Hollywood Icon Never Knew How Big His Iconic Spider-Man Role Was

Martin Sheen has had a long and illustrious career on screen, for which he has earned numerous accolades, including a Golden Globe Award, three Emmy Awards, and four Screen Actors Guild Awards. He is perhaps best known for his memorable performances as Captain Benjamin L. Willard in Apocalypse Now and President Josiah “Jed” Bartlet in The West Wing, though there are many more to his name. In fact, there is one role that he didn’t realize would be quite so significant in his extensive list of acting credits, and that was playing Ben Parker, aka Uncle Ben, in The Amazing Spider-Man opposite Andrew Garfield’s titular webslinger.
During a recent appearance on Josh Horowitz’s Happy Sad Confused podcast, Sheen was asked about his experience on 2012’s The Amazing Spider-Man, particularly whether he realized how iconic his character was for generations of young men and women. After all, with great power comes great responsibility. He asserted that he had no idea how important Uncle Ben was to comic book fans until he witnessed some of the audience reaction to his character. It was only when people “laughed and applauded” him in the role years later that it dawned on him even more that his character had a lasting impact on moviegoers. He recalled:
“I didn’t have a clue. I don’t see many of the big so-called tent films. I didn’t have a clue. I’d never seen Spider-Man. I never saw Superman. Forgive me. I saw Star Wars about six or eight years ago. I like drama and actors doing play. The fantasy thing that never kind of made a dent in me. A couple of years ago, I was giving the commencement speech at a university here in Los Angeles, and the guy that introduced me very graciously talked about all the things you’re talking about; West Wing and Badlands and Apocalypse Now. And it wasn’t until he got to Spider-Man that the audience laughed and applauded [for] Uncle Ben. Oh my God, I thought, ‘What kind of universe are we living in?'”
Uncle Ben Is Crucial to Spider-Man
Sally Field as May Parker and Martin Sheen as Ben Parker in The Amazing Spider-ManSony Pictures Releasing
Uncle Ben is a crucial character in the Spider-Man mythology, as he serves as a strong moral compass for Peter Parker, even in his life as a superhero. Sheen is one of several actors who has brought the character to the screen; Cliff Robertson famously portrayed him in the Sam Raimi Spider-Man trilogy and Adam Scott played a younger version of the character in last year’s Madame Web, not to mention the multiple voice actors who have taken on the role over the years. Sheen’s version of the character, like many of the other iterations, met an untimely fate in The Amazing Spider-Man, but his performance lived on with fans of the film.
In the MCU, the gravity of the Uncle Ben character is implied through minor references, though he doesn’t make a physical appearance (in flashbacks or otherwise) in the Tom Holland Spider-Man films. The fourth film, Spider-Man: Brand New Day, is scheduled for release on July 31, 2026, as part of Phase 6 of the MCU. It has been described as a soft reboot for Holland’s Peter Parker and his alter-ego, initiating a more emotionally resonant and grounded chapter for the superhero – one helmed by Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings director Destin Daniel Cretton. Some fans have speculated whether the “fresh start” could lend itself to Uncle Ben appearing in a flashback scene or, at least, getting a more explicit mention in the storyline, especially since it seems like Parker might need a guiding force more than ever in the next film.
Release Date
July 3, 2012
Runtime
136 minutes
Director
Marc Webb
Writers
Alvin Sargent, James Vanderbilt, Steve Kloves, Stan Lee, Steve Ditko
Producers
Avi Arad, Laura Ziskin, Matt Tolmach




