….
This was Spider-Man.
A teenager, alone in the chaos of New York, bitten by fate and burdened by choices no boy his age should have to make.
And Regal, three blockbusters under his belt, was now ready to introduce the world to a version of Spider-Man it had never seen before.
Well… not introduce but create, because here, in this alternate world, no one had ever seen a Spider-Man movie.
So, there was no Raimi trilogy.
Or a Garfield reboot and obviously not MCU Spider-Kid in space.
There was only him, the page, the myth – web-slinger.
This is going to be the first and the best version to - he is going to make sure of that.
Around Regal, notebooks were splayed open, filled margins, scribbled arrows, overlapping circles.
He rubbed his palms together.
"Don't tell - just show."
That quote came back to him like a thunderclap, and with that, the first line of the screenplay was already typing itself out under his fingers.
"New York City - Present day."
"A science lab crackling with sterile tension with glass walls, robotic arms and teenage shadows…"
He had already made his first decision.
Unlike Spider-Man: Homecoming, which casually skipped Peter's origin under the assumption the audience had already lived through it twice before, this film couldn't afford that luxury.
This world had never seen Peter Parker get bitten by a spider, had never followed him through high school hallways with sticky fingers and rising dread.
Regal had to show it.
The Tobey Maguire version had been simple, Peter gets bitten during a museum trip, one wide-eyed photo snap and boom, it's done.
It worked for 2002, but it felt too staged now.
The Andrew Garfield version, on the other hand, had an unpredictability Regal admired.
Making it feel like Peter was actively seeking something, drawn to the spider through curiosity rather than pure chance.
There was intention behind his actions, even if he didn't understand the full consequences.
…and more than that.
The environment and the atmosphere.
The spider labs, the web-like containers, the tension of secrecy, it pulled the viewer in and made Peter's transformation feel like a strange accident waiting to happen.
It was a moment.
He built off that.
From there, he let his fingers fly.
The transformation.
One after another - nausea, mirror scene and the rooftop discovery of powers.
This is where the children and the inner child hidden in the adult body both are going to enjoy the most…
"What's more fun to watch than the protagonist getting his superpower out of nowhere and messing things up because he is just too strong…"
He made every choice consciously, clean, and logical, but also packed with the emotional uncertainty of a teenager whose life had just been rewired at the cellular level.
Break.
"Offff… my neck hurts."
Regal slumped back in his chair, popped his neck, and reached for his coffee.
Cold
He almost.. Sprained out the coffee from his mouth..
Two hours had passed without him noticing.
Still, there was a long way to go.
Regal, eyes flicking from one version of the Spider-Man films to the next in his mind.
He was now onto one of the most emotionally defining moments of Peter Parker's story - the conversation with Uncle Ben, the moral heart of the entire franchise.
…and one of the biggest challenge - the infamous line which will become a central theme of the Spider-Man mythos:
"With great power comes great responsibility."
It was sacred, Iconic and dangerous, if not handled right.
In Tobey's version, it was delivered earnestly by Uncle Ben, a near-direct lift from the comics.
In Andrew's, they had rephrased it, tried to modernize it.
"If you can do good things for other people, you have a moral obligation to do those things."
It was heartfelt, but less timeless.
Regal frowned, it was easy to mess this up.
"The death scene and plot for both, [Spider-Man 1] and [Amazing Spider-Man] is mostly similar, with just few changes of the killer's background."
Both the scene exceptionally emphasizes the consequences of Peter's inaction and the weight of responsibility that follows.
"Let's go with [Spider-Man 1] though, giving the killer some background and setup with Peter makes it more impactful."
However, just which portrayal of Uncle Ben should he choose?
It definitely had to be something that won't sound irrelevant when he says the iconic line and dies.
In some versions, Uncle Ben was the wise patriarch dispensing life lessons, in others, he was more of an everyman, someone who stumbled into wisdom through experience rather than inherent knowledge.
Regal had to choose which Uncle Ben to use, between the steady, fatherly warmth of Cliff Robertson from the original, and the more subdued, working-class grit of Martin Sheen in the reboot.
There wasn't even a competition with [Homecoming], which skipped the character entirely, and understandably as they can't do the same damn thing three times.
Anyway for whatever reason… Regal always felt there was a deeper connection with Uncle Ben from the Amazing Spider Man than the first one.
Still, in the end, he made the call.
He would use Uncle Ben from [Spider Man 1] for background.
And [The Amazing Spider-Man] for his character traits, simply because - his interactions with Peter felt more grounded, more like real-life conversations between a stubborn teen and a weary guardian.
So he went with him but the dialogue from the original comics, he also gave Uncle Ben more depth, made him soft-spoken, sharp-witted, someone who earned that line instead of just saying it.
And when Ben dies, yes, he still dies, it wouldn't be a plot point.
It would be a knife twisting in Peter's ribs, a failure that redefined him.
Break again, this one longer.
Regal walked around his apartment barefoot, letting his thoughts simmer.
He had a folder full of notes comparing Raimi's visual choices, Webb's intimate camera work, and Homecoming's sleek Marvel sheen.
He just didn't want to pick the best ideas, he was threading them together like silk.
He returned to the desk with a quiet breath and opened the next scene.
The web-shooter....
Organic vs. mechanical.
He already told Stain Lee what he was going to do… So one could say it wasn't much of a debate.
He went mechanical.
But if he wants to give a reason…
It wasn't because he wanted it more 'realistic' but because it told the audience something about Peter.
That he was smart, creative and an inventor.
Someone who didn't just get lucky with powers, but who built the rest of his identity from scratch.
From here, the rest would fall into place.
But.. after a few minutes.
He paused, backspaced the lines, and started again.
This wasn't right either.
He needed to find his own approach to the moment that would define his version of the character.
….
Hours passed.
Days passed.
A Week had passed.
Regal took frequent breaks, pacing around his study, thinking through each beat of the story.
This wasn't like his usual writing process - typically, the words flowed effortlessly.
But combining three different interpretations into something cohesive required careful consideration of every choice.
…and soon the night wore on.
It was dawn too.
Outside the window, the sky was dark now, stars blinking like pixels.
He saved the script obviously not finished - but the spine was there.
A new Spider-Man was being born.
And this time, the world would see it the way it was always meant to be seen.
So he hit the bed and woke up the next day… did his usuals and got to work.
Next came Peter himself, not the Spider-Man.
Regal reminded himself of that distinction.
The story wasn't about the masked hero, not yet.
It was about the kid from Queens who still fumbled with pizza deliveries and math homework, who didn't instantly become confident the moment a spider bit him. The boy who remained, deep down, the same even as the world around him demanded change.
Regal respected that version.
If anyone asked, he would admit it outright: Tobey Maguire's Peter Parker was still his favorite.
Not the Spider-Man - the Peter Parker.
The socially awkward, introverted soul who couldn't seem to catch a break no matter how many lives he saved.
That's the version Regal would use as the foundation.
The Daily Bugle arc, the delivery boy job, the subtle guilt and pressure he faced before ever donning a suit, all of it would stay.
It wasn't even a difficult decision for him, not really.
Some choices just made sense.
.
….
[To be continued…]
●──────●◎●──────●
+1 Free Chapter and +12 Advance Chapters in Patreon.