The fact that there's no music during the tentacles rampage, only people screaming in pain and fear truly making this scene terrifying (especially when I was a kid)
Sam Raimi knows a lot about horror movies, trust me. And he loves this genre, so much so that even in children's films he was able to insert many references to the genre.
Me too! I was so scared to fall asleep for weeks. I live in Jersey City just a river across Manhattan I was terrified to go there thinking he’ll come get me
@@emmanuelodom698 I just realised that too.... when the Doctor jokes about it he notices that arms moved an inch but he ignores it. Thinking it was nothing untill they got attacked.
I like how they make it believable that these huge metal arms could still perform small, delicate tasks by showing it retracting out some smaller claws to take off his blindfold
and the fact the arms are designed in a way to protect otto its so cool to see the contrast in how they treat him compared to the environment around him
Is it weird that, having watched this scene as a kid and later as an adult, it's actually *MORE* intense than I remember it. As a kid, I think the camera jumped around too quickly for me to keep up or something, but seeing the scene for what it is now... I'm impressed.
Lol, true. Usually, the things look much more cool or scarrier when you whatch them as a kid, but this time, man, I don't know how I survived this scene as a kid... now I see that I watched pure horor. :D
Something I love is how the arms “snap and bite, defensively” at the staff initially before getting more aggressive. The arms reacted out of fear and self-preservation. They thought they were under attack and defended themselves. Their first “moments of life” were being threatened by Saws and Drills and then once outside, by a giant car. They think the world wants to kill them and Otto.
Fun fact Alfred Molina gave the arms their own name during the making of spider man 2 which are Harry, Larry, Flo and Moe. Harry and Larry are the bottom arms and they're the heavy lifters and Flo the right arm is the most motherly one
I know. In the comics doc ock is still a little tragic. But mostly we just see him as another villian. But in the raimi verse. Otto and all four arms are extremely tragic characters who just wanna be left alone.
OMG I was so excited about him making a come back I'm sooooo hyped. But let's be real, they won't be able to do that sort of scene in the MCU, or his one liners like: "I'll peel the flesh of her bones"
I can't believe this movie is 17 years old. It feels like it should be like....five years ago or something. That's how time flies when you get older. At least it does for me..
When I was a kid I thought that Doctor Octavius had control of the arms. Being an adult and learning that the arms had its own artificial intelligence and were free from control after the inhibitor chip was destroyed makes it more terrifying
@@masterknife8423 No, the arms are controlled by AI. There was a chip in his spine that was suppose to make him control the arms, instead of the arms controlling him. That chip was broken during the presentation. The AI started to control Otto, instead of the other way around. That’s why he got corrupted
This isn't even typical slightly intimidating villain introduction. This shit is genuinely scary. The imagery, the brutal way the doctors are being killed, and my god the screams.
@@nsasupporter7557 the amazing spiderman 1 was actually pretty good, and so was homecoming and far from home,and into the spiderverse rises above every spiderman movie, so nah you're living on a different planet lol
@@Elli-gl7gu no, you’re living on a different planet. The only thing Amazing Spider-Man 1 had going for it was that it was better than it’s sequel. It was basically a repeat of the first Spider-Man only with the Lizard instead of Green Goblin. Homecoming sucked because it was too much like a kids movie, it was aimed at a kid audience. The only thing good about Homecoming was Michael Keaton as the villain. He’s an awesome actor. I don’t care what you say, Spider-Man 1 and 2 will always be the best (and only good) Spider-Man movies. I’d rather watch Spider-Man 3 than Amazing Spider-Man. I’m done here, don’t respond to me anymore
@@CBMOA What Sam Raimi did was brilliant!!! Topher grace was the only Evil venom ever created, he was sinister and psychopathic, Topher was a villain in this Movie, he wasn’t a anti hero joke just like venom in the comics or Tom Hardy’s version. He was a demon in spiderman 3. and when venom slowly became a creepy version of spiderman and took his form that was scary. That’s why he was so skinny because he was the opposite of Peter. and he was way more terrifying then carnage Venom in 2007 was perfect.
This scene F***ing scared me but after I like this is the best scene ever and still this day when see stuff like that I like yes the kids will experience this like we did and parents will shut up saying marvel family friendly
This scene is almost as disturbing to watch as an adult as it was as a kid when this came out. Perfect editing and camera work. That nurse who scratches the floor up, Bravo! Burned into my brain forever.
I felt like a big problem with Doc Ock in No Way Home is that the camera work was really lazy and didn't fully play up the effect of the arms. There were all these wide shots and face close-ups, and the camera didn't follow the arms around and make them seem like they where everywhere and overwhelming to fight against like this movie did
@@PotatoMaGobinus Yeah, I wasn't disappointed with it because I had low expectations, but the person I saw it with hadn't seen an MCU movie in a long time, so he was annoyed
I don’t think it’s going to be a terror let alone a horror film, that’s the main reason why they parted ways with Scott Derrickson to begin with because of “creative differences”, he’s still going to executive producer though
sarnai and a brain doesn’t need brain cells to function. Oh wait it does you “moron” what Luis meant by what he said was that you are somewhat limited horror wise with a pg 13 rating as opposed to a rated R rating
Idk the camera cuts and angles are weird and the screaming/reactions the people did are weird too lol maybe because it's an old movie but idk. The way the one dudes hand came up with the mini chainsaw for example lol or the girl scratching the floor while being dragged. It's all just kinda cheesy
Part at 1:14 . When Otto just lays there unconscious, while his mechanical arms wreak havoc in the emergency room combined with the terrified screams. There’s no words to describe the cinematic genius of this movie. This scene alone deserves Oscar
@@1234TheBeat4321 I believe his plan was to create arms that would act by his commands. But after the disaster in his laboratory, I think the tentacles were left without an owner to obey since the chip on Doc Ock’s neck was destroyed. That’s probably how he became evil because he was being brainwashed by his technology
@@1234TheBeat4321 to operate the arms, he has to use his mind, which creates a neural link however, because of how advanced it was, it could control his mind whenever they pleased, which is why he made a inhibitor on the top part of the spinal cord
Ummm. William Salyers is better in my opinion. He is only a voice actor for doc oc in the ps4 game but he had the best doc oc voice I’ve ever heard! Everything that came out of his mouth was amazing and the backstory for the character was extremely well written and made sense! Alfred is amazing don’t get me wrong the guy does the role amazingly but the emotion from William Salyers in my opinion captures atto actavius perfectly
@@ezeke99m bshhh yeah 100% the guys a voice actor he doesn’t do live action films I doubt there will be any way to compare em correctly. Bc of his limited acting experience I bet he wouldn’t be as good as Alfred in live action but I honestly never heard someone sound as doc oc as the guy
Ladies and gentlemen. This is how a horror film should be made. No jumpscares or extreme gore. Just the screams of agony and struggle is enough to scare the audiences.
I love that how the camera aims at doc sleeping, showing that he has no control and the tentacles control themselves like they have their own consciousness.
More like they are a reflection of his id- they act on Otto's instincts without his consciousness or morals holding him back, which is why he's clearly afraid of the taxi while they decide to flip it. It's also why, once they basically take over his mind, his grand plan is to perform the energy experiment without any of those pesky morals getting in the way- it's what Otto WANTS to do without any of the filters his mind puts in place to stop him from acting on those wants.
@@themightybullfrog no they are all like four different life forms witch each act and react differently but all work together because they knew without Otto they can't survive.
