Sony’s Kraven the Hunter movie has R-rating, no Spider-Man
The reports from Sony Pictures’ panel at Cinemacon have been published: Kraven The Hunter will be the company’s first R-rated superhero film. Sony revealed the first footage for the movie, set for release on Oct. 6, to attendees, featuring blood, guts, and the titular supervillain and protagonist biting a poacher’s nose off.
Aaron Taylor-Johnson is the star of this movie.Kick-Ass, Avengers Age of UltronIn the leading role, he is played by Russel Crowe. Ariana DeBose plays Calypso as his love-interest (based off the Spider-Man bad guy), Fred Hechinger portrays his half-brother Chameleon as the Spider-Man evil character and Alessandro Nivola takes on Rhino as the Spider-Man-baddie.
Taylor-Johnson has described the film’s take on Kraven as being an environmentalist and animal lover — which I guess explains the nose biting thing. As Discussing Film describes it:
“Things kick off with Kraven stopping a group of poachers in the wild who are trying to escape with their bounties of wild animal carcasses. Kraven The Hunter is confirmed to be Sony’s first rated R Marvel film and the footage really shows it, with Kraven killing everyone quite literally like an animal.
“Aaron Taylor-Johnson’s Kraven the Hunter uses weapons, his hands, and even his own teeth as he bites a piece of a poacher’s face off and spits out the blood. He Also, he jumps from walls and attacks his enemies like an animal. The main conflict of the film is between his father, played by Russell Crowe, who was the one who actually raised him in the extreme ways of hunter vs prey.”
With the actual name of Sergei Kravinoff, Kraven’s traditional comic book raison detre is that it’s his life-long goal to hunt the most dangerous people and best them in honorable single combat whether they like it or not. Created by OG Spider-Man creative team, Stan Lee and Steve Ditko, he’s a pure lift of the bloodthirsty Russian aristocrat General Zaroff from Richard Connell’s famous 1924 short story, the title of which is now simply a euphemism for hunting humans for sport: “The Most Dangerous Game,” kitted out in comic book style for the ravenous teen reader of the 1960s.
It’s this motivation that is also the secret of his comic book utility, and therefore his longevity. He started his career by claiming Spider-Man to be the most dangerous human in the Marvel Universe. Wild assertion), he’s a villain who can be dropped into nearly any superhero’s story for a breath of fresh air. One month, Kraven can set his sights on Captain America, the peak of human physical potential — in another it’s the Black Panther, who’s basically the same thing but cat-themed — it’s even been Squirrel Girl, queen of the wiliest prey animals in New York City.
And we’re not limited to Marvel here. Batman Beyond rubbed the serial numbers off the idea of Kraven and dropped their own “shirtless guy, bored of killing animals, gotta move up to the coolest humans” villain, calling him Stalker. Underneath his porn stache, leopard print leggings, and open vest made out of a lion’s actual head, Kraven is a bombastic and versatile antagonist.
But it does make one wonder: If we’re changing the character’s core motivation, keeping him siloed away from superheroes, and, as the CinemaCon footage seemed to indicate, not even putting him in a superhero costume — why not just make an The originalAction flicks, what’s with the nosebiting?
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