Arts & Entertainment

Rant

‘Spider-Man’ the Musical: Just Pull the Plug Already

Posted 25 months ago|6 comments|916 views
Written by
TheOpinionatedB
New York, NY
I'm aware that theater people aren't always completely grounded in reality, but the fact that money is still being poured into the black hole that is the 'Spider-Man' musical (officially titled 'Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark,' yes, really) is beyond ludicrous. For those not in the know, here's a brief rundown:

'Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark' (hereafter referred to as 'Spidey') is a Broadway musical that has been in the works for what seem like decades. Julie Taymor—who brought 'The Lion King' successfully to the stage with ingenious puppets and mediocre everything else—is directing, and the U2 boys Bono and The Edge are writing the music. 'Spidey' has been fraught with problems, most stemming from how expensive it is.

Obviously, 'Spidey' isn't going to be some minimalist production, because Spider-Man has to, like, do stuff, and the sort of technology and pyrotechnics this show requires doesn't come cheap. At one point construction of the set actually came to a halt because they ran out of money. Financial backers started dropping out, and the opening date was delayed multiple times (and the longer a stage show can't collect ticket sales cash, the bleaker things get). At last count, over $50 million has been sunk into 'Spidey', thus making it the most expensive Broadway musical production ever. That's right; 'Miss Saigon' landed a motherf'ing helicopter on the stage, but still came in under 'Spidey' on budget.

But even as opening night got pushed further and further back, and the budget got more and more bloated, the production team behind 'Spidey' stayed strong, convinced that the show would go on and people would come to see it, mainly due to Evan Rachel Wood playing Mary Jane and Alan Cumming as the Green Goblin. But the thing with known actors is that they are in demand and have other projects to work on. So while 'Spidey' started and stalled and sputtered its way toward opening night, its big-name draws had careers to worry about. Wood dropped out of the show in March, claiming scheduling conflicts. Then just a couple of days ago, Cumming also left due to the expansion of his role on the successful TV drama, 'The Good Wife.' (Note to 'Spidey' staff: "Successful" means the show is running and people are watching it. Just FYI).

So what is basically left of 'Spidey' is an empty theater and several mountains of debt. The show was originally supposed to open this past February, then got pushed to March, then finally settled on November 2010. But now that it's down two actors—and the two actors that were going to draw an audience—'Spidey' is basically screwed. Producers need to stop pouring money into this sinkhole and just write 'Spidey' off for what it is: A cautionary tale to overly-ambitious, but ultimately short-sighted producers. Even if the show had opened, it would have had to lucratively run for several years to recoup the money put into it, and that was highly unlikely to happen. Why? Because it's a friggin' musical about Spider-Man!

Once upon a time, New York musical theater was filled with shows based on classic literature, operas, and—most daring of all—original ideas written by talented people! But in recent years, Broadway has become a dumping ground for whatever half-baked Hollywood-inspired crap producers think will get tourists to shell out $130 for orchestra seats (because locals know better than to see those shows or pay full price for anything). Sometimes is works out, but for every 'Mary Poppins' and 'The Lion King,' there are dozens more 'Young Frankensteins' and 'Tarzans.' And unfortunately for 'Spidey', no amount of Bono or cracked-out Taymor puppets is going to save it from its 'Tarzan'-like stench.
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COMMENTS
Ian Forbes
Ian Forbes
San Diego, CA
25 months ago: I absolutely agree with you. Just wait until they figure out an "Avatar" musical ... in 3D!!! (though at least on stage, I'd be able to see the depth I was supposed to get in theaters)
TheOpinionatedB
TheOpinionatedB
New York, NY
25 months ago: Well, we already have the Blue Man Group, who interacts with the audience, so hopefully that will be close enough.
25 months ago: Just so I understand--you haven't read the script, you haven't heard the music, you haven't seen any designs, the last big Broadway project of this director has grossed three billion dollars and run for over 12 years (and only after running the gauntlet of naysayers calling a musical based on a disney cartoon about animals ludicrous), and yet you're totally confident this thing is going to tank? It's like the Tea Partiers of the theatre world--opinionating based on ignorance and gleeful negativity. I really don't get it...
TheOpinionatedB
TheOpinionatedB
New York, NY
25 months ago: Yup, that's why this is called an opinion piece. In my opinion, a production that has been fraught with so many problems and has accrued such an immense amount of debt is unlikely to be the major success it needs to be, and with the recent exit of its two biggest stars, I think it's time to just cut their losses and pull the plug. I would love to be wrong and see every play/musical/movie/book/etc. that artists create be great successes that earn billions of dollars, end world hunger, and create world peace, but that's unlikely to happen.

I'm not hoping for Spidey's failure, but the writing seems to be on the wall. It's not like I'm standing outside the theater with poorly made signs accusing Spidey of being a socialist.
25 months ago: I love Spider-Man. Read the comics as a kid. Bought all kinds of memorabilia during my lifetime. Have watched all the movies several times and continue to buy Spidey stuff for my kids.

I wish Stan Lee the best. I hope he's getting paid a bunch for this. He's enriched my life tremendously.

However, unless I see or hear something really compelling, I think I'm going to pass on the "musical."
CapsLock
CapsLock
Broken Bow, OK
25 months ago: Well... if a Spiderman musical came out, it would fail horribly. I think it should just stay on the big screen ^w^. Just wait... soon, they'll have "Guitar Hero: The musical tribute!" And then we may have to sit through all the songs from each game with some lame story behind it. They need to stop it now before it's too late!!! Or maybe a "Punisher" opera or something along those lines... Dear God... it might get worse...

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