@@Super-Godzilla99 I'm like 90 percent sure that in this movie they're just controlled by advanced ai. The chip at the top (which was broken during the fusion experiment scene) was an inhibitor to keep the ai from acting on its own without his go ahead
I still love that the design team clearly showed that each pair of arms clearly has a differing purpose. The upper two are smaller and delicate, they have the most tools and attachments to be precise in their work. The lower two are larger and heavier, they're to help support the weight of the harness and do the most damaging tasks.
@@paolopasaol9700 that's what I also think. Because as a child you don't clearly understand what's happening to those surgeons. The only thing you do know is that they are in serious trouble. As an adult you learn about these things. Making it all the more scarier. You know what is happening you understand what led these surgeons to be here in the first place. But there is nothing you can do but watch.
That's true, I remember seeing this movie when I was like 5 and not making a fus over this scene Edit: incase anyone asks, either it's the Canadian rating system or Canadian theaters just don't care, little children are allowed to see these films
I know what you mean. As kids, me and my brothers were Geeks in the making and when we watched this scene, we're like: "Whoa! Doc Ock is becoming the villain! This is so cool to see him kill!" Now as adults, it's like: "Jesus! Those poor doctors and nurses!!!!!"
It’s always so fascinating to see how much the arms move, how much personality they have. How they go from being deadly murder weapons to anyone but Otto, to being docile - albeit mischievous - child-like entities to the man himself.
From Novelization: "Father? Can you hear us? Don't let them hurt us. We will do whatever you wish. We will serve you. We are you. Father? Are you there? Don't let the bad man hurt us... Can we stop the bad men?"
I like how at 2:24 the tentacles participate in his gesture of despair as if they weren't the ones that damn well made the mess poor Otto is horrified at
Notice how at 1:46 that the doc's arms hesitate before killing the surgeon, but the center eye turns from white to red indicating doc's mind was trying to fight the control of the arms but the arms regained control and killed the surgeon. Throughout the movie, when the arms' center "eyes" are white, it means Otto's brain is in control, but when they are red, they are functioning on their own will. Edit: Wow, this blew up, too cool. Thanks for all the kind comments and likes. I rewatched the movie and paid attention to small details and this was one of them. I thought it was a pretty cool detail to add that most didn't notice.
I forget sometimes how beautifully Raimi-esque this scene is. Its got all the Evil Dead hallmarks- cool shadows, zoom-ins, closeups, even the first-person zoom along the ground shot. LOVE this scene.
Although it's not the same director, I'm getting Hellraiser II vibes from several scenes. The heroic music, becoming the "evil" doctor/scientist being controled by sub-human devices...love it!
Does the arms work on its on? I am more inclined to think that it needs a host perhaps? Like it require signals in the spinal cord to run. Perhaps doc was not fully anaesthetised, if he was, this would’ve not been the case.Given my point is perfectly debatable yet that’s the version of “reality “ i like it to be.
Man, Raimi’s horror roots really shine through in this scene, the fact that he was able to blend comic book goofiness and horror so well speaks volumes about his directing skills
I wouldn't get my hopes up if I were you... Remember : when Spider-Man 1 & 2 came out, the MCU was not born yet. Only Iron Man and X Men existed. And both kinda sucked. But now it's all about CG and jokes. I don't know he'll be able to pull off something serious out of a current MCU movie
@@philippebeauchamp2827 You're acting as if Sam Raimi wasn't known for making non-serious flicks. Go watch Army of Darkness or even his TV shows like Xena.
Fun fact, the arm that first reacts is is FLO, the most motherly one, she would remove the blind fold, give him drinks, and take off his hat. This is also the arm he would talk to when he regains control. It was the most protective arm, according to the actor, they wanted each arm to have a personality, the bottom 2 were just followers, mimicking eachother, top right (from his perspective) was the most protective and violent. Top left prefered to use weapons like the blade and didn't mind not "seeing" things while Flo would always look in the direction Doc does.
1:57 Three things I loved about this scene. 1) As the blindfolds come off of Octavious's eyes, he is like a new born baby at the hospital. Doc Oc is now born. 2) The Frankenstein monster vibe because he is now different from others. Like a monster. 3) The haircut. Anyone else notice his iconic Doc Oc mushroom haircut?
It's crazy to think that Raimi and his crew had the balls to implement scenes like these whether as today, everything nowadays is over the top kid friendly and comedic.
No offense but I think movies are scarier nowadays. In lots of Marvel movies, there is blood and there was even this scary scene of Bucky Barnes killing old people with a lot of blood
The weight of every impact, the sheer crudeness of the sound being only screams and the movement of the metal, the delivery of Alfred as the Doc witnesses the what happened. This a masterpiece of a scene
It would be fucking terrifying. But it would be so cool. Seeing Dr-conners transform and bite off people's heads. OH MY GOD THE POTENTIAL. Would've been way better than what we got in The amazing Spiderman.
It would’ve been cool keeping his appearance hidden from the audience and build suspense until the characters see what he looks like. I think similar to Amazing, Peter and Gwen might’ve been the ones to discover the transformed Connors.
@Julian R well they are in 2014, so his nebula got transferred with memories from the mcu nebula (somehow idk) so thats how he knew to go to vormir and why he teleported to the future to stop what they were going to do by undoing what his future self did so he knew of earth at the point so he could of went to earth, destroyed it and killed the super heroes to bring back as "trophies" to show he is someone to be feared
This scene terrified me as a kid, but that makes me appreciate it all the more. No ridiculous music, just pure horror. And the fact that Raimi was able to do all of this in a PG-13 movie speaks volumes to the director and the producer realizing it didn't have to be a gore-fest, what we DON'T see and what we do see makes it all the worse. Like what did happen to Doctor Chainsaw? Was his neck crushed? Blunt force trauma? Did they just snap his neck? Just a great scene.
And a what about the women that left their fingernails at the floor while she was dragged at that dark corner? That scare's me a lot, i Just a good scene
As a kid I always assumed each tentacle tore Doctor Chainsaw's head open. Which is pretty grim for a kid to be thinking, but sometimes in horror its best to tell not show. An audience's imagination will always be more personally horrifying than anything one can create. Its the primordial lovecraftian fear of the unknown. Explanations offer comfort in the sense that you can eventually cope with what you've witnessed afterward. Not knowing just makes the mind wander aimlessly. Like Lambert's death in Alien.
@@siddharth_0771 it really dosnt, "brutal" yeah, but not scary. You must think FNAF jump scares are "scary" as well or Final Destination because it has "brutal" kills
This is what I love from Raimi. In real life, super villains wouldn't just be scary. They would be horror movie creatures. People would have mental trauma from just looking at these abominations
I heard it once that Doc Ock was essentially both the Mad Scientist and his monstrous creation wrapped into one character, and I feel this scene is a perfect example of this
In the novel, this scene is extremely bloody. They describe the whole room with blood and guts everywhere. Edit : for those wondering, I'm talking about the official novelization of the movie by Peter David.
Fun fact: Movie novelization books tend to borrow what’s on script than the final movie. The hospital scene here was shot to be a lot more gruesome but the producers wanted to keep away from a PG-13 rating so they asked Raimi to tone it down
@@searchingforfoodonyoutube2500 the entire point of him as a villain here is that he isn’t controlling the arms. After the inhibitor chip gets destroyed, the arms can act on their own, as seen here when they protect themselves and him when he’s unconscious.
If you listen closely when the guy first starts up the saw, you can actually hear the arms activating in response. I never noticed that until recently. They used the sound of the saw to mask their own sound. Clever little bastards. Plus that final scene when the arms screech with him is definitely concerning.
