Gwen Freaking Stacy
Filed under: Action, Casting, Celebrities and Controversy, Fandom, Scripts, Newsstand, Comic/Superhero/Geek, Remakes and Sequels
Marvel man Avi Arad recently held a phone
discussion with AICN's Harry Knowles, obstentatiously to
discuss a sequel to the Hulk film...but in the process he let drop perhaps the biggest bombshell Marvel movies
have seen yet. Avi told Harry that Sam Raimi is hell bent on the idea
of working none other than GWEN STACY into the Spider-Man
movie continuum. How this is going to work out is anyone's guess...
For you casual fans not in the know, Gwen
Stacy represents a huge part of Peter Parker's early life. She was a close friend of MJ's, and had a continually
on-and-off romantic relationship with Peter which was consistantly hampered by the fact that he would stand her up to
go fight villians (sound familiar?). Gwen was enormously popular among fans, and her death sent shockwaves through the
Marvel community. It remains one of the most important and profound character deaths in the Marvelverse (perhaps
because she is one of the very few characters to stay well and truly dead). You remember that scene in the first movie,
wherein Mary Jane was dropped from the bridge by the Goblin, and Peter saved her in the nick of time? That story belongs
to Gwen. Except in the comic book, when Spidey caught Gwen by the leg with his web the force of the sudden jerky stop
snapped her neck.* It was devestating. Her death played a big part in drawing Peter and MJ into a closer, eventually
romantic, relationship.
How on earth Sam plans on working Gwen in now that her story has been hijacked by
MJ, I have no idea. I just hope it is done well, and doesn't feel ridiculously forced. A contract has apparently been
signed with Bryce Howard; you can see a large picture of here over at
AICN. Her hair, obviously, will be dyed very blond before shooting.
All I've got to say to this is...gwaaaah.
To most of the world this probably won't seem like much more than a new romantic foil added in to create a love-triangle
sort of deal- but to True Believers, Gwen represents so much more. Should we be excited that her character is
finally getting some on screen love, or angry that her story has been so irritatingly screwed over?
*There are some people who argue that it was the shock of the fall that killed Gwen, but Stan Lee himself cleared
up that issue many years ago.












Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
1-19-2006 @ 9:07AM
mayorjimmy said...
Can we please have just ONE comic book movie that doesn't have ANY romance in it?
Badmouth the Dolph Lundgren version of The Punisher, but at least that movie was killing and more killing.
Reply
1-19-2006 @ 2:17PM
Seth said...
obstentatiously - not even close to a word.
Ostensibly or ostentatiously, the former makes much more sense. Does the site need a copy-editor?
Reply
1-19-2006 @ 6:03PM
Hattori Hansolo said...
It seems like many of these directors don't do enough homework with the original comic book stories for the first movie, then when they run out of ideas for the movies they run to the comic books for news ideas. Example?
-Why decide to just throw Gwen Stacy into the new movie instead of developing the character throughout the first couple movies? I love Raimi and company to death, but they obviously assumed Mary Jane, much like the rest of pop culture, was the only love interest Spider-man has ever had.
-Beast in X3. Beast was around since day one. Why throw him in all of the sudden in the third installment?
I have enjoyed the Spider-man and X-men films, but by the filmakers not doing their homework early on, the sequels are going to continue to just throw in comic characters and stories that have no business being introduced on screen, because they will be underdeveloped, sporatic, and way too complicated.
Mark my words!
Before all this is over Gwen Stacy, Gambit, Venom, and the Sentinals will have all been screwed up by filmakers.
Reply
2-28-2006 @ 11:38AM
Edward said...
You guys are getting all bent out of shape over nothing. Comic storylines are ALWAYS being twisted around and re-organized every time they proceed into a new era or medium. Both X-Men and Spider-Man are telling different versions of the stories from their respective franchises. If it helps you sleep at night think of it as new "What if?" worlds.
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