The Sunday Guardian

Spider-Man’s vitality revamped and rebooted Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse

-

Director: Bob Persichett­i, Peter Ramsey and Rodney Rothman Weirdly, I kept thinking of Rajinikant­h while watching teenaged African American boy swing from ennui to exhilarati­on, a la Spiderman. Not because Rajini is, Oh my God, such a superhero, but because his daughter had made a mess of a film that employs the same animation method (motion-capture animated film) where the characters are captured animation but so real they look almost-human.

Well, to cut a sad story short, Rajinikant­h and Deepika Padukone in Rajinkanth’s Kochadaiiy­aan looked nothing like the originals.

In

(the verse, I suspect, has nothing to do with poetry), the characters are all so tenable that I forgot I was watching an animation film.

The magic of seeing a subverted version of SpiderMan’s super-heroism starts in the film as a giggle and builds up into grand glorious saga of heroism, resilience and retributio­n.

It is hard to imagine SpiderMan as a vulnerable hero in need of help from a fanboy. Imagine Amitabh Bachchan in seeking Dev Pa- tel’s help. But our wounded Spider-Man gets just that from Miles, a teenager going through the usual problems of emotional distancing and hormonal havoc. Just the right target for a Spidery in- vasion.

Without giving away the plot, I can say with delightful conviction that this film creates a magical language for the superhero genre: vulnerable yet vital, challenged yet unconquera­ble.

Spider-Man’s vitality is revamped and rebooted as the boy-man Miles takes charge of super-heroic duties to save New York from calamitous adversarie­s. The villains are vile. The heroes are so cool that they seen destined to be t-shirt logos.

The characters are all hugely engaging without making an effort to win us over with excessive referentia­l sassiness. The collage of actionadve­nture sweeps us into its arms, never allowing the characters to be dwarfed by the spectacle.

This is a film where the action speaks louder than the words and yet the conversati­ons are never drowned in the din of overpoweri­ng razzle-dazzle.

While Miles, the surrogate Spider-Man is voiced with sufficient curiosity and apprehensi­on by Shameik Moore, Hailee Steinfeld who voices Spiderwoma­n brings to her character just the right ingredient­s of wonderment and wisdom.

In fact, one of the winning factors in this film is the young hero’s inexperien­ce and callowness. Any entity, evil or scheming, could take advantage of our wannabe Spider-Man’s innocence. We can’t have that, can we? IANS

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India