I guess they don’t want to be separated from his creator plus they thought the doctors were gonna harm Otto. That’s why they attacked the doctors since they felt like their creator was in danger
The same guy who directed this scene will direct Doctor Strange 2, the MCU’s first horror themed movie. I like where this is going. Edit: I’m also aware that it’s not going to be a horror movie, nor that it ever was going to be. Kevin Feige mentioned that it’s just going to have scary sequences in the movie. Still excited nonetheless.
The way Octavius moved as the arms flipped the car even though he initially flinched is more brilliant than I remember, it shows how the arms and him are intertwined in thought and action. They act together, even though he doesnt realize it at first. Like his reactions are the also the arms reactions and vice versa. These movies were golden
Actually he had no control over them once the chip was destroyed, he in turn ended up letting the arms control his every move but when he first put them on it was meant as a good thing, and was supposed to be meant to help human kind but things went wrong and the control chip ended up being destroyed thus creating a villain with powerful arms that had no control
A fun thing to think about is how Octopus' arms are thought to have tiny brains that allow them to act on their own, helping the octupus perform several actions at once without losing focus.
I love how octopus's arms aren't like another set of limbs, but more like the heads of a hydra. He may be the boss, but they do what they want, when they want.
@@martmandred9182 "Father? Can you hear us? Don't let them hurt us. We will do whatever you wish. We will serve you. We are you. Father? Are you there? Don't let the bad man hurt us... Can we stop the bad men? " From the novel version
I was 15 when this movie came out the girl screaming help me digging her nails into concrete always got me. That was truly the most horrifying death out of all of them. She was truly fighting for her life.
It creeped me out when I was little now I’m 12 and I didn’t know what was going on I started getting scared on that scene but now as 12 I finally found out what’s going on and what this movie is about!
I was at a babysitters when I saw it the first time. I was so into it then the other kids were like mom this is scary then we watched spiderman 3 for the damn tenth time.
Honestly this is still a scaring scene for me. Even without the blood and gore, to realistic screams and the brutal end to each doctor leaves me with a deep fear of this character in this particular scene that I don’t experience anywhere else.
As a little kid I had my eyes closed the whole time as soon as the doctor turnt on the circular saw because I thought we would see the surgery, so I never truly saw until years later that scene yet HEARING IT still counted as one of my childhood fictional traumas
Everything about this scene...the cinematography, the acting, the sound design won me over in loving this version of spiderman. I used to think it was a little corny at first but this scene was so fun to watch!
Something I love about this scene is its cinematography. The close-up shots transform the room into a labyrinth, where the tentacles’ attacks always come from out of frame, creating a sense of omnipresence.
I love how Doctor Octopus’s arms are basically their own separate entities. It actually reflects a lot to how a real life octopus’s body functions. Octopuses are absolutely fascinating! They are one of the smartest creatures on planet Earth, however their intelligence works very differently than that of most other creatures. Unlike vertebrates who have a highly centralized nervous system that is controlled entirely by a central brain, cephalopods (like the octopus) have multiple neuron clusters and ganglia throughout their body. These clusters mean the octopus basically has multiple brains (9 to be exact) that control each part of the body on their own. One cluster is the central dominant brain that receives most of the information gathered, while the other 8 control the arms and basically act as “mini brains” that can operate independently from the main central brain. This allows them to solve problems that are impossible for most other creatures. Otto designed his arms with the same purpose in mind, but unfortunately as we all know, it didn’t go as planned.
@@ezzzzzy3863 Yeah I realize that. But still, this film is ahead of its time regarding the "effects" scenes. This looks more real than 99% of Hollywood superhero films today
I remember watching this as a kid.... One of the most horrifying things I'd seen...... And now I'm so hyped up to see Molina back as doc ock in 'no way home'
It makes me laugh thinking what this man was thinking when he did that. He was probably like: "A-HA I have retrieved the chainsaw. Anyways". *Proceeds to shred arm*
This entire movie is very light on the action up until this point, which makes this scene in that context even crazier the first time you see it. My grandpa didn't have much patience for superhero movies when this came out, and I brought the DVD during a visit. My cousins and I were watching, and up until this point my grandpa poked his head into the living room every now and then saying "you're still watching this? Its so boring," (he had a point, it was mostly talk and Peter stuff). Then he happens to walk into the room.... this scene is playing. He said, "holy shit... is this the same movie?!" Lmaooo, he stayed and watched the rest of it. Hahaa, I still remember that so clearly. Miss you, Peeps!
1:43 I love how Raimi even makes a subtle reference his film “Evil Dead” in this scene. Makes me wonder how much more horrifying this scene would be if the film was rated R
MCU has the Disney censor all over it. Regardless how "horror" Dr. Strange 2 attempts and claims to be, we'll never see a scene even close to this magnitude in an MCU film. Ever. Period.
Doc ock is underrated. Hes got his own intelligence and an extra set of nearly indestructible limbs that he can both control and have act on its own/instinctively. Dude would be a powerhouse in the MCU
What scares me is that the Arms are ruthless, they travel like serpents and latch themselves onto someone and beats them to Death. The one that flew into the Doctor and hit his stomach must’ve Impaled him, the Nurse that got dragged into the corner was silenced. God Sam did a great job on this Movie
1:19 was the scariest part to me as a kid, getting pulled into the darkness, also she was trying to grip it so hard she was scraping concrete/metal….brutal!!
Basically what Empire Strikes Back was to Star Wars, this film along with the Dark Knight, and Days of Future Past and Terminator 2 deliver the same outstanding achievement.
The fact that there's no music during the tentacles rampage, only people screaming in pain and fear truly making this scene terrifying (especially when I was a kid)
facts lmao
@@starboybellyjewel7524 same for me but I was in between.
@@starboybellyjewel7524 stop cursing it’s a sin.
Sam Raimi knows a lot about horror movies, trust me. And he loves this genre, so much so that even in children's films he was able to insert many references to the genre.
Me too! I was so scared to fall asleep for weeks. I live in Jersey City just a river across Manhattan I was terrified to go there thinking he’ll come get me
RIP to the surgeons who spent 9~10 years of intense post-college training just to get killed by an octopus arm lol
should took shop class
Seemed like a bunch of pricks anyway
@@lettucememe3390 Nah surgeons are way above your level
I missed the part where that’s my problem
@@lettucememe3390 savage level ×3000
If you know you know.
“Any of y’all take shop class?”
*doctors laughing*
*arms laughing*
Wait they laugh?
@@emmanuelodom698 they do
@@emmanuelodom698 I just realised that too.... when the Doctor jokes about it he notices that arms moved an inch but he ignores it. Thinking it was nothing untill they got attacked.
Arms laughing 🤣😂😂🤣🤣
nani?
I like how they make it believable that these huge metal arms could still perform small, delicate tasks by showing it retracting out some smaller claws to take off his blindfold
@xXTr8rZXx so?
@@weaponizedlizardmen360 that made me lol.... like really who cares 🤣
@xXTr8rZXx You know, spoiling movies aren't worth the erection, even from behind the false safety of your screen.
and the fact the arms are designed in a way to protect otto its so cool to see the contrast in how they treat him compared to the environment around him
Eye protection
The arms were only protecting Dr. Octopus from that huge medical bill.
Except spider-man is in england!!!!! Dun dun duuuuun
how big was the medical bill?. ?w?
yeah that's America of course
Lmao
@@twilightjester5672 $10,000
Raimi did a good job implementing HIS horror genre into this scene
yeah that close up of the chainsaw was great callback
@@PuppetierMaster even the little zoom makes me wanna say groovy
He did a little evil dead with the octopus cam lol now all we need is the doc to be ash and say Come Get Some haha
Hope he does the same for Dr.Strange 2. I doubt Disney will let him but i want Raimi to go crazy with his horror style for that movie
Evil Dead references in this section!
