Compbros
Man of Tomorrow
My point is, even if she hits the ground, the audible snap still happens. The floor didn't make any part of her snap, and the interview excerpt seems to indicate the floor was added for all those people who don't believe the snap, not to replace the snap. Its not like her neck snapped and she was okay then her head hits the floor. She simply couldn't have survived, there was nothing Peter could do to save her, which is the same lesson as the comic.
I think you're giving 70s era comic writing too much credit. Goblin told Peter to pick heroism or her. He picked both and he can't have both so he loses both. That's the lesson. Even if Stan Lee didn't write a "perfect" Kobayashi Maru scenario, it's clear from Goblin's dialogue on the very next page that she was supposed to be dead either way.
30 years of writing later it makes sense that someone else could write in some caveats, make some references and even give Peter some learning experiences from it. It's no different when guys 10 years later go back and say, oh well that happened because it was a clone. Simple fact is there's nothing in the original story that illustrates negligence on Peter's part. Well, not in his technique, anyway. Even after the Goblin gets fucking gutted and he realizes how hollow vengeance is, Peter doesn't express remorse about not having trained for this situation or whatever. There's no epilogue about Peter practicing newer safer web catches, nor improving his speed swing to beat Goblin up to her, or even his left hook to knock Goblin out in one punch. Peter's next move was to come to term with the fact that he can't have it all.
My point is that even with the snap the cause of death changes, also I'll need to listen back to if it's a snap or the thud her hitting the ground.
Potentially but that's the way I've always interpreted the impact of that death, that it was Peter's fault through carelessness and so it was so much worse for him than an inability to save her. Perhaps that's not the intent, that could certainly be argued, but I didn't enjoy how ambiguous they made it in the movie. Maybe on a second viewing I'll like it but for now it feels off to me.
I agree with this but I also have to say that such scenes of purposeful training don't need to be seen. Yes, people can always fill in gaps in later years or what have you but it's shown that he believes that the way he tried to save Gwen was what caused her death and he rectifies it when similar events happen. Him standing on a building practicing web techniques or reading books about momentum/whiplash don't need to be shown. The only thing that signifies negligence is the "Spider-man killed her" that Peter speaks after handing her to the cops.