Spider-Man 2 is the Academy Award-winning sequel to the popular 2002 film Spider-Man and was released in the U.S. on June 30th, 2004. Its soundtrack was a major hit in the United States and elsewhere.
The screenplay is credited to Alvin Sargent, with screen story credit given to Alfred Gough, Miles Millar, and Michael Chabon. Stan Lee and Steve Ditko receive additional screen credit for "comic book and characters."
It has been two years since the end of the last film, and Peter Parker is finding a double life very difficult. He loses a job, faces financial difficulties, is having trouble with his estranged friend, Harry Osborn, who still blames his father's death on Spider-Man (Harry doesn't know that Norman was actually the villanous Green Goblin of the first film or that Peter is Spider-Man, but is angered that Parker's trust is not to his best friend, but to Spider-Man, his "bread and butter"), struggles with his studies and school work, as Professor Curt Connors reprimands him, and finds that he is losing his powers. Moreover, he has learned that Aunt May is being threatened with foreclosure on her house and his potential girlfriend, Mary Jane, has acquired a new boyfriend, John Jameson, the son of Peter's employer, J. Jonah Jameson. M.J. turns increasingly hostile to Peter after he fails to keep a promise to see a play in which she is the female lead. Further, he questions if he could ever have what he "needs," a life as Peter Parker, which climaxes in a vision involving Uncle Ben.
Peter's idol, a brilliant, gentle scientist named Otto Octavius becomes a mechanically-controlled lunatic as the result of a fusion accident and the loss of his wife and failure. Doctor Octopus ("Doc Ock"), as he is now called (due to the metal tentacles wired to his spine), desperately wants to rebuild his experiment, and Spider-Man, in the meantime, must stop him from robbing a bank. In the robbery attempt Aunt May is nearly kidnapped and is enlightened to the fact that Spider-Man is a hero after he saves her. Peter's morale hits a nadir when Harry lashes at him in a drunken rage, M.J. and John Jameson announce their engagement and he loses his powers due to a form of burn-out syndrome. Peter temporarily gives up Spider-Man, shirking his responsibilities.
As Peter has much more spare time now, not only does he excel at his physics courses, but at least one of his relationships improves. Peter and Mary Jane connect once again, but as Mary Jane is engaged, it seems too late. On the other hand, Aunt May is distressed by Peter's confession that he was somewhat responsible for his Uncle Ben's death. Soon after though, she sees his bravery in admitting the truth and inadvertently inspires him to become Spider-Man once more, as she speaks of how he gives hope to others and that one must do things for the greater good in spite of their dreams. In the meanwhile, Doctor Octopus and Harry Osborn, now head of Oscorp's research division, make a deal: Harry supplies him with tritium for his experiment, and Octavius agrees to capture Spider-Man for him.
Mary Jane remembers the upside-down kiss she had with her savior Spider-Man in the first film, and that Peter's kiss suspiciously felt the same. She arranges a meeting with Peter, and although she is very fond of him, Peter's secretive behavior estranges and intrigues her. But before things can go on, they are attacked by Doctor Octopus. Because he knows that Peter and Spider-Man are close (although he does not know that they are the same person), he abducts Mary Jane in a ploy to lure Spider-Man into a trap.
This shock brings back Peter's powers. He dons his costume and has a great fight with Octavius, culminating with the insane scientist forcing Spider-Man to rescue a runaway subway train. With an utmost effort, Peter narrowly prevents the train from falling from an unfinished bridge and then looses consciousness. Unmasked and vulnerable, the passengers of the train carry his limp body inside and set him down gently. Peter awakens and is startled by the absense of his mask which is then returned by two young boys. The children and assemblage of other passengers vow not to tell anyone of seeing his face. Unfortunately, he is weak from stopping the train and is captured easily by Doctor Octopus, then brought before Harry Osborn. Harry unmasks Spider-Man and is stunned to discover that his sworn enemy is also his best friend.. Peter easily breaks free of his bonds and convinces Harry that they need to set aside their conflict for the time being as larger problems are at hand. He then persuades Harry to reveal where Octavius went so he save Mary Jane from being killed.