No blood, no extreme gore, and this scene is still tense and atmospheric.
Yeah I know
Impressive
imagine its rated r oh no its gonna be bloody
and no music
Makes me wonder if they actually died or were just badly beaten
Is it weird that, having watched this scene as a kid and later as an adult, it's actually *MORE* intense than I remember it. As a kid, I think the camera jumped around too quickly for me to keep up or something, but seeing the scene for what it is now... I'm impressed.
That’s because Sam Raimi was the director :)
Lol, true. Usually, the things look much more cool or scarrier when you whatch them as a kid, but this time, man, I don't know how I survived this scene as a kid... now I see that I watched pure horor. :D
Yeah it’s weird it’s more intense when you understand context and stuff like that.
Same
Idk man, it scared me then as a kid, and it scares me now as an adult.
Something I love is how the arms “snap and bite, defensively” at the staff initially before getting more aggressive.
The arms reacted out of fear and self-preservation. They thought they were under attack and defended themselves.
Their first “moments of life” were being threatened by Saws and Drills and then once outside, by a giant car. They think the world wants to kill them and Otto.
Halo man
Fun fact Alfred Molina gave the arms their own name during the making of spider man 2 which are Harry, Larry, Flo and Moe. Harry and Larry are the bottom arms and they're the heavy lifters and Flo the right arm is the most motherly one
@@sleekemu356 what about Moe
I know. In the comics doc ock is still a little tragic. But mostly we just see him as another villian. But in the raimi verse. Otto and all four arms are extremely tragic characters who just wanna be left alone.
@@bradbradthebrad Moe is just Moe. I don't know maybe he's the more aggressive one
And we’ve come full circle…
“Hello, Peter”
This movie is about to be lit
OMG I was so excited about him making a come back I'm sooooo hyped. But let's be real, they won't be able to do that sort of scene in the MCU, or his one liners like: "I'll peel the flesh of her bones"
Peter to doc . Here's your change
I can’t believe this is happening
How he wears a shirt
Gosh this scene is INSANE. Seventeen years later and it still gives me the chills. Mr. Raimi is a freaking horror genius. DAMN.
Right like too goated
I can't believe this movie is 17 years old. It feels like it should be like....five years ago or something. That's how time flies when you get older. At least it does for me..
Lol did you combine his first and last name?
Looking back now, i understand why, especially him directing the original Evil Dead
@@iggystardust9236 - Good catch lol that was an accident 😊
I love that Spider-Man 2 went from being a Sam Raimi action movie to a Sam Raimi horror movie for about 3 minutes.
This scene should've been renamed Sam Raimi's "Hospital Terror" if it was a movie
Ngl this scene was kinda like that Darth Vader scene from the end of revenge of the sith
@@RealMcfloppa
*"Nooooooo* !!!!! ....."
Doc OCK: Run 🏃♂️
Yeah those arms are now sentient due to the chip that protects his brain
When I was a kid I thought that Doctor Octavius had control of the arms.
Being an adult and learning that the arms had its own artificial intelligence and were free from control after the inhibitor chip was destroyed makes it more terrifying
He has control over them in some way but not 100% obviously
You ain’t an adult
Same
@@masterknife8423 No, the arms are controlled by AI. There was a chip in his spine that was suppose to make him control the arms, instead of the arms controlling him. That chip was broken during the presentation. The AI started to control Otto, instead of the other way around. That’s why he got corrupted
Doktorr, turn off my pain inhibitors!
This isn't even typical slightly intimidating villain introduction. This shit is genuinely scary. The imagery, the brutal way the doctors are being killed, and my god the screams.
There’s more gore in the novel
@@crackhead-of2mz seriously?
And the man wasn't even conscious.
@Limau Purut holy shit
I wish that was a cut version we can watch
Seeing gore and violence is fun ya know? Oh yeah also I'm the quiet kid in my class
*This movie was so well made*
Yes! This one and the first one were the best Spider-Man movies... in fact they were the only good ones
@@nsasupporter7557 not true, so so untrue
@@Elli-gl7gu so true, so very true. Both Amazing Spider-Man movies were crap. As was homecoming
@@nsasupporter7557 the amazing spiderman 1 was actually pretty good, and so was homecoming and far from home,and into the spiderverse rises above every spiderman movie, so nah you're living on a different planet lol
@@Elli-gl7gu no, you’re living on a different planet. The only thing Amazing Spider-Man 1 had going for it was that it was better than it’s sequel. It was basically a repeat of the first Spider-Man only with the Lizard instead of Green Goblin. Homecoming sucked because it was too much like a kids movie, it was aimed at a kid audience. The only thing good about Homecoming was Michael Keaton as the villain. He’s an awesome actor. I don’t care what you say, Spider-Man 1 and 2 will always be the best (and only good) Spider-Man movies. I’d rather watch Spider-Man 3 than Amazing Spider-Man. I’m done here, don’t respond to me anymore
And this, ladies and gentlemen, is what happens when you have a horror movie director make a superhero movie.
And I thought Carnage was scary enough than the rest of Spider Man’s villains, much less Batman’s villains
Sam Raimi did a masterful job with the direction he took for all three Spider-Man films before doing Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness!
You get a masterpiece
@@CBMOA What Sam Raimi did was brilliant!!!
Topher grace was the only Evil venom ever created, he was sinister and psychopathic, Topher was a villain in this Movie, he wasn’t a anti hero joke just like venom in the comics or Tom Hardy’s version. He was a demon in spiderman 3. and when venom slowly became a creepy version of spiderman and took his form that was scary.
That’s why he was so skinny because he was the opposite of Peter.
and he was way more terrifying then carnage
Venom in 2007 was perfect.
This scene is so. damn. Raimi.
The fact that Raimi can put scenes like this into a kid-friendly franchise movie is absolute king shit.
This scene scared the shit out of me when i was a kid
@@lucassabbione9160 me too back then I was 4 years old it f***ed me up damn.
This scene F***ing scared me but after I like this is the best scene ever and still this day when see stuff like that I like yes the kids will experience this like we did and parents will shut up saying marvel family friendly
@@lucassabbione9160 same
Imagine what he can do in Doctor Strange 2
This scene is almost as disturbing to watch as an adult as it was as a kid when this came out. Perfect editing and camera work. That nurse who scratches the floor up, Bravo! Burned into my brain forever.
The beginning with the covered up arms in the curtains, and how unnatural it looks is horrific in itself
I felt like a big problem with Doc Ock in No Way Home is that the camera work was really lazy and didn't fully play up the effect of the arms. There were all these wide shots and face close-ups, and the camera didn't follow the arms around and make them seem like they where everywhere and overwhelming to fight against like this movie did
@@junehatter8479 this is true, but I already knew they weren't gonna do it justice or come even close, it's a marvel movie unfortunately
@@PotatoMaGobinus Yeah, I wasn't disappointed with it because I had low expectations, but the person I saw it with hadn't seen an MCU movie in a long time, so he was annoyed
@Daniel Jaramillo I meant MCU smart one, just use your head a little Jesus Christ🤦♂️
This scene is why I trust Sam Raimi will do a great job making Doctor Strange 2 a terror movie. Even tho its gonna be rated Pg-13
Ash vs the evil dead too bro
I don’t think it’s going to be a terror let alone a horror film, that’s the main reason why they parted ways with Scott Derrickson to begin with because of “creative differences”, he’s still going to executive producer though
God I have so much excitement and hype for this movie. CAN'T WAIT
sarnai and a brain doesn’t need brain cells to function. Oh wait it does you “moron” what Luis meant by what he said was that you are somewhat limited horror wise with a pg 13 rating as opposed to a rated R rating
Idk the camera cuts and angles are weird and the screaming/reactions the people did are weird too lol maybe because it's an old movie but idk. The way the one dudes hand came up with the mini chainsaw for example lol or the girl scratching the floor while being dragged. It's all just kinda cheesy
Part at 1:14 . When Otto just lays there unconscious, while his mechanical arms wreak havoc in the emergency room combined with the terrified screams. There’s no words to describe the cinematic genius of this movie. This scene alone deserves Oscar
I always thought it was his doing, but later I remembered that Peter mentioned that the tentacles had a mind of their own
@@luccithegreatest271 I always wondered, why would he create self aware robotic arms?
