The Borneo Post

An eager teenage Spider-Man swings into ‘Homecoming’

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You’ve seen Spider-Man swing through New York battling the Green Goblin, but you’ve never seen him idolise Iron Man.

That is what the director of “Spider-Man: Homecoming” hopes audiences will be drawn to as the third Spider-Man reboot in a decade hit movie theatres on Friday.

Jon Watts said he wanted to make “Homecoming” a cross between a superhero movie and a high school comedy where the dorky lead is a fanboy of other superheroe­s.

“Homecoming” takes a lighter tone to the last two iterations of Spider-Man, in keeping with Marvel’s proclivity for harnessing laughs in its superhero franchise.

Unlike previous films where Spider-Man was the lone superhero, “Homecoming” has the web- slinging crime fighter battling alongside Marvel characters Iron Man and Captain America.

Usual scenes explaining Spider-Man’s origins — the death of his Uncle Ben and being bitten by a radioactiv­e spider — are notably absent.

“We’ve seen that origin story before,” Watts told Reuters. “Here’s Spider-Man, he’s a kid, let’s take him on an adventure ... it’s all part of trying to show people something new.”

Spider-Man, this time played by Tom Holland, was first introduced alongside other Marvel characters in 2016’s “Captain America: Civil War.”

A deal between Sony Corp, which holds rights to Spider-Man, and Walt Disney Co which has those for superheroe­s like Iron Man, let Spider-Man feature next to fellow Marvel characters. That allowed Watts to explore the boy hero in a way he said creators Stan Lee and Steve Ditko originally envisioned in comic strips with multiple characters.

“They wanted to give a different perspectiv­e on this world of superheroe­s, like a regular guy’s perspectiv­e, that was one of the things that made Spider-Man so special,” Watts said.

“Homecoming” takes place after the events of “Civil War,” and 15-year- old Peter Parker feels neglected by Iron Man, struggling to adjust back to the mundanenes­s of high school while disguising his superpower­s.

“We’ve seen a lot of superheroe­s dealing with responsibi­lity and burden of their powers ... but if you have a 15-year- old kid with super powers, definitely there’s going to be some funny moments,” Watts said.

Parker also faces foes, particular­ly The Vulture, played by Michael Keaton, who has built an undergroun­d arms trade with the debris of high-powered superhero weapons littered across New York City during 2012’s “Avengers.”

“Homecoming” has received warm reviews from critics and trade publicatio­n Variety said the film was projected to open with upward of US$ 85 million at the US and Canadian box office.

The film follows Andrew Garfield’s “The Amazing Spider-Man” franchise from 2012 to 2014 and movies featuring Tobey Maguire from 2002 to 2007.

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