As a follow-up to George’s post about the alternate ending to The Amazing Spider-Man 2, what is being reported as “every deleted scene” has just been made available over the internet, courtesy of Comic Book Movies. The video, which can be found HERE, runs at slightly over 23 minutes in length. Along with the alternate ending to the film, the footage includes, but is not limited to:
- A different version of the opening prologue.
- A surprise cameo from someone who appeared in the first Amazing Spider-Man film.
- Electro’s mom.
- The scene from the trailers where Peter finds out from Harry that Norman Osborn has had him under surveillance.
- An additional scene between Gwen Stacy (Emma Stone) and Aunt May (Sally Fields).
- And Harry Osborn as the Green Goblin attacking OsCorp.
Not included, however, are the scenes depicting Shailene Woodley as Mary Jane Watson, which had been previously filmed before getting cut altogether.
The Amazing Spider-Man 2 is scheduled for DVD and Blu-Ray release on August 19th. And since these scenes are coming out early, who knows how long they will remain available until then. If you do get the opportunity to watch the video, which of the deleted footage were your favorites? Which ones did you think the filmmakers should have kept in the final cut? And which ones are you glad were dropped on the cutting room floor?
I’m pretty sure these extra features are on iTunes along with the movie, so you don’t have to worry about them disappearing.
This was just a bad movie from the beginning wasn’t it? Ill never forgive orci and kurtzman
Garfield does a great job in the scene at the grave with his father, but it is even worse than I thought it would be from the description from George’s post earlier today. It completely nullifies Uncle Ben and his part in Peter’s life. Just the fact that this was written and filmed is infuriating.
It was nice to see Flash and a continuation of the character that started to be nicer to Peter in ASM1. But having him go to a different university than Peter? Boo!
Max’s mother – you can tell that the person who wrote Dr. Kafka’s dialogue also wrote her. They probably thought the audience would find her hysterical.