Amazing Spider Man 2 3d Blu Ray Review

The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (2014) movie poster The Amazing Spider-Man 2 Theatrical Release: May 2, 2014 / Running Time: 142 Minutes / Rating: PG-13 Manager: Marc Webb / Writers: Alex Kurtzman, Roberto Orci, Jeff Pinkner (screen story & screenplay); James Vanderbilt (screen story); Stan Lee, Steve Ditko (Curiosity comic book) Cast: Andrew Garfield (Spider-Human being/Peter Parker), Emma Rock (Gwen Stacy), Jamie Foxx (Electro/Max Dillon), Dane DeHaan (Greenish Goblin/Harry Osborn), Colm Feore (Donald Menken), Felicity Jones (Felicia), Paul Giamatti (Rhinoceros/Aleksei Systevich), Sally Field (Aunt May), Embeth Davidtz (Mary Parker), Campbell Scott (Richard Parker), Marton Csokas (Dr. Ashley Kafka), Louis Cancelmi (Man in Black Suit), Max Charles (Young Peter Parker), B.J. Novak (Alistair Smythe), Sarah Gadon (Kari), Michael Massee (Gustav Fiers - The Gentleman), Jorge Vega (Jorge), Chris Cooper (Norman Osborn - uncredited), Denis Leary (Helm George Stacy - uncredited)

When Spider-Man 4 wasn't coming together quickly enough for their liking, Sony decided to retroactively end that Sam Raimi-directed Tobey Maguire franchise at 3 films and to motility on to a reboot rather than another sequel. That conclusion seemed rash and premature. What could a Spider-Man origin moving-picture show do in 2012 that information technology couldn't in 2002? As The Amazing Spider-Homo demonstrated, not a whole lot.

Those disappointed by Spider-Man three may take held hope that an all-new cast and a mostly new creative team would put a singled-out and original spin on the web-slinging superhero. Those hopes, however, didn't prove terribly well-founded. Sure, Amazing gave us a new master love interest in Gwen Stacy and a new villain in The Cadger, but it could just depart from the original concept of Stan Lee and Steve Ditko's 1962 comic book then much. You lot still had to have a teenage boy lose his parents and his guardian uncle, get bitten by a radioactive spider, and take it upon himself to defend New York Metropolis against evil. Information technology may take been in 3D and with actors slightly younger than their Raimi series counterparts, merely the experience wasn't dramatically different. What on its own merits was fine suffered from a example of "too similar, too soon" and just kids coming of PG-thirteen viewing age right in the summer of 2012 would exist able to appreciate Amazing without comparing information technology to 2002's Spider-Man.

Two years later, hither is the inevitable sequel. Astonishing'due south reviews were only marginally meliorate than those of Spider-Man 3 and its domestic and worldwide grosses trailed all three of Raimi'southward films by a meaning margin. Thus, The Astonishing Spider-Man 2 is not built-in out of success or need, simply obligation. All the studios are making big tentpoles these days. With Raimi'south trilogy occupying the top three slots in Sony's all-time box role records, the company had no better property on which to pin their hopes in the summertime before The Avengers' return.

Amazing Spider-Man two brings back director Marc Webb, who landed the final film on the basis of his highly-seasoned feature debut (2009's (500) Days of Summer), only assembles a mostly new screenwriting team. From the previous installment, only James Vanderbilt returns to take a screen story credit, which he shares with the three attributed with the screenplay: Star Trek and Transformers duo Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci, plus their new partner and swain "Alias" alumnus Jeff Pinkner.

Peter Parker (Andrew Garfield) just barely makes it to his high school graduation in time to hear his girlfriend, Gwen Stacy (Emma Stone), provide the valediction.

Following an airborne flashback apparently designed to rival the opening sequence of The Dark Knight Rises, this sequel seems to pick up where its predecessor left off, though you may be very hard-pressed to remember where that was less than two years afterwards. Spider-Man (Andrew Garfield) is widely known and loved past the people of New York Urban center. His truthful identity, Peter Parker, is known simply by his girlfriend, the aforementioned Gwen Stacy (Emma Stone). Gwen is the valedictorian of the graduating form at Middle Science High School, though costumed heroics nearly crusade Peter to miss her speech and accepting his own diploma.

