Crave Online: One movie that I guess you’re working on right now is The Amazing Spider-Man. You talked just a little bit about it in the book, and what you’re planning for it, and how you’re going to use Muay Thai and parkour. Are you done with that yet?
Vic Armstrong: I literally finished on Friday, and my son finished yesterday and my brother finishes next Friday. When I finished writing about it, that’s when the book was just coming out. That’s as far as I got. Robert wanted to bring it up to date as far as we could. We’re just finishing up on Spider-Man, but it’s exceeded all our expectations. There’s some great stuff on YouTube of Spider-Man flying down this overpass on Twelfth Avenue, and you see him flying for real. The body language is so much different from CG Spider-Man. It’s just fantastic. And we got great stunt people there who do parkour, who do skateboarding, and they were teaching Andrew Garfield certain elements of that. And certain elements you wouldn’t miss him doing. You know, $200 million is resting on his shoulders, so it would be totally impractical to put him in every situation but he’s in as many situations as we’ll allow him to be. And he’s fantastic. I really think that it’s a… They hate to call it a “reboot,” but it’s sort of reboot…
Crave Online: Well, it is.
Vic Armstrong: I hope it has as much realism as Mission: Impossible III did. Because I think that was the best of the Mission: Impossibles…
Crave Online: I totally agree.
Vic Armstrong: And I think it’s as grounded in reality as that is, but with the same flare and surrealness that Spider-Man brings to it. He’s flying on spiderwebs and climbing on buildings, you know? So I think it’s going be a great, great mixture of real and surreal.