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#Tom Holland is the perfect example : the man does not know you exist and will not like you ever so stop hating on any female around him
that-shamrock-vibe · 5 years
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Movie Review: Spider-Man Far From Home (Spoilers)
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Spoiler Warning: I am posting this review the weekend after the movie’s release in the U.K, so if you haven’t yet seen the movie do not read on until you do because there are some rather juicy spoilers here.
MCU Ad Campaign:
This is why I feel Kevin Feige needs to have full control over Spider-Man because he is a master of teasing us with enough in the trailers to get us excited for the movie.
Even with Avengers: Endgame which kept so much secret in the trailers built up that hype and anticipation, okay yes it was the culmination of 11 years of movies and the second part of what was one of the greatest cinematic cliffhangers in history, but even so there were so many theories and speculation about what could happen that it obviously helped with that juggernaut release.
But the issue with Spider-Man: Far From Home is the trailers and promotion just made the movie seem like your average superhero flick. It was necessarily the case of The Amazing Spider-Man 2 or Suicide Squad where so much was shown in the trailer that wasn’t in the final movie, but there wasn’t enough to speculate on or build up the hype unless you’re already a comic-book fan and want to see another Spider-Man movie and know that in the comics Mysterio is a villain so want to see what happens with him here.
I’d say the introduction of the multiverse may have been what both Feige and Pascal thought could be a key plot point to draw in the hype, but that was proven just to be a facade. It was only really mentioned in that scene that everyone has seen in the trailers and there was never a time in the trailers where I thought “Yes that is what everyone will talk about”.
With Thor: Ragnarok for example, it was penned as a fun 80s style buddy movie and that is what the trailers showed, but then you add in Hela and that shot of her destroying Mjolnir as well as the “He’s a friend from work” scene and that’s what made it one of the most watched trailers of all time.
I said in my non-spoiler review that I fear for this movie’s performance if we are to base mainstream audience interest on watching the trailers, I still feel that even though the two times I have now seen the movie the theatres have been relatively full.
Characters:
Spider-Man:
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As I said in my non-spoiler, Tom Holland continues to prove why he was such a perfect casting choice for Peter Parker/Spider-Man. Not only does he still look like a teenager so you believe he should still be at school, he has so much charisma and charm that you can’t not like the guy.
I loved when he was at Aunt May’s support centre and was, as May said, a little stiff but it was believable.
Let’s face it, this is a guy who is still a teenager, he is still dealing with the average student problems like fancying a girl and possibly getting good grades, although at Midtown it’s a wonder any of them can get good grades with those teachers, we’ll get to them. But also Peter is dealing with the added stress not only of being Spider-Man but the aftershock of what happened in Endgame both in terms of “The Blip” and Tony’s death.
It was interesting to me that they were kind of going down the Iron Man 3 route of Peter having PTSD from “The Blip” but that quickly turned simply into either guilt or grief over Tony’s sacrifice and the responsibility everyone is now putting on his shoulders. With great power comes great responsibility, that saying is echoed throughout this movie in particular.
I also really like the Spidey suits in the movie, because there were so many it was like a Spidey fashion show at one point.
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I loved the fact he kept the Iron Spider suit and especially seeing it pixelating in that container was really cool. Also the upgraded suit he was given which is a mainstay of the character at this point.
Then there’s the return of the original Spidey sweatsuit during one of Mysterio’s illusions which was a nice little nod and a reference to the Emperor’s New Clothes with who the world has built him up to be compared to how he feels on the inside.
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Also, his new red and black suit that he created in the Stark Industries jet was a fantastic sequence. Not only was it crystal clear that they were trying to make Peter resemble Tony in that scene, but it was done so effortlessly and it was really fun once again to see someone play with the Holo chamber.
But in terms of my negatives, because I do have negatives for all these characters, I cannot believe he was that stupid that he gave away EDITH to Mysterio, not because Mysterio was an obvious bad guy because he wasn’t, but because EDITH was such a useful device and Peter apparently doesn’t have KAREN anymore so he needs some form of AI assistant.
I did however really enjoy the onscreen partnership of Jake Gyllenhaal and Tom Holland, you can tell off-screen the two really got on and it resonates on screen.
There was also a really stupid moment when he’s facing Hydro-Man and he wears that mask to try concealing his identity from his classmates, despite the fact that he is wearing the same clothes his classmates know he is wearing so why didn’t anyone attempt to put 2 + 2 together. I mean it’s implied MJ may have but who knows.
With the Elementals as well, as much as I think they are brilliant antagonists visually, and of course in this instance weren’t real but may still exist, I don’t see how Spider-Man can combat any of them because his synthetic webbing would have no effect on water, fire, sand or air. It was obviously Mysterio’s perfect plan to make himself the hero, but the fact no one thought to question that Spider-Man was less use than Black Widow would have been in that fight really bugged me.
