Spider-Man 2 Ending Explained: Everybody Loves A Hero

Sony Pictures By Sandy Schaefer/Aug. 3, 2022 5:54 pm EST

Slapstick horror films, soapy superhero movies, zany westerns, intense crime-thrillers, romantic sports dramas — in a career that spans more than 40 years, there’s very little Sam Raimi hasn’t tried his hand at directing (to say nothing of his prolific output as a producer). But what, exactly, makes a movie a Sam Raimi movie? Is it the horror elements? The hyper-dynamic camera shots? The off-kilter comedy? The protagonist giving up the thing they’ve always wanted, having come to see the error of their selfish behavior?

To all that, I would say … yes. Few Raimi movies utilize these motifs quite as successfully as “Spider-Man 2,” a film many critics still rank as one of the best (if not the best) superhero movies ever made. The 2004 sequel to Raimi’s “Spider-Man” picks up with Peter Parker (Tobey Maguire) as a 20-year-old who, like many people at that age, is a mess. Struggling to balance his superhero duties with school and paying rent (cue Pete’s landlord, Mr. Ditkovitch, yelling “RENT!”), Peter barely has time for his would-be girlfriend Mary Jane Watson (Kirsten Dunst) anymore. Meanwhile, his pal Harry Osborn (James Franco) wants to kill Spider-Man, believing the web-slinger is responsible for his father’s death, and Harry is angry at Peter for refusing to help him. Also, Peter’s poor Aunt May (Rosemary Harris) is facing eviction and still blames herself for Uncle Ben’s murder.

One could say, when it comes to Peter’s future, hope dangles on a string – even before well-intentioned scientist Otto Octavius (Alfred Molina) inadvertently transforms himself into the super-villain Doctor Octopus. When push comes to shove, though, “Spider-Man 2” isn’t a film about Peter punching Doc Ock in the face (although he does that a lot in the movie). It’s a story about how everybody loves a hero, but actually being one is quite tough.

Spider-Man 2 Ending Explained: Everybody Loves A Hero

Sony Pictures

By Sandy Schaefer/Aug. 3, 2022 5:54 pm EST

Slapstick horror films, soapy superhero movies, zany westerns, intense crime-thrillers, romantic sports dramas — in a career that spans more than 40 years, there’s very little Sam Raimi hasn’t tried his hand at directing (to say nothing of his prolific output as a producer). But what, exactly, makes a movie a Sam Raimi movie? Is it the horror elements? The hyper-dynamic camera shots? The off-kilter comedy? The protagonist giving up the thing they’ve always wanted, having come to see the error of their selfish behavior?

To all that, I would say … yes. Few Raimi movies utilize these motifs quite as successfully as “Spider-Man 2,” a film many critics still rank as one of the best (if not the best) superhero movies ever made. The 2004 sequel to Raimi’s “Spider-Man” picks up with Peter Parker (Tobey Maguire) as a 20-year-old who, like many people at that age, is a mess. Struggling to balance his superhero duties with school and paying rent (cue Pete’s landlord, Mr. Ditkovitch, yelling “RENT!”), Peter barely has time for his would-be girlfriend Mary Jane Watson (Kirsten Dunst) anymore. Meanwhile, his pal Harry Osborn (James Franco) wants to kill Spider-Man, believing the web-slinger is responsible for his father’s death, and Harry is angry at Peter for refusing to help him. Also, Peter’s poor Aunt May (Rosemary Harris) is facing eviction and still blames herself for Uncle Ben’s murder.

One could say, when it comes to Peter’s future, hope dangles on a string – even before well-intentioned scientist Otto Octavius (Alfred Molina) inadvertently transforms himself into the super-villain Doctor Octopus. When push comes to shove, though, “Spider-Man 2” isn’t a film about Peter punching Doc Ock in the face (although he does that a lot in the movie). It’s a story about how everybody loves a hero, but actually being one is quite tough.

To all that, I would say … yes.

Few Raimi movies utilize these motifs quite as successfully as “Spider-Man 2,” a film many critics still rank as one of the best (if not the best) superhero movies ever made. The 2004 sequel to Raimi’s “Spider-Man” picks up with Peter Parker (Tobey Maguire) as a 20-year-old who, like many people at that age, is a mess. Struggling to balance his superhero duties with school and paying rent (cue Pete’s landlord, Mr. Ditkovitch, yelling “RENT!”), Peter barely has time for his would-be girlfriend Mary Jane Watson (Kirsten Dunst) anymore. Meanwhile, his pal Harry Osborn (James Franco) wants to kill Spider-Man, believing the web-slinger is responsible for his father’s death, and Harry is angry at Peter for refusing to help him. Also, Peter’s poor Aunt May (Rosemary Harris) is facing eviction and still blames herself for Uncle Ben’s murder.

One could say, when it comes to Peter’s future, hope dangles on a string – even before well-intentioned scientist Otto Octavius (Alfred Molina) inadvertently transforms himself into the super-villain Doctor Octopus. When push comes to shove, though, “Spider-Man 2” isn’t a film about Peter punching Doc Ock in the face (although he does that a lot in the movie). It’s a story about how everybody loves a hero, but actually being one is quite tough.

With great power yadda yadda yadda

Sadly, however, Harry doesn’t have a loving relative to guide him. All he has is the ghost of his father and the toxic lessons Norman passed down, which also leads to Harry uncovering the dark secret Norman kept very literally hidden away from the world. Even so, by choosing to continue pursuing the thing he desires most (revenge) no matter the consequences, it’s Harry and Harry alone who completes his evolution into a pumpkin bomb-chucking baddie.

‘Go get ’em, tiger’

But what of Mary Jane? If anything, her storyline holds the key to understanding what “Spider-Man 2” is all about. Over the course of the film, Mary Jane is left struggling to make heads or tails of Peter’s erratic behavior, even as she strives to make a life for herself. It’s only when she finally learns the truth about Pete’s alter ego that Mary Jane can even make her own big choice: Enter a picture-perfect if emotionally-unsatisfying marriage with her fiancé (no way that could end badly, right?), or try to make a relationship with Peter work, knowing it could easily fall apart.

Of course, Mary Jane chooses the latter and cheers Peter on (“Go get ’em, tiger”) as soon as he’s called into action as Spider-Man again. The film then ends with a closeup of Mary Jane watching Pete swing away, a look of uncertainty on her face. It’s a downbeat visual that speaks the unspoken truth the rest of the movie has avoided explicitly stating up until then: There’s never a guarantee things will work out, no matter which path you take. Talk about a meaningful note for a silly, splashy blockbuster to go out on.