….
Doctor Octopus.
That was the villain Regal finally chose for his Spider-Man movie.
It hadn't been an easy decision.
In fact, it had been one of the hardest calls he had made during the scripting stage.
For weeks, he had gone back and forth, laying out every possible antagonist on the board, Green Goblin with his theatrical menace, Vulture with his grounded, working-class grit, Kraven the Hunter with raw animal brutality.
Each one had merit, each one offered a different kind of story.
Especially - Green Goblin.
His ideology is just terrifying.
However, Regal felt that his character was killed too soon without any build.
So, he wants to give a good back story to him with Peter Parker, and then turn him into a villain in the second part, followed by Harry in the next part with Venom.
Also, for the first part Regal wanted the villain to represent Spider-Man in some way.
He wanted a villain who could match Peter not just in strength, but in presence, someone who could stand in the same frame and hold equal weight without being overshadowed by the hero.
A threat that felt intelligent, mechanical, and unnervingly methodical, while still capable of some real destruction.
That was Otto Octavius.
The tentacles gave him scale and spectacle; the man inside gave him depth. Four mechanical arms meant four times the stunt complexity, and four times the opportunity to integrate Spider-Man's agility against something relentless and multi-directional.
But it was the man inside that armor - the brilliant, disciplined, unnervingly calm scientist, that unsettled Regal.
He remembered the first time he had seen Doc Ock as a child in his old world. It wasn't on a cinema screen - on a tattered comic page in the dim light of a power outage, the only sound was the vibration of his own breathing.
The panel showed Ock's shadow stretching across the wall toward Spider-Man, those arms curling like predators in slow motion.
Regal could almost hear the metal grinding, the claws flexing, even as a boy, he had felt something twist in his gut.
It wasn't the usual comic-book 'bad guy' fear.
He could imagine the weight of those tentacles pressing him into the ground, the helplessness of realizing you couldn't move no matter how much you fought.
It was terror that didn't need shouting or a snarling face, just the knowledge that once Ock had you, you weren't getting free.
That memory never left him.
Even now, thinking about it sent a thin film of cold sweat across his shoulders.
It was the kind of villainy that seeped under the skin.
The decision also came with risks.
From a filmmaking standpoint, Doc Ock was a nightmare to pull off.
Those arms couldn't just look heavy, they had to behave like they were.
The momentum, the drag, the subtle micro-movements when they were at rest, every frame had to sell the illusion that these were machines with weight and will of their own.
CGI could carry part of the load, but Regal wanted practical rigs wherever possible.
That meant weeks of designing puppeteered limbs, multiple operators, and stunt coordination so precise that even one mistimed swing could derail an entire shot.
Still, the payoff was worth it.
If they could pull it off, every confrontation between Peter and Ock would feel like a living, breathing battle…
Even the most die-hard Tom Holland fans would have to admit it, without the MCU propping him up, the Vulture just doesn't hit hard enough as a first-movie villain.
He is serviceable, sure, but not iconic.
And the Lizard? Well… he was never terrible, just forgettable, the kind of villain you remember mostly for the suit design debates on fan forums rather than the performance itself.
Octavius, though, Doc Ock, has always felt like peak Spider-Man territory, with a visual identity so strong you could recognize him in silhouette.
So after running through every possibility, Regal found himself circling back to the same question.
It's gotta be Otto, right?
And honestly, that choice came with a hidden advantage.
Alfred Molina - the man who had once brought Octavius to life, was the Snape of Regal's Harry Potter, they had already spent time working closely together, building trust on set.
That familiarity mattered, with Molina, Regal wouldn't just be casting an actor; he would be partnering with someone who already understood how Regal worked, someone who could jump straight into the rhythm without a long warm-up period.
Which is why, in hindsight, all that brainstorming and cross-examining other villains might have been more about proving to himself that the decision wasn't preloaded in his subconscious.
He didn't want to choose Ock because it was comfortable, he wanted to choose him because it was the most rational, most compelling, and, yes, the most emotionally satisfying move for the film.
By the time he admitted that to himself, the answer had been staring at him the whole time.
….
A long breath escaped from across the table, the kind that carried both disbelief and excitement.
"I am getting excited for this, Regal." Alfred Molina said at last, leaning forward slightly.
He had just finished reading the script, the man who had once brought Snape to life under Regal's direction now looked as if he were trying to stop himself from bouncing in his chair.
Regal had given him one of the richest, most layered characters of his career in Harry Potter.
At the time, some had questioned the choice - why act in what seemed like a brooding, secondary role? But those voices fell silent when the film crossed the billion-dollar mark.
So when Regal called out of the blue, saying there might be a role for him in his next film, Molina couldn't help but feel a flicker of anticipation.
He told himself not to expect much, it could be a small part, maybe even a glorified cameo, but deep down, he knew Regal didn't hand out roles without purpose.
Because Regal had a way of making you want to work with him.
It is not just because of his reputation, but because his writing had a weight to it, a rhythm and truth that actors craved.
The promise of a fully fleshed-out role in one of his worlds was intoxicating to any performer with a pulse.
And now?
Now Molina had the pages in front of him, and the truth was almost too much to take in.
A villain.
Not just any villain either.
The kind of role that lived and breathed and clawed its way into the audience's memory, the sort you knew would outlive the film itself. He felt goosebumps spread up his arms just picturing himself in that world.
For the briefest heartbeat, a question tried to surface.
Can this even be done?
But it died almost as quickly as it appeared, one look at the man sitting opposite him was enough to erase any doubt.
Of course it could be done.
Because this was Regal, and he would make it happen.
"I told you I had a character for you in one of my films that you would love to do." Regal reminded Molina, leaning back in his chair with a faint smile.
For a moment, Molina was pulled right back to the Harry Potter set in his mind.
Regal had said those exact words to him once before.
At the time, Molina had brushed it off, not because he doubted Regal, but because of how Regal had said it.
Too casually, almost like an afterthought tossed into a random conversation between takes.
But now it clicked.
Molina's brow arched slightly. "Yeah, you did say that… but didn't you also mention you had something for Willem Dafoe? Is that in this film too?"
The second he asked, he realised he might have just stepped into territory most directors wouldn't touch in casual conversation.
But Regal, as usual, didn't flinch.
"Yeah." He said without hesitation. "He is in this one too - for now it's just a small cameo."
The way Regal said for now was deliberate.
Almost an open invitation for Molina to read between the lines, and the lines were clear: Dafoe's role wasn't simple, and it wasn't over.
There would be more.
Which also meant something else, Regal was already thinking about the next Spider-Man movie.
That was two pieces of information most directors would guard like state secrets.
Molina's expression softened, Regal was trusting him, the same way he had on Harry Potter when he had slipped him major future plot points so he could shape Snape's performance with knowledge no one else on set had.
Molina had kept those details locked away then, and he would again now.
Not a single word would leave this room.
And the man they were talking about?
Willem Dafoe - Voldemort in Regal's Harry Potter, and now destined to be the Green Goblin.
If anyone took a step back and looked at the pattern, they might start thinking Regal had been planning this Spider-Man film since the Harry Potter auditions.
For most people, it would be too much of a coincidence.
But with Regal… maybe it wasn't.
Coincidence or not, one thing was certain: when the world eventually pieced it together, they wouldn't be able to help but admire his foresight, especially if this film turned out as strong as the rest of his work had so far.
.
….
[To be continued…]
★─────⇌•★•⇋─────★
Author Note:
Visit Patreon to instantly access +1 chapter for free, available for Free Members as well.
For additional content please do support me and gain access to +11 more chapters.
--> [email protected]/OrgoWriters