Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Spider-Man: Homecoming

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86 Cast: Tom Holland, Michael Keaton, Robert Downey Jr., Marisa Tomei, Jon Favreau, Gwyneth Paltrow, Zendaya, Donald Glover, Jacob Batalon, Laura Harrier, Tony Revolori, Bokeem Woodbine, Tyne Daly, Abraham Attah, Hannibal Buress Director: Jon Watts Rating: PG-13, for sci-fi action violence, some language and brief suggestive comments Running time: 2 hours, 13 minutes alter ego Peter Parker is a teenager in the comics, it’s fitting that Homecoming plays more like a 1980s John Hughes

(The Breakfast Club) movie than a standard cape flick.

Then again, Spidey doesn’t wear capes, so that’s appropriat­e.

Director Jon Watts, who helmed hilarious segments for The Onion News Network, and a legion of writers correctly assume that audiences don’t need yet another origin story. There’s no point in killing off Peter Parker’s noble Uncle Ben yet again, even if one misses golden-throated actors like Cliff Robertson or Martin Sheen reminding us that “With great power comes great responsibi­lity.”

At this point, the Friendly Neighborho­od Spider-Man’s encounter with a radioactiv­e

spider is old news, and it’s frankly more interestin­g to watch him learn how to deal with his powers and obligation­s than it is to watch him discover them.

Having already collaborat­ed with Tony Stark/Iron Man (Robert Downey Jr.) in a violent dispute with Captain America in Captain America: Civil War, Peter (Tom Holland) thinks that his superhuman strength and Stark Industries-crafted suit mean he’s ready to join Thor and the Hulk in the Avengers.

That said, like many teenagers and the mercurial Stark himself, Peter lacks the judgment to go with his abilities. While he can recite all sorts of obscure facts during academic decathlons, Peter is impulsive and sometimes causes collateral damage

when he’s trying to bust crooks. His eagerness keeps Stark and his humorless security chief Happy Hogan (Jon Favreau) from giving him more to do.

Adolescenc­e also doesn’t give him a break. He fumbles with appealing to his decathlon teammate Liz (Laura Harrier), and his high-pitched voice and awkward manner attract derision from criminals and his classmates.

While Peter’s saddened that Stark and Liz seem to be ignoring him, Queens has a far more troubling phenomenon. A salvage operator named Adrian Toomes (Michael Keaton) has collected space alien wreckage from the battle in New York that traumatize­d Stark in The Avengers and has used it to make fearsome new weapons.

Toomes isn’t above using his deadly equipment for his needs and figures if Tony Stark can get rich off of the tools of war, so can he.

Having nailed the look of real news with the absurd sarcasm of The Onion, Watts effortless­ly juggles classroom comedy with larger than life daring do. Having Keaton for a villain really helps because his manic energy can be amusing and threatenin­g — depending on the context.

The British Holland looks younger than his 21 years, and can play insecure without being obnoxious. His Spider-Man has skills, but one of his handicaps is that he doesn’t come off as intimidati­ng. He has to prove to bad guys that he can subdue them.

Spider-Man co-creator

Stan Lee gave most of the creations the same insecuriti­es that plague flesh-andblood heroes and villains. In some ways Holland’s convincing awkwardnes­s makes Parker seem more heroic. For a superhero movie to work, even the most gifted of protagonis­ts still need human hearts.

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