Source: Sony Pictures, Sony Pictures Japan Official Site: theamazingspiderman.com
SPOILER WARNING: This article contains plot details and images from an upcoming movie.
INTRODUCTION
One of the world’s most beloved characters is back on the big screen as a new chapter in the Spider-Man legacy is revealed in The Amazing Spider-Man. Focusing on an untold story that tells a different side of the Peter Parker story, the new film stars Andrew Garfield, Emma Stone, Rhys Ifans, Denis Leary, Campbell Scott, Irrfan Khan, with Martin Sheen and Sally Field. The film is directed by Marc Webb. Screenplay by James Vanderbilt and Alvin Sargent and Steve Kloves. Story by James Vanderbilt, based on the Marvel Comic Book by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko. Laura Ziskin, Avi Arad, and Matt Tolmach are producing the film in association with Marvel Entertainment for Columbia Pictures, which will open in theaters everywhere in 3D on July 3, 2012. The Amazing Spider-Man is the story of Peter Parker (Garfield), an outcast high schooler who was abandoned by his parents as a boy, leaving him to be raised by his Uncle Ben (Sheen) and Aunt May (Field). Like most teenagers, Peter is trying to figure out who he is and how he got to be the person he is today. Peter is also finding his way with his first high school crush, Gwen Stacy (Stone), and together, they struggle with love, commitment, and secrets. As Peter discovers a mysterious briefcase that belonged to his father, he begins a quest to understand his parents’ disappearance – leading him directly to OsCorp and the lab of Dr. Curt Connors (Ifans), his father’s former partner. As Spider-Man is set on a collision course with Connors’ alter-ego, The Lizard, Peter will make life-altering choices to use his powers and shape his destiny to become a hero. Columbia Pictures presents a Marvel Entertainment / Laura Ziskin / Avi Arad / Matt Tolmach production, The Amazing Spider-Man™. Starring Andrew Garfield, Emma Stone, Rhys Ifans, Denis Leary, Campbell Scott, Irrfan Khan, with Martin Sheen and Sally Field. Directed by Marc Webb. Produced by Laura Ziskin, Avi Arad, and Matt Tolmach. Screenplay by James Vanderbilt and Alvin Sargent and Steve Kloves. Story by James Vanderbilt. Based on the Marvel Comic Book by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko. Executive producers are Stan Lee, Kevin Feige, and Michael Grillo. Director of Photography is John Schwartzman, ASC. Production Designer is J. Michael Riva. Editors are Alan Edward Bell, A. C. E. and Pietro Scalia, A. C. E. Special Visual Effects by Sony Pictures Imageworks Inc. Visual Effects Supervisor is Jerome Chen. Costume Designer is Kym Barrett. Music by James Horner. The Amazing Spider-Man has been rated PG-13 by the Motion Picture Association of America for Sequences of Action and Violence.
ABOUT THE FILM
Spider-Man returns to the big screen for the untold story of Peter Parker in The Amazing Spider-Man. In beginning a new chapter in the Spider-Man saga, it was important to the filmmakers to show a side of Peter Parker that moviegoers haven’t seen before. “There are a lot of things in the Spider-Man canon that haven’t been explored cinematically,” says Marc Webb, who directs the new film. “The loss of Peter’s parents launches Peter on his journey. I was curious about the emotional consequence of that tragic event – ultimately, this is a story about a kid who goes out looking for a father and finds himself. Then, of course, we have the Gwen Stacy saga – whether you’re familiar with the comics or not, it’s an extraordinary story. And, of course, there’s the Lizard, one of my favorite villains in comics. All of that gave us a lot to work with.” Avi Arad, formerly the head of Marvel Studios and now a producer who has shepherded the Spider-Man films from the very beginning, notes, “Spider-Man has filled thousands of pages of comic books with hundreds of stories since he debuted fifty years ago. That’s a deep vein of resources to mine as we look to continue the story of Peter Parker on the screen.” Matt Tolmach, a producer of the film who previously oversaw the Spider-Man franchise when he served as president of the studio, says, “Spider-Man is an iconic character because we all grew up relating to him, we all have a personal relationship with him. Peter Parker is what sets Spider-Man apart. He’s relatable, an everyman. He’s a kid who has trouble with girls, he’s not popular, he’s not rich and powerful... he’s just an ordinary boy. He’s someone you can identify with – you can see some of yourself in Peter. And because of this, the story of Peter Parker, of Spider-Man, touches people emotionally in ways that few other characters can, and we, as filmmakers, but also as fans, feel a huge responsibility to do right by the character.” Taking the helm of The Amazing Spider-Man is Marc Webb, whose previous film, (500) Days of Summer, deftly and unblinkingly portrayed the ups and downs of a relationship. “From the very first day we talked to Marc, it was clear that he brought a unique vision for Spider-Man and the universe,” says Tolmach. "He’s been our guide throughout this process. He’s someone who’s shown an affinity for character and emotion both of which are the heart of any great Spider-Man story.”
At the center of The Amazing Spider-Man is, of course, the story of a boy, Peter Parker. “Since we were reestablishing Peter Parker, we had to build the audience’s relationship with him from the ground up,” notes Webb. “In order to do that legitimately, we begin the story with Peter Parker as a seven-year-old boy. We see him before his parents left, before they handed him off to Aunt May and Uncle Ben. This allowed the audience to experience the significant emotional cues in his life.” This is a Peter Parker who has been shaped by who he is and what he has experienced. “In this movie, we wanted to explore what happened to Peter before he went to live with his Uncle Ben and Aunt May,” says Avi Arad. “He is an orphan. The fact that he is an orphan is one of the most important influences on his young life, and the Spider-Man movies haven’t yet delved into that. All orphan stories are ultimately about the search for parents, and I think this film explores that in an interesting way. His parents vanished in a mysterious way that made his quest for answers more complicated.” “This Peter Parker is a little different: he’s still an outsider, but he’s an outsider by choice,” says Webb. “He has a chip on his shoulder – he’s the kid who rejects people before they can reject him. The humor, the sarcasm, the rebellious streak emanates from that little kid who got left behind so long ago.” “For this film, we talked a lot about Peter Parker, a boy who lost his parents at a very young age – and lost them in a way that’s still a mystery to him,” adds Tolmach. ”It leaves him with a lot of formative questions – Where am I from? Who am I? Why did my parents leave? Why did this happen? Who am I going to become? These are all the primal questions that face our hero. This angle had not been heavily explored, yet it’s so critical to who Peter Parker is – this is the essence of a young man’s journey. So we were incredibly excited to go down this road with the story and these characters.” “The things that are unresolved, the things we have to live with, send us down a road – and that road can make us better people or not,” says Webb. To put it another way, even though Peter’s experiences have left an imprint on the young man he’s become, he is now a character with agency. Before her untimely passing in 2011, Laura Ziskin, who had played an integral role in shaping the Spider-Man films as a producer, said that many of Peter’s troubles – including getting bitten by that fateful spider – are problems of his own making, but his strength of character and fortitude give him the power to write his own destiny. “Peter is in a place he shouldn’t be when the spider bites him,” she noted. “But once he has the powers, it begins a learning process for him. He is active, not reactive – he is responsible for everything that happens.”
“A key part of our orchestration of the story is that everything in Peter’s journey happens because of his yearning to find out about his father,” says Webb, concurring. “The sequence of events which leads him to OsCorp and to Dr. Connors results in his being bitten. I didn’t want the spider bite to be an arbitrary occurrence, but a representation and result of his desire to fill a void.” At the same time, Peter Parker is uniquely suited for the responsibilities that his powers bring. “Peter Parker is a hero, not a superhero,” says Andrew Garfield, who takes on the iconic role. “He’s already good before the spider bites him. After that, he gets the power to act on what he already knows is right.” Garfield says he feels a special responsibility being the man inside the suit. “When I was younger, I sometimes felt trapped in my own skin,” he says, “but we all have that. That’s why this character is the most popular of all the superheroes: he is universal and uniting. The reason Spider-Man means so much to me is the same reason he means so much to everyone: he’s a symbol, an imperfect person in the way that we’re all imperfect, but trying so hard to do what is right and what is just and fighting for the people who can’t fight for themselves. It’s overwhelming to represent him – and believe me, I’m just the guy in the suit. I’m honored to be that, but Spider-Man belongs to everyone.” “The character of Spider-Man has meant a great deal to me since I was a child; my attraction to the character began early,” says Garfield. “I found hope in Peter Parker’s struggles and the trials he went through week in and week out in the comics, and I connected with that. I found it fascinating; there was something very real in the way Stan Lee wrote him and created him with Steve Ditko.” Garfield says that Webb’s vision for a Spider-Man more grounded in reality is highlighted by one of the choices: the decision that Peter Parker would design and build his own web shooters in The Amazing Spider-Man. “They’re a big thing for him,” says Garfield. “It was important to Marc to show Peter taking an active role in his transformation into Spider-Man. It isn’t just something that happens to him – he seizes the moment and does everything in his power to make the most of it.”
Emma Stone plays Gwen Stacy, Peter Parker’s first love – but more than that, his first real connection to the world around him. It’s a very different relationship from the one that audiences might be more familiar with. “I feel like Mary Jane fell in love with Spider-Man. Gwen falls in love with Peter Parker,” she explains. The heart of the film, Stone says, is the relationship between Gwen and Peter. “Marc’s biggest goal was working out that relationship,” she says. “We’re operating in a superhero universe, but that relationship has to feel grounded and real. I think the reason that so many fans of the comic books feel so protective of Gwen – or Mary Jane – is that those relationships did feel real and did feel grounded. As actors, it’s nice to have that material to build from – it already feels genuine.” “The relationship between Peter and Gwen is very significant – the previous movies haven’t explored this until now,” says Tolmach. ”Gwen is a very self-assured character; she’s his rival intellectually. And her father happens to be Captain Stacy and let’s be honest, it’s hard enough to meet your girlfriend’s parents for the first time, but when he happens to be the head of the police force that’s chasing you, it makes things that much more complicated. But there’s an emotional honesty and partnership that’s unique to their relationship. Gwen is really the only person who truly knows Peter – and because of that, there’s a closeness that develops between the two of them that neither of them have with anyone else in their lives.” Peter’s last link to his father is Dr. Curt Connors, his father’s former partner and the only man who might have some insight – not only into what happened to Peter’s father, but into why Peter’s life turned out the way it did. “Peter’s discovery of his father’s briefcase is what leads him to OsCorp and to a complicated relationship with Connors,” said Ziskin. “This results in some rather dire consequences down the road.” When Connors transforms into the Lizard, Peter must make choices that come very close to home.
However, as Tolmach notes, the connection between Peter and Connors goes beyond the scientist’s relationship to Peter’s father. “They are both incomplete, one physically, one metaphorically,” he explains. “Connors is an incredible character – there’s something compelling and quite tragic about him. He becomes blinded by his own condition and to the repercussions of what it is that he’s trying to do, and that makes for great drama.” “The Lizard, a manifestation of Dr. Connors’ desire to fill a void, is one of my favorite Marvel villains of all time, because the character’s story is about loss,” says Arad. “His alter ego, Dr. Connors, is a brilliant scientist who is totally consumed with the field of cross species genetics and regeneration, desperate to regain his missing right arm.” Rhys Ifans plays the role. “To me, the thing that sets the Spider-Man villains apart from other comic book villains is that they’re human, and real, and flawed, as much as Peter Parker is,” he says. “Particularly with Dr. Curt Connors, what makes him a more emotional presence in Peter’s life is that he was very close to Peter’s father. That makes Peter’s relationship with him a very complex and emotional one.” Ifans was drawn to the film by its complexity and the emotional elements of the role: “Connors is not a villain as such, and I’m not portraying him as a villain. He does feel kind of cheated by God, and he’s looking for answers in science. He is a man with genuine needs and anxieties. There’s a palpable pain and pathos to him, and when he crosses the line into self-experimentation, the true tragedy begins.” Ifans prepared for the role by learning how to live as a person with one arm – becoming quite skilled at tying a tie, making coffee, and many other tasks with his right arm tied behind his back. “It’s a real revelation to discover to what level that a disability can affect a person, but also how it can actually make you more deft than a person with both arms,” says Ifans.
Denis Leary plays Gwen’s father, Captain George Stacy. “Peter doesn’t make a very good first impression on Stacy, who wonders why the dinner guest looks so disheveled,” explains Leary. “At the dinner table, he launches into a bit of an interrogation of his daughter’s new friend, and Peter finds that a bit uncomfortable.” When the conversation turns to Stacy’s efforts to apprehend Spider-Man, it only increases Peter’s discomfort. “Denis Leary is a great actor and has always been hilarious and a great observer of humanity,” says Webb. “As Captain Stacy, he got to not only inject some comedy, but a level of drama and emotional reality that was really powerful.” Martin Sheen and Sally Field join the cast as Uncle Ben and Aunt May, who raise Peter after his parents suddenly and mysteriously disappear. Field says that the way Peter’s parents leave makes for a slightly different relationship between Peter and his aunt than we’ve seen before, one that is fraught with hidden emotion. Field says she put herself in May’s shoes – suddenly being asked to raise a child and not knowing why or what happened. “She loves her nephew, of course, but this whole situation was thrust upon her. Nothing was explained. Peter’s father left Peter with them years ago and disappeared. That impacts her relationship with Peter – it’s loving, but it’s very complicated,” she says. Sheen says that his character, Uncle Ben, is the moral center of the movie. “In a lot of ways, Uncle Ben is Peter’s hero and the motivating factor for a lot of the good things he does,” he says. “He becomes an image for Peter, an image that is a reminder of what character is, what heroism is. He’s a reminder that ethical behavior usually has a cost, but that cost is also an indication that it is worthy.”
ABOUT THE STUNTS AND EFFECTS
Director Marc Webb says that exploring a new dimension of the Peter Parker story meant telling the story in a different way – a more naturalistic way. “I wanted the fun, the spectacle, the action, the rage, and the humor to feel more realistic – like you walk out on the street and you can imagine this happening,” says Webb. As a result, the filmmakers chose to create The Amazing Spider-Man using practical, real-world elements whenever possible and choosing visual effects only when strictly necessary.
