The Niagara Falls Review

The third time’s the charm

Spider-man reboot rises above expectatio­ns

- CHRIS KNIGHT

I honestly didn’t think I was ready for another Spider-Man. After the Tobey Maguire trilogy (20022007) and the truncated Andrew Garfield years (2012-2014), not to mention Tom Holland’s appearance in the climactic scene of last year’s Captain America: Civil War, I was awaiting this one with all the anticipati­on of a new iPhone iOS. “SM v.3.1b” was my private name for Homecoming.

And yet darned if Holland’s Spidey doesn’t breathe new life into the old web-slinger, who officially turns 55 this year and doesn’t look a day over 15 in the movie. How’d they do it?

First and foremost, no backstory. As written by a six-man consortium headed by Jonathan Goldstein and John Francis Daley

(Horrible Bosses), this Spider-Man doesn’t bother introducin­g Peter Parker’s Uncle Ben just to bump him off and teach the kid a lesson. (Though it does include Marisa Tomei as the hottest Aunt May to grace the screen.) Even the radioactiv­e spider bite is mentioned only in passing, after Peter’s pal (Jacob Batalon in a fine bit of comic relief ) learns his secret identity.

Instead, we get something new. Michael Keaton stars as Adrian Toomes, a blue-collar type heading up the cleanup of one of the

Avengers movies that wrecked parts of New York. His job looks like a workers’ comp/alien lawsuit waiting to happen, but before he can start, the feds take over with a new department, Damage Control. (Can’t help but see those initials, DC, as a dig at that other superhero franchise whose track record, until Wonder Woman, has been less than super.)

Undeterred, Toomes grabs a bit of alien tech and reverse-engineers himself a flying suit and some weapons to traffic. In something of a full cinematic circle, the Batman (1989) who became

Birdman (2014) is now basically Evil Birdman.

Meanwhile, Spider-Man is honing his crime-fighting powers at the community rather than intergalac­tic level: Hey, he is your friendly neighbourh­ood Spider-Man. And in a nod to the success of the similarly costumed Deadpool, SpiderMan delivers a fairly constant banter with his foes, albeit far more PG-friendly than Ryan Reynolds’ “merc with a mouth.” Though I’m not sure I’d like to live in Spidey’s section of Queens, given the lowlevel devastatio­n — busted fences, broken roof tiles, etc. — he leaves in his wake. Kids these days!

Spidey will no doubt have more to do with the rest of the Avengers team in future movies — wait, you knew there were more coming, right? — but for now he gets just an occasional visit from Iron Man, or at least from Tony Stark’s remotecont­rolled Iron Man suit. Mostly, Peter’s wellbeing is fobbed off on Stark’s assistant Happy Hogan (Jon Favreau), whose movingday-at-Stark-Tower storyline is the film’s weakest plot element. On the plus side, there are several fun Captain America cameos.

Being a latchkey superhero leaves Peter free to get up to other shenanigan­s, some involving his high school crush Liz (Laura Harrier) and the more interestin­g but platonic Michelle (Disney triple-threat Zendaya). And since his suit comes from Stark Enterprise­s, he soon learns it has voice-activated options (Jennifer Connolly provides the suit’s amusingly Siriesque voice). Much of this culminates in a thrilling rescue atop the Washington Monument, nicely paced by director (and superhero first-timer) Jon Watts.

Keaton, whose character pops up in the most unusual places (including one of two post-credit sequences), makes for a fascinatin­g villain — far from wanting to take over the world, he seems most interested in providing for his family, making him hard to hate. And Britain’s Holland manages to balance his awkward, excitable personalit­y against the film’s darker, lifeor-death moments. Here’s something I never thought I’d write: I want to see more of both of them. cknight@postmedia.com

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? Tom Holland stars as Spider-Man in Columbia Pictures’ Spider-Man: Homecoming.
SUPPLIED Tom Holland stars as Spider-Man in Columbia Pictures’ Spider-Man: Homecoming.
 ?? SUPPLIED ?? Spider-Man struggles to pull the ferry together in Spider-Man: Homecoming.
SUPPLIED Spider-Man struggles to pull the ferry together in Spider-Man: Homecoming.

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