@@1234TheBeat4321 I believe his plan was to create arms that would act by his commands. But after the disaster in his laboratory, I think the tentacles were left without an owner to obey since the chip on Doc Ock’s neck was destroyed. That’s probably how he became evil because he was being brainwashed by his technology
@@1234TheBeat4321 to operate the arms, he has to use his mind, which creates a neural link
however, because of how advanced it was, it could control his mind whenever they pleased, which is why he made a inhibitor on the top part of the spinal cord
@@inoxisane yeah but the chip got fried then he died but then spiderman no way home had to save him
Raimi is so darn good at directing horror scenes
The Evil Dead
George Dawn it'd be kind of interesting to see a spiderman horror movie
Thriller*
@@doomguyisbetterthanmasterc6624 Thriller*
What are you talking about?
This scene IS a horror scene.
this is just a great EVIL DEAD scene in the middle of a superhero movie
The quick zoom on the surgical chainsaw is soooo raimi
I freaking love when horror movie directors go back to their horror roots during a superhero film.
@@ethangamino4740 wait till we see his spiderman 4 next year!!.....i mean "dr strange 2"
Bro I was just thinking that haha. This scene is legitimately amazingly well done
@@saintniccage2818 The camera following a moving object like that is also a Raimi trait.
Alfred owns this role. Nobody will ever be a better Doc Ock.
Ummm. William Salyers is better in my opinion. He is only a voice actor for doc oc in the ps4 game but he had the best doc oc voice I’ve ever heard! Everything that came out of his mouth was amazing and the backstory for the character was extremely well written and made sense! Alfred is amazing don’t get me wrong the guy does the role amazingly but the emotion from William Salyers in my opinion captures atto actavius perfectly
@@nerdthatcantfit1079 Voice yes but acting we have to see but it may never happen.
@@ezeke99m bshhh yeah 100% the guys a voice actor he doesn’t do live action films I doubt there will be any way to compare em correctly. Bc of his limited acting experience I bet he wouldn’t be as good as Alfred in live action but I honestly never heard someone sound as doc oc as the guy
WILIAM SPAYERS! Forgot his name for a split second XDD
Alfred is coming back with the "HELLO PETER" in spider man no way home
Ladies and gentlemen. This is how a horror film should be made. No jumpscares or extreme gore. Just the screams of agony and struggle is enough to scare the audiences.
Dr Strange 2 trailer says hello😎
@@I-speak-U-shut-it doctor strange 2 sucked
This thread aged well 🤣🤣
Ironic, since this movie was made by the same guy who directed the evil dead movies
Exactly
This scene: horrified me as a kid
Me now: realized that Sam raimi is a horror director
Me: that makes sense
That is....acceptable
Well he's the one who made Evil Dead series.
I always thought that the chainsaw was an evil dead reference
@@giancarlojimenez1541 I noticed that too!!
He also directed Drag me To Hell
I love that how the camera aims at doc sleeping, showing that he has no control and the tentacles control themselves like they have their own consciousness.
they have
More like they are a reflection of his id- they act on Otto's instincts without his consciousness or morals holding him back, which is why he's clearly afraid of the taxi while they decide to flip it. It's also why, once they basically take over his mind, his grand plan is to perform the energy experiment without any of those pesky morals getting in the way- it's what Otto WANTS to do without any of the filters his mind puts in place to stop him from acting on those wants.
@@themightybullfrog no they are all like four different life forms witch each act and react differently but all work together because they knew without Otto they can't survive.
I really wonder why Doc Oct really wanted to do the fusion core experiment so much?
@@Super-Godzilla99 I'm like 90 percent sure that in this movie they're just controlled by advanced ai. The chip at the top (which was broken during the fusion experiment scene) was an inhibitor to keep the ai from acting on its own without his go ahead
I still love that the design team clearly showed that each pair of arms clearly has a differing purpose. The upper two are smaller and delicate, they have the most tools and attachments to be precise in their work. The lower two are larger and heavier, they're to help support the weight of the harness and do the most damaging tasks.
Tbh I never noticed the arms were different... xD
i like how doc ock was 😴 until they took the blindfold off. lol
i love how the doctors joke around before the surgery . it gives immersion to this scene
how the hell i'm finding this scene scarier as an adult than when i was a child
Possibly because we get psychological horror better when we mature. Just my 2 cents on it.
@@paolopasaol9700 that's what I also think. Because as a child you don't clearly understand what's happening to those surgeons. The only thing you do know is that they are in serious trouble. As an adult you learn about these things. Making it all the more scarier. You know what is happening you understand what led these surgeons to be here in the first place. But there is nothing you can do but watch.
That's true, I remember seeing this movie when I was like 5 and not making a fus over this scene
Edit: incase anyone asks, either it's the Canadian rating system or Canadian theaters just don't care, little children are allowed to see these films
I know, I watched this as a little kid and found it creepy but mostly cool. Now I'm like "dayum"
I know what you mean. As kids, me and my brothers were Geeks in the making and when we watched this scene, we're like: "Whoa! Doc Ock is becoming the villain! This is so cool to see him kill!"
Now as adults, it's like: "Jesus! Those poor doctors and nurses!!!!!"
The moment you realize Doctor Octopus can have his own horror movie
Nighthowler YES!!!
I’d pay to see that
@@stashap9260 same my man
That hospital already looks creepy enough lol
Or maybe his own crime action film that focuses on his rise as the Master Planner.
Doctor Octopus just doing his operation with multiple patients 👨⚕️🐙
Tentacle operations
bruh
Videos????
Absolutely💖🐙
Just a fast robotic surgery, nothing to see here. Although he dropped a tool there.
It’s always so fascinating to see how much the arms move, how much personality they have. How they go from being deadly murder weapons to anyone but Otto, to being docile - albeit mischievous - child-like entities to the man himself.
That couldn’t be more eloquently phrased 🤌
From Novelization:
"Father? Can you hear us? Don't let them hurt us. We will do whatever you wish. We will serve you. We are you. Father? Are you there? Don't let the bad man hurt us... Can we stop the bad men?"
@@caav56Whoa
“HELLO PETER.”
We all know why we’re here.
Yes
I was hoping who else geeked out when that trailer came out.
That's a fact
Factual
No way home
Watching this as a kid was so terrifying, it goes to show that you don't need a single drop of blood or any gore to be scary as fuck.
How is there not blood?
@@tantris2876 Because PG12, that's why
@@tantris2876 Where would there have been and why? Edgy fucko.
Lol, I watched it yesterday and I was still scared
And I’m 21
@@DropkickNation Is edgy now an insult?
Green Goblin: I memorably scared heck out of everyone’s childhoods
Doc Ock: (to his arms) *Hold my hat*
Venom: have you heard of terrifying facial zoom ins
@@attackontitanfollower Lizard: My face is enough
Green Goblin : Misery, midery that's what you've chosen. I offered friendship and you spat on my face
Goblin and Doc Ock were the scariest of all these
@@christophermichaelclarence6003 "MJ and I, we're gonna have a hell of a time!"
