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15th April 2014
07:06pm BST

The Amazing Spider-Man 2 builds on the foundations of the first film. Peter Parker and his girlfriend, Gwen Stacey, continue their relationship, despite the fact that Gwen's father's dying wish was that Peter would leave her alone and keep her out of danger. With Peter haunted by her father's death, he ends the relationship but continues on with his work, vigilante when needed, photographer to pay the bills.
While Peter continues to balance his life, his old friend Harry Osborn (Dane DeHaan) makes a re-appearance after the death of his father, founder of Oscorp, Norman Osborn, only to discover he has the same disease his father had, which will eventually end his life. Harry desperately tries to find Spider-Man to obtain his blood and help him survive. However, Spider-Man has much bigger problems in the form of Electro, an engineer who bascially turns into a charged-up mad man who wants to control the city and kill Spider-Man. On top of that, there's Rhino.
Like the others, Amazing Spider-Man is just a lot of fun, but unfortunately that's it, mostly just fun. There really isn't the depth to character here that you would expect to have in the second film in the series and you really don't get the depth and emotion you might get from someone like Iron Man. On the other hand, Garfield is still the perfect Spider-Man while you will just fall a little bit in love with the wonderful Emma Stone. Dane DeHaan, who we named as one to watch from Kill Your Darlings, is simply brilliant as Harry Osborn, equally petrifying and forlorn. Jamie Foxx on the other hand is woefully underused and underdeveloped while Rhino (Paul Giamatti) has absolutely no need to be there whatsoever.
The action sequences look pretty amazing, particularly the one in Times Square, but it doesn't carry the same weight or darkness as it possibly could, partially due to the jokey nature of the character. It just never really feels like Spider-Man could possibly be in that much trouble, he just never really takes it too seriously.
Realistically, the script just has too many threads which are thrown out throughout the film; Spider-Man battles not one, not two, but three villains which are just two villains too many. The film doesn't even seem to know itself where it's going, let alone what the real motivations of the nasties are; it's just too sprawling.
One for the Spider-Man fans and the kids, this is fun but nothing epic.
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