To achieve his goal, Webb worked closely with brothers Vic and Andy Armstrong and their grown children – a renowned family of top stunt performers and coordinators and second unit directors. Andy Armstrong teamed with his son, James, to serve as the film’s stunt coordinators, and Vic took on the role of the film’s second unit director, with his son, Scott, as the second unit’s stunt coordinator. “I was very impressed that Marc wanted to approach the film from a more realistic point of view,” says Vic Armstrong. “For Andy and me, that meant exploring the extent to which we moved from computer-generated action to practical stunts to increase the thrill factor.” “There is an innate sense that somehow allows us to recognize whether an action is computer-generated or if it is a real human being in motion,” says Andy Armstrong. “We tried to go for practical stunts and action as much as possible, because it ups the ante for thrills and suspense.” The Armstrongs worked closely with Webb on increasing the level of practical stunt work with their innovative choreography and with the design, development and construction of new tools to allow Spider-Man to swing higher, farther and with more in-camera excitement, rather than relying solely on visual effects work. “Andy developed devices for our film that would enhance the swinging in a way that just hadn’t been done before,” says Webb. “The level of ingenuity and engineering that the Armstrongs espoused was really incredible.” For Andrew Garfield, Webb’s approach meant he would prepare for the rigors of the role with a rigorous and intense training regimen, as health and fitness trainer Armando Alarcon oversaw Garfield’s strength, agility, and core training, as well as nutritional monitoring. “The physical preparation was very challenging, to be sure,” recalls Garfield. “For six months, Armando and I worked together six days a week. He pushed me harder than I thought I could be pushed; however, our work ethic is quite similar, so I tended to push myself as hard as he pushed me. He had a holistic approach that was invaluable in terms of my body confidence, health, strength and nutrition. We have become great friends.”
Garfield also trained under the tutelage of the Armstrongs, in order to be prepared for the stunt work he would perform as Spider-Man. “Andrew trained and rehearsed with us for over three months, doing trampoline work, power core moves, perfecting basketball skills, as well as martial arts, gymnastic and parkour work, all with instruction from some of the top people in the world in each discipline,” notes Andy Armstrong. “We had shot the key action sequences on video with stunt people, and we gradually integrated Andrew into the action through the training process.” “I think one of the traits which makes Spider-Man so interesting is how quickly he can moves, how fast he is,” notes Webb. “Spiders are tiny creatures that can move with incredible speed and efficiency, and that was important to reflect in the character. Andrew spent a lot of time studying how spiders moved, and he came up with a body language that felt spider-like. His work ethic and performance is just extraordinary – it was remarkable to watch.” The stunt training camp, at a warehouse near Sony Pictures Studios, featured replicas of several elements of buildings, walls and other environments from the film, in which the team could recreate and perfect the action sequences. “Andrew gave 200% to everything he tried. He is one of the most dedicated actors I’ve ever seen go through this process,” says Andy Armstrong. “His willingness to try anything really was extraordinary, and he ended up doing some really gnarly action bits on the film.”
ABOUT THE PRODUCTION
New York City has always been a key component of the Spider-Man story, and that’s especially true in Webb’s vision for The Amazing Spider-Man. “New York is such a wonderfully engaging place if you have a mind to be engaged by it, and it can be an incredibly sad place if you’re lonely and isolated,” says production designer J. Michael Riva. “For Peter Parker, it’s both things at different times in the movie.” The film’s exteriors were largely shot on the New York street sets at Universal Studios as the first film to shoot there following the set’s extensive rebuild following a devastating fire in 2008. “Luckily, the set became available for us to use for several weeks of filming at just the right time,” says executive producer Michael Grillo. “Our production designer, J. Michael Riva, and his team created this world of New York City for us, so we could do stunts and physical effects, maintaining a control over explosions and crashes that are obviously much more effectively achieved than on practical locations.” Universal’s new New York Street set could not represent the city authentically without the addition of years of big-city wear-and-tear to the area. Over 2,000 posts, bills and stickers were placed on light poles, mailboxes and alleyways as well as on the eight construction sites added by the production. Discarded gum lent additional realism to the faux detritus placed throughout the several city blocks, and fake pigeons were installed on a lamppost above the street. The production used over 5,000 yards of fabric, 300 venetian blinds and other materials, as well as 300 air conditioning units to dress the more than 1,454 bare windows. Eighteen set dressers worked for weeks in order to install the storefronts, art galleries, restaurants, mailboxes, newsstands and cafes on the streets. Many leading retailers teamed up with the production, loaning them materials to be used in creating the New York street scenes. These stores included Starbucks, DKNY, Manolo Blahnik, Design Within Reach, Brioni, Hugo Boss, Sephora, Patagonia, Dean & Deluca, Banana Republic, Tory Burch, and Bed, Bath & Beyond, whose window was shattered and merchandise destroyed during a particularly intense action scene.
Beyond the New York Street, the production showed off other areas of the city. One key action sequence takes place along New York’s Williamsburg Bridge, a portion of which was shot on Universal’s Falls Lake backlot area. When Spider-Man arrives on the scene, he makes a daring rescue. “This sequence was extremely complex – it had so many moving parts and was so physically demanding for everyone involved,” recalls Webb. “It was also a key emotional beat, because it is where Peter realizes the value of what Spider-Man can be, and it transforms him in a certain way.” “The construction department built a full-scale, three hundred foot section of the bridge so that our department could prepare for a complex sequence involving a raging reptile and several unfortunate cars,” explains Academy Award winner John Frazier, the film’s special effects supervisor. “The Lizard is on a rampage on the bridge, chasing a character in a limousine, and he is swatting vehicles off of the bridge into the East River when Spider-Man arrives on scene to attempt a daring rescue. Our job was to choreograph and set up all of the mechanics of ‘tossing’ the cars by using car flippers – high pressure nitrogen floor jacks – so we could flip six cars while avoiding damage to the surrounding cars.” Riva created an impressive series of sets for the film, on studio stages and on practical locations. “One of the things I like about the movie is that it has a lot of tension built into it, from scene to scene, as well as the stark contrast between the worlds of Queens and OsCorp. The first scenes, when seven-year-old Peter is living with his parents, are very womb-like, warm and comforting. When his family gets ripped apart and he goes to live with people he essentially barely knows, we created a home less affluent than Peter’s parents’ home, but still warm. Cut to OsCorp, a black glass tower high above mid-town Manhattan, and inside a huge white, sterile place where cutting edge research is being conducted with no expense spared. It’s a stark contrast.”
The OsCorp lab set was built on Stage 30 at Sony Pictures Studios and was one of the largest sets created for the film. Its massive footprint occupied over 14,000 square feet of stage floor and took over twelve weeks to build. High school exteriors were shot at two Southern California high schools. For the interior sequences – which would require extensive stunt and effects work – sets were constructed on Sony’s Stage 15. The largest soundstage on the lot became home to four classrooms, five hallways, a bathroom, principal’s office and secretary’s office. The high school library, the site of a fierce and destructive battle, required a separate stage and was comprised of almost 3,000 feet of faux books, constructed of real book covers with recyclable styrofoam inserts. But even though a film like The Amazing Spider-Man requires movie magic, you can’t beat the real thing – which is why the filmmakers wrapped production in New York City for exterior shots. For example, beneath an elevated portion of Riverside Drive, between 130th and 135th Streets, the filmmakers shot an extensive sequence in which Spider-Man leaps underneath an elevated street, webbing the trestles 80 feet above the street and dodging traffic as he swings away from the police. Andy Armstrong explains how it was done. “We built a traveling winch rig under the elevated roadway to travel Spider-Man on as he moves. We constructed a vehicle which is literally like a giant puppeteer rig, thirty feet high, so we can pull him along at any speed we wanted. He could achieve these giant swings, all the while dodging the traffic below.”
ABOUT THE SUIT
Creating a new vision for Spider-Man also meant creating a new vision for how he gets around: a new suit and new web-shooters. “We were trying to create a suit that looked and felt as if Peter could make it himself, and it was important for the suit to enhance the lean physique of Spider-Man, and for him to have a rather spidery quality about him,” says costume designer Kym Barrett. “I began with the idea that Peter Parker creates the spider costume in his computer. Marc wanted to present an electronic world, with evidence of technology everywhere, so our Spider-Man suit needed to become part of this world. We used Andrew Garfield’s physique to determine how and where the lines flowed across the body for the suit, so the lines had geometric form from any angle.” For the material of the suit, the filmmakers had an equally wide array of inspirations. “We looked at Winter Olympics athletes’ suits and bicyclists’ clothing as a starting point,” adds Arad. “Lightweight, athletic, stretchy materials which Peter could use for inspiration for his suit.” They also kept in mind that the film would be shot in 3D, and the designers looked for ways to incorporate texture that would enhance the suit for 3D audiences. “We found that we could print shadows on the fabric of the suit, and that gives the suit real density and depth on the screen,” explains Barrett. Lenses for Spider-Man’s mask were made by a manufacturing company that creates sunglass lenses for the military and for NASA. Coated to reduce reflection, the lenses feature a blue-tinted optical lens with a gold hexagon mirrored pattern printed on top. The end result was impressive – especially to the man who would wear it. “The first time I saw the suit, I thought it was so cool, and Kym did an incredible job reimagining the suit while remaining true to what Steve Ditko originally drew,” recalls Garfield. “The first time I put on the suit, it was kind of surreal and joyous, because you see yourself embodying something that’s meant so much to you.” The suit took 20 minutes for Garfield to put on for shooting, assisted by costumer Robert Moore.
Peter Parker creates mechanical web-shooters in his uncle’s basement. “It fits in with our goal to make Peter’s world seem real,” says Webb. “Peter Parker is very much a kid of today. He wouldn’t wait around for someone to invent web-shooters; he’d be on the internet, doing research and figuring out how to make them himself. He’s got a head for this stuff naturally – designing the web-shooters is just the next logical step for him.” In designing the web-shooters, Barrett was inspired by wide leather watchbands which had a plastic cover that snapped over the watch to protect its face. “We thought Peter would think these were perfect,” says Barrett. “Take out the watch and you have a great housing for the web-shooters. Snap the cover over it to hide it, and when you’re walking down the street, it just looks like you’re wearing a watch.”
ABOUT THE VISUAL EFFECTS
Sony Pictures Imageworks – which previously handled VFX duties on director Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man trilogy – returns to oversee the visual effects on The Amazing Spider-Man. For this film, the work was overseen by Jerome Chen, an Academy Award®-nominated VFX supervisor who has been with Imageworks since its founding 20 years ago.
Working with director Marc Webb, Chen and the visual effects teams created a visual style that naturally blends cutting edge live-action stunt work with CG character animation and seamlessly integrates both into extensive digital environments. Imageworks created many digital characters, environments and VFX elements including: Spider-Man, The Lizard villain, OsCorp Building including spire and extensive rooftop set, New York Sixth Avenue, Mid-Town High School hallways, library, sewer tunnels beneath New York City and Spider-Man’s new webs. Chen says that Webb’s new vision for Spider-Man set a new bar for the Imageworks artists. “Marc had a specific vision for Spider-Man’s world: an organic, naturalistic New York City, a place full of dirt, scaffolding, and steam. He wanted Spider-Man to be more physical, to really react with this environment, rather than a stylized version of the character,” he says. “I loved this concept, but I knew that an organic, naturalistic Spider-Man would make the visual effects work a lot more challenging, because the CG imagery would now demand a higher level of visual sophistication. The CGI would need more textural and tonal detail in order to integrate with the photography. And, of course, the organic feel of the movie has a huge impact on how we realize our completely CG villain – who would have to feel real and be as sturdy and gritty as the rest of the picture.” Webb’s vision didn’t just apply to the look of Spider-Man, but also to how he would move – and it would be different from what audiences might be familiar with. “What was really important to Marc was that the movement was natural and physical, in the sense that a real person could do it. Because of that, there’s a physicality of Spider-Man in the way he responds to gravity,” says Chen. “Andy Armstrong’s stunt team worked hard on suspending Spider-Man from the right geometry of wires that allowed him to swing in the correct way. We were able to mimic that – we looked at what gravity did to the real stuntmen, then simply enhanced it to give it a bigger scope.”
For example, the chase sequence that takes place under the elevated portion of Riverside Drive showcases the marriage between practical stunts and visual effects. Armstrong’s team started the process with practical stunt work. “We integrated that with CG for wider shots, simply because the mechanics of the truss work didn’t extend far enough. We had great reference from the real movement,” says Chen. Similarly, Chen’s team provided CG animation on the Williamsburg Bridge sequence where practical effects were not the best solution: creating the Lizard, of course, but also some blue screen work and a CG Spider-Man when needed. Webb’s previous film work – including the indie hit (500) Days of Summer – might not seem to make him a natural choice for a film with hundreds of visual effects shots, but Chen says that the film was in quite capable hands. “Marc had a very clear vision for the characters and how he would handle the love story between Peter and Gwen – that’s the heart of the movie. But what really impressed me about him when I first met him was that he knew, in his mind’s eye, what he wanted the film to look like, and his direction to me about what the effects needed to be, the movement of the Lizard and the movement of Spider-Man, was very specific.” Chen also says that Webb uses pre-visualization (or “pre-viz”) techniques in an interesting way. While many directors use pre-viz to explore, say, how much of a set should be built vs. constructed in the computer, or which camera lenses will work best for a given shot, or blocking out camera movements, Chen says that Webb has another goal in mind. “It’s not just technical – Marc uses pre-viz creatively, to explore a whole sequence. It will show his intentions for the physicality of movement, the energy of the scene, the emotional beats, the dramatic intent. It’s a very finished pre-viz and it becomes a great starting point for the scene.”
