Top 31 Quotes & Sayings by Marc Webb

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American director Marc Webb.
Last updated on November 21, 2024.
Marc Webb

Marc Preston Webb is an American music video director and filmmaker. He made his feature film directorial debut with the romantic comedy 500 Days of Summer (2009), and went on to direct the 2012 Spider-Man reboot, The Amazing Spider-Man, and its 2014 sequel, dubbed the "Webb-Verse" by Marvel Studios by December 2021. He directed the drama films Gifted and The Only Living Boy in New York in 2017.

I always remembered that when I saw people get married they got on a rocketship and went to Planet Happiness, Population: Them.
It's such a thrilling part about being in a relationship at a young age, and all your feelings are apocalyptic, all your emotions are so huge.
Everybody's part of the greater whole and skepticism and virtue are a part of that. — © Marc Webb
Everybody's part of the greater whole and skepticism and virtue are a part of that.
I was a Marvel guy. I started reading comics when I was a kid.
I just like that dynamic in relationships in movies where they're kind of lovers as rivals, you know?
One of my life philosophies is that you have a choice to make when you're doing something creative. You can be cheesy... or you can be lame.
There's a bigger universe at hand.
Earnestness can ferment into sentimentality.
'Batman' was scary.
That Happily Ever After is a great way to tell stories when you're young but eventually it loses its meaning because it's just not true.
When you don't inherit an identity you have to define it on your own.
Romance: That's one of the things that makes Spider-Man really unique, in terms of the comic books. There is a tender, romantic quality to it. And certainly, that's something that's always fascinated me about the cinema: good romance.
There's a punk rock quality to Peter Parker, that I identified with when I read the comics [Spider-Man], and that I really liked. He has this chip on his shoulder.
Working with the actors, working with production designers, working with the creative people who surround the process is really fun, it's really inspiring and I take great pleasure in working with them. That's what's most fun about directing.
When you dont inherit an identity you have to define it on your own.
I think that Spider-Man is a part of our culture. He's a perennial character. He's something that's constantly reexamined and there are so many versions of him in the comics that it was something that I thought that we could do cinematically. He belongs on the big screen.
Sundance is a really special place. They're very protective of movies, especially lower-budget movies.
Geeks are running the world, anyone who's seen The Social Network knows the dynamic has shifted, but what I think is iconic and timeless about Peter Parker is that he's an outsider, on the outside looking in, and that was something I thought was very important to protect.
For me, there were a few things in the Spider-Man comics that I thought were really interesting. There's this story about Peter's parents and where he came from, and I thought that it was really interesting to explore the emotional consequence of someone whose parents had left them, at a very young age.
Something you can do in a comic that you can't do in a film is that you can have thought bubbles.
It's really hard to find just a simple character-driven drama, outside of a genre, that was available to direct, except for on TV.
Nerds are running the world. Andrew Garfield made a movie [called “The Social Network”] about it. Nerds are no longer pariahs and knowing how to write computer code is longer a [mocked] quality. What was important in those early comics was this notion that Peter Parker is an outsider and how we define that in a contemporary context. That, I think, was one of the challenges for us — getting Peter Parker’s outsider status to be current.
I think that the dramas that you find in TV are actually a lot more interesting, typically, than what you find in cinema.
When you have to react to a lizard that's a tennis ball, it's a really, really difficult, tricky piece of craft. — © Marc Webb
When you have to react to a lizard that's a tennis ball, it's a really, really difficult, tricky piece of craft.
I think it's really important, when you're redefining a character [ Spider-Man], for the audience to experience things that they haven't experienced, from the ground up. I wanted to build a character. I feel like point of view is a really crucial thing in the story, and that you need to build up the emotional building blocks, so that you can experience all the other emotions in a very specific way, rather than just experiencing it in an intellectual way.
It's very important to keep the emotions grounded, to keep the characters in some real place.
We're creating a different universe with different rules and a different tone and different villains. We were very careful to honor the iconography of Spider-Man, but we wanted to tell it in a new and different way [in the film].
I think that if you make something that's relatable then people will attach themselves to it. You can express it in a lot of different ways but I feel like as long as you are consistent and fair with the audience they'll engage irrespective of how they self-identify. I think it just gets too complicated to track all those differences between demographics.
Audiences can tell when you're being fake and they will eat you alive. But if you're doing something authentic they will connect to it and that can lead to commercial success.
When you get that opportunity to be honest and open with somebody, for the first time, and share things about yourself that you haven't been able to share before, that you might be scared of or ashamed about, that's really exhilarating, and I think that's something that people will really identify with.
I think one of the things about Peter Parker that is so great, and what has made him and Spider-Man last so long is he is a kid that we all feel connected to, he's not an alien, he's not a millionaire, he's just this kid that has trouble asking girls out.
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