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Director Sam Raimi's Spider-Man trilogy, which starred Tobey Maguire as the wall-crawler, had a fourth film planned. However, we got Andrew Garfield in The Amazing Spider-Man five years after Spider-Man 3 instead. Work on the fourth film had progressed, though, and we can now see what might have been, thanks to storyboards released by artist Jeffrey Henderson. You can see a couple in the gallery below and the rest over at Henderson's website.

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The storyboards reveal the movie's villains as the Vulture and Mysterio, though Henderson told io9 that the latter villain was floated as Bruce Campbell's cameo--Campbell and Raimi worked together on The Evil Dead (1981), and Campbell made a cameo appearance in each of the three Spider-Man movies. Henderson said that it would have been a part of a montage at the beginning of the film, which would show Spider-Man dealing with "C and D-list villains" like the Shocker, Prowler, and "the old school, onesie-wearing Rhino."
 
The Vulture would go on to be Spider-Man 4's main villain, though Henderson said Raimi had some ideas to reinvent and modernize the character.
 
"The thing we kept coming back to was that, as a character, everyone was going to dismiss the Vulture as just an old guy in a silly green suit," Henderson explained. "So we wanted to go the opposite way and really make him the most fearsome and formidable adversary that Spider-Man had faced in the series."
 
Alas, Spider-Man 4 was not to be, and we unfortunately don't know why it was cancelled. The only way to see Spider-Man in theaters these days is in Captain America: Civil War and the upcoming Spider-Man: Homecoming, which releases in summer 2017.
 
Your friendly neighborhood web-slinger is played by Tom Holland in both of the aforementioned movies. He'll be joined by Robert Downey Jr. as Tony Stark/Iron Man and reportedly Michael Keaton as the villain. Additionally, Captain America actor Chris Evans has said that he would also like to appear in the film.
 
Spider-Man movie rights are owned by Sony, though Marvel president Kevin Feige has said that Homecoming is under the comic book company's complete creative control.
 

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