The main antagonist emerges in Max Dillon (Jamie Foxx), a nerdy, lonely, undervalued electric engineer who becomes an obsessive Spider-Man fan afterwards a cursory, friendly encounter. An incident at his workplace, Oscorp, involving electric eels in water tanks turns Max blue and leaves him with electricity coursing through his veins. Renaming himself Electro, this once mild-mannered, at present rumbly-voiced outcast can suddenly manipulate electricity to powerful effect, creating a scene in Times Square that requires Spider-Man's attention and costs the hero his one time biggest fan.

With his webs, Spider-Man ties up Russian mobster Aleksei Systevich (Paul Giamatti), but it's not the last he'll see of him.

Meanwhile, Peter reconnects with his sometime friend, Harry Osborn (Dane DeHaan), who returns home from boarding school for a painfully expositional chat with his dying father, Norman (Chris Cooper). If you're fearing you've forgotten this incarnation's interpretations of these characters, fear not. They are beingness introduced here less than gracefully. Wrestling with his own mortal affliction, Harry wants Spider-Homo's blood, assertive it will cure him. This puts Peter in an awkward place, wanting to help his friend but knowing such a transfusion is too dangerous and unpredictable to perform.

Haunted by visions of Gwen's late police chief father (Denis Leary), Peter is conflicted about making adept on his promise to stay away from her. She breaks up with him, just their attempt at a friendship is clearly more than that. Non surprising given (500) Days, Webb is comfortable in depicting the ups and downs of Peter and Gwen's romance, which is proficient since he devotes a lot of time to information technology in this, the longest Spider-Man film to appointment. Peter also researches his parents' by, looking inside his father's work bag that has long been housed in his closet.

Electro (Jamie Foxx) makes quite the scene at Times Square.

Ignoring the complaints that Spider-Man 3 juggled as well many villains, Astonishing 2 develops two others in addition to Electro, i of them an abrupt transformation that will only surprise those unversed in the Raimi films and one of them (involving a baldheaded, tattooed Russian madman played by Paul Giamatti) basically there to tease the side by side episode, one which may non proceed to plan following this i's commercial disappointments. That tease finale follows an unexpectedly deplorable development, a gutsy move few superhero films would attempt, and one that will probably split up viewers and anger some of them.

Amazing ii is an comeback over the first film, but notwithstanding non as good equally whatsoever of Raimi's iii films. It largely avoids retread, hit just some of the aforementioned beats of earlier (e.g. Spider-Human getting worn out and receiving some criticism). There are fewer obligatory fight scenes than last time around, with concrete disharmonize beingness delayed until the last half-hour. While I can't say those action scenes are riveting, they're non an invitation to check out as they were on the outset Astonishing.

Garfield, who turns 31 this week, grows less believable as a teenager by the day. His label seems overthought still likewise weak and inconsistent. Our sympathy for Spider-Man is largely won past what we bring to this film, from comics to cartoons to Maguire. The supporting cast is a tad more commendable, with Foxx especially standing out for doing something we haven't quite seen before with his role. The pic boasts some appealing visuals (save for the climactic Rhino, who hopefully is less of an eyesore in future outings) and a nice 1980s-sounding score born out of a collaboration between Hans Zimmer and popular musicians similar Pharrell Williams.

Even Spider-Man gets sick on the job. Young Harry Osborn (Dane DeHaan) assumes the helm of Oscorp following his father's death.

Although he was the world's biggest box office depict in 2002 and 2007, Spider-Man is no longer an enormous attraction, at to the lowest degree in the country he calls habitation. The picture'south domestic tally, essentially finished at $203 million, is a steep drop from the previous installment and the three that came before it. That gross puts Spider-Man behind Maleficent, the X-Men, and the previously unknown Guardians of the Galaxy amidst summer releases. It also casts doubt over profitability, knowing that the film cost Sony $200 1000 to produce and some other estimated $185 1000 to market place.

