Sunday, June 30, 2013

Amazing Spider-Man 13 -- Spidey Thinks He's Going Fight Club -- Man w Fish Bowl 4 a Head


In a violent month for the world, anti-Vietnam protests continue in America while martial law is declared in South Korea, Turkey and Greece argue over Cyprus and Nelson Mandela is sentenced to life in Robben Island Prison.  Through this hazy smoke of violence and despair, Jim Bunning of the Philadelphia Phillies pitches the first perfect game in the National League since 1880.  As summer approaches, Spider-Man battles the latest addition to his glorious rogue's gallery, the fish bowl helmeted master of movie magic..........

MYSTERIO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Our tale begins with what looks like Spider-Man in the middle of a bank heist.  He steals a wad of cash, climbs the walls, webs up the night watchmen and leaps off the roof before parachuting to safety.  When the news of this hits the press, the city is in shock, so are the students at Midtown High, who all start turning on Spidey left and right, with the exception of his biggest fan, Flash Thompson.

When Peter gets wind of the news and considers the evidence and timing, he actually begins to believe he is becoming a split personality ala Tyler Durden, committing crimes at night as Spider-Man while he believes he is peacefully slumbering as Peter Parker.

When another crime is committed as Spider-Man, Peter turns anxious and desperate and decides to visit a shrink in his Spider-Man garb.  So now this episode goes from Fight Club to The Sopranos.  Even though both movies are violent and probably not appropriate scholastic material, you cannot deny either's impact on pop culture.  The students want to use references to the Sopranos or Fight Club in our script, or maybe the next one.  We have decided that we aren't going to tackle intergalactic aliens or major terrorist plots in our first script.  The Arach-Knight Begins is going to be your good old fashioned origin/revenge story.

I still get this great idea of doing a Spider-Man graphic novel with
The Kingpin as the main villain and having the model for the character the late, great James Gandolfini.  Bringing in Kingpin will be a great way to also bring in Marvel hero Daredevil, who I always considered a poor man's Batman but loved the title when Frank Miller was involved.  Either way, it's hard to talk sequel when we haven't started our first movie script yet.

While he wonders if he's a sleep walking criminal, Peter Parker has to be careful about where he goes as Spider-Man since he is now a wanted man.  This puts a damper in Peter's photography career, which is bad timing since Aunt May is low on funds and they have a mortgage payment due.  Once again we open discussion up to the floor about the ethics of having superpowers and what limits you would take to use them in order to take care of your family.  With the powers to go on a one man crime spree, why doesn't Peter just rough up some thugs and pull a Robin Hood act?  The students all agree that sometimes ethics and morals are thrown out the window when the bills are due.  What made Spider-Man stand out above the rest was the fact that he always managed to find a way out when that solution would become the only option.


As Jameson basks in the glow of Spidey's fugitive turn, the Daily Bugle is visited by a costumed crusader who claims he is the man for the job of taking out Spider-Man.  He calls himself Mysterio and wears a giant fish bowl on his head, looking like something out of a bad 50's monster movie.  I go over the vintage horror genre with the students as we continue to discuss whether Mysterio has the proper credibility to be a usable Spider-Man villain in a story.

With the Internet still just an idea in the mind of a infant Al Gore, the newspaper was still the king of all media.  Mysterio has Jameson put a post in the paper challenging Spider-Man to a confrontation on top of the Brooklyn Bridge.  When they face off, Spidey is amazed at Mysterio's bag of tricks.  Underneath the fish bowl helmet and flowing cape, Mysterio has magnetized boots and can throw clouds of smoke that seem to make him look like he's teleporting.  When Spider-Man tries to web him up, Mysterio shoots mist from his gloves that vaporizes webs




Locked in another large cloud of smoke, Mysterio is virtually invisible and gives Spider-Man a good enough beatdown where the wall crawler is forced to regroup and retreat by jumping off the bridge.  Webbing himself an air tight helmet, Spider-Man swims underwater to safety while police helicopters search for the fugitive at large.

So while Mysterio receives a small parade for defeating the criminal Spider-Man, Flash still defends his hero while Jameson sets up a deal for exclusive rights to Mysterio's secret identity.  When Peter is introduced to Mysterio by Jameson as his photogrpaher, Parker takes the opportunity to slip one of his custom spider tracer devices into his cloak.  



Following old Fish bowl, Spidey tracks Mysterio to a movie studio where they engage in combat once again.  Besting him for a second time, Mysterio then breaks the rules of the cliched villains handbook when he reveals everything to Spider-Man, figuring he's going to kill him in about 5 minutes anyway.  We learn that Mysterio was a former movie stunt who became a master of setting up special effects.  A mad genius in his own right, Mysterio was fascinated by Spider-Man and obsessively decided to study him for months to learn everything about his powers and abilities in an attempt to mimic him, as he had done for so many others on the silver screen.  Suddenly Mysterio's character becomes more interesting, even somewhat usable for a future story.  



One of the students brings up the movie Seven, a psychological thriller starring Brad Pitt and Morgan Freeman as detectives trying to take down a major league serial killer with a revolting literary theme.  The way the killer studies the detectives and puts together his intricate plan patiently and methodically is reminiscent of how Mysterio goes about becoming Spider-Man, using everything from suction gloves and boots to using nylon chord as fake webbing, acid spitting gloves, tinted helmets and smoke ejectors from under his cloak, doing just about everything Spider-Man does naturally, only artificially.  Mysterio put a lot of time into his plan but then became obsessed with getting above just imitating Spidey and creating a super hero persona of his own, being able to take credit for stopping the crime wave he started.



More angered then flattered over Mysterio's obsession, Spider-Man decides not to hold back any more and slugs the stunt man so hard he sends him through the wall and right into the middle of a live movie set.  While the directors and crew scatter and scramble, they miss out on filming some incredible live action as Spider-Man and Mysterio brawl all over the studio set until Spider-Man gets the upper hand and knocks Mysterio unconscious.  He delivers his body to the cops for a full confession, and delivers the pics and story to the Bugle to clear his name while playing one last jolly prank on Jameson for good measure.  Just like that the mortgage is paid and our hero gets his occasional happy ending.



So we see in today's lesson how looks can be deceiving as Mysterio started out as a joke villain and turned into a character that myself and the students are looking forward to seeing once again.  All in all, another fine day of Comics in the Classroom.










Vocab Word Web

1- Psychiatrist
2- Hastily
3- Subconscious
4- Controversial
5- Cautiously
6- Dissolving
7- Vaporizing
8- Invertebrate
9- Billowy
10- Conceited
11- Thwarted
12- Overwhelmed 
13- Plunge
14- Concealing
15- Vindicated

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