I like how at 2:24 the tentacles participate in his gesture of despair as if they weren't the ones that damn well made the mess poor Otto is horrified at
its actually pretty good symbolism that he still does have some control over them, leading to his ending decision
I thought those tentacles were cheering
I'm pretty sure Otto just woke up and realized that is project is dead along with his wife, not sure he even realizes what happened around him.
Imagine going through medical school just to be killed by a robotic octopus arm.
But an interesting career
I would regret that..
But at least u don't have to pay ur student loans back
@@peaceemerick2 Lol, beat me to it with this response!
@@ferrykent433 and a short one
Even without the blood and gore, this scene still feels terrifying...and I love it.
less is more.
There was blood and gore?
@@revthescatman137 Read it again. ;)
It's scary although only two of them died I think, the guy who got electrocuted and the guy who got mangled
@@agaveboy really? Where did you hear that? That would be cool if some of them survived I always felt so bad for them as a kid.
Notice how at 1:46 that the doc's arms hesitate before killing the surgeon, but the center eye turns from white to red indicating doc's mind was trying to fight the control of the arms but the arms regained control and killed the surgeon.
Throughout the movie, when the arms' center "eyes" are white, it means Otto's brain is in control, but when they are red, they are functioning on their own will.
Edit: Wow, this blew up, too cool. Thanks for all the kind comments and likes. I rewatched the movie and paid attention to small details and this was one of them. I thought it was a pretty cool detail to add that most didn't notice.
Bruuuuuuh
Amazing observation
I've never notice that before, nice job👍 👍
I haven't see that. Nice catch to that small detail.
Good eye!
Damn, I never noticed! I just figured it was waiting until the other arms gathered up for the attack.
Doctor: *Picks up a chainsaw*
Sam Raimi: "Wrong movie"
I forget sometimes how beautifully Raimi-esque this scene is. Its got all the Evil Dead hallmarks- cool shadows, zoom-ins, closeups, even the first-person zoom along the ground shot. LOVE this scene.
And a chainsaw! Groovy
Yeah this scene is straight evil dead I love it
Although it's not the same director, I'm getting Hellraiser II vibes from several scenes. The heroic music, becoming the "evil" doctor/scientist being controled by sub-human devices...love it!
Came to make the same comment lol
Saw some Phantasm in there too.
Anesthesiologist is fired... if he survived
Movie Games jaja
To be fair, Otto was out the whole time. And the anesthetic wouldn’t work on the arms.
@DarthVader the anesthesiologist would be in the operating room, he would be dead
Does the arms work on its on? I am more inclined to think that it needs a host perhaps? Like it require signals in the spinal cord to run. Perhaps doc was not fully anaesthetised, if he was, this would’ve not been the case.Given my point is perfectly debatable yet that’s the version of “reality “ i like it to be.
Fire him any way even if he dead. It's the principle
Man, Raimi’s horror roots really shine through in this scene, the fact that he was able to blend comic book goofiness and horror so well speaks volumes about his directing skills
You can take Sam Rami out of horror, but you can't take the horror out of Sam Rami.
This scene proves that Raimi can push the boundaries and make PG-13 look brutal. A glimpse of what we'll be seeing in Multiverse of Madness.
I wouldn't get my hopes up if I were you... Remember : when Spider-Man 1 & 2 came out, the MCU was not born yet. Only Iron Man and X Men existed. And both kinda sucked. But now it's all about CG and jokes. I don't know he'll be able to pull off something serious out of a current MCU movie
@@philippebeauchamp2827 did you say iron man sucked?💀
@@soyspicepod1547 Well it's never been more than entertainment and having a laugh
@@philippebeauchamp2827 they give riami creative freedom.
Because if they interfere with movie making than results would be like Spiderman 3
@@philippebeauchamp2827 You're acting as if Sam Raimi wasn't known for making non-serious flicks. Go watch Army of Darkness or even his TV shows like Xena.
Tell me you directed Evil Dead without telling me you directed Evil Dead
Make a video essay about these Spider-Man movies
I understand that reference
Yeah that chainsaw zoom in was textbook Raimi
It's a stead fest!
Haven’t read a Sam Raimi reference in a loooooooong time
Fun fact, the arm that first reacts is is FLO, the most motherly one, she would remove the blind fold, give him drinks, and take off his hat.
This is also the arm he would talk to when he regains control.
It was the most protective arm, according to the actor, they wanted each arm to have a personality, the bottom 2 were just followers, mimicking eachother, top right (from his perspective) was the most protective and violent. Top left prefered to use weapons like the blade and didn't mind not "seeing" things while Flo would always look in the direction Doc does.
Wow that’s crazy
Damn that's some interesting information
Very cool
So... Top right is Flo?
Top left is the violent one?
@@viperakmal Alfred Molina named the top left arm Mo. The two bottom ones were named Harry and Larry.
1:57 Three things I loved about this scene. 1) As the blindfolds come off of Octavious's eyes, he is like a new born baby at the hospital. Doc Oc is now born. 2) The Frankenstein monster vibe because he is now different from others. Like a monster. 3) The haircut. Anyone else notice his iconic Doc Oc mushroom haircut?
I'd like to add that he's COMPLETELY unconscious while the arms are just doing complete horrific damage.
It's crazy to think that Raimi and his crew had the balls to implement scenes like these whether as today, everything nowadays is over the top kid friendly and comedic.
@xXTr8rZXx so?
and the contrast was even more powerful becuz the entire film is wholesome and not cynical
Yeah and people think these movies are goofy and meme worthy . Hahaha they don't see development and layers of Art in this movie .
@@weaponizedlizardmen360 what did he even say
No offense but I think movies are scarier nowadays. In lots of Marvel movies, there is blood and there was even this scary scene of Bucky Barnes killing old people with a lot of blood
The weight of every impact, the sheer crudeness of the sound being only screams and the movement of the metal, the delivery of Alfred as the Doc witnesses the what happened. This a masterpiece of a scene
Imagine how sam raimi's lizard could have been
It would be fucking terrifying. But it would be so cool. Seeing Dr-conners transform and bite off people's heads. OH MY GOD THE POTENTIAL. Would've been way better than what we got in The amazing Spiderman.
It would've eaten ppl lets be honest
Xenomorph
It would probably be something that would make David Cronenberg proud
It would’ve been cool keeping his appearance hidden from the audience and build suspense until the characters see what he looks like. I think similar to Amazing, Peter and Gwen might’ve been the ones to discover the transformed Connors.
That trademark Sam Raimi style POV camera angle of the tentacles was such a great touch, makes it even more unsettling
This scene screams Sam Rami.
Pretty sure he screams "NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!"
A9sAs ITS SUPPOSED TO BE A JOKE
now edit and make that scene but with michael p screams from the females screams
And then Ash cones in and takes the chainsaw at 1:52 🤓
Well Bruce Campbell is in these movies
As a kid I never realized that they died and how actually scary this scene was, especially for a superhero movie.
I love how people frequently say "for a superhero movie" Disney's really ruined their reputation
@@shealupkes this is Marvel movie and sam raimi maked perfect horror scene from spider-man 2
Even the guy who was shoved into the lamp?
@@pav3elytcz566 yes, that's what I meant
@Julian R well they are in 2014, so his nebula got transferred with memories from the mcu nebula (somehow idk) so thats how he knew to go to vormir and why he teleported to the future to stop what they were going to do by undoing what his future self did
so he knew of earth at the point so he could of went to earth, destroyed it and killed the super heroes to bring back as "trophies" to show he is someone to be feared
This scene terrified me as a kid, but that makes me appreciate it all the more.
