By Albert Ching, Staff Writer
posted: 01 July 2010 08:54 pm ET
Andrew Garfield is Spider-Man.
After months of speculation — heating up this week, with widely reported (and later disputed) rumors placing 17-year-old actor Josh Hutcherson in the role — 26-year-old Garfield, seen on-screen in last year's The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus, has been confirmed via press release to play the title role of the iconic Marvel Comics hero in the 2012-scheduled film directed by Marc Webb.
Though far from a household name (at this point), Garfield has assembled a handful of impressive credits in his young career, working with noted directors Terry Gilliam for Parnassus and David Fincher in this fall's The Social Network. Genre fans may be familiar with him from his role in the 2007 series three Doctor Who two-parter, "Daleks in Manhattan" and "Evolution of the Daleks."
Garfield's age, 27 next month, casts some doubt on speculation that the film will depict a teenaged Peter Parker, but Tobey Maguire was roughly Garfield's age when shooting the first Spider-Man film, which opened with the character as a high school senior.
Garfield, born in Los Angeles but a dual citizen of the United States and the United Kingdom due to his American father and British mother, had been rumored as a contender for the role since late May.
Full press release follows:
CULVER CITY, Calif., July 1, 2010 – After a comprehensive
worldwide
casting search, Andrew Garfield has been chosen to portray Peter Parker
when Spider-Man swings back onto the screen in 3D on July 3, 2012. The
new film will begin production in early December directed by Marc Webb
from a screenplay by James Vanderbilt. Laura Ziskin and Avi Arad will
produce the film from Columbia Pictures and Marvel Studios.
Today’s
confirmation culminates what has been one of the most eagerly
anticipated casting announcements in recent memory. Bloggers, pop
culture speculators, and everyday fans have pored over and analyzed
every conceivable online rumor in an attempt to discover the identity of
the next actor to play Peter Parker. Garfield will immediately begin
preparing for the coveted role.
The Spider-Man franchise is one of
the most successful in film
history and the three previous motion pictures have collectively grossed
more than $2.5 billion in worldwide box office.
On selecting
Garfield, director Marc Webb said, “Though his name may
be new to many, those who know this young actor’s work understand his
extraordinary talents. He has a rare combination of intelligence, wit,
and humanity. Mark my words, you will love Andrew Garfield as Peter
Parker.”
Commenting on the announcement, Amy Pascal, co-chairman
of Sony
Pictures Entertainment, and Matt Tolmach, President of Columbia Pictures
said, “Spider-Man is a classic superhero -- a young man who balances
his responsibility to serve humanity and crush evil with the shyness and
normalcy of someone struggling to find himself. The role demands an
extraordinary actor. You need someone who can magically transform
himself from Peter Parker into Spider-Man. An actor who will depict the
vulnerability of youth and the strength and confidence of a legendary
figure at the same moment. We have found that actor in Andrew Garfield.
From the first time we saw him in the upcoming film The Social Network,
to his glorious screen test, which floored all of us, we knew that we
had found our new Peter Parker.”
Producer Avi Arad added, “I’m
incredibly excited about Andrew
Garfield. In the Spider-Man tradition, we were looking for a smart,
sensitive, and cool new Peter Parker who can inspire us and make us
laugh, cry, and cheer. We believe we have found the perfect choice to
take on this role and lead us into the future.”
Producer Laura
Ziskin said, “We are thrilled to have Andrew Garfield
for this new incarnation of Spider-Man under Marc Webb’s direction. We
were fortunate enough to meet with a group of fantastically talented
young men. In the end, we all agreed that in addition to being an
extraordinary actor, Andrew had the right mix of humor, youth, and
pathos, along with an underlying sense of strength and power necessary
to bring Peter Parker and Spider-Man to life on screen.”
The
selection of Garfield was revealed at a press event in Cancun,
Mexico for international journalists attending a media tour promoting
upcoming films from Sony Pictures Entertainment. B-roll footage of the
announcement will be available via satellite later this evening -- see
uplink times coordinate information below.
Garfield is fast
becoming one of the most respected and sought-after
young actors working in the industry today. In a short career, spanning
only five years, he has already been directed by, and starred alongside,
some of the greatest names and received a BAFTA for a role that won him
international praise.
Garfield most recently worked with director
David Fincher on the
upcoming film The Social Network. He previously starred for Spike Jonze
on his robot love story I’m Here, which premiered at Sundance this
year. He plays the lead male opposite Keira Knightley and Carey
Mulligan in Mark Romanek’s Never Let Me Go, due for release later this
year.
Other notable screen credits include Terry Gilliam's The
Imaginarium
of Dr Parnassus playing opposite Christopher Plummer, Johnny Depp, Colin
Farrell, Jude Law and the late Heath Ledger, Robert Redford’s Lions For
Lambs, where he starred alongside Redford, Tom Cruise and Meryl Streep;
Revolution Films’ “Red Riding Trilogy – 1974” directed by Julian
Jarrold, where he lead a stellar cast including Rebecca Hall and David
Morrissey, and his unforgettable portrayal of a young ex-con in John
Crowley’s “Boy A,” for which he earned the best actor BAFTA in 2008.
Garfield’s
career began in theatre and in 2006 his performances in
“Beautiful Thing” (Sound Space/Kit Productions), “The Overwhelming,” and
“Burn / Chatroom / Citizenship” (Royal National Theatre) won him the
Milton Shulman Award for Outstanding Newcomer at the Evening Standard
awards and the Jack Tinker Award for Most Promising Newcomer at the
Critics Circle Theatre Awards. Other notable theatre credits include
“Romeo and Juliet” (Manchester Royal Exchange) and “Kes” (Manchester
Royal Exchange), for which he received the Most Promising Newcomer Award
at the Manchester Evening News Awards 2004.






