When I started reading comic books, back in the
early 1960s, single-issue stories were the norm. Everything, with very rare
exceptions, was done in one. Mind you in those days you had 25 pages of story
to play with in book-length stories, although most issues had a 17-page main
story and an 8-page back-up.
One of Marvel’s great innovations was the
introduction of the story arc. Suddenly the narrative could run for three or
four issues, the result was a more novelistic approach to storytelling and the beginning
of an upward curve in the age of the readership. That said, this was still an immense
source of frustration for those in the UK given the randomness of distribution.
The upshot of this is an increasingly
interdependent comic book landscape and the growth of the comic book universe. Which
brings us to Spider-Man: Far from Home,
a film which doesn’t really need to exist in its own right but is vital to the
continued integrity of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU).
I should point out, as Tom Holland did in the
trailer, that if you haven’t seen Avengers
Endgame (2019) this would be a good
point to stop reading this blog.
The death of Tony Stark/Iron Man along with, to a
lesser extent, the absence of Captain America, Thor, and The Black Widow, have
caused ripples in the Marvel Universe. The main function of this latest
Spider-Man film is to allow those ripples to spread and ultimately disperse. This
is a world which has lost some of its greatest heroes and dealt with the loss
and recovery of half of its population in the so-called ‘Blip’ so there are a
lot of blanks to fill in.
Meanwhile there is another emergent Avengers-level
threat as a series of giant elemental creatures powered by air, fire, earth and
water appear all across Europe. These may be from another version of earth in a
parallel dimension – yet more complexity – and they are being pursued by
Mysterio (Jake Gyllenhaal), a hero from their world.
Inconveniently the only hero from our earth who
appears to be handy is Spider-Man but he’s a bit mopey after the death of his
mentor. Conveniently however he is on a school trip throughout Europe so the
writers can bounce him from city to city as the creatures appear.
Mysterio is there to restore some of Spider-Man’s
much-needed confidence and together they can combat the creatures in a story
which seems to take Ian Fleming’s ‘thrilling cities’ approach to narrative.
It has to be said that Jake Gyllenhaal is just
terrific; he is the ideal casting for a comic book movie. Ironically there was
a time when he might have been Spider-Man but watching this film you get the
sense he’d actually be a pretty good Superman.
He’s great and so prominent that Spidey ends up a bit like a guest star in
his own movie; he’s not a character, more of a plot device.
Spider-Man has nothing to do except swing around
on webs. There’s no wisecracking, there’s no exhilaration, there’s none of the
stuff that made him such a fun character. This applies to a lot of the cast;
Maria Hill for example is really underwritten, seen but not heard most of the
time.
Actually the writing in the movie is very weak. It’s
essentially a Young Adult romance with some super heroics thrown in. Compared
to his work on Spider-Man: Homecoming
(2017) or Ant-Man and the Wasp (2018),
Chris McKenna’s writing seems very flat here. It looks a bit like ticking boxes
rather than telling an interesting story. How convenient, for example, that
everyone in Spider-Man’s life – and therefore in this film – were among those
who were blipped. How much more interesting would it have been if Peter Parker
or MJ or any of the other principal characters had no disappeared? This and
many other things go unaddressed.
Spider-Man: Far from Home does all that you would
expect but for me it was just a little flat; good but not great. However it does
offer the promise of better days to come with a mid-credits sequence that might
be one of the most significant events in the MCU and I’m really excited for
that.
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