No ridiculous music, just pure horror. And the fact that Raimi was able
to do all of this in a PG-13 movie speaks volumes to the director and
the producer realizing it didn't have to be a gore-fest, what we DON'T
see and what we do see makes it all the worse.
Like what did happen to Doctor Chainsaw? Was his neck crushed?
Blunt force trauma? Did they just snap his neck? Just a great scene.
I hate to say this but four camera angles ... Four pieces
And a what about the women that left their fingernails at the floor while she was dragged at that dark corner? That scare's me a lot, i Just a good scene
@@samlegder9369 Every time. Every god damn time I see that, my nails hurt.
@@samlegder9369 scared the hell outta me as a kid, imagination went kinda wild with what what happened to her.
As a kid I always assumed each tentacle tore Doctor Chainsaw's head open.
Which is pretty grim for a kid to be thinking, but sometimes in horror its best to tell not show.
An audience's imagination will always be more personally horrifying than anything one can create. Its the primordial lovecraftian fear of the unknown.
Explanations offer comfort in the sense that you can eventually cope with what you've witnessed afterward. Not knowing just makes the mind wander aimlessly.
Like Lambert's death in Alien.
I really really hope Dr Strange 2 have a scene like this , an horror scene so well made.
It dosnt. Sorry. Just got out of it. It has glimmers, but its nothing close
@@ZenLoveX it has more brutal scenes bruh
Oh boy, I think it makes this scene look like Backyardigans.
@@siddharth_0771 it really dosnt, "brutal" yeah, but not scary. You must think FNAF jump scares are "scary" as well or Final Destination because it has "brutal" kills
@@ZenLoveX how the hell Wanda killing Xavier is not scary but Doc Ock killing is
This is what I love from Raimi. In real life, super villains wouldn't just be scary. They would be horror movie creatures. People would have mental trauma from just looking at these abominations
Why would you bad-mouth ol' Blonsky like that
@@ManashSarkarVidyapithson because blonsky is a freak.
I heard it once that Doc Ock was essentially both the Mad Scientist and his monstrous creation wrapped into one character, and I feel this scene is a perfect example of this
In the novel, this scene is extremely bloody. They describe the whole room with blood and guts everywhere.
Edit : for those wondering, I'm talking about the official novelization of the movie by Peter David.
Fun fact: Movie novelization books tend to borrow what’s on script than the final movie. The hospital scene here was shot to be a lot more gruesome but the producers wanted to keep away from a PG-13 rating so they asked Raimi to tone it down
@@MNIMnoob All things considered, I'd say it didn't pretttty good at still showing the brutality without getting gory.
Christ
Having been for Raimi, this would have been like the comic book version, or even bloodier and more disturbing
@@MNIMnoob where can I find this book lol
Here after the “No way home” trailer to remind myself how scary Doc Ock really is.
this mf scared me so much when I was a kid lol
He is scary
He's not in control
@@michaelgay7789 he can control his arms obviously
@@searchingforfoodonyoutube2500 the entire point of him as a villain here is that he isn’t controlling the arms. After the inhibitor chip gets destroyed, the arms can act on their own, as seen here when they protect themselves and him when he’s unconscious.
If you listen closely when the guy first starts up the saw, you can actually hear the arms activating in response. I never noticed that until recently. They used the sound of the saw to mask their own sound. Clever little bastards.
Plus that final scene when the arms screech with him is definitely concerning.
0:46 You can also see the reflection of the mechanical arm
on that surgeon's goggles as it gets up and ready to
cause trouble.
Arms have their own AI so no wonder that they smart.
I guess they don’t want to be separated from his creator plus they thought the doctors were gonna harm Otto. That’s why they attacked the doctors since they felt like their creator was in danger
The same guy who directed this scene will direct Doctor Strange 2, the MCU’s first horror themed movie.
I like where this is going.
Edit: I’m also aware that it’s not going to be a horror movie, nor that it ever was going to be. Kevin Feige mentioned that it’s just going to have scary sequences in the movie. Still excited nonetheless.
TheRedBrother me too
I think nightmare will be the villain
I hope to God we get to see this universe of Spider-Man in Doctor Strange 2.
ooohhhhh fuck yes
This will be no horror movie wtf are u saying? The one who was hired to make dr strange 2 already LEFT mcu
The way Octavius moved as the arms flipped the car even though he initially flinched is more brilliant than I remember, it shows how the arms and him are intertwined in thought and action. They act together, even though he doesnt realize it at first. Like his reactions are the also the arms reactions and vice versa. These movies were golden
Actually he had no control over them once the chip was destroyed, he in turn ended up letting the arms control his every move but when he first put them on it was meant as a good thing, and was supposed to be meant to help human kind but things went wrong and the control chip ended up being destroyed thus creating a villain with powerful arms that had no control
A fun thing to think about is how Octopus' arms are thought to have tiny brains that allow them to act on their own, helping the octupus perform several actions at once without losing focus.
I love how octopus's arms aren't like another set of limbs, but more like the heads of a hydra. He may be the boss, but they do what they want, when they want.
They tried to protect it's host much like the symbiote.
@@martmandred9182 "Father? Can you hear us? Don't let them hurt us. We will do whatever you wish. We will serve you. We are you. Father? Are you there? Don't let the bad man hurt us... Can we stop the bad men? "
From the novel version
MCU: We need an intense scene in far from home, lets make Peter launch a killer drone to his bus
Sam Raimi:
IKR
Disney owns marvel now :,(
holk In Defense of Disney, the entire Mysterio scene of him dominating Spider-Man was brutally intense.
Dark Lord of Insanity For an MCU film it was
Dark Lord of Insanity I felt absolutely nothing because there are no stakes in his movies. No one important died or was close to it
No music, no blood, no gore, but it’s damn effective. Very impressive.
why ur comment seems to be one of the few here that isnt "edited"
In the novelization, this scene is actually depicted as extremely bloody and gory.
I really can't wait to see his return in spiderman no way home
“Hello Peter”
@@beowchengkan2395 ”brilliant but lazy eh”
I was 15 when this movie came out the girl screaming help me digging her nails into concrete always got me. That was truly the most horrifying death out of all of them. She was truly fighting for her life.
It creeped me out when I was little now I’m 12 and I didn’t know what was going on I started getting scared on that scene but now as 12 I finally found out what’s going on and what this movie is about!
Ladies and gentlemen, 17 years later he comes back saying
“Hello, Peter”
Yep, the past always have an unexpected way to catch up with this generation!
I'm not gonna lie, this scene scared the hell outta me as a kid!
Same for me dude! I was terrified!
@@shanedawndusk3290 same lol
@@bladea_boi5104 That’s Sam Raimi for you lol
Somehow I wasn't. I thought it a cool scene back then.
I was at a babysitters when I saw it the first time. I was so into it then the other kids were like mom this is scary then we watched spiderman 3 for the damn tenth time.
Honestly this is still a scaring scene for me. Even without the blood and gore, to realistic screams and the brutal end to each doctor leaves me with a deep fear of this character in this particular scene that I don’t experience anywhere else.
I think the biggest thing that scares me is the fact that he wasn't in control of this. He had no idea this was going on until it was too late
0:41
Having one of the mechanical arms mimic the sound of the saw to get to it's target is just pure genius.
I just realised that this is a perfect sequence that Corridor can use to make Spiderman 2 R-Rated lol.
Tell them. TELL THEM NOW.
YES.
TELL THEM TO DO IT NOW MAN
You edgy kiddos make me crack up.