Spider-Man finds Doctor Octopus in an abandoned waterfront warehouse on a pier, where he holds Mary Jane hostage and has just re-ignited his doomed fusion experiment, which is clearly going astray just as did the one in the beginning of the film. They fight a second time, and in the end, Octavius regains his sanity. Peter reveals his true identity and reitterates some advice given him by Octavius prior to his tragic fall from grace. This triggers an epiphany in Octavius where he realizes the monstrosity of his recent actions. Determined to end his doomsday experiment before it causes anyone harm, Octavius uses his mechanical arms to collapse the floor of the building, plunging himself and the fusion device into the water below, snuffing it out permanently. Tragically, Dr. Octavius is killed in the process but ends up dying a hero ("I will not die a monster!"). Mary Jane finds out that Peter is Spider-Man, and is in awe and full of joy at the same time. But Peter tells her they can never be together, as he will always have deadly enemies, and says she should spare herself the grief of coming too close to him.
As he hears of the warehouse disaster in his penthouse, a distraught Harry Osborn meets face to face with his father, the late Norman Osborn in a hanging mirror. The hallucination of Norman demands that his son kill Peter Parker to avenge his death. This, for the first time, marks Harry's possible departure into mental decline. Horrified at the thought of harming his best friend, Harry hurls a dagger at the mirror, shattering it and revealing a hidden passageway which leads to a secret room in the attic. Confused, disoriented, and surrounded by a cache of advanced weaponry and equipment, Harry focuses on a Goblin Glider in the center of the room and realizes that his father was the infamous Green Goblin. He also discovers glass cylinders containing the performance-enhancing chemical compound which gave Norman Osborn his superhuman abilities as well as triggering his insanity. This is a clear lead-up to Harry donning the mantle of the second Green Goblin in the third film as he does in the comics.
In the end, Mary Jane Watson runs away from her marriage with John Jameson. She gatecrashes Peter's apartment, telling him that she has decided to live with him - despite the risks - because a full dangerous life is better than a half, carefree life. She - almost forcefully - persuades Peter to finally be her boyfriend while accepting the need of his vows by letting him respond to a sudden call for help. As Peter joyfully swings to the rescue, Mary Jane remains, still somewhat apprehensive of the bizarre and potentially dangerous relationship they have committed themselves to.
Other records the film holds are highest-grossing box office for a film opening on a Wednesday, best opening weekend for a film opening in July, best five-day gross for a film opening on a Wednesday and the fastest film to reach $200 million (the film needed 8 days, which ties it with 2005's Revenge of the Sith). *
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Roger Ebert, who was lukewarm on the first film praised the second movie and gave it four stars. He went on to call it the "greatest super-hero movie since Superman" [http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20040629/REVIEWS/406300301/1023. A number of other newspapers also gave it good marks, and the movie was listed in AFI's Top Ten Films of 2004
However, The New Yorker rated it as average, while Salon.com and Village Voice rated it as poor.
In the 77th Academy Awards, the movie won the Academy Award for Visual Effects. It was also nominated for the Academy Award for Sound and the Academy Award for Sound Editing. There were many rumors that the film was in contention for the Academy Award for Adapted Screenplay, as many fans and critics alike regarded Alvin Sargent's screenplay as superb in terms of emotional depth and character development. There have also been a few critics and web sites arguing that it even deserved a Best Picture nomination.
Particular praise was lavished upon Alfred Molina for his sympathetic performance as Doc Ock, as well as Tobey Maguire's continued portrayal of the troubled and tormented superhero.
| Actor | Role |
|---|---|
| Tobey Maguire | Peter Parker / Spider-Man |
| Alfred Molina | Dr. Otto Octavius / Doctor Octopus |
| Kirsten Dunst | Mary Jane Watson |
| James Franco | Harry Osborn |
| J.K. Simmons | J. Jonah Jameson |
| Daniel Gillies | John Jameson |
| Dylan Baker | Dr. Curt Connors |
| Donna Murphy | Rosalie Octavius |
| Rosemary Harris | May Parker |
| Bill Nunn | Joseph "Robbie" Robertson |
| Ted Raimi | Hoffman |
| Elizabeth Banks | Betty Brant |
| Elya Baskin | Mr. Ditkovich |
| Cliff Robertson | Ben Parker |
| Willem Dafoe | Norman Osborn / Green Goblin |
| Vanessa Ferlito | Louise |
| Bruce Campbell | Snooty Usher |
| Mageina Tovah | Ursula |
2004 films | American films | English-language films | Films directed by Sam Raimi | Films shot in Super 35 | Sequel films | Spider-Man films | Thriller films | Live-action/animated films
Spider-Man 2 | Spiderman 2 | Spider-Man 2 | Spider-Man 2 | Spider-Man 2 | スパイダーマン2 | Spider-Man 2 | Spider-man II | Spider-Man 2 – Hämähäkkimies 2 | Spider-Man 2
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