
Homem-Aranha 2
Peter Parker é confrontado com a difícil tarefa de gerir a sua vida pessoal – o amor secreto por Mary Jane, a raiva que o amigo Harry sente pelo Homem-Aranha, os problemas da tia May – com a sua responsabilidade enquanto Homem-Aranha e os ataques da imprensa que o consideram um criminoso. Para mais surge uma nova ameaça em Nova Iorque chamada Dr. Octopus, o brilhante cientista Otto Octavius que enlouqueceu após uma experiência falhada e se transformou num poderoso inimigo com tentáculos metálicos...
Directed by
Sam Raimi
Written by
Stan Lee, Steve Ditko, Alvin Sargent, Miles Millar, Alfred Gough
Studio
Marvel Enterprises
Genre
Action, Adventure, Fantasia, Ficção científica
Video
1080p
Audio
English (DTS 5.1)
Subtitles
English
Cast

Tobey Maguire
Spider-Man / Peter Parker

Kirsten Dunst
Mary Jane Watson

James Franco
Harry Osborn

Alfred Molina
Doc Ock / Otto Octavius

Rosemary Harris
May Parker

J.K. Simmons
J. Jonah Jameson

Donna Murphy
Rosalie Octavius

Daniel Gillies
John Jameson

Dylan Baker
Dr. Curt Connors

Bill Nunn
Joseph 'Robbie' Robertson

Vanessa Ferlito
Louise

Aasif Mandvi
Mr. Aziz

Willem Dafoe
Green Goblin / Norman Osborn

Cliff Robertson
Ben Parker

Ted Raimi
Hoffman

Elizabeth Banks
Miss Brant

Bruce Campbell
Snooty Usher

Gregg Edelman
Dr. Davis

Elya Baskin
Mr. Ditkovitch

Mageina Tovah
Ursula

Daniel Dae Kim
Raymond

Hal Sparks
Elevator Passenger

Joel McHale
Mr. Jacks

Stan Lee
Man Dodging Debris

Kelly Connell
Dr. Isaacs

Brent Briscoe
Garbage Man

Emily Deschanel
Receptionist

Jason Fiore-Ortiz
Henry Jackson

Scott Spiegel
Man on Balcony

Andy Bale
OsCorp Executive

Christine Estabrook
Mrs. Jameson

Molly Cheek
Society Woman

John Paxton
Houseman

Joy Bryant
Woman at Web

Joanne Baron
Skeptical Scientist

Peter McRobbie
OsCorp Representative

Timothy Jerome
Injured Scientist

Taylor Gilbert
Mrs. Watson

Peter Vouras
Stage Manager

Donnell Rawlings
Pizza 'Heist' Witness
Zachry Rogers
Boy Saved by Spider-Man
Ella Rogers
Girl Saved by Spider-Man

Louis Lombardi
Poker Player

Marc John Jefferies
Amazed Kid

Roshon Fegan
Amazed Kid

Brendan Patrick Connor
Theater Traffic Cop

Reed Diamond
Algernon

Dan Callahan
Jack

Elyse Dinh
Violinist

John Landis
Doctor

Tim Storms
Chainsaw Doctor

Susie Park
Clawing Nurse

Michael Edward Thomas
Man at Fire

Anne Betancourt
Woman at Fire
Venus Lam
Child in Burning Building

Bill E. Rogers
Fireman

Joe Virzi
Fireman
Jopaul Van Epp
Boy With Mask
Weston Epp
Boy With Mask

Peter Allas
Train Passenger

Brianna Brown
Train Passenger

Bill Calvert
Train Passenger

Tony Campisi
Train Passenger

Joey Diaz
Train Passenger

Chloe Dykstra
Train Passenger
Simone Gordon
Train Passenger

Dan Hicks
Train Passenger

Julia Max
Train Passenger
Savannah Pope
Train Passenger

Timothy Patrick Quill
Train Passenger

Jill Sayre
Train Passenger

Rickey G. Williams
Train Passenger

Michael Arthur
NYPD Officer (uncredited)

Frank Bonsangue
Pizza Man (uncredited)

Cindy Cheung
Chinese Daughter (uncredited)

Phil LaMarr
Train Passenger (uncredited)

Calvin Dean
Boomer (uncredited)

Andre M. Johnson
Fireman 2 (uncredited)

Peter Cincotti
Piano Player in Planetarium (uncredited)

Peyton List
Little Girl Playing on Steps (uncredited)

Spencer List
Little Boy Playing on Steps (uncredited)

Troy Metcalf
Blue Collar Guy (uncredited)
Scott Ross
Pedestrian (uncredited)

Bonnie Somerville
Screaming Woman (uncredited)
Wesley Volcy
Columbia University Student (uncredited)

Lou Volpe
Man at Web (uncredited)

Garrett Warren
Bearded Doctor (uncredited)
Joseph M. Caracciolo
Priest at Mary Jane's Wedding (uncredited)
Tom Carey
Train conductor

Patricia M. Peters
Screaming Nurse
Reviews
Julien Lapointe
Raimi is good with the details.
Nell Minow
A popcorn pleasure with heart, soul, and insight.
Marc Savlov
Raimi has finally recaptured the manic charge he brought to Evil Dead 2.
Las Vegas Mercury
Jeannette Catsoulis
The genius of director Sam Raimi is to take the fantastic and make it believably, achingly human.
Jonathan Rosenbaum
Alfred Molina makes a more baroque supervillain than Willem Dafoe's Green Goblin, but the other stars seem happy to be giving us more of the same. Sam Raimi's direction, on the other hand, is even more fluent and well paced.
Christy Lemire
The web-slinging sequences are bigger-better-brighter-faster than the already spectacular ones in 2002's Spider-Man, and at the same time, the film's smaller emotional moments are denser, richer and more resonant than those in the first.
Wall Street Journal
Joe Morgenstern
A lot of talent to lavish on a single movie, but the result is uncommonly smart for the genre, and not just smart but tremendously enjoyable.
Nathan Rabin
Simultaneously funnier, darker, and more emotional than its forebear.
Nick Schager
A sensational summer treat.
New York Magazine/Vulture
Peter Rainer
It improves on the first one: better action, better comedy.
Anthony Lane
Like the first installment, refreshingly perverse in its intent.
Andrew Sarris
Spider-Man 2 is much more a grown-up love story than its predecessor.
Charles Taylor
For a big-budget action movie Spider-Man 2 is modest and not assaultive -- it has a boring decency.
Denver Rocky Mountain News
Robert Denerstein
A terrifically entertaining comic book of a movie that mixes action and romance in ways that give it heft and heart.
Ella Taylor
Spider-Man 2 has all manner of fancy CGI improvements on its precursor, but in the end it's the old-style action sequences that carry it.
Sara Michelle Fetters
It is a winning web, and everyone involved should be proud.
Lisa Schwarzbaum
This triumphant sequel to the hard-to-top 2002 original may be the first great comic-book movie in the age of self-help and CGI wizardry, an entertainment in which both the thrills and the therapeutic personal growth are well earned.
Miami Herald
Rene Rodriguez
A masterpiece of pop filmmaking -- a fantastic, exuberant entertainment that manages to be both sleek and substantial without being patronizing.
Jay Boyar
The new, improved SM2 has a far smoother narrative line, as well as more amazing special effects, including even more terrific swinging.
Michael Booth
Easily the most fun movie of the summer, an all-ages show that crawls deep into the heart.