The World According to Spider-Man
Book
It's not easy being a Super Hero when you've got a steady job to hold down and girlfriend problems...
The Lost Island of Tamarind
Book
Three children. Alone on the ocean waves, after a fierce storm throws their parents from the Pamela...
Why Life Matters: Fifty Ecosystems of the Heart and Mind
Michael Charles Tobias, Jane Gray Morrison and Bill Gladstone
Book
Dr. Michael Charles Tobias and Jane Gray Morrison are world-renowned ecological philosophers and...
Chesapeake Crimes: Invitation to Murder
Book
The seventh volume in the Chesapeake Crimes series presents an impressive set of tales by new and...
David McK (3207 KP) rated Spider-Man (2002) in Movies
Oct 3, 2021
So that's back before the Marvel Cinematic Universe was a thing (Iron Man was '08).
It's also not long after the twin Towers disaster, which - I believe - had to be edited out of this film.
This was also the first big-screen take on Spider-Man, with a mainly 20 something cast all playing characters in their late teens, headlined by Tobey Maguire as Peter Parker/Spider-Man and by Kirsten Dunst's redhead Mary-Jane Watson.
The early portions of this movie basically retells Spider-Mans origins story (although, here, Parker is bitten by a Genetically modified Spider instead of a Radioactive one and does not need web-shooters: they come out of his actual wrists), complete with the death of Uncle Ben who gets to utter the immortal lines to Parker that 'with great power comes great responsibility'.
Yes, Stan Lee makes a 'blink and you'll miss it' cameo.
Yes, the soundtrack owes a fair deal to that of 1989s 'Batman'
Yes, the Green Goblin costume does look a bit like a Power Rangers reject.
Yes, the film still holds up nearly 20 year later: there's a reason that 'upside-down' kiss is now iconic!
(Oh, and TK Simmons J Jonah Jameson? *Chef's Kiss*.)
Weed Firm: RePlanted
Games and Stickers
App
Weed Firm: RePlanted. The Vicious and Lawless Career of Mr. Ted Growing The updated version of the...
Favourite Poems: Of the National Trust
Jane McMorland Hunter and Jane Robbins
Book
An anthology of classic poems that are perfect for bedside reading, accompanied by charming...
Lindsay (1693 KP) rated The Green Dress (True Colors #6) in Books
May 27, 2020
Harriet seems to bring in a Dr. Weaton. She moved into the Robinson family household but things seem to happen more once Lizzie passes away. But we do not know who it is. As the story goes on and more death occurs. The suspicions rise. Who is killing the Robinson family members and why?
The author does a wonderful job of having you trying to figure out the culprit. You get a history of some of the members. What a way to show some true colors in some folks. This story has you wanting to turn the pages and rooting for the heroes to save the day. You are pulled in emotionally as well. I was guessing Dr. Beers or even Mrs. Robinson. Can Michael and Harriet save the Robinson family members or will it all go bad?
Spider-Man
TV Show Watch
One minute he's Peter Parker the college student, and the next he's Spiderman. The series focuses...
Spider-Man Spider-Man The Animated Series
Bookapotamus (289 KP) rated The History of Jane Doe in Books
May 29, 2018
Ray is a high-schooler history-buff in love with Jane. She enters his life and him and his best friend Simon are forever changed. But she hides some deep dark secrets that torment her and Ray has a hard time seeing into her head, as is usually the case when loving someone who is depressed, and he struggles to find his way through her dark past so that they can have a future. This is a history of her life, written by Ray, flipping between the past and present of one devastating day when everything changes.
Michael Belanger writes that he's experienced some painful episodes in his life, and it's evident in how eloquently he decribes feelings of sadness and darkness. I can imagine this book will make quite a few people very sad, as most everyone knows someone who suffers from depression, or anxiety, or other forms of mental illness. But I also think it will probably help just as many. I applaud him for his candor and insights into a rarely talked-about issue.
If you love 13 Reasons Why, or anything by John Green, you will love this story. The witty banter between Ray and Jane, Simon and Mary is refreshing and fun, and it's an interesting look into mental illness, how things in life can trigger it, and change a person, and and exploration of how it affects all those around you, and how even though you may think you are ending your suffering, you are ultimately just passing it on to those who loved you.
What I took away most from this is that even if you feel like you are drowning in darkness and can't see past the shadows, you never know what a light you'll be to someone else.