A $10 million increase in international returns doesn't injure, of form, but it only pushes the series further to strange attraction status, with regions exterior of North America now accounting for over 71% of the global earnings, a vast shift from the original 2002 film'due south roughly 50-50 split. Since Sony distributes the film in almost every part of the world, those foreign ticket sales should yet assistance to keep Spidey swinging on the large screen for the foreseeable future.

As of at present, Sony has plans to release spin-off movie Sinister 6 (which may or may not characteristic Spider-Human being) from Cabin in the Wood author-director Drew Goddard in November 2016, while The Astonishing Spider-Man 3 has its sights set on 2018, though it hasn't penciled in a date as dozens of vaguely-announced future Marvel and DC projects have. If you're among the many who took a laissez passer on seeing Amazing two in theaters, yous tin can catch it on disc today in a single-disc DVD, a two-disc Blu-ray philharmonic pack, and the three-disc Blu-ray 3D + Blu-ray + DVD + Digital Hd philharmonic reviewed hither.

The Amazing Spider-Man 2 Blu-ray 3D + Blu-ray + DVD + Digital HD combo pack cover art -- click to buy from Amazon.com Blu-ray 3D, Blu-ray & DVD Details

one.85:1 Widescreen (DVD Anamorphic)

Blu-rays: 5.1 DTS-HD MA (English, French), Dolby Digital five.1 (Spanish, English DVS)
DVD: Dolby Digital v.1 (English, French, Spanish), Dolby Surroundings 2.0 (English language DVS)
Subtitles: English, English for Hearing Dumb, French, Castilian
Non Airtight Captioned; Well-nigh Extras Subtitled in English and Spanish
Release Engagement: August nineteen, 2014 / Suggested Retail Price: $45.99
Three single-sided, dual-layered discs (2 BD-50s & 1 DVD-9)
Thick Articulate Keepcase in Lenticular Cardboard Slipcover
Also available as Blu-ray Combo Pack ($twoscore.99 SRP), standalone DVD ($30.99 SRP), Amazon.com-exclusive Blu-ray 3D Combo Collector'south Edition with Electro Caput ($149.99 SRP), and on Amazon Instant Video

VIDEO and Audio

In what should surprise no i, given Sony's typically kickoff-rate Blu-ray output and Spider-Man being the company's flagship franchise, Astonishing two showcases outstanding flick and sound in high definition. The 2.40:ane picture is basically flawless, while the 5.i DTS-HD master audio consistently engages with potent effects and fitting directionality.

Peter Parker's father (Campbell Scott) is resurrected with a beard in this deleted graveyard scene that almost ended the film. Jamie Foxx gets his Electro make-up touched up in "Making 'The Amazing Spider-Man 2.'"

BONUS FEATURES, MENUS, PACKAGING and Blueprint

The bulk of extras are exclusive to the standard Blu-ray Disc. First upward is a filmmakers' audio commentary recorded past writers Alex Kurtzman and Jeff Pinkner and producers Matt Tolmach and producer Avi Arad. Kurtzman, Pinkner, and Tolmach lead the track with filmmaking talk, while Arad speaks to the concern side of things. While Arad gets our attention with his account of meeting Stan Lee, he seems to bow out in the middle without saying cheerio, leaving the others to fill the air to nearly the finish of the long closing credits. They give serious thought to many topics, similar upholding or departing from the comic book, the conclusion to impale off a major graphic symbol, wrestling with whether or not to end with the resurrectory first deleted scene, test screening comments, avoiding paparazzi leaks, converting to 3D, and the actors (whose looks and chemistry they regularly praise). It is a substantial rail that fans of the motion-picture show or of comic books in general ought to bask hearing.

On the video side, where all is encoded in HD, we begin with thirteen deleted and extended scenes (23:01). More remarkable than well-nigh cut bits, they include a bizarre, snowy graveyard visit from Peter's father (Campbell Scott), a graduation day appearance past Flash Thompson (Chris Zylka), a peek at Max'due south home life (where he waits on a sickly mother who forgets his altogether), Electro springing dorsum to life before he can be cremated, a Harry-Peter meeting at Oscorp (with an appearance by the underused Felicity Jones), more of Gwen'south awarding to Oxford and deviation, an extended version of Harry's transformation, and some amusingly unfinished visual effects. These deletions tin can also be viewed with audio commentary by manager Marc Webb, oddly a no-show on the feature commentary, who explains why they were shot even so cut. Not found here: scenes shot but unused of Divergent'south Shailene Woodley playing Mary Jane Watson.

