Alright, so I showed a friend of mine both of my Extended Versions, and she really liked them and told me that it was much better than the theatrical versions, which she enjoyed both very much (yes, people like the second one as well, she called it a great movie and I agree).
Anyway, at the end of the second movie where (SPOILERS... DUH) Gwen Stacy dies, she wasn't affected at all, and she was confused. After the film ended, I asked her why she wasn't affected by the ending, which most of my friends and the internet agrees that that part is a very emotional part of the film, she told me that she isn't dead because her death scene at Peter's arms were at the left side:
She told me all filmmakers must be careful about this and that when a character dies, if the head of the dead body is at the right side of the mourning person, it means he or she is permenantly dead. If the head is at the left side of the mourning person like in these screenshots, it means she will sooner or later return in some form.
At first I thought this was absurd, however later I checked for some legit death scenes. I remembered in the Hobbit that Thorin was at the right side, and in LOTR, Boromir was in the right as well:
I checked Uncle Ben's death in The Amazing Spider-Man, and...:
Then I wondered how they did it in Spider-Man 2002, and that almost destroyed this theory:
Why
almost? Well, that's because he returns in Spider-Man 2... sort of. In the scene where Peter has an inner conflict, he has a conversation with Uncle Ben, which we never saw before.
Then I checked a faked death, Loki's, from Thor: The Dark World. And guess what?
I was shocked, and my first thought was: Is this real? Is it just a big coincidence, or is this a real rule in Hollywood death scenes? I searched for it on the internet, however nothing about that came. My second thought was: Was Sony originally planning on bringing the Clone Saga to The Amazing Spider-Man 3? As a lot of you might know, the Clone Saga had Gwen Stacy ressurected by cloning, and some clones of Spider-Man etc.
But that didn't matter anymore, because they are rebooting again, so if this rule exists, Gwen Stacy's death in The Amazing Spider-Man 2 remains done wrong. My friend told me something that is basically non-existent on the internet, but the scenes I checked supports this "rule". I really don't know guys, I wanted to ask you guys about this because maybe you guys know about it. Does this rule exist?
If it does exist, I will flip the shot of Gwen dying in The Amazing Spider-Man 2.