star Wars, Star Trek, Buffy, Dark Angel and many other movies and TV shows not based on specific comics characters had the Lee/Kirby/Ditko Marvel spirit, feature films based on superhero properties that are completely true to the properties' spirit have just started to be made. The X-Men movie and the two Blade movies come to mind. But it turns out that they were just warm-ups for Spider-Man.

























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