CREATING THE VILLAIN
Chen and his team also oversaw the CG creation of the Lizard, the villain of The Amazing Spider-Man and the most complex character ever built at Imageworks. “He’s such an iconic villain from the comic books,” says Chen. “And there have been so many variations – our departure point started with a beautiful sculpt done at Legacy. Our Lizard was almost nine feet tall, muscular and powerful, with a sweeping tail. The face is humanoid, which was important to provide us with a connection to the human Dr. Connors, as performed by Rhys Ifans.” New animation and rendering technology was developed at Imageworks in order to create the incredible detail of the Lizard’s scales and the movement of his muscles beneath the skin. “Marc wanted the Lizard’s skin to have loose folds – like a Komodo Dragon – but still feel the power of the muscles moving beneath them,” remarks Chen. His team spent months researching lizards, studying HD footage taken during museum and zoo trips, even to a local pet store specializing in reptiles.
Of course, the VFX team also had to ground the character in reality so that he would fit in with the rest of the film. “I was taught that the key to making an animated character believable is that the audience has to see that this character is thinking,” says Chen. “And our access point was Rhys Ifans. When he’s in Lizard mode, what’s his thought process? What would his performance be like?” To achieve that, the filmmakers worked with Ifans to get videotape reference for the animators. “Marc directed Rhys during the key emotive moments when the Lizard was on screen. Though the Lizard rarely speaks in the film, there are many moments where we have to read his eyes and his expression.” The video reference provided powerful inspiration for Imageworks’ animators as they articulated the CG Lizard’s moments of subtle facial performance. But the Lizard – as one of Spider-Man’s most formidable enemies – has plenty of moments in the film where he is not so subtle. The movement style of the Lizard’s physicality during the action scenes took many weeks for the animators to discover and led to a variety of techniques employed throughout the film. One such technique involved the use of a stuntman – dressed in black to help his digital “removal” during the post process – posing as a stand-in for the Lizard during a key action sequence at Peter Parker’s high school. To fully convey the illusion that Spider-Man is grappling and being tossed around by a nine-foot-tall mutated Lizard, the stuntman (who was almost seven feet tall himself!) would grapple with Andrew Garfield. Later, the stuntman was removed and the CG Lizard animated to have motion that coincided with Garfield’s movements. The meshing of the real physics of the actor and the CG animation of the Lizard create a visceral illusion of Peter Parker fighting for his life.
Chen oversaw the work by the team at Pixomondo who were responsible for turning Ifans into an amputee. “Rhys wore a green sleeve to help us track where we would have to paint out his arm and paint in the background,” says the VFX supervisor. Painting out the arm was the easy part – but making the small details look right was much more challenging. “For example, when the arm is removed, does the sleeve hang right and move properly against the remnant of the arm?” he says. “The fact that he’s missing an arm has a huge impact on your impression of the character. It’s why he goes to great lengths to pursue his creation of the serum, and why he continues to take it, even though he’s losing his soul to it. It has to look right.” In addition to the CG character work, Imageworks was also required to create the daunting illusion of the city in which these characters must interact. There are two major full-CG environments in the film: a long stretch of Sixth Avenue leading up to the OsCorp Tower, and another on the roof of the OsCorp Tower itself. Both environments are the stages for the high points of the film, where Spider-Man swings through the glittering nighttime canyons of Manhattan en route to his climactic battle with the Lizard. The Sixth Avenue environment is an extremely detailed CG construct involving hundreds of digital cars and pedestrians, plus dozens of complex buildings with elaborate room interiors – some even with flickering televisions. All these details were combined to create the illusion of a living city that Spider-Man swings through. The OsCorp Tower roof serves as the background for Spider-Man’s final battle with the Lizard, and is one of the most complicated sequences in the film in terms of visual effects. After an extensive pre-visualization process which allowed Marc Webb to tightly design the action in terms of both fight choreography and virtual camera work, the scene was turned over for final CG animation and rendering/compositing. Dozens of full CG shots are intercut with live action photography of Andrew Garfield and Denis Leary in a gripping action sequence.
ABOUT THE 3D PHOTOGRAPHY
The Amazing Spider-Man was shot in 3D, and for the filmmakers, it is a key choice. “3D isn’t right for every movie, but 3D was made for Spider-Man,” says Avi Arad. “It is another way we have of keeping the audience immersed in the storytelling. You see the world through his eyes and you feel like Spider-Man – the exciting moments are even more exciting. But what might be surprising is that 3D makes the intimate moments more intimate as well – I can think of some scenes that are quite emotional that are even more emotional in 3D. It’s a perfect choice for this movie.” “We wanted to put people in Peter Parker’s shoes and Spider-Man’s shoes in this film, to let them experience the thrills themselves. What better way to do that to enhance the reality than through 3D,” notes Webb. “It’s the ideal format to allow the audience to viscerally experience the quality of moving through space, flying through the air, swinging through Manhattan.” Webb referred to the “3 Vs” – “Velocity, Vertigo, and Volume” – as keystones for his approach. “It seemed to me that Spider-Man was the perfect venue for immersing the audience into the experience of flying with the character,” he says. “I like to shoot things from a subjective point of view, so in creating a connection between the camera and the character, the three dimensionality of it gives you the feeling of the sense of velocity when Spider-Man swings through the streets.”
John Schwartzman, the Academy Award nominated director of photography, and Rob Engle, Sony Pictures Imageworks’ 3D visual effects supervisor, were chosen to collaborate with Webb on lensing The Amazing Spider-Man in 3D. The Amazing Spider-Man is the first movie to be shot in 3D using the Red Epic camera mounted on 3ality Digital’s newest, most lightweight rig. “You could not have chosen a better movie to shoot in 3D than this one,” says Schwartzman. “It would have been shortsighted not to, given the technology that has been developed.” “One of the things that’s great about working with Marc is that he is so driven to tell this story, to make sure that the story beats are clear, and that the 3D helps support that,” says Engle. Marc Webb adds, “3D enabled us to capture not only the thrills of a huge action sequence, but the portable handheld rigs allowed us to capture emotionally charged, more intimate scenes, such as a scene between Peter and his Aunt May that felt palpable, real and authentic.” “John has a knack for creating really beautiful images, but what we did for this film was try to create an enhanced naturalism,” explains Webb. “I wanted to create environments that felt realistic and not super stylized – John was able to give them a tinge of fantasy; he elevated them with his lighting so that the environments became warm and inviting. You wanted to spend time in this world and there was beauty and sophistication in even the simplest of moments.”
FUN FACTS
• 2012 marks the 50th anniversary of Spider-Man. The classic Marvel comic book character made his debut in 1962 in Issue #15 of the anthology series Amazing Fantasy (August 1962). Amazing Fantasy ended with this issue and Spider-Man’s adventures continued in a new series, The Amazing Spider-Man, beginning in 1963. • Andrew Garfield is a lifelong fan of Spider-Man – he remembers an old snapshot of himself, at age 3, dressed as Spider-Man for Halloween. • Emma Stone portrays Gwen Stacy, a key character in Spider-Man lore and Peter Parker’s first love. Gwen Stacy made her first appearance in the December 1965 The Amazing Spider-Man #31. • The Amazing Spider-Man employed over 1,000 people. The film’s sets occupied seven stages at Sony Studios’ Culver City lot. • Andrew Garfield worked with personal trainer Armando Alarcon six days a week for six months to prepare for the role of Spider-Man. Garfield also worked with stunt coordinator Andy Armstrong and his team, doing trampoline work, power core moves, basketball skills, martial arts, gymnastic and parkour work, as well as skateboard skills. • Andy Armstrong and his stunt team maintained a training camp in a warehouse near Sony Pictures Studios, where Andrew Garfield worked with top instructors in each of several disciplines. The warehouse featured several elements of buildings, walls and other environments from the film, which the team used to recreate, rehearse and perfect the action sequences.
FUN FACTS: COSTUMES
• Costume designer Kym Barrett collaborated with director Marc Webb to realize his vision for Spider-Man’s suit to reflect a more lean and athletic, less muscular silhouette. For inspiration, Barrett imagined what would happen if a spider web was being blown by the wind and wrapped itself around the body. • Costume designer Kym Barrett studied the lightweight, stretchy materials used by Winter Olympics athletes and bicycle racers, among other fabrics, in order to create a Spider-Man suit which allowed for the special acrobatics Spider-Man employs as he swings though Manhattan. • 56 Spider-Man suits were created for the film, including 17 suits for Andrew Garfield and multiples for each stunt person. The suits varied from pristine condition to various stages of distress, as dictated by the story. • Costume designer Barrett utilized printing techniques incorporating shadows in the suit’s fabric, which enhanced the 3-D nature of the print and gave the person wearing the suit depth and density. • It took Andrew Garfield 20 minutes, assisted by costumer Robert Moore, to put on the Spider-Man suit for shooting. • The lenses for Spider-Man’s mask are custom made, with a blue-tinted optical lens and a gold hexagon mirrored pattern printed on top. They are also coated to reduce reflection. • 100 sets of lenses were on hand in the costume department to use in the Spider-Man suits, featuring variegated tints for nighttime and daytime.
FUN FACTS: THE LIZARD
• The Lizard, one of the most formidable of Spider-Man’s foes, made his first appearance in 1963 in Marvel’s The Amazing Spider-Man #6. • In order to portray the role of the one-armed Dr. Curt Connors, Rhys Ifans learned to complete various tasks with one arm tied behind his back. He became quite skilled at tying a tie, making coffee and many other tasks using only his free arm. • Gwen Stacy serves as Dr. Connors’ lead intern at OsCorp, so Emma Stone went on lab field trips along with Rhys Ifans. The two actors spent one trip observing scientific research on axolotl regeneration. Axolotls, a type of salamander, are famous for their ability to re-grow limbs and even portions of the brain and spine.
FUN FACTS: OSCORP
• The OsCorp Lab set, one of the largest sets built for the film, took over three months to build. Constructed on Sony’s Stage 30 in Culver City, CA, its massive footprint occupied over 14,000 square feet of stage floor. • The ceiling of the OsCorp Lab hallway is actually egg crate soundproofing foam. A three-man team spent three weeks custom cutting, gluing and fireproofing the 3,000 square foot ceiling. • The reptile skeletons and other macabre accessories seen in Connors’ OsCorp Lab offices come from two aptly named Los Angeles shops: Necromance and Dapper Cadaver. • The “mice” seen in the OsCorp Lab are actually cat toys. There are approximately 200 of them, and crew members had to remove the ears of each mouse, which were a very un-lifelike fluorescent pink!
FUN FACTS: OTHER ENVIRONMENTS
• In Peter Parker’s father’s study, created for flashback scenes, Dr. Parker’s passion for jazz is represented by a collection of jazz CDs and a framed photograph of Duke Ellington, which hangs on the study wall. The same Ellington image can be seen as a postcard on the bulletin board of Peter’s bedroom years later, a symbol of his memories of his father. • Much of the children’s artwork that appears in the film was created by Jaden Tell, the seven-year-old daughter of two set decoration buyers for the film. • Interiors of Midtown Science High School were constructed on Sony Studios’ Stage 15. The stage housed four classrooms, five hallways, a restroom, a principal’s office and secretary’s office. The chemistry class was constructed of breakaway materials, to accommodate several fight sequences. Over 400 pieces of breakaway glass flasks, cylinders and beakers were acquired for this classroom alone. • The high school library, the site of a fierce and destructive battle, required a separate stage and was comprised of almost 3,000 feet of faux books, constructed of real book covers with recyclable styrofoam inserts. • In Captain Stacy’s office at the Police Precinct, a certificate of commendation from The Leary Firefighters Foundation hangs on the wall. This real-life organization was established in 2000 by actor Denis Leary in response to a tragic fire that claimed the lives of six firefighters, including Leary’s cousin and a childhood friend.
ABOUT THE CAST
ANDREW GARFIELD (Peter Parker/Spider-Man) is a BAFTA-winning actor and a Golden Globe nominee for his work in The Social Network. Garfield is currently making his Broadway debut in the revival of Arthur Miller’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play “Death of a Salesman,” directed by Mike Nichols. Garfield plays Willy Loman’s underachieving son, Biff. Garfield recently starred opposite Keira Knightley and Carey Mulligan in Mark Romanek’s Never Let Me Go. Other screen projects include Terry Gilliam’s The Imaginarium of Dr Parnassus; Spike Jonze’s robot love story I’m Here; Robert Redford’s Lions For Lambs; Revolution Films’ Red Riding Trilogy - 1974, directed by Julian Jarrold; and John Crowley’s Boy A, for which he earned the Best Actor BAFTA in 2008. Garfield’s career began in theatre and in 2006 his performances in “Beautiful Thing” (Sound Space/Kit Productions), “The Overwhelming” and “Burn, Chatroom, and Citizenship” (Royal National Theatre) won him the award for Outstanding Newcomer at the Evening Standard Awards, and the Jack Tinker Award for Most Promising Newcomer at the Critics Circle Awards. Other notable theatre credits include “Romeo and Juliet” (Manchester Royal Exchange) and “Kes” (Manchester Royal Exchange), for which he received the Most Promising Newcomer Award at the Manchester Evening News Awards 2004. With her striking beauty and sincere talent, Golden Globe nominated actress EMMA STONE (Gwen Stacy) is claiming her role as one of Hollywood’s most sought out actresses. Stone also recently wrapped production for Warner Bros.’ Gangster Squad, starring opposite Sean Penn and Ryan Gosling. The film, set in 1949, portrays the take down of LA gangster Mickey Cohen. Directed by Ruben Fleischer, the film is slated for release this fall. Stone recently signed on to executive produce and star in GK Films’ Little White Corvette. This marks Stone’s first role as a producer.
