I'd hate it, and would not pay to see it. If you have the choice of staying with the source material and changing it, you should always stay with the source material unless you have a damn good reason to do otherwise.* If your only argument in favour of changing it is that it doesn't matter whether Peter Parker is black or white, then he should be white, because Peter Parker is white.TheFeniX wrote:I would love to see a Spider-man movie with a black lead with nothing but a line or scene explaining one (or both) of Parker's parents were black. He still gets bullied for being a nerdy runt by Flash. He still gets to make out with Dunst. He still deals with great power yadda yadda without his race playing into it. As far as the movie universe is concerned, being black or white or whatever does not matter.Hell, why not go that route with Marvel movies Spiderman (unless he's supposed to be the same as the current movie Spiderman)? I mean, its a new continuity, and its not like Marvel has an overabundance of major non-white male characters, at least in the films (their TV/Netflix lineup is better, with Agent Carter, Jessica Jones, Agents of SHIELD, etc.).
If you don't like that kind of restriction on your creative direction, you shouldn't be making movies which only exist to be reasonably faithful adaptations of another person's work.
* As an example of a damn good reason to do otherwise, I would have been in favour of the Hobbit movies replacing a few of the male dwarves with female dwarves. But this would actually serve a useful purpose: since Peter Jackson wanted each dwarf in Thorin's party to be visually distinct from all the others, spreading them out over a broader range of demographics would increase the distance between each dwarf and their most similar neighbour and hence make them more distinct.