Right off the bat, SPIDER-MAN: HOMECOMING (2017) wins accolades for not being another origin story.
We know how Peter Parker became Spider-Man. We don’t need to see it happen again. The film skips this back story and as such plays like a breath of fresh air. And that’s just for starters. SPIDER-MAN: HOMECOMING has a lot more going for it, making it yet another Marvel superhero hit.
SPIDER-MAN: HOMECOMING actually doesn’t open with Spider-Man at all, but with construction worker Adrian Toomes (Michael Keaton). Toomes and his crew are working clean-up after the massive battle between The Avengers and alien invaders, but he’s pulled off the job by secret government higher-ups, which to Toomes, means money lost, something he needs to support his family. Bitter, when Toomes realizes his crew still has some of the alien technology in their scrap heap, he decides to keep it, to help even the odds with the elites.
The story jumps eight years ahead where we meet high school sophomore Peter Parker (Tom Holland), ecstatic about his fighting alongside Iron Man and the other Avengers in events seen in CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR (2016). In fact, Parker’s mentor is Tony Stark (Robert Downey, Jr.) himself, who serves as the voice of reason and caution for the young superhero, reminding him to keep out of trouble and help out with the local little jobs; in short, to be the friendly neighborhood Spider-Man. Stark leaves his best buddy Happy Hogan (Jon Favreau) to keep tabs on Parker, which he does with a tracking device that informs him of Parker’s every move.
Parker finds himself terribly distracted at school, as he’s constantly waiting for that call from Tony Stark to join the Avengers. He’d like to date Liz (Laura Harrier) but he’s always running away as Spider-Man for one reason or other. Things grow more complicated when his best friend Ned (Jacob Batalon, in a scene-stealing performance) discovers that Peter is Spider-Man, and can hardly contain his excitement. He wants to tell everyone they know, but Peter reminds him that that is not a good idea.
Eventually, Spider-Man crosses paths with Adrian Toomes, who’s been stealing alien weaponry and selling it on the black market. Toomes has built himself a flying bird suit from the alien technology and flies through the skies as the Vulture. And when Peter can’t convince Happy or Tony Stark that the danger from Toomes is very real, he suits up as Spider-Man and takes on the villain on his own.
SPIDER-MAN: HOMECOMING is basically the Spider-Man story re-told from the perspective of The Avengers. Ever since Marvel released THE AVENGERS (2012), the superhero films which have followed have pretty much all been tie-ins with that massive Marvel hit. As someone who loved THE AVENGERS, I like all these tie-ins, as the universe that Marvel has built around these characters is a good one, and the story that continues to evolve remains compelling.
So, pretty much every move that Peter Parker makes in this movie is dominated by his obsession with wanting to join The Avengers. It’s a far cry from the story told in the Tobe Maguire film, SPIDER-MAN (2002). But SPIDER-MAN: HOMECOMING still works because in spite of the AVENGERS connection it keeps to the original spirit of the character in the comics.
As such, SPIDER-MAN: HOMECOMING is an extremely light film. The humor is on target throughout, and a bulk of this movie spends its time with Peter Parker and his high school friends, and these scenes work because both the writing and the acting are superb.
And in a strange juxtaposition, you have this light comical tale intertwined with another darker story featuring one of the better villains we’ve seen in a Marvel movie in a long time, Adrian Toomes/the Vulture, played by Michael Keaton. It’s an odd combination, but it works.
One of the reasons it works is Toomes’ heavy-handedness makes for a superior foe for young Spider-Man. You have all these high school scenes, and so you’re half expecting a high school student for a villain, but instead you have Toomes, a guy who is one of the more serious villains we’ve seen in a superhero movie in a long while.
Toomes is also the perfect antithesis to Tony Stark. In Stark, you have the rich playboy running around playing superhero, while Toomes is the working class man who worked all his life but couldn’t make good for his family, and so he takes an opportunity, albeit an illegal one, to provide tons of money for his family. It’s thinking that reminded me of Bryan Cranston’s Walter White in TV’s classic BREAKING BAD (2008-2013).
SPIDER-MAN: HOMECOMING is blessed with a solid cast. Tom Holland actually debuted as Spider-Man in CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR (2016), and it was an awesome debut. Holland continues his success here. His Peter Parker is young, very young, which is perfect because he comes off as a genuine high school student. His scenes with his friends are among the best in the movie. And his wise-cracking Spider-Man is still a hoot to watch, although truth be told, I don’t think he has any moments in this movie as out-of-this-world amazing as the fight sequence in CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR.