Stone was most recently seen in DreamWorks’ The Help. The film grossed $203,410,672 worldwide and received numerous award nominations including: Academy Awards®, Golden Globes, Screen Actors Guild, Critics’ Choice, Producers Guild of America, National Board of Review, BAFTA and the AFI, as well as winning Best Ensemble for the Screen Actors Guild Awards. Stone lent her voice to the DreamWorks Animation comedy The Croods along with Ryan Reynolds and Nicholas Cage. The Croods is about a prehistoric society in which one man’s leadership is threatened by new inventions such as fire. This film is slated for release next spring. Last year, Stone earned rave reviews and a Golden Globe nomination for her performance in the Broadcast Film Critics Association Award winning comedy, Easy A. She won the 2011 MTV Movie Award for Best Comedic Performance for her role in the film. Stone and writer/director/producer Will Gluck will soon team up together to develop another comedy with Screen Gems. Stone’s additional film credits include the romantic comedy Crazy, Stupid, Love, Screen Gems’ Friends with Benefits, the independent drama Paperman, the Twentieth Century Fox animated comedy, Marmaduke, Columbia Pictures’ hit comedy Zombieland, the Warner Brothers romantic comedy Ghosts of Girlfriends Past, the Columbia Pictures/Happy Madison hit comedy, The House Bunny, Twentieth Century Fox’s The Rocker and Columbia Pictures’ Judd Apatow comedy Superbad. Native of Arizona, Stone currently splits her time between New York and LA.
RHYS IFANS (Dr. Connors) is a gifted actor known for his enduring presence, his distinctive approach to comedy, and his ability to elegantly disappear into compelling and complex roles that are always memorable. Ifans was most recently seen in Judd Apatow’s The Five-Year Engagement, opposite Jason Segel and Emily Blunt in a comedy that charts the ups and downs of a couple’s relationship. Ifans is in production on the independent film, Serena, directed by Susanne Bier. Ifans stars opposite Jennifer Lawrence and Bradley Cooper. Set during the Depression-era in North Carolina, Ifans plays Galloway, the vicious Appalachian guide and bodyguard of Serena (Lawrence). The indie film is scheduled to release in 2013. Ifans can also be seen in the HBO’s upcoming adaptation “The Corrections,” directed by Noah Baumbach and produced by Scott Rudin. Based on Jonathan Franzen’s critically acclaimed book of the same name, Ifans stars alongside Ewan McGregor, Anthony Hopkins, and Maggie Gyllenhaal. Ifans is perhaps best known for his breakout performance in Roger Michell’s Notting Hill (1999) where he starred opposite a noteworthy cast including Julia Roberts and Hugh Grant. For his portrayal of Grant’s roommate Spike, Ifans received a BAFTA nomination for Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role. Additional credits include: Anonymous, directed by Roland Emmerich; Passion Play, also starring Bill Murray, Mickey Rourke and Megan Fox; the closing chapter to the Harry Potter franchise, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows; Noah Baumbach’s dark comedy Greenberg with Ben Stiller; Pirate Radio, starring Philip Seymour Hoffman; Shekhar Kapur’s Elizabeth: The Golden Age; Peter Webber’s Hannibal Rising; Once Upon A Time in the Midlands, directed by Shane Meadows; Michel Gondry’s comedy drama, Human Nature, where he starred opposite Patricia Arquette; Mike Figgis’ Hotel; Lasse Hallström’s The Shipping News; and Howard Deutch’s comedy, The Replacements, where he starred alongside Keanu Reeves and Gene Hackman. On television, he played the role of Peter Cook in Terry Johnson’s “Not Only But Always,” for which he won the BAFTA for Best Actor. He also appeared in “Shakespeare Shorts”; “Trial and Retribution”; “The Two Franks”; “Judas and the Gimp”; “Night Shift”; “Spatz”; “Burning Love”; and “Review.” In theater, Ifans appeared at the Donmar Warehouse in Robert Delamere’s “Accidental Death of an Anarchist,” Patrick Marber’s “Don Juan in Soho” and Michael Sheen’s “Bad Finger.” He was seen at the National Theatre in Matthew Warchus’ “Volpone” and Roger Michell’s “Under Milk Wood”; at the Duke of York Theatre in Hettie MacDonald’s “Beautiful Thing”; at the Royal Court Theatre in James MacDonald’s “Thyesters”; and at the Royal Exchange in Braham Murray’s “Smoke” and Ronald Harwood’s “Poison Pen.” Beyond film and television, Ifans made a guest appearance for the rock band Oasis in the video for their single “The Importance of Being Idle,” for which he accepted their award for Video of the Year at the 2005/6 NME Awards. Ifans was born and raised in Wales, where he attended youth acting schools at Theatre Clwyd in Flintshire and appeared in many Welsh language television programs before embarking on his film career.
DENIS LEARY (Captain Stacy) is a four-time loser at the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences’ annual Emmy Awards. Most recently, he lost in the category of Best Supporting Actor In A Miniseries Or Movie for his role as Michael Whouley in HBO’s “Recount.” Leary previously lost twice for Best Actor in a Drama and once for Best Writing in a Drama, with these Emmy nominations emanating from his work on FX’s critically acclaimed “Rescue Me.” He was also nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Actor by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association for his performance on “Rescue Me,” which followed New York City firefighters, and again for Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Series, Mini-Series or Motion Picture Made for Television, for his performance in “Recount.” Again, he lost. Leary hopes to one day get nominated for – and more than likely not win – an Oscar, a Grammy and a Tony Award. In his long and storied entertainment career, Leary has also never won The Stanley Cup, The Nobel Peace Prize or an argument with his wife. CAMPBELL SCOTT (Richard Parker) studied with Stella Adler and Geraldine Page and got his first break playing Benvolio in “Romeo and Juliet” in summer stock in New England. Following that, Scott understudied in the Broadway production of Tom Stoppard`s “The Real Thing,” starring Jeremy Irons and later, Nicol Williamson. He has also appeared on Broadway in an acclaimed production of “Long Day’s Journey Into Night,” with Jason Robards and Colleen Dewhust, “Ah! Wilderness,” “Hay Fever,” and “The Queen and the Rebels.” Off-Broadway, Scott has appeared in “The Last Outpost,” “Copperhead,” “A Man for All Seasons,” and “On the Bum.” He played the title role of “Hamlet” at the Old Globe in San Diego, receiving excellent reviews. He played “Hamlet” again at the Huntington Theatre in Boston. Scott’s other Shakespearean roles include Angelo in “Measure for Measure” at Lincoln Center, the title role of “Pericles” at the New York Shakespeare Festival, and Iago in “Othello” at the Philadelphia Drama Guild. Regionally, Campbell has been seen in “Our Town,” “Gilette,” “School for Wives,” and, for the Williamstown Theatre Festival, “Miss Julie, “”Dead End,” and “The Atheist.” His first film role was in From Hollywood to Deadwood followed by the highly praised Longtime Companion, The Feud, and Bernardo Bertolucci`s The Sheltering Sky. Scott appeared in Dead Again directed by Kenneth Branagh and starred in Dying Young, opposite Julia Roberts, directed by Joel Schumacher; Singles, directed by Cameron Crowe; The Innocent, directed by John Schlesinger; Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle, directed by Alan Rudolph; Only With You; and Let It Be Me. He co-stars with Steve Martin in David Mamet`s film The Spanish Prisoner. His most recent film appearances include Big Night, The Daytrippers, Ship of Fools, Hi-Life, Top of the Food Chain, Spring Forward, Other Voices, Lush, Delivering Milo, Roger Dodger, Secret Lives of Dentists, Loverboy, Marie and Bruce, Duma, The Exorcism of Emily Rose, and The Dying Gaul, which he starred in and produced.
For television he starred in, co-directed and produced “Hamlet” for the Odyssey Network. He also starred as Joseph Kennedy, Jr. in “The Kennedys of Massachusetts,” co-starred with Ben Kingsley and Joanna Lumley in “Sweeney Todd” for Showtime, co-starred with Jennifer Jason Leigh in “The Love Letter” for Hallmark Hall of Fame, “Shot in the Heart” for HBO and “Follow the Stars Home” for Hallmark Hall of Fame, again co-starring with Jennifer Jason Leigh. Scott recently had a recurring role in the FX series “Damages” alongside Glenn Close. Scott co-directed the film Big Night with Stanley Tucci. He has also directed the feature films Off the Map and Company Retreat, the latter of which was also written by Scott. For the stage, he has directed “Miss Julie,” “Snake Pit,” and “Recruiting Officer.” Currently, Scott can be seen in the USA original series “Royal Pains.” Long established in his native India as one of his country’s most prominent and celebrated actors, IRRFAN KHAN (Ratha) is making an impact on Western audiences with his most recent acclaimed performances. Khan most recently starred in the Golden Globe winning drama “In Treatment.” In its third season, Khan played Sunil, a recent widower and new immigrant from Calcutta who now lives with his son’s family in Brooklyn and is struggling with life in America. Khan starred opposite Gabriel Byrne and Dianne Wiest in the HBO series. Khan also starred in Danny Boyle’s Academy Award® winning film, Slumdog Millionaire. As the police inspector, Khan gives a sensitive portrayal of corruption and, as part of the acclaimed ensemble cast, was honored with a Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture. Previously, Khan had starred in Wes Anderson’s The Darjeeling Limited opposite Owen Wilson, Adrien Brody, and Jason Schwartzman and in Michael Winterbottom’s A Mighty Heart opposite Angelina Jolie. In 2006, Khan starred in Mira Nair’s The Namesake, for which he received an Independent Spirit Award nomination for his performance. He also appeared in 2007’s Life in a Metro, for which he received a Filmfare Award. In 2011 Khan was awarded with Padma Shri, one of the highest honors given in India for extraordinary contribution. Khan gained international acclaim for his role in The Warrior. A film circa feudal India in the State of Rajasthan, Khan plays Lafcadia, a fierce warrior who abandons his cruel and sadistic Lord who reigns terror on all and decides to put down his sword to seek peace in his village. The Warrior went on to win two BAFTA Awards. Khan had also starred as the title role in Maqbool, the critically acclaimed adaptation of Shakespeare’s Macbeth, as well as the Bollywood film, Haasil. Khan received Screen Weekly Award and Zee Cine Award nominations for his work on Maqbool, and a Screen Weekly Award, Zee Cine Award, and Filmfare Award for his role in Haasil. Additional credits include, Ek Doctor Ki Mauth, Rog, Acid Factory, New York, Paan Singh Tomar, and New York, I Love You. With his start in television, Khan has starred in numerous series in India such as “Chanakya,” “Sara Jahan Hamara,” “Banegi Apni Baat,” “Chandrakanta,” “Star Bestsellers,” “Sparsh,” “Darr,” “Kahkashan,” “Mano Ya Na Mano,” and “Kyaa Kahein.” Khan received a fellowship at National School for Drama and after graduating began acting in television and theater. Born in Jaipur, Khan is married to writer Sutapa Sikdar. He currently splits his time between India and Los Angeles.
A multiple Emmy and Golden Globe Award winner, MARTIN SHEEN (Uncle Ben) is one of America’s most celebrated, colorful and accomplished actors. The Ohio native has appeared in more than 65 feature films, including a star turn as Army Captain Benjamin L. Willard in Francis Ford Coppola’s landmark film Apocalypse Now, which brought Sheen worldwide recognition. The film also starred Marlon Brando, Dennis Hopper and Robert Duvall. Other notable credits include Wall Street (with son Charlie Sheen and Michael Douglas), The Academy Award®-winning film Ghandi (with Sir Ben Kingsley), Catch Me If You Can (with Leonardo DiCaprio & Tom Hanks), The American President (with Douglas & Annette Bening) and a Golden Globe nominated breakthrough performance as Timmy Cleary in The Subject Was Roses – a role he originated on Broadway and for which he received a Tony Award nomination as Best Featured Actor. In 2006, the actor played ill-fated cop Oliver Queenan in Martin Scorsese’s Academy Award®-winning film The Departed opposite DiCaprio, Matt Damon, Jack Nicholson, Mark Wahlberg and Alec Baldwin. The same year, Sheen joined another all-star ensemble cast for the highly acclaimed feature Bobby, written and directed by his son, Emilio Estevez. Bobby was nominated for a Golden Globe Award and a SAG Award and starred Anthony Hopkins, Harry Belafonte, Laurence Fishbourne, Sharon Stone, William H. Macy, Elijah Wood, Demi Moore and Heather Graham. His most recent feature films include The Double with Richard Gere and Topher Grace, Stella Days (Irish Film & TV - Best Actor nomination), as well as The Way, written and directed by Emilio Estevez. Sheen co-authored the bestselling memoir Along the Way: The Journey of a Father and Son (Free Press, May 2012) with Estevez. For television audiences, Sheen is best recognized for his award-winning role as President Josiah Bartlet in NBC’s long-running “The West Wing.” SALLY FIELD (Aunt May) is a two-time Academy Award winner, for her performances in Robert Benton’s Places in the Heart (for which she also received a Golden Globe) and Martin Ritt’s Norma Rae (for which she received a Golden Globe, along with the New York Film Critics prize, the National Board of Review Award, the Los Angeles Film Critics Award, the National Society of Film Critics honor and Best Actress at the Cannes Film Festival). Field has also received Golden Globe nominations for her work in Smokey and the Bandit, Absence of Malice, Kiss Me Goodbye, Steel Magnolias, and Forrest Gump. Her many film credits include An Eye for An Eye, Mrs. Doubtfire, Soapdish, Not Without My Daughter, The End, Hooper, Stay Hungry (her first major film role, opposite Arnold Schwarzenegger), as well as Punchline and Murphy’s Romance, both of which were produced by her former production company, Fogwood Films.
“Brothers & Sisters," on which Field starred for 5 years, completed its final season in May 2011. For her role as family matriarch Nora Walker, she has received both an Emmy and a SAG Award as well as two Golden Globe nominations. In the fall of 2011, Field began production on Lincoln, in which she stars as Mary Todd Lincoln opposite Daniel Day Lewis as Abraham Lincoln. Steven Spielberg directs from a screenplay by Tony Kushner. The film is slated to be released later this year. Born in Pasadena, California and raised in a show business family, Field began her career in television on the series "Gidget." She went on to star in the "The Flying Nun" and "The Girl with Something Extra." She received Emmy Awards for her title role in the landmark miniseries "Sybil" and for her performance on "ER." She also received Emmy nominations for her role in Showtime’s "A Cooler Climate" and the NBC miniseries "A Woman of Independent Means" which she co-produced and for which she received a Golden Globe nomination. Also known for her work behind the camera, Field made her directorial debut in 1996 with the ABC telefilm "The Christmas Tree," which she co-wrote and which starred Julie Harris. She directed an episode of the HBO miniseries "From the Earth to the Moon" and in 2000 made her feature film directorial debut with Beautiful starring Minnie Driver. In 2002, Field made her Broadway debut in Edward Albee’s "The Goat," and in 2004, she received rave reviews for her role as Amanda in Tennessee Williams’ "The Glass Menagerie" at The Kennedy Center. Field has served on the Board of Directors of Vital Voices since 2002. She has served as Mistress of Ceremony at the Vital Voices Global Leadership Awards gala held at The Kennedy Center from 2002 through 2009. She also served on the Board of Directors of The Sundance Institute from 1995-2010.
