We all know there are Moans of a Blossomed Sister in lawtoo many Spider-Men. Since the dawn of time, or since 2002, or since 2011, or 2015 -- Presidents have come and gone, MySpace fell, iPods were literally invented, but Spider-Man and the Spider-Men remain our constants.
In honor of Tom Holland's first solo outing as Spidey, and in honor of the many Spideys that came before, here's a full list of Spider-Man movies to watch, based on how you're feeling. A Spidery for every emotion!
SEE ALSO: The Evolution of Spider-ManTASM and its sequel are easily the most forgettable Spider-Manmovies -- not bad, just forgettable. The one thing that sticks, though, far and away outstrips the competition: Its main romance. Emma Stone and Andrew Garfield started dating on production of this movie, and if their on-screen chemistry is any indication, it was destiny. Watch them fumble and flirt and finally make out.
Back when innocent moviegoers had no expectation of superhero movies (except for the shining beacon of X-Men), Spider-Manburst through and was better than it had any right to be. This is post-9/11 America, rife with trust issues and wishing desperately for a hero. It introduced many to Tobey Maguire, who we promptly abandoned in 2007, and the cast is rounded out by bit players who ended up becoming household names -- including J.K. Simmons, James Franco, Elizabeth Banks, and Octavia Spencer.
Tom Holland's sleek young webslinger makes his debut in a fight between the grownups, joining Team Iron Man for an epic face-off about morals or whatever. Holland charms from his first moment on screen, playing off Robert Downey Jr. and inspiring us with more excitement and hope for a Spider-Man reboot than we though we could still summon.
Spider-Man 2has everything; a love triangle, a disillusioned hero, a benevolent scientist turned villain (neither the first nor last in the franchise). There's a devastating emotional reveal when Peter tells Aunt May about his role in Uncle Ben's death, and the city gives up on its friendly neighborhood hero before coming back to him.
The second TASMsurvives just barelydue to the living, breathing romance at its center. If you remember one thing, it's probably that devastating ending death (if you forgot one thing, it might be that a psychedelic Jamie Foxx was the villain), so go ahead and let this one destroy you.
There's a lot to love in Homecoming, but Michael Keaton's Vulture is the most fully-fleshed out villain since we met Thor's resentful little brother. He doesn't follow the same formula as his fellow Spider-Man baddies, and Keaton has just the kind of twisted charisma to sell this character multiple times over.
Just trust us.
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