As Peter’s best friend Ned, Jacob Batalon really stands out. He enjoys a bunch of scene stealing moments, the high school geek whose dream comes true when he finds himself actually working with Spider-Man, someone who knows the Avengers.
Laura Harrier is fine as Peter’s eventual girlfriend Liz, but it’s Zendaya who really stands out here as one of their quirky friends, Michelle. She’s not in the movie much, but when she is, you can’t help but notice her. She enjoys many fine little moments.
Robert Downey Jr. has a decent amount of scenes here as Tony Stark, but ultimately, even though he’s always fun to watch, he doesn’t get to do a whole lot. Don’t look for Iron Man to rush in to save the day. This is Spider-Man’s movie.
Jon Favreau has plenty of screen time as Happy Hogan, as he’s left in charge of keeping an eye on Peter. Favreau is always fun in this recurring role, which goes all the way back to IRON MAN (2008), and he’s enjoyable yet again here. Favreau is a talented guy. He also directed IRON MAN (2008) as well as a lot of other movies, including THE JUNGLE BOOK (2016) and CHEF (2014), in which he also starred.
Chris Evans also shows up as Captain America, in a very humorous bit featuring promotional videos shown at the high school. Want to teach the merits of physical education? Pop in a promotional video featuring Captain America! These videos provide some funny moments.
And Gwyneth Paltrow even makes a brief appearance as Pepper Pots.
But it’s Michael Keaton who really stands out here as Adrian Toomes/the Vulture. First of all, Keaton is a phenomenal actor who keeps getting better with age. What I liked most about his performance as Toomes is that he makes the guy real. Toomes is not out to take over the world or the universe. He’s not a shadowy villain without a clear-cut agenda. He’s a real person with a real goal: after years of playing by the rules and not getting anywhere, he’s broken the rules to better support his family.
And Keaton is more than up to the task of making this guy believable. He also provides a real hardness to the character. When he says he’s going to kill Spider-Man, you believe him. In a way, it’s a performance that almost seems out-of-place here, because the rest of the film is so light and comical, while Keaton is dead serious in his scenes. But it does work and works well, because ultimately it gives young Spider-Man a true test of his mettle.
Keaton gets one of the best sequences in the movie, when Toomey confronts Spider-Man near the end, and he speaks about what they have in common, that they’re both common folks who need to change the rules in order to succeed in life. At one point, Toomey says, “I know you know what I mean.” It’s a line that resonates, both from Keaton’s delivery and from the knowledge we have of Peter’s life with his Aunt May, as they struggle to make ends meet, making Toomey’s line true.
And speaking of Aunt May, Marisa Tomei is quite effective as the younger sexier aunt of young Peter Parker. So much so that Tony Stark even quips about how hot she is.
SPIDER-MAN: HOMECOMING was directed by Jon Watts, who comes off as an old pro here. The film fits in with the rest of the Marvel movies seamlessly, in spite of the fact that this is the first superhero flick that Watts directed.
The pacing is good, the special effects decent, and the battle scenes are entertaining. The sequence at the Washington Monument is probably the best action sequence in the film, and the scenes where Peter Parker has to scale the monument and realizes it’s higher than anything he’s climbed before is so effective it’s nearly vertigo-inducing.
SPIDER-MAN: HOMECOMING was written by six screenwriters, some of whom have extensive comedic credits, which comes as no surprise, since humor is a strength here.
There’s also an upbeat music score by Michael Giacchino, who’s written a ton of scores over the years, including the superior score to last year’s stand-alone STAR WARS movie, ROGUE ONE (2016).
While SPIDER-MAN: HOMECOMING is available in 3D, I saw a 2D print and liked it just fine.
And yes, there are after credits scenes, two to be exact. The one at the very end after all the credits does provide a laugh-out-loud moment, so it’s probably worth waiting for.
All in all, I really liked SPIDER-MAN: HOMECOMING. Is it as good as Marvel’s best? No. Is it as good as this year’s earlier superhero hit from DC, WONDER WOMAN (2017)? Not quite. But I liked it better than the previous two Marvel entries, GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY, VOL. 2 (2017), and DOCTOR STRANGE (2016).
It’s light, it’s fun, and it features a gritty hard performance by Michael Keaton as one of the better Marvel movie villains yet, the Vulture, whose plans to better his family life are destroying a neighborhood, making him the perfect foe for our friendly neighborhood Spider-Man.
—END—