ABOUT THE FILMMAKERS
MARC WEBB (Director) made his feature film debut with the acclaimed (500) Days of Summer, starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Zooey Deschanel. The film was nominated for two Golden Globe Awards, including Best Picture - Musical or Comedy. (500) Days of Summer also earned an Independent Spirit Award for Best Original Screenplay. For his work on the film, The National Board of Review presented Webb with The Spotlight Award, which honors outstanding directorial debuts. Webb began his career as a director for commercials and for music videos for recording artists such as Green Day, Fergie and My Chemical Romance. He was honored with several MTV Video Music Awards, including the 2009 Best Director Award for Green Day’s “21 Guns,” Best Rock Video in 2006 for AFI’s “Miss Murder” and Best Group Video for The All-American Rejects’ “Move Along.” Also in 2006, The Music Video Production Association honored him as Director of the Year for his work with Weezer, AAR and My Chemical Romance. Webb attended Colorado College, from which he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in English, and New York University. JAMES VANDERBILT (Screenplay / Story) sold his first screenplay 48 hours before he graduated from the University of Southern California’s Filmic Writing Program, because that will help you make friends at film school. The keynote speaker at his graduation was Spider-Man producer Laura Ziskin. Vanderbilt wrote and produced the true-life crime thriller Zodiac, directed by David Fincher and starring Jake Gyllenhaal, Mark Ruffalo and Robert Downey Jr. Vanderbilt received a Writers Guild of America Award nomination for his screenplay about the hunt for the serial killer who terrorized the San Francisco area in the 1970s, based on the book by Robert Graysmith. His most recent screenwriting credits include The Rundown and The Losers. Esquire Magazine profiled him in their Genius Issue, calling him a Fearless Screenwriter. He is terrified of the following in no particular order: meeting new people, insects, dancing, the dark, Jell-o, werewolves, and the Rapture. He’s generally considered a nice guy and will crush all those who oppose him.
ALVIN SARGENT (Screenplay) is a two-time Academy Award winner for his screenplays for Julia and Ordinary People and an Academy Award nominee for Paper Moon. He has won three Writers Guild Awards (for Julia, Ordinary People, and Paper Moon), a BAFTA award for Julia and, in 1991, received the Writers Guild Laurel Award for Screenwriting Achievement. Sargent most recently wrote the screenplay for Spider-Man 2 and co-wrote the screenplay for Spider-Man 3. Sargent wrote the script for Unfaithful starring Diane Lane. His other films include Anywhere But Here, Other People’s Money, White Palace, Dominick and Eugene, Nuts, Straight Time, Bobby Deerfield, The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds, Love and Pain and the Whole Damn Thing, I Walk the Line, The Sterile Cuckoo, The Stalking Moon, and Gambit. STEVE KLOVES (Screenplay) wrote the screenplays for all but one of the installments in the blockbuster Harry Potter film franchise, based on the bestselling books by J.K. Rowling. Kloves shared in BAFTA Children`s Award nominations for Best Feature for his work on Harry Potter and the Sorcerer`s Stone and Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets. He went on to script Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 1 and Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 2. He previously earned an Academy Award® nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay for Curtis Hanson`s acclaimed 2000 drama Wonder Boys, starring Michael Douglas, Tobey Maguire and Frances McDormand. He also won a Critics` Choice Award and earned BAFTA Award, Golden Globe and Writers Guild of America (WGA) Award nominations for his screenplay for the film. Kloves began his film writing career in 1984 with the screenplay for Racing with the Moon, a World War II-era coming-of-age story, directed by Richard Benjamin and starring Sean Penn, Elizabeth McGovern and Nicolas Cage. In 1989, he made his directorial debut with The Fabulous Baker Boys, starring Jeff Bridges, Beau Bridges and Michelle Pfeiffer. The film, which Kloves also wrote, garnered four Academy Award® nominations, including one for Michelle Pfeiffer, who also won a Golden Globe and a BAFTA Award for her performance. Additionally, Kloves won a British Film Institute Award and received a WGA Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay. He also wrote and directed the psychological thriller Flesh and Bone, starring Dennis Quaid, Meg Ryan and Gwyneth Paltrow. STAN LEE (Based on the Marvel Comic Book by / Executive Producer) is the Founder of POW! Entertainment and has served as its Chairman and Chief Creative Officer since inception. Known to millions as the man whose super heroes propelled Marvel to its preeminent position in the comic book industry, Stan Lee’s co-creations include Spider-Man, The Incredible Hulk, X-Men, The Fantastic Four, Iron Man, Daredevil, Silver Surfer and Dr. Strange. Now the Chairman Emeritus of Publishing and Marvel Studios, Lee first became publisher of Marvel Comics in 1972. He is recognized as the creative force that brought Marvel to the forefront of the comic publishing industry. In 1977, he introduced Spider-Man as a syndicated newspaper strip that became the most successful of all syndicated adventure strips and now appears in more than 500 newspapers worldwide -- making it the longest-running of all super hero strips.
From June 2001 until the formal creation of POW! in November 2001, Stan Lee worked to form POW! and to create intellectual property for POW! and start the development of various POW! projects. STEVE DITKO (Based on the Marvel Comic Book by) was born in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, on November 2, 1927. He studied at the famous Cartoonists and Illustrators School in New York City, landing his first professional break in comic books in 1953. Amongst his influences were Mort Meskin, Jerry Robinson, Burne Hogarth, and Jack Kirby. In a career lasting more than 45 years, Ditko has worked on titles such as The Amazing Spider-Man, The Incredible Hulk, Doctor Strange, Tales of the Mysterious Traveler, Captain Atom, The Question, Mr. A, The Creeper, The Hawk and the Dove, Shade the Changing Man, Static and numerous others. Ditko lives in New York City, and continues to be prolific in his craft. LAURA ZISKIN (Producer) established herself as one of Hollywood’s leading independent producers and studio executives with a passion for discovering new talent. Well known for her work producing the Spider-Man franchise, Ziskin oversaw one of the most successful film franchises in history. Spider-Man and Spider-Man 2 have grossed more than $1.5 billion worldwide and Spider-Man 3, which broke box office records worldwide, has become the highest grossing film in Sony’s history. In 2007, Ziskin produced the Academy Awards for the second time and instituted the first ever “Green” Oscar ceremony. The show was nominated for 9 Emmy Awards. In March 2002, she produced the 74th Annual Academy Awards (the first woman to produce the awards solo). The show was nominated for eight Emmy Awards including Outstanding Variety, Music or Comedy Special. In 1984, Ziskin partnered with Sally Field in Fogwood Films and produced Murphy’s Romance, which yielded an Academy Award nomination for James Garner as Best Actor. She also produced No Way Out starring then newcomer Kevin Costner and Gene Hackman. In 1990, she was Executive Producer of Pretty Woman, which remains one of the highest grossing films in Disney’s history.
In 1991, Ziskin produced two films, the comedy hit What About Bob?, from a story by Ziskin and Alvin Sargent, starring Bill Murray and Richard Dreyfuss and the critically acclaimed The Doctor starring William Hurt and Christine Lahti under the direction of Randa Haines. In 1992, Ziskin produced Hero, which was also from a story by Ziskin and Sargent, directed by Stephen Frears and starring Dustin Hoffman, Andy Garcia, and Geena Davis. In 1994, she produced To Die For starring Nicole Kidman (who won a Golden Globe as Best Actress – Musical or Comedy) and directed by Gus Van Sant. She also developed and served as Executive Producer of Columbia Pictures’ As Good As It Gets, which garnered Academy Awards® for stars Helen Hunt and Jack Nicholson. In 1994, Ziskin was named President of Fox 2000 Pictures, a newly formed feature film division of 20th Century Fox. Under her stewardship, Fox 2000 released such films as Courage Under Fire, One Fine Day, Inventing the Abbotts, Volcano, Soul Food, Never Been Kissed, Fight Club, Anywhere But Here, Anna and the King and The Thin Red Line, which garnered seven Academy Award® nominations including Best Picture. In 2000, just after stepping down from Fox 2000 Pictures, Ziskin teamed with George Clooney to produce the live television movie “Fail Safe,” directed by Stephen Frears. It was the first television movie to be aired live in over 35 years. It was nominated for six Emmy Awards as well as a Golden Globe nomination for Best Television Movie. It also received PGA and DGA nominations. Ziskin also Executive Produced the Norman Jewison-directed HBO Film Dinner With Friends written by Donald Margulies from his Pulitzer Prize-winning play and starring Dennis Quaid, Andie MacDowell, Greg Kinnear and Toni Collette. The film was nominated for two Emmy Awards, including Outstanding Made for Television Movie.
Ziskin was actively involved in issues that concern health, the environment, and families, having served on the board of Americans for a Safe Future, the National Council of Jewish Women and Education First. In addition she was honored by Senator Barbara Boxer as a “Woman Making History” and by the City of Hope as “Woman of the Year.” She was also honored with Premiere Magazine’s “Women in Hollywood” award, the Big Sisters of Los Angeles Sterling Award, Women’s Image Network Award, Women In Film’s Crystal Award, the Israel Film Festival’s Visionary Award, The Wellness Community’s Human Spirit Award, and The Producers Guild of America’s David O. Selznick Award as well as the Visionary Award. Ziskin was a 1973 graduate of the University of Southern California USC School of Cinematic Arts, where she returned to teach the first class in the Peter Stark Producers program. She received the Mary Pickford Alumni Award from USC in 1999. In 2008, Ziskin, along with like-minded women in the entertainment industry with a similar desire to make a real impact in the fight against cancer, founded Stand Up To Cancer. Ziskin executive produced the historic Stand Up To Cancer (SU2C) televised event, simulcast on all three major networks on September 5, 2008 to raise awareness about cancer and funds to support groundbreaking cancer research. The one-hour special, which combined entertainment, education and musical performances, was the first ever “roadblock” event raising money to proactively combat a major public health threat (the only previous roadblocks had been in response to 9/11 and Hurricane Katrina). Over 100 celebrities donated their time to appear in the show and in public service announcements promoting it, including Academy Award®-winning actors Halle Berry, Josh Brolin, Morgan Freeman, Sidney Poitier, Susan Sarandon, Meryl Streep, Hilary Swank, Tilda Swinton, Charlize Theron and Forest Whitaker. Stand Up To Cancer is one of only eight programs from 2008 honored by the Academy of TV Arts & Sciences for having made “a significant impact on the viewing audience concerning vital issues.” The SU2C initiative, which aims to accelerate the pace of cancer research in order to get more effective treatments to patients faster, awarded the first installments of over $70 million worth of three-year grants to a number of interdisciplinary, multi-institutional Dream Teams of researchers in 2009, one year after the initiative’s launch. In 2010, on September 10th, the second Stand Up To Cancer televised event aired on all four major networks and over a dozen cable outlets, including HBO, Showtime and Discovery Health. Over 100 celebrities and musicians donated their time once again to promote the initiative, including Academy Award-winning actors Denzel Washington, Gwyneth Paltrow, George Clooney, Michael Douglas, Sally Field, Renee Zellweger and Kathy Bates as well as Grammy-winning artists Stevie Wonder and Lady Antebellum. Ziskin was a founder of SU2C and a member of its Executive Leadership Committee. Ziskin passed away from breast cancer in June of 2011. Her work with Stand Up to Cancer continues as the organization raises critical funds and awareness for accelerated cancer research.
AVI ARAD (Producer) was the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Marvel Studios, the film and television division of Marvel Entertainment, and Chief Creative Officer of Marvel Entertainment. In June of 2006, Arad branched off to form his own production company – Arad Productions, Inc. Arad has been a driving force behind bringing many of Marvel’s most famous comic book characters to the screen, with a track record that has been nothing short of spectacular, including a string of No. 1 box office openings. As a producer or executive producer, his credits include Spider-Man, Spider-Man 2, and Spider-Man 3 (Columbia Pictures), which was the top-grossing film of 2007; X-Men, X2: X-Men United and X-Men: The Last Stand (Twentieth Century Fox); The Hulk (Universal Pictures); Daredevil (New Regency); The Punisher (Lions Gate Entertainment); Blade, Blade II and Blade: Trinity (New Line Cinema); Elektra (Twentieth Century Fox); The Fantastic Four and its sequel Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer (Twentieth Century Fox); Bratz: The Movie (Lionsgate); Ghost Rider and Ghost Rider Spirit of Vengeance (Columbia Pictures); Iron Man (Paramount Pictures); and The Incredible Hulk (Universal). Mr. Arad’s current feature film slate includes The Amazing Spider-Man (Columbia Pictures), Ghost In The Shell (DreamWorks), Lost Planet (Warner Bros.), Venom (Columbia Pictures), Uncharted: Drake’s Fortune (Columbia Pictures), Popeye (Sony Pictures Animation), Infamous (Columbia Pictures), Maximum Ride (Universal), Mass Effect (Legendary Pictures / Warner Bros.), and many more. Arad has also been producing animation for over 20 years on such series such as “X-Men,” “Fantastic Four,” “Silver Surfer,” “Iron Man,” “Spider-Man,” “Conan the Adventurer,” “King Arthur & the Knights of Justice,” “Bots Master,” and on direct-to-video animated features such as “Avengers,” “Iron Man” and many others. Additionally, Arad created “Mutant X” and produced sixty-six hours of the live-action TV series for Tribune Entertainment. He also produced thirteen hours of “Blade”, the live-action TV series for Spike TV. Currently Arad is producing the Pac-Man 3D CG animated show for Disney XD. Born in Cyprus and raised in Israel, Arad came to the United States during his college years and enrolled at Hofstra University to study industrial management. He earned a bachelor of business administration from the University in 1972. A long-established expert in youth entertainment, Arad is one of the world’s top toy designers. He has been involved in the creation and development of over two hundred successful products, including action figures, play sets, dolls, toy vehicles, electronic products, educational software and video games. In fact, virtually every major toy and youth entertainment manufacturer, including Toy Biz, Hasbro, Mattel, MGA, Nintendo, Tiger, Ideal, Galoob, Tyco, Sega and THQ, has been selling his products for more than 30 years. In addition to his toy, animation, and film projects, today, Arad serves as the Executive Advisor of NAMCO BANDAI Holdings and as a Chairperson of Production I.G’s American affiliate - Production I.G., LLC.
