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Spider-Man writer David Koepp gives his thoughts on saving the Spider-Man franchise

February 2, 2015 by Luke Owen

Back in 2002, comic book movies were not as common place as they are today. 20th Century Fox had just released Bryan Singer’s X-Men two years earlier and Sony had just launched the Sam Raimi directed Spider-Man to much critical acclaim. Original writer David Koepp (Jurassic Park) would not return for its sequels Spider-Man 2 and Spider-Man 3, but he does have some ideas on how to save the franchise after the disappointing return on The Amazing Spider-Man 2 and Sony’s lack of direction on the series.

“If I were in charge of Spider-Man right now, and money was no object, I would…(Pauses) Well, now you can see why they are having trouble! (Laughs) Not so easy, is it,” he told Empire Online. “When I was doing Spider-Man the first time, I remember distinctly having thoughts about three movies, each of a different kind. The way the comic-book lines switched, it was Spider-Man, Amazing Spider-Man, Spectacular Spider-Man… there were a number of them. So rather than try to pursue the same course, or any kind of similar tone, you’d have strikingly different tones. The classic Spider-Man, that would be the top-of-the-line, studio Sam Raimi ones, then the Amazing Spider-Man ones, they’d be done for $75-80 million, and have a rougher, edgier, almost R-rated feel to them, though I don’t think they could ever bring themselves to do that. Tougher, nastier, a rougher look… shorter movies. I don’t like superhero bloat, personally.”

“And these series didn’t have to be consecutive, they could be released concurrently,” he continues. “Then I also thought there should be a Spectacular Spider-Man series, because Spider-Man leaves out a large group of its audience. Little kids are fascinated by Spider-Man by the time they are three, or younger. But when I was a kid, I loved the animated series, so I always thought there should be separate lines to cater for different ages of Spider-Man fans. And I’d certainly develop other characters in the Spider-Man universe, which is what they are trying to do, I know. Black Cat deserves her own movie series.”

Koepp also gave his thoughts on comic book movies today, “as for the superhero genre generally now, I am stunned at its viability, its quality, its longevity, and its ability to grow and deepen,” he said. “I think they’re great. I was so continually wrong about where superhero movies were going that now I am just an audience member, thrilled to see them continue to improve.”

What do you make of Koepp’s thoughts on the Spider-Man franchise?

http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL18yMRIfoszH_jfuJoo8HCG1-lGjvfH2F

Filed Under: Luke Owen, Movies, News Tagged With: David Koepp, Marvel, Spider-Man

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