In a trick indebted to Buster Keaton, three Spider-Mans are used to film this one stunt involving a moving truck. Director Marc Webb discusses the film's music and deleted scenes, but is strangely a no-show on the feature audio commentary.

"The Wages of Heroism: Making The Astonishing Spider-Human ii" tin can be viewed as one feature-length making-of documentary (1:43:42) or as the post-obit six featurettes: "Lessons Learned: Development and Direction" (18:59), "Heart of the City: Shooting in New York" (12:34), "Triple Threat: Attack of the Villains" (20:56), "A More Unsafe World: Transforming Goblin and Electro" (10:10), "Bolt from the Blue: Visual Effects" (17:42), and "Spidey Gets His Groove Back: Music and Editing" (24:09). Those titles give yous a pretty articulate thought of how this takes a topical wait at the picture show's production, covering virtually all the bases you can recollect of with cast and coiffure talking heads, concept art, and behind-the-scenes footage. Every bit in the commentary, they address trying to right things from the starting time movie that fans didn't beloved. They also treat us to copious views of stunts, make-upwardly, post-production effects, and New York location filming.

"The Music of The Astonishing Spider-Homo 2" (8:09) picks the director's mind on the film's themes, which blends Hans Zimmer score with the dubstep electronic sounds of a collective called The Magnificent Six. Webb's remarks are complemented by behind-the-scenes footage of collaboration and demonstrative moving-picture show clips.

Alicia Keys performs the end credits song "It's On Again" in this music video. Spider-Man kicks it up a notch on The Amazing Spider-Man 2's DVD main menu.

Finally, at that place is a music video for Alicia Keys' cease credits song "It's On Again" (3:49), which sees the vocalizer performing in city settings in betwixt clips from the motion-picture show post-obit some Kendrick Lamar rap.

Though Sony doesn't care for Amazing Spider-Man 2 to the 2-disc DVD it would have undoubtedly gotten in a world without Blu-ray,

http://www.entertainmentearth.com/cjdoorway.asp?url=hitlist.asp?theme=Spider-Man

that format doesn't completely strike out in the bonus features section. The DVD included here, the same 1 sold on its own separately, includes the commentary, the Alicia Keys music video, and four deleted/alternate scenes (viii:19), leaving off most of the nigh noteworthy deletions.

Electro'south electricity underlines the highlighted list on a Blu-ray carte atop screen-filling clips. The Blu-rays support bookmarks and also allow y'all to resume playback.

Strangely, the 2D Blu-ray contains no trailers whatever for this or other Sony backdrop. The DVD opens with a superhero-themed promo for Worldwide Orphans and trailers for the upcoming Annie and When the Game Stands Alpine. Its Previews card holds the trailers plus ones for Recollect Like a Man Too, Moms' Night Out, and Appleseed: Alpha. The Blu-ray 3D includes a trailer for the original flick.

The three discs are divided between ii hubs in ane of Sony'south thick articulate keepcases, which is topped by a slipcover with embossed designs and extensive holography. The 3 uniquely-labeled total-color discs are joined by a booklet of coupons (including a code for a free-plus-shipping eight" x 8" photo book from Shutterfly) and the insert holding your code for the included Digital HD UltraViolet stream or download.

Spider-Man battles an electrifying foe in "The Amazing Spider-Man 2."

CLOSING THOUGHTS

The Amazing Spider-Homo 2 does not put an end to comparisons to the Sam Raimi trilogy nor does it quiet questions over the wisdom of Sony's hasty reboot. Still, it'due south slightly better than its predecessor and if but average every bit far as superhero movies get, this even so manages to provide an entertaining time with bold characters, impressive visuals, and fun escapism.

Sony'southward Blu-ray 3D combo pack delivers a dynamite feature presentation plus a pretty terrific five hours of bonus features. While the moving picture is one you might be on the argue about owning, this stellar set may be plenty to get more than completists to hop that fence.

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Source: https://www.dvdizzy.com/amazingspiderman2.html

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