MATT TOLMACH (Producer) is president of Matt Tolmach Productions, which is based at Columbia Pictures. Tolmach launched his company in late 2010 and is currently developing several high-profile projects for Columbia Pictures, including Kitchen Sink, Royal Wedding, Frankenstein, Moonwalking With Einstein, and The Slackfi Project. From 2003 through 2010, Tolmach oversaw all production activity at Columbia Pictures, a post shared with Doug Belgrad. In 2008, Tolmach was named president of the historic label and for the better part of the past decade, he and Belgrad developed, championed and produced hundreds of films while also managing the creative staff at the studio. Prior to his appointment as president of Columbia Pictures, Tolmach previously served as president of production for the studio. During his tenure, working under the leadership of Sony Pictures Co-Chairman Amy Pascal, Tolmach was closely associated with Sam Raimi, Judd Apatow, Roland Emmerich, Adam McKay, Jimmy Miller, Neal Moritz, David Fincher and David Koepp, among other filmmakers. He oversaw some of the most successful blockbusters in Columbia Pictures history, including the Spider-Man franchise, the worldwide hits The Da Vinci Code and Angels & Demons, 21 Jump Street, Moneyball, Salt, The Other Guys, Zombieland, 2012, Step Brothers, Pineapple Express, Superbad, Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby, and Panic Room, among many others. Under his stewardship of the Columbia banner with Belgrad, Columbia released 62 #1 movies at the box office was one of only two studios to reach the $1 billion plateau at the box office every year. Tolmach joined Columbia Pictures in 1997 as Senior VP of Production. He was named Executive Vice President of Production in November 1999. Tolmach graduated from Beloit College with a B.A. in English Literature in 1986. He began his career as an agent trainee at the William Morris Agency and later ran Michael J. Fox’s production company before joining Amy Pascal as Vice President of Production and eventually Senior Vice President of Production at Turner Pictures. Over the past decade, KEVIN FEIGE (Executive Producer) has played an instrumental role in a string of blockbuster feature films adapted from the pages of Marvel comic books, including the hugely successful Spider-Man and X-Men trilogies. In his current role as producer and president of Marvel Studios, Feige oversees all creative aspects of the company’s feature film and home entertainment activities. He is currently producing the next two projects from Marvel Studios including Iron Man 3 which is slated for release on May 3, 2013 as well as Thor 2.
Feige most recently produced the critically acclaimed Marvel’s The Avengers which set the all-time, 3-day weekend box office record at $207.4 million. The film shattered box office records becoming Disney Studios’ highest-grossing domestic release of all time. Feige’s other recent producing credits include Thor starring Chris Hemsworth and Natalie Portman which opened in theatres on May 6, 2011, Captain America: The First Avenger starring Chris Evans and Tommy Lee Jones which was released on July 22, 2011, and Iron Man 2 which was released in theatres on May 7, 2010. The sequel to Iron Man, took the number one spot its first weekend with a domestic box office gross of $128.1 million. In the summer of 2008, Feige produced the summer blockbuster movies, Iron Man and The Incredible Hulk, which were the first fully financed and developed films by the new Marvel Studios. Iron Man, in which Robert Downey Jr. originally dons the Super Hero’s powerful armor for director Jon Favreau alongside co-stars Gwyneth Paltrow and Jeff Bridges, was released May 2, 2008 and was an immediate box office success. Garnering the number one position for two weeks in a row, the film brought in over $100 million its opening weekend and grossed over $571 million worldwide. On June 13, 2008, Marvel released The Incredible Hulk marking its second number one opener of that summer. The film stars Edward Norton along with William Hurt, Tim Roth and Liv Tyler. Director Louis Leterrier’s spectacular revival of the iconic green goliath grossed over $250 million in worldwide box office receipts. Feige previously served as executive producer on the second and third Spider-Man films, which took in combined worldwide box office receipts of well over a billion-and-a-half dollars. The Spider-Man series, starring Tobey Maguire, Kirsten Dunst and James Franco, are the three highest grossing superhero films of all time. Feige also co-produced X2: X-Men United, the second installment in the popular X-Men franchise, and executive produced X-Men 3: The Last Stand. Together, the two films, starring Hugh Jackman, Halle Berry and Ian McKellen, totaled $866 million in ticket sales worldwide. Since joining Marvel in 2000, Feige has been involved in key capacities for all of the company’s theatrical film productions. His credits include executive producing Fantastic Four and its sequel 4: The Rise of the Silver Surfer, which together grossed over $600 million worldwide. He also was the executive producer of Ang Lee’s Hulk, starring Eric Bana and Jennifer Connelly; Elektra, starring Jennifer Garner; and The Punisher, starring Thomas Jane. Additionally, Feige co-produced the 2003 hit Daredevil starring Ben Affleck.
After graduating from the University of Southern California`s School of Cinema-Television, Feige worked for Lauren Shuler Donner and Richard Donner at their Warner Bros.-based production company. During his tenure there, Feige worked on the action-adventure Volcano and the hit romantic comedy You`ve Got Mail. Transitioning into a development position, Feige earned his first producer credit on X-Men, a film that is credited with revitalizing the comic book genre. In 2003, Feige appeared on The Hollywood Reporter’s annual “Next Gen” list of 35 top young executives poised to become leaders in the entertainment industry. MICHAEL GRILLO (Executive Producer) most recently served as executive producer for Columbia Pictures` action comedy The Green Hornet, starring Seth Rogen, Jay Chou and Cameron Diaz. Grillo received an Academy Award nomination, shared with writer/director Lawrence Kasdan and Charles Okun, for 1988`s The Accidental Tourist, which starred William Hurt, Kathleen Turner and Geena Davis. Grillo served as head of feature film production management at DreamWorks from the company`s inception in 1996 through 2005. He also served as the executive producer on DreamWorks` first feature film, The Peacemaker, starring George Clooney and Nicole Kidman. During his tenure at DreamWorks, Grillo shepherded such acclaimed films as Cast Away, Gladiator, American Beauty and Saving Private Ryan, and the popular hits Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy, The Ring, Almost Famous and Minority Report. Grillo`s credits as executive producer include DreamWorks` The Uninvited and multiple collaborations with Kasdan, including Silverado, I Love You To Death and Wyatt Earp. Grillo served as producer and first assistant director for Kasdan`s Grand Canyon. He also produced the Albert Brooks comedy Defending Your Life, and writer/director David Koepp`s The Trigger Effect. Grillo worked his way up through the production ranks over the years, beginning his career as a DGA trainee on the classic films Young Frankenstein and The Towering Inferno. He served as assistant director on such films as New York, New York, The Deerhunter, Breaking Away, Heaven`s Gate, Inside Moves, Body Heat, Cat People, Young Doctors In Love, The Man With Two Brains, The Woman In Red, Thief of Hearts, Irreconcilable Differences and The Big Chill. Grillo is a member of The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. He lives in the Los Angeles area. JOHN SCHWARTZMAN, ASC (Director of Photography) is an Academy Award nominee and winner of the ASC Award for his work on the film Seabiscuit. A veteran of comedy as well as big action films, Schwartzman experience also includes music videos and commercials. Most recently, Schwartzman shot The Green Hornet, Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian and The Bucket List. A graduate of the University of South California, Schwartzman was previously nominated for the ASC award for his work on Pearl Harbor. Other notable credits include National Treasure: Book of Secrets, Meet the Fockers, Armageddon, Conspiracy Theory and The Rock.
Schwartzman`s commercial work includes spots for a wide range of national and international clients such as HBO, State Farm Insurance, Capitol One, Blue Man Group, Pacific Life, Chevy, Visa, Toyota, Hershey`s, American Express, Coca-Cola, Budweiser, Buick, Honda, Nike, Victoria`s Secret, Canon, Levi`s Mercedes Benz, Jeep, Kodak and AT&T. J. MICHAEL RIVA (Production Designer) is an Academy Award nominee for his designs on Steven Spielberg`s The Color Purple. He most recently designed Iron Man 2. Riva is currently working on Quentin Tarantino`s forthcoming Django Unchained. He also designed Iron Man, Seven Pounds, Spider-Man 3, The Pursuit of Happyness, Zathura: A Space Adventure, Stealth, Charlie`s Angels and Charlie`s Angels: Full Throttle, and Ivan Reitman`s Evolution. Riva has doubled as the production designer and second unit director on A Few Good Men, Radio Flyer, Scrooged and Goonies. Other memorable production design credits include Dave, Six Days Seven Nights, Congo, The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai, Lethal Weapon, Lethal Weapon 2, Lethal Weapon 4, Ordinary People, Bad Boys and Brubaker. Among Riva`s television credits are the Emmy Award-winning telefilm "Tuesdays with Morrie" and "The 74th Academy Awards," for which he received an Emmy nomination. With over 20 years of feature film editing experience, ALAN EDWARD BELL, A. C. E. (Editor) began his career with director Rob Reiner as an assistant editor on the feature films A Few Good Men, Misery and The American President. He later continued to work with Reiner as an editor on The Story Of Us and Alex And Emma. Bell`s recent credits include his collaboration with director Marc Webb on the critically acclaimed film (500) Days of Summer. Bell also edited Water for Elephants, The Green Mile and Gulliver`s Travels. Over the years, his diverse credits include such features as the action adventure Comedy Bait, starring Jamie Foxx, Hoot, and the sports comedy spoof The Comebacks. Bell also cut the critically acclaimed romantic comedy Little Manhattan for directing team Mark Levin and Jeniffer Flackett, which then led to a producing role on their next project, Nim’s Island. Other credits include the award-winning documentary Wall Rats, and the independent film The Anarchist’s Cookbook. Bell’s talent and interest in creating visual effects has led him to numerous visual effects supervisory roles, many of them on the films he has edited. When he is not in the cutting room, he is running Handmade Digital Inc., his visual effects company specializing in story based, performance-enhancing effects.
During his twenty-five-year editing career, PIETRO SCALIA, A. C. E. (Editor) has been an integral collaborator on films from acclaimed directors such as Ridley Scott, Bernardo Bertolucci, Oliver Stone, Gus Van Sant and Sam Raimi. The Italian-born Scalia was raised and educated in Switzerland before moving to the United States to pursue filmmaking, receiving his MFA in Film and Theatre Arts from UCLA in 1985. Scalia began his career as an assistant editor for Oliver Stone on Wall Street and Talk Radio, then went on to contribute as an associate editor on Born On The Fourth Of July and as an additional editor on The Doors. In 1992, the then-31-year-old Scalia won his first Academy Award, the A.C.E. Eddie Award and the BAFTA Film Award for Best Editing on Oliver Stone`s JFK. In 1998, Scalia received a second Academy Award® nomination for Gus Van Sant`s Good Will Hunting. He went on to edit G.I. Jane, Hannibal, Gladiator, Black Hawk Down and American Gangster for director Ridley Scott, garnering another Academy Award® nomination on Gladiator and winning his second Academy Award® for his work on Black Hawk Down. Body Of Lies and Robin Hood are his latest projects with the prolific Ridley Scott. Scalia`s other editing credits include Little Buddha and Stealing Beauty for Bernardo Bertolucci, The Quick And The Dead for Sam Raimi, Playing By Heart for Willard Carroll and Memoirs Of A Geisha for Rob Marshall. In addition, Scalia`s efforts include stints as music producer with composer Hans Zimmer on three of Scott`s films, served as a Jury member at the Venice Film Festival in 2004 and headed a seven member Jury for the “Swiss Film Prize” in 2006. JEROME CHEN (Visual Effects Supervisor) is an Academy Award-nominated senior visual effects supervisor at Sony Pictures Imageworks. Chen served as senior visual effects supervisor on Beowulf and The Polar Express and applied his outstanding talents on the two Stuart Little films, creating the first all-digital character to star in a live action film. He earned his first Academy Award® nomination for the groundbreaking visual effects in Stuart Little, recognizing his advances in the development of digital imagery techniques including innovations in digital lighting, compositing, fur and cloth. His work on Stuart Little also was awarded with a Monitor Award for Best Electronic Effects in a Theatrical Release. For Stuart Little 2, Chen invented the complex feather systems and perfected the photo-real integration for the film, which won the Prix du Long Metrage (Best Feature Film) at the Imagina Awards in 2003.
