Spider-Man Versus Kraven the Hunter
Directed byBruce Cardozo
Written byBruce Cardozo
Based onSpider-Man
by Stan Lee
Steve Ditko
Produced byBruce Cardozo
StarringJoe Ellison
A. Andrew Pastorio
Edited byJulie Tanser
Release date
1974
Running time
30 minutes
CountryNorth America
LanguageEnglish

Spider-Man Versus Kraven the Hunter is a 1974 American superhero short film written and directed by Bruce Cardozo.[1] It is a fan film that was endorsed by Marvel Comics and authorized by Stan Lee.[2]

History

According to an article in the 1975 issue of FOOM, the film features appearances by Kraven the Hunter and Gwen Stacy, and the story is based on issue fifteen of the comic book, The Amazing Spider-Man.[3][4]

In October 1972, Cardozo wrote a letter to Stan Lee explaining the project. He received a very enthusiastic letter of approval providing the film was limited to a non-commercial exhibition (because of commercial licensing commitments Marvel Comics had at the time). Next, he presented the idea to his experimental film class, proposing a half-hour, 16mm, color, sound, semi-professional Spider-Man movie. When he outlined the special effects the class felt that it was impossible, but his instructor, Peter Glushanok, was very interested and gave Cardozo the go-ahead.

The first term was spent almost entirely in pre-production. Cardozo was a perfectionist and spoke with hundreds of people before deciding on the cast alone. He wanted the audience to say to themselves, "he or she looks and acts exactly like the characters." Daphne Stevens and Marilyn Hecht made the costumes, Richard Eberhardt designed the graphics, such as the Spider-signal, (as well as playing Spider-Man in costume) and Art Schweitzer created the unusual lighting effects featured throughout the film. Cardozo worked on the scenario, production direction and special effects.

They built an entire section of the building for Spider-Man to climb. They used travelling matte shots to make Spider-Man swing through Times Square at night with all the neon signs flashing in the background to produce breathtaking and dazzling visuals. Rather than using a phoney-looking backdrop when Spider-Man climbs up and down buildings, they matted in colorful sunsets and backgrounds and utilized travelling mattes in a scene where Kraven sends lions after Spider-Man in the final conflict.

The second term was hectic with more shooting and editing by Julie Tanser. When the film was bout 3/4 finished, they gave Stan Lee, Ray Thomas and other members of the bullpen, a preview of some of the key scenes of the film. They were very impressed and enthusiastic about the results and encouraged them to finish the project.

Cardozo and his crew had hoped to have the film distributed in some form in the future, but on April 24, 2015, Cardozo died, and his computer containing the only known copy of the film was destroyed, making it lost. Its last known showing was at the Comic Book and Science Fiction Convention in Los Angeles in 2005.[5] The film was never available online because Cardozo was against it.[6]

Plot

The screenplay was adapted primarily from The Amazing Spider-Man #15, with various scenes added to update the story concerning Kraven's first arrival in America.

Spider-Man swings down and catches a group organizing a bank robbery and upon dropping in unexpectedly, a man escapes and contacts Kraven the Hunter. Parker finds this out firsthand when taking photographs for The Daily Bugle when Kraven arrives by boat. After studying Spider-Man's fighting style by organizing a robbery for Spider-Man to stop, Kraven finally comes out of hiding and fights Spider-Man. Spider-Man realizes the true strength of Kraven and also realizes that Kraven cheats by infecting his opposition with drugs that weaken them.

Cast

Reception

The casting was very well received by Marvel Comics employees. The realistic suit for Spider-Man was acclaimed and the casting of Andrew Pastario as J Jonah Jameson and Joe Ellison as Peter Parker received praise for their likeness to the characters.[7]

See also

References

  1. Young, Clive (2008-10-15). Homemade Hollywood: Fans Behind the Camera. Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 978-0-8264-2923-0.
  2. "Homemade Hollywood by Clive Young, PopMatters". 14 April 2009.
  3. "Ten Fan Films That We'll Never See - Fan Film Follies". 21 March 2010.
  4. http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_tW3g8zCM6c0/TQmDfoF07jI/AAAAAAAABWo/VSBffzAS2cs/s1600/FOOM%2B4%2BSpidey%2Bfan%2Bfilm.jpg
  5. CBR staff (August 3, 2005). "August 14th LA SciFi & Comic Book Con Details". Comic Book Resources. Archived from the original on 2017-09-15. Retrieved 2017-08-26.
  6. Green, Scott (June 23, 2012). "Proto-Cosplay Captured in 1969 "Spider-Man" Fan Movie". Crunchyroll. Retrieved 2017-08-26.
  7. Sacks, Jason; Dallas, Keith; Dykema, Dave (2014). American Comic Book Chronicles: The 1970s. TwoMorrows. ISBN 9781605490564.
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