Spider-Man: The Peril of Doc Ock is a 2004 Spider-Man brickfilm brickfilm by Tony Mines and Tim Drage of Spite Your Face Productions.[1] It was produced for The LEGO Group and Sony Pictures to promote the 2004 Spider-Man 2 movie and line of LEGO Spider-Man 2 toys.[2][3] It debuted on Yahoo.com's Movies section,[4] and was also posted on various other video websites that predated YouTube. It received a significant amount of media coverage and widespread attention across the internet.[5] It was the last brickfilm created by Spite Your Face for The LEGO Group.
Plot[]
Peter Parker is leaving the Daily Bugle when a bunch of people run past. Doc Ock is on the loose and throwing cars, elephants and Duplo blocks everywhere. Spider-Man is here! Doc Ock follows Spider-Man up the Daily Bugle building, where Jonah J. Jameson sees them fight. Doc Ock falls onto a subway car and tosses out the conductor, who lands in water. Spider-Man and Doc Ock fight, then Doc Ock separates the front subway car, stranding Mary Jane and Aunt May in the runaway car. Spider-Man jumps onto the runaway car and fights Doc Ock until the subway car meets a dead end and crashes into a warehouse at the docks. Mary Jane and Aunt May land safely in a spider web, and Spider-Man and Doc Ock continue to fight. Eventually Doc Ock slips and falls into the water, where his robotic arms short out. Spider-Man fishes out Doc Ock and saves the day.[6]
Alternate Ending[]
A second version of the film was produced with an alternate ending, which takes place after the subway car crashes through the dead end. The subway car lands on a dock, riding along it and smashing the dock to pieces until the subway car crashes into a warehouse. Spider-Man, Aunt May and Mary Jane look around the creepy warehouse, and Doc Ock bursts through the floor. Spider-Man uses his web-slinging skills to tie Doc Ock to a pillar. Doc Ock finally breaks free and runs into an electrical box, frying his arms. His arms turn on him, smack him in the face, and then do a silly dance. Doc Ock's arms, with Doc Ock attached, dance their way out to a line of police cars and get into a police van.[7][8]
Crew[]
- Tony Mines - Writer, Director, Producer, Animator, Editor
- Tim Drage - Writer, Director, Producer, Animator, Editor, Sound effects
- Peter Moran - Computer animation
- Tom Bevan - Assistant animator
- Gordon Emmanuel - Assistant animator
- Jason Graves - Original soundtrack
- Luke Oram - Sound effects
- Bolex Brothers - Special thanks[9]
References[]
- ↑ Announcement of release of the film
- ↑ Spite Your Face
- ↑ History of Brickfilms
- ↑ Debut release of The Peril of Doc Ock
- ↑ "The World of Brickfilms Podcast Ep 40 w/Spite Your Face" on YouTube
- ↑ YouTube Video
- ↑ Alt Ending on YouTube
- ↑ Alt Ending Discussion on Brickfilms.com
- ↑ Peril of Doc Ock website page archive