His earlier film credits include Godzilla (Annie Award nomination for Best Special Effects Animation in a Feature Film), Contact (Monitor Award for Best Electronic Effects in a Theatrical Release), James and the Giant Peach, The Ghost and the Darkness, and In the Line of Fire. Chen joined Sony Pictures Imageworks in its founding year, 1992, and worked his way up through the production ranks as a digital artist, senior animator, computer graphics supervisor, digital effects supervisor to his current position of senior visual effects supervisor. He is an acknowledged expert in the technique of integrating digital imagery with live action, especially in the area of photorealistic effects, and is known internationally for his presentations on the topics of digital character creation and imagery techniques. KYM BARRETT (Costume Designer) attended the National Institute of Dramatic Arts in Sydney, where her association with Baz Luhrmann led her to the U.S. and Mexico from her native Australia to work on Luhrmann`s 1996 film Romeo + Juliet. The costumes she created for Leonardo DiCaprio and Claire Danes in that film attracted attention and led to a meeting with the Wachowski brothers. The Wachowskis hired her in 1999 to design the costumes for The Matrix, The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions – costumes that inspired fashion designers, other costume designers and consumers around the world. Her other film credits include Three Kings (1999), starring George Clooney, the Hughes twins’ From Hell (2001), starring Johnny Depp, the Wachowskis’ Speed Racer (2008), and most recently, The Green Hornet (2011). For her work on screen, Barrett was nominated in 2001 by the Costume Designers Guild of America`s Best Costume Award for The Matrix, and she won the guild’s award for Best Commercial Costume Design in 2002. The same year she was nominated for a best costume design Golden Satellite Award for her work on From Hell and in 2007 she was nominated for excellence in costume design for the fantasy film Eragon. Barrett designed the costumes for Cirque du Soleil`s presentation "Totem," which reflected the creation and evolution of life and the development of civilizations on earth. JAMES HORNER (Music by) is one of the most celebrated of modern film composers. Having created the music for dozens of the most memorable and successful films of the past two decades, Horner was honored with two Academy Awards® and two Golden Globes for James Cameron’s Titanic. In addition, he has earned Academy Award nominations for his Original Scores for Avatar, House of Sand and Fog, A Beautiful Mind, Braveheart, Apollo 13, Field of Dreams and Aliens, and for the Original Song “Somewhere Out There“ from An American Tale. He has also garnered eight more Golden Globe nominations and has won six Grammy Awards, including Song of the Year in both 1987 (“Somewhere Out There“) and 1998 (“My Heart Will Go On“).
In April 1998, Horner’s Titanic soundtrack completed an unprecedented run of 16 weeks at #1 on Billboard’s Top 200 Album Chart, setting a new record for the most consecutive weeks at #1 for a score album. Known for his stylistic diversity, Horner’s film credits include The Karate Kid, The Spiderwick Chronicles, Apocalypto, All The King’s Men, The New World, The Legend of Zorro, The Chumscrubber, Flightplan, The Forgotten, Troy, The Missing, Bobby Jones, Stroke of Genius, Radio, Beyond Borders, Enemy at the Gates, Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas, The Four Feathers, The Perfect Storm, Freedom Song, Bicentennial Man, Mighty Joe Young, The Mask of Zorro, Deep Impact, The Devil’s Own, Ransom, Courage Under Fire, To Gillian on Her 37th Birthday, The Spitfire Grill, Casper, Legends of the Fall, Clear and Present Danger, The Pagemaster, Bopha!, The Pelican Brief, The Man Without a Face, Patriot Games, Thunderheart, Sneakers, The Rocketeer, Glory, In Country, Field of Dreams, Honey, I Shrunk the Kids, The Land Before Time, Willow, An American Tail, The Name of the Rose, Cocoon and Cocoon: The Return, Gorky Park, 48 Hrs. and Another 48 Hrs., Star Trek II and Star Trek III. He also wrote the score for the 2006 film The Good Shepherd. Marvel, and the names and distinctive likenesses of Spider-Man and all other Marvel characters: ™ and © 2012 Marvel Entertainment, LLC & its subsidiaries. All Rights Reserved. “ACADEMY AWARD” and “OSCAR” are the registered trademarks and service marks of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.”
CREDITS
Columbia Pictures Presents "THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN"
Directed by Marc Webb Screenplay by James Vanderbilt and Alvin Sargent and Steve Kloves Story by James Vanderbilt Based on the Marvel Comic Book by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko Produced by: Laura Ziskin, Avi Arad, Matt Tolmach Executive Producers: Stan Lee, Kevin Feige Executive Producer: Michael Grillo Director of Photography: John Schwartzman, ASC Production Designer: J. Michael Riva Editors: Alan Edward Bell, A.C.E., Pietro Scalia, A.C.E. Costume Designer: Kym Barrett Casting by Francine Maisler, CSA Music Composed byJames Horner Visual Effects Supervisor: Jerome Chen A Marvel Entertainment, Laura Ziskin, Avi Arad, Matt Tolmach, Production CAST Spider-Man/Peter Parker: Andrew Garfield Gwen Stacy: Emma Stone The Lizard/Dr. Curt Connors: Rhys Ifans Captain Stacy: Denis Leary Uncle Ben: Martin Sheen Aunt May: Sally Field Rajit Ratha: Irrfan Khan Richard Parker: Campbell Scott Mary Parker: Embeth Davidtz Flash Thompson: Chris Zylka Peter Parker (Age 4): Max Charles Jack`s Father: C. Thomas Howell Jack: Jake Ryan Keiffer Helen Stacy: Kari Coleman Store Clerk: Michael Barra Cash Register Thief: Leif Gantvoort Gordon: Andy Pessoa Missy Kallenback" Hannah Marks Hot Girl: Kelsey Chow Mr. Cramer: Kevin McCorkle Physics Nerds: Andy Gladbach, Ring Hendricks-Tellefsen Miss Ritter: Barbara Eve Harris School Librarian: Stan Lee Nicky`s Girlfriend: Danielle Burgio Nicky: Tom Waite Car Thief: Keith Campbell Car Thief Cop: Steve DeCastro Receptionist: Jill Flint OsCorp Intern: Mark Daugherty Rodrigo Guevara: Milton Gonzalez Howard Stacy: Skyler Gisondo Phillip Stacy: Charlie DePew Simon Stacy: Jacob Rodier Construction Worker: Vincent Laresca Taxi Driver: Damien Lemon Police Officer with Sketch: Ty Upshaw Police Officer: James Chen Officer (SWAT): Alexander Bedria Sheila (Subway) Tia Texada Subway Guy: Jay Caputo Newscaster (News Chopper): John Burke Principal: Terry Bozeman Second Girl (Subway): Jennifer Lyons Man in the Shadows: Michael Massee Ariel: Amber Stevens CREW Stunt Coordinators: Andy Armstrong, James Armstrong Fight Coordinator: Gary Ray Stearns Stunts: Tony Angelotti, Nina Louise Armstrong, Tyler Barnett, Charlie Brewer, Jennifer Caputo, Alex Chansky, Ilram Choi, Gary Davis, Mark Dirkse, John Duff, Jeremy Dunn, David Elson, Bryan Friday, Conrad Gamble, Zedric Harris, Toby Holguin, J.E. Johnson, Rob Mars, Mike Owen, Jim Palmer, Simon Potter, Georgina Rawlings, John Rawlings, Sean Rosales, Buddy Sosthand, William R. Spencer, Jim , Bryon Weiss, Thom Williams, Glen Yrigoyen Unit Production Manager: JoAnn Perritano First Assistant Director: Richard Graves Second Assistant Director: Christina Fong Second Assistant Director: Eric Sherman Visual Effects / Stereo Producer: Cari Thomas 3D Visual Effects Supervisor: Rob Engle Associate Producers: Tom Cohen, Kyla Kraman, Beatriz Sequeira Supervising Art Director: David F. Klassen Art Directors: N.C. Page Buckner, Michael E. Goldman, Paul Sonski, Suzan Wexler Set Decorator: Leslie A. Pope Property Master: Andrew M. Siegel Script Supervisor: Sharron Reynolds-Enriquez "A" Camera Operator: Ian Fox First Assistant "A" Camera: Richard Mosier Second Assistant "A" Camera: Thomas D. Lairson, Jr. "B" Camera Operator: David Luckenbach First Assistant "B" Camera: Mark Santoni, Stephen Wong Second Assistant "B" Camera: John Woodward Digital Intermediate Technician: Brook Willard Assistant Costume Designer: Holly Davis Costume Supervisor: Lynda Foote Key Costumers: Jo Kissack Folsom, Robin Borman-Wizan, Betsy Glick Costumers: Robert Moore, Valentina Aulisi, Michael Crow, Leigh Bell Spider-Man Costume Manufactured by Cirque du Soleil Makeup Department Head: Ve Neill Key Makeup Artist: Nikoletta Skarlatos Hair Department Head: Kathrine Gordon Key Hair Stylist: Yvette Stone Chief Lighting Technician: Dave Christensen Assistant Chief Lighting Technician: James M. McClure Rigging Gaffer: Frank Dorowsky Best Boy Rigging Electric: Brian Dennis Key Grip: Les T. Tomita Best Boy Grip: Dana Baker Dolly Grips: Alan Shultz, Jack P. Glenn Key Rigging Grip: Rick Harris Best Boy Rigging Grip: Donald A. Spadoni Librahead Technician: Adam Austin Production Mixer: John Pritchett Boom Operator: David M. Roberts Video Assist Operator: David Deever Special Effects Supervisor: John Frazier Special Effects Coordinator: Jim Schwalm Special Effects Foreman: David Amborn Location Manager: Mike Fantasia Assistant Location Managers: Donny Martino, Jr., Michael B. Louis Production Supervisor: Jason Tamez Production Coordinators: Lisa Dietrick, Jenny Sandell Assistant Production Coordinator: Sara Bartkiewicz Production Secretary: George J. Hrico Production Controller: Sheilah Sullivan First Assistant Accountants: Rick Castro, Michelle De Mayo Payroll Accountants: Cathy Marshall, David Romano Construction Coordinator: Walt Hadfield General Foreman: Brian Walker Paint Foreman: Josh Morris Propmaker Foremen: William Daley III, Bret Brand Greensman: Lee Runnels Standby Painter: Bill Kauhane Hoyt Set Designers: Ernest Avila, Andrew Birdzell, Noelle King, William Law III, Eric Sundahl Character Concept Designs by Aaron Sims Illustrators: George Hull, EJ Krisor, Josh Nizzi Graphic Designer: Susan A. Burig Art Department Coordinators: Nancy A. King, Amanda C. Bromberg Storyboard Artists: Robert Consing, Stephen Platt, Amy Umezu, Leadman: Russell Anderson On-Set Dresser: Marcus Epps Assistant Property Masters: Josué Rodriguez, Chela Fiorini Unit Publicist: Sandy O`Neill Still Photographer: Jaimie Trueblood 2nd Second Assistant Director: Audrey Clark DGA Trainee: Steve Windle Assistants to Ms. Ziskin: David Jacobson, Lynn Padilla Assistant to Mr. Arad: Mona Lisa Farrokhnia Assistant to Mr. Tolmach: Kim Cullum Assistant to Mr. Grillo: Cindy Marcari Assistant to Mr. Garfield: Jesse Grillo Assistant to Ms. Stone: Alexis Alexander Assistant to Mr. Ifans: Bea S. Rembeczky Production Assistants: Lauren Abiouness, Nick Allen, Teri Barber, Wesley Barker, Joseph Dizon, Katy Galow, Jenn Grundstad, Matt Hibbard, Dylan Klassen, Erin Levine, Kyle Morrison, Kyle Musselman, Courtney Salmon, Joshua Sankar, Kristen Schreck, Jeffrey Stanton. Townson Wells,Chad Witt Casting Associate: Kathy Driscoll-Mohler Casting Assistant: Elizabeth Chodar Extras Casting: Central Casting Catering: For Stars Catering Craft Service: Richard Cody Medic: Tony Whitmore Trainer for Mr. Garfield: Armando Alarcon Dialect Coach: Elizabeth Himelstein Transportation Captain: Joel Marrow Transportation Co-Captains: Randy Cantor, Jimmy Ray Pickens SECOND UNIT Second Unit Director: Vic Armstrong First Assistant Director: Steve Love Second Assistant Directors: David Kelley, Henry Matthew Marshall Production Supervisor: Matthew F. Leonetti Stunt Coordinator: Scott Armstrong Script Supervisor: Kathy McHugh Property Master: Douglas Fox Plate Unit Director / Director of Photography: Peter Collister "A" Camera Operator: Peter Mercurio First Assistant "A" Camera: Alan Disler Second Assistant "A" Camera: Robin Bursey "B" Camera Operator: John A. Connell First Assistant "B" Camera: Darrin DeLoach Second Assistant "B" Camera: Rob Monroy Key Costumer: Jason M. Moore Makeup Department Head: Bill Corso Key Makeup Artist: Gerald Quist Hair Department Head: Barbara Cantu Key Hair Stylist: Teressa Hill Gaffer: Shane D. Kelly Best Boys Electric: Donald K. Davidson, Wally Rowell Key Grip: Michael Alexonis Best Boy Grip: Tim Soronen Dolly Grips: Jason Newton, Ralphie Del Castillo Sound Mixer: Douglas Axtell Boom Operator: Gunnar T. Walter Video Assist Operator: Chris Shadley Production Coordinator: Daniel M. Tipton Standby Painter: Chris Samp Assistant Property Master: Michael P. Sweeney On-Set Dresser: Phillip Thoman NEW YORK UNIT Unit Production Manager: Richard Baratta Second Assistant Director: Maggie Murphy Art Director: Miguel Lopez-Castillo Set Decorator: Regina Graves Property Master: James Mazzola Camera Operator: Tom Houghton Costume Supervisor: Susan J. Wright Key Makeup: Vincent T. Schicchi Hair Department Head: Angelina DeAngelis Chief Lighting Technician: Russell Engels Assistant Chief Lighting Technician: Jim Mah Key Grip: Richard