Holy f*** I was thinking the same thing. Tell them, this'll be a great video idea.
As a little kid I had my eyes closed the whole time as soon as the doctor turnt on the circular saw because I thought we would see the surgery, so I never truly saw until years later that scene yet HEARING IT still counted as one of my childhood fictional traumas
Everything about this scene...the cinematography, the acting, the sound design won me over in loving this version of spiderman. I used to think it was a little corny at first but this scene was so fun to watch!
the corny-ness is part of the fun
@@thebigguy270 yeah I know
Something I love about this scene is its cinematography. The close-up shots transform the room into a labyrinth, where the tentacles’ attacks always come from out of frame, creating a sense of omnipresence.
I've waited a decade for him to return and he's finally back. It's a dream come true.
If new hot Aunt May snaps an umbrella on his face I’m gonna loose my shit
@@kazutokirigaya6597 Shame On You!
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
He's not gonna be this creepy tho
Recent comments: “We all know why we’re here.”
In the words of Peter Falk: “Yes, you’re very smart. Shut up.”
If this movie was rated R there would be so much blood
And several more casualties
AND TONS of mutilations
@@joscar062 yeah he did flip the car
Fr. Imagine how the guys skull would’ve looked after 1:50 😬
That’s in the Snyder cut of this movie.
I love how Doctor Octopus’s arms are basically their own separate entities. It actually reflects a lot to how a real life octopus’s body functions. Octopuses are absolutely fascinating! They are one of the smartest creatures on planet Earth, however their intelligence works very differently than that of most other creatures. Unlike vertebrates who have a highly centralized nervous system that is controlled entirely by a central brain, cephalopods (like the octopus) have multiple neuron clusters and ganglia throughout their body. These clusters mean the octopus basically has multiple brains (9 to be exact) that control each part of the body on their own. One cluster is the central dominant brain that receives most of the information gathered, while the other 8 control the arms and basically act as “mini brains” that can operate independently from the main central brain. This allows them to solve problems that are impossible for most other creatures. Otto designed his arms with the same purpose in mind, but unfortunately as we all know, it didn’t go as planned.
The CGI octo arms are incredible. It's amazing how ahead of its time that the Sam Raimi Spidey trilogy's CGI is.
There were practical tentacle shots in this scene.
They were actually practical most of the time, even here
@@ezzzzzy3863 Yeah I realize that. But still, this film is ahead of its time regarding the "effects" scenes. This looks more real than 99% of Hollywood superhero films today
There is a reason this film won an Oscar, it was Visual Effects alone
They were real tentacles
I remember watching this as a kid.... One of the most horrifying things I'd seen...... And now I'm so hyped up to see Molina back as doc ock in 'no way home'
1:37
I dunno if this is a reference or anything, but I can’t help but find it......
Groovy.
I can't recall where I got the idea. But I think one of the Evil Dead movies is the reference even though I've never seen them.
TwoKool115 evil dead that’s ash’s signature quote
Ash evil dead
Congrats to all the idiots replying.
You are groovy!
Evil dead probably the chain scene.
You know a movie is very well made when it aged well
The perfect example of effective horror without gore
1:37 makes me lol, I love how his hand just comes up like, “GOT IT!”
It makes me laugh thinking what this man was thinking when he did that. He was probably like: "A-HA I have retrieved the chainsaw. Anyways". *Proceeds to shred arm*
@@Spider-Mate 😂😂😂😂😂
But DID HE have it? 😂
@@ChrisManley1994 he did as a matter of fact.
Evil Dead reference maybe
You know, seeing Evil Dead and then this now, yeah, I can see Sam Raimi all over this scene.
Same, after watching the 1st two evil dead films and the tv series, I have a newfound appreciate for the OG Spiderman films
This entire movie is very light on the action up until this point, which makes this scene in that context even crazier the first time you see it. My grandpa didn't have much patience for superhero movies when this came out, and I brought the DVD during a visit. My cousins and I were watching, and up until this point my grandpa poked his head into the living room every now and then saying "you're still watching this? Its so boring," (he had a point, it was mostly talk and Peter stuff).
Then he happens to walk into the room.... this scene is playing. He said, "holy shit... is this the same movie?!" Lmaooo, he stayed and watched the rest of it. Hahaa, I still remember that so clearly. Miss you, Peeps!
1:43 I love how Raimi even makes a subtle reference his film “Evil Dead” in this scene. Makes me wonder how much more horrifying this scene would be if the film was rated R
subtle? is an understatement.this whole scene almost frame by frame is a direct homage to evil dead lol
That chainsaw is also a direct callback.
I really hope Dr. Strange 2 has a scene like this.
Nope because it's not a horror movie
You can take it up with Feige about that nonsense
@@joscar062 lol neither is Spider-Man 2
Oscar Jimenes you can still have parts like this plus doc strange is going to be horror type superhero movie
The Watcher yes,but sadly it has been moved Like almost every single marvel movie:(
MCU has the Disney censor all over it. Regardless how "horror" Dr. Strange 2 attempts and claims to be, we'll never see a scene even close to this magnitude in an MCU film. Ever. Period.
*I love how his tentacles instinctively defend him without any conscious effort on his part*
Doc ock is underrated. Hes got his own intelligence and an extra set of nearly indestructible limbs that he can both control and have act on its own/instinctively. Dude would be a powerhouse in the MCU
@@unclesy4360 I wonder how the surgery could've turned out if those mechanical arms hadn't attacked all of those surgeons? 🤔🤔🤔
@@calebsawyer0719 ive always wondered what would happen if he died and the arms kept going. That would make for some excellent horror
Stefan Lauzon It would just be a dead body with arms moving it around.
@@darkworld9850 i know, it would be fuckin awesome
I miss when Spiderman movies were this intense.
What scares me is that the Arms are ruthless, they travel like serpents and latch themselves onto someone and beats them to Death. The one that flew into the Doctor and hit his stomach must’ve Impaled him, the Nurse that got dragged into the corner was silenced. God Sam did a great job on this Movie
1:19 was the scariest part to me as a kid, getting pulled into the darkness, also she was trying to grip it so hard she was scraping concrete/metal….brutal!!
Not the concrete. Those were her nails being filed down.
@@jqalightexhange Yeah. And ouch. Scratching the ground with nails must be painful...
Wasn’t that an “Evil Dead” reference ?
But the horror in this scene was pure Sam Raimi
how did she die?
That part always gives me anxiety imagine all the pain...
The scene that reminded me, “Oh yeah, this guy’s directed horror movies.”
After all of these years I still think this is the best superhero movie
Surgeon: "Anybody here took shop class??"
Dr Octopus's mech arms: "And we took that personally."
The greatest Spider-Man villain in all of cinema. He nailed the role of doc oc perfectly.
I’m So Happy He Back in Spider Man No Way Home.
While Green Goblin was my personal favorite villain, I will say this, Alfred Molina as Doc Ock might be top 5 casting of all time
Well debatable
The Lizard in the Amazing spider man was awesome too. I like the science part oscorp had also the mystery.
I'd give that spot to Sandman.
Spider-Man 2 is definitely “The Dark Knight” of it’s trilogy.
Ironically, they are both the middle movies of the trilogies
Other way around.
@@yowatchie I grew up with both, The dark knight is superior than spiderman 2
Basically what Empire Strikes Back was to Star Wars, this film along with the Dark Knight, and Days of Future Past and Terminator 2 deliver the same outstanding achievement.
I honestly prefer this movie to The Dark Knight.
This was a terrifying scene when i watched it back in my childhood. No bgm just pure unfiltered gore.