Guinness, Jr. Best Boy Grip: Robbin Park Dolly Grip: Joe Belschner Special Effects Coordinator: Steve Kirshoff Special Effects Foreman: Mark Bero Location Manager: David Ray Martin Parking Coordinator: Kerry Clark Production Coordinator: John DeSimone Assistant Production Coordinator: Monica Barraza Production Secretary: Veronique Lee Production Accountant: Joan Altman Construction Coordinator: Joseph A. Alfieri, Jr. Key Construction Grip: Steven Fratianni Scenic Charge: Lauren Doner Hirn Art Department Coordinator: Brianne Zulauf Leadman: Christopher DeTitta On-Set Dresser: Chris Cerniglia Transportation Captain: Michael Hyde Transportation Co-Captain: Robert Buckman POST PRODUCTION Additional Editing: Michael McCusker, A.C.E. 1st Assistant Editors: Jennifer Vecchiarello, Robert Mead Assistant Editors: Bob Drwila, Lauren Clark, Kathleen Latlip Apprentice Editor: Shawn Neill Visual Effects Editors: Linda Drake, Mark Herman, John Berri Post Production Assistants: Merry Colomer, Hillary Hendler Re-Recording Mixers: Paul Massey, David Giammarco, Deb Adair Supervising Sound Editors: Shannon Mills, Addison Teague Assistant Sound Editors: Jacob Riehle, Melissa Lytle Supervising Dialogue Editor: Teri E. Dorman Dialogue Editors: David Arnold, Robert Troy Sound Effects Editors: Adam Kopald, Martin Jacob Lopez, Lee Gilmore Supervising ADR Editor: Kimberly Harris ADR Editor: Michele Perrone Foley Editors: Thomas W. Small, Willard Overstreet Foley Artists: Sarah Monat, Robin Harlan Foley Mixer: Randy K. Singer ADR Mixer: Howard London Recordist: Dan Sharp Loop Group: HoffmanBrow Post Sound Services Provided by Sony Pictures Studios, Culver City, California Music Editors: Jim Henrikson, Joe E. Rand, Barbara McDermott Orchestrators: JAC Redford, James Horner, Jon Kull, Randy Kerber Score Mixer: Simon Rhodes Synth Programming: Ian Underwood Music Arranged by: Simon Rhodes, Simon Franglen Piano Solos: James Horner Boy Soprano: Luca Lupino-Franglen Vocalists: Dhafer Youssef, Lisbeth Scott Digital Score Recordist: Kevin Globerman Music Preparation: Bob Bornstein Music Contractors: Sandy DeCrescent, Gina Zimmitti Music Scoring Supervisor: Sylvia Wells Score Recorded at Sony Pictures Studios, Streisand Scoring Stage Main Titles by Blur Studio End Titles by Cinetitle Digital Intermediate by Colorworks Digital Colorists: Steve Bowen, John Persichetti On-Set Dailies by OUTBURST, a LIGHT IRON Digital Service Lizard Special Effects Makeup by Legacy Effects Design and Prosthetics Supervisors: Lindsay Macgowan, Shane Mahan VISUAL EFFECTS Visual Effects Production Supervisor: Adam LaGattuta Lead Visual Effects Coordinator: Marcus Taormina Visual Effects Coordinators: Phelicia Sperrazzo, Kate Royce Walters, Katrissa Peterson Visual Effects Assistant Coordinator: Melissa Franco Visual Effects Data Wrangler: Chris Moore Special Visual Effects and Animation by Sony Pictures Imageworks Inc., Culver City, California Animation Supervisor: Randall William Cook Additional Animation Supervision: David Schaub Digital Effects Supervisor: David A. Smith Senior Visual Effects Producer: John Clinton Visual Effects Executive Producer: Debbie Denise Digital Producer: David Kalbeitzer Senior CG Supervisor: John Haley CG Supervisors: Christopher Waegner, Theo Bialek, Robert Winter Stereographic Supervisor: Benjamin Hendricks Digital Production Managers: Louisa Kwan, Daniel Carbo, Ryan Gilleland, Jarrod Nesbit Visual Effects Senior Editor: Allen Cappuccilli Visual Effects Editor: Patrick Ballin Resource Manager: Jann Wimmer Modeling Supervisor: Marvin Kim Character & Hard Surface Modelers: Joy Chung, Marcos Caleb Kang, Eric Provan Character Set-Up Leads: Frank Müller, Stephen Cullingford Character Set-Up TD: Tim Coleman Pipeline Supervisor: Firat Enderoglu Pipeline TDs: Stefaan Contreras, Alex Redsar Lampila, Kee Chang Texture Paint Lead: Elbert Yen Texture Painters: Nathan Boyd, Camila Davila, Rich Fallat, Glen Gustafson, Kerry Nordquist Matchmove Lead: Tom Schultz Rotomation Lead: Joanie Karnowski Rotomation Artist: Brian G. Curtis Matchmove Coordinator: Andrew Turner Precomp Lead: JD Cowles Plate Prep/Stereo Precomp Artists: Curtis Carlson, Sep Dehpour, Douglas Zablocki Stereo Coordinator: Judith Fernando Layout Lead: Brian Doman Layout Artists: John Bunt, Justin Louis, Hajime Ogata, Emi Tahira, Michael M. Walsh Layout Coordinator: Adrian J. Sciutto Character Animation Leads: Max Tyrie, Mike Beaulieu, Richard B. Smith Character Animators: Brendan Body, Michael Dharney, Derek Esparza, Brian Eyre, Joel Foster, Robert Fox, Simon Irvine, Jacqueline Koehler, Bart Kosmowski, Billy Vu Lam, Michael Langford, Alexander Lee, Cedric Lo, Jonathan Macintosh, Ina Marczinczik, Leonardo Martinez, Robert Mcintosh, Adrian Millington, Atsushi Sato, Alexander Snow, Nick Starcevic, Zachary Torok, Vince Truitner, Roger Vizard, James R. Ward, Phan Wiantrakoon, Paul Wood, Roland Yepez Animation Production Manager: Jules Christina Eschliman Animation Coordinator: Ozen Sayidof Animation Finaling Artists: Paxton Gerrish, Matthew Tovar Cloth & Skin Simulation Lead: Dustin Wicke Cloth & Skin Simulation Artists: Daniel Camp, William Eckroat, Dax LaFleur, Hannah Lees, Christo Libaridian, Kaitlyn Peplow, Jason Stellwag Cloth & Skin Simulation Coordinator: Veronica Kablan FX Animation Leads: Stephen Marshall, Joseph Pepper FX Animation Artists: Tom Allen, Charles Anderson, Matthew Michael Benson, Dan Bodenstein, Daniele Colajacomo, Todd Dufour, Maria Giannakouros, Scott Giegler, Mark Hamilton, Ahmed Bahaa Hassan, Matthew Hendershot, Matt Hightower, David Hipp, Wayne Hollingsworth, Doug Ikeler, Seunghyuk Kim, James Little, Kevin Mannens, Chris Messineo, Daniel Naulin, Jongwon Pak, Christopher Dante Romano, Miles Todorof, Carolyn A. Uy, Jeff Wolverton FX Animation Coordinator: Colin de Andrade Roto/Paint Lead: Kim Headstrom Roto/Paint Associate Production Manager: Taide Carpenter Look Development & Lighting Leads: Clara Chan, Bertrand Cordier, Joosten Kuypers, Nick Loy, Cosku Turhan Compositing Leads: Stuart Cripps, Colin Drobnis, Anthony Kramer, Aaron Kupferman. Orde Stevanoski Stereo Leads: Brian Blasiak, Erik Gonzalez, Benjamin T. Perkins, Joseph Rosensteel, Mathew Thomas Lighting and Compositing Coordinators: Danielle DiMarco Barto, Dan Cortez, Chrissy Habblett, Laura M. Meredith, Jeff Wong Lighting and Compositing Artists: Douglas Addy, Laide Agunbiade, Mike Ogun Alkan, Bekah Baik, Al Bailey, James Battersby, Brooke Beane, Jean-Paul Beaulieu, Tatjana Bozinovski, Jared Brient, Grady Campbell, Jean Choi, Jeff Chung, Cedar Connor, Mike Dalzell, Dennis Davis, Lisa Deaner, Caine Dickinson, Amy Edwards, Brian Fisher, Toby Gaines, Jason Gottlieb, Brian Hanable, Jerome S. Hartman, Daniel Hayes, Luke Heathcock, Yuka Hosomi, Chris Hung, Jeffrey J. Johnson, Miku Kayama, Farid Khadiri-Yazami, Dan Knight, Dan Kruse, Wing Kwok, Kurt Lawson, Stephen Lunn, Lori C. Miller, Sarah Moore, Gautama Murcho, Vinh Nguyen, James H. Park, Cara Paul, Michael Porterfield, Laurie Powers, Daniel Raffel, Daniel Rubin, John Sasaki, David Wayne Satchwell, Christian Schermerhorn, Manuela Schmidt, Peter Sidoriak, Aaron Singer, Ryan Smolarek, Sharmishtha Sohoni, Daniel Sunwoo, Ryan Trippensee, Wayne Vincenzi, Nancey S. Wallis, Christina Adia Wang, Susan Weeks, Matthew Thomas Wheeler, Bob Wiatr, Shane Christopher Wicklund, Ned Wilson, Tyquane Wright, Genevieve Yee, Teru Yoshida, Fernando Zorrilla Lead Production Services Technician: Stephen Winters Production Services Technicians: Thomas Cosolito, Lisa Curtis, Glenn Gannon, Shawn Kirsch, Zubair Lawrence, Nathan Longest, Toby Abraham Rosen, Max Smythe, Dan Zimmer Production Coordinator: Valerie Kenniston Production Assistants: Joel Binder, Timothy Dalton, Robin Garcia Survey/Data Wrangler: John Schmidt Visual Effects Photographer: Chris Hebert Visual Effects Accountant: Jeff Shapiro Shader Pipeline: Lee Kerley Rendering Scientist: Larry Gritz Software Supervisors: Armin Bruderlin, Brian Hall, Parag Havaldar, Sosh Mirsepassi Software Engineers: Alan Davidson, Peter Palombi, Mathew Selby Senior Systems Architect: Nick Bali Systems Engineers: Hector Barrera, Derrick McPherson, Yukiko Yamanaka Systems Administrators: Adam Fukushima, Angel Trujillo Digital Production: Anett Gough, Stephanie Greco, Dawn Guinta, Lea Lambert, Wendy Mashburn, Samantha Ofole-Prince, Rosie Server Senior Staff: Randy Lake, Rob Bredow, Rick Mischel Sony Pictures Imageworks India General Manager: Joe Gareri Production Manager: Navin Venkatesh CG Supervisor: Gomathi Ramalingam Matchmove/Rotomation Supervisor: Ranjith Kizakkey Senior Production Coordinator: Chirag Matchmove Sequence Leads: Bala Morarji. T.P, Suresh. E Matchmove Artists: Kathirvel. M, Manoj Kumar. E, Praveenkumar. V, Ron Thomas, Saravanan. T, Saurabh Patel, Sivapriyan. K, Thangaperumal. R, Yuvarajan. B Rotomation Artists: Ibrahim Basha, Dhananjayan. D, Stanley. B Paint Lead: Ramkumar. C.R Paint Artists: Elanchezhiyan. A, Jaikishan. H, Jeyaruban. J, Kumar. S, Kumaran. L, Panner Selvam. A, Praylin Paulraj, prasanna. D, Sabanayagam. V, Sakthivel. M, Sandesh. R, Selvam. G, Suresh. N Roto Lead: Abheesh Roto Artists: Aaravindan. C, John Abraham, Anitha. P, Balaji, Deepika Bhandari, Biju. S, Chandrasekar. C, Dilipan. J, Kiran. M, Manikandasamy. V, Ramesh. G, Suprith Kumar. R, Uma Maheswari. C Visual Effects by Pixomondo Visual Effects Supervisor: Boris Schmidt Visual Effects Producer: Natasha Ozoux CG Supervisor: Adam Watkins Compositing Supervisor: Robin Graham Sequence Compositing Supervisor: Mihaela Orzea Sequence Producers: Sabrina Gerhardt, Pam Hammarlund, Michael Kowalski, Franzisca Puppe Sequence Supervisors: David Burton, Sven Martin, Mohsen Mousavi Additional Visual Effects by Pixel Playground Additional Visual Effects by Nerve Additional Visual Effects by Arc Productions Ltd., Toronto Additional Visual Effects by Method Studios Additional 3D Conversion by Gener8 Stereographer: Ben Breckenridge VFX Supervisor: Mark Lasoff Stereoscopic Producer: Paul Becker Stereoscopic Supervisor: Warren Lysechko Stereoscopic Production Supervisor: Lindsey Williamson Christy Additional 3D Conversion by Legend3D Additional 3D Conversion by Reliance Media Works Previsualization Services Provided by PROOF, INC. Previs Supervisors: Gavin Wright, Louise Baker 3D Camera Services Provided by 3ality Technica 3D Producer: Steve Schklair 3D Camera Engineers: Jeff Amaral, Terry Devine, Markus Lanxinger, Don Presley Filmed at Sony Pictures Studios, Culver City, California Score Album on Sony Classical MUSIC "No Way Down" Written by James Mercer Performed by The Shins Courtesy of Columbia Records By arrangement with Sony Music Licensing "Big Brat" Written by Alexander Greenwald Performed by Phantom Planet Courtesy of Epic Records By arrangement with Sony Music Licensing "Bus Bus" Written and Performed by Amy Ray Courtesy of Daemon Records "Til Kingdom Come" Written by Guy Berryman, Jonathan Buckland, William Champion and Chris Martin Performed by Coldplay Courtesy of EMI Records Ltd. Under license from EMI Film & Television Music © 2012 Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc. All Rights Reserved Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc. is the author of this film (motion picture) for the purpose of copyright and other laws. In loving memory of Laura Ziskin Filmed on location in Los Angeles and New York Richard Feynman photograph courtesy of the Archives, California Institute of Technology Rear Window poster courtesy of Universal Studios Licensing, LLLP Special Thanks to: The City of New York Mayor`s Office of Film, Theatre and Broadcasting Michael R. Bloomberg, Mayor Katherine L. Oliver, Commissioner NYPD Movie & TV Unit New York City Transit Alberteen Anderson, Film and Special Events New York City Department of Transportation The New York State Governor`s Office for Motion Picture & Television Development and Joe Caracciolo SHOT ON RED No. 46601 Marvel, and the names and distinctive likenesses of Spider-Man and all other Marvel characters: TM and © 2012 Marvel Entertainment, LLC & its subsidiaries. All Rights Reserved. This is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents, and locations portrayed and the names herein are fictitious, and any similarity to or identification with the location, name, character or history of any person, product or entity is entirely coincidental and unintentional. American Humane Association monitored the animal action. No animals were harmed. (AHAD 03155) This motion picture photoplay is protected pursuant to the provisions of the laws of the United States of America and other countries. Any unauthorized duplication and/or distribution of this photoplay may result in civil liability and criminal prosecution.