I did like him trying to court MJ, I thought his six-step plan was well thought out and the rivalry between him and Brad over MJ was also refreshing to see in a superhero movie.
We’ll talk about the post-credits scene further down but that ending scene before the credits of him doing Spidey’s traditional scout of the city was a great way to end the movie. The main reason I love playing the Spider-Man games is simply to swing through the city and will gladly spend a lot of time doing it just to explore. Also if that’s not the Oscorp building he swung through than it’s the biggest misdirect in a Marvel movie.
Mysterio:
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By far my favourite Jake Gyllenhaal role, I have never been a massive fan of his as he and his sister have simply been actors I gloss over. But Mysterio was a very comical villain for me in terms of looks yet Gyllenhaal manages to make the suit and the fishbowl look awesome.
I loved how he was so committed to his role as a parallel world superhero, you honestly believed he was a good guy right up until the moment when the illusion fades.
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Speaking of illusions, these are potentially the best use of visual effects I have seen since Doctor Strange. I haven’t seen the movie in 3D but I was almost tempted to the second time just to experience the splender of how the visuals looked. They were literally effects ripped from the comics, everything came together and it was magic.
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When he was revealed as a villain and that epic reveal scene of his and his crews master plan, including throwbacks to Captain America: Civil War and the first Iron Man was jaw-dropping. I really appreciate both Feige and  Peter Billingsley who was the actor playing the former Stark Industries scientist turned Beck’s henchman for making it seem like this was the plan overall all those years back. I doubt very much that Feige planned it from Civil War let alone 2008.
However, the ending for Mysterio is where my negatives come in. Not only did Beck turn into a raging child running out of ideas but also the fact they killed him off is something I really can’t get my head around. Vulture, Shocker and Scorpion are all alive and if they want to build a Sinister Six then surely this Mysterio is a likeable candidate, yet now he’s dead. It just reminds me of the likes of Hela and these one-movie villains with so much more potential.
Nick Fury:
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I love Samuel L. Jackson, I know I sang his praises during Captain Marvel but he’s just as great here.
I loved the running theme of Peter ghosting him by sending him to voicemail, then eventually when Fury and Peter do meet and there’s the constant interruptions of staff and students that makes him turn and say “If one more person touches that door you and I will be attending another funeral” it was so great and only could be said by Nick Fury.
However, and I’ll get into the reasons more in my post-credits discussion, but with the reveal at the end that the Fury we have seen throughout the movie is in fact Talos the Skrull, there are tells throughout the movie that indicate that which I can’t tell as to if they’re deliberate or accidental.
For instance, during Spider-Man’s first meeting with Mysterio, Fury says “He’s from Earth, just not yours” so why didn’t he say “ours”? Also when he said that appearances can be deceiving I bet that was also a tell that he was the shapeshifting alien.
For that reason, it is hard for me to say that I enjoyed Fury in this movie because the real Nick Fury is only in one small scene at the end of the movie. But Samuel L. Jackson still delivers. Also “bitch please you’ve been to space!” never gets old.
MJ:
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Commiserations to Zendaya for not getting Ariel, but at least now she is the girlfriend of Spider-Man so yay. 
I really love Zendaya in this role, I think she brings a much needed grounded modern realism to the role that I feel is needed for the younger female audience of today.
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I loved it when she revealed that she always knew Peter was Spider-Man but when he eventually confirmed it she said “Really, because I was only 67% sure”. They really played up the character’s awkwardness and vulnerabilities in this movie which explain why she is such an outcast and how she just seemed to float on by in the first movie.
My one negative is where the character goes now, I think that scene after she found out Peter was Spider-Man was definitely her weakest because she just seemed like a very mopey love interest. But then she’ll have kick-ass scenes like knocking out a drone with a mace.
The ending with her swinging around with Peter was already shown in set photos but it was hilarious to see the final thing, I loved how she kept saying she wouldn’t look down and then kept looking down. Then when they landed and her hair had seemingly grown in weight was very funny.
Happy Hogan:
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I am so happy for Jan Favreau being a mainstay in the MCU, you would think that after RDJ left that his entourage would also leave. However, now that Happy is seemingly Spider-Man’s support staff it gives him more reason to be around.
I will say this though, everything you see of Happy in the trailers you pretty much see in the movie itself, with some extended scenes. There are a couple more funnier scenes added in but other than that you’ve seen pretty much everything he does in the movie.
As I said, I loved the recurring gag of “ghosting” Nick Fury, it was interesting in the first instance because I swear up until now Happy and Fury have not actually met before, but now Tony is dead I guess they have some association with each other.
His relationship with Aunt May in the movie was a very sweet and understated coupling in the movie. I actually do see the two of them together and it would be great going forward if they remained in a relationship just to give them both something to do other than support Peter Parker.
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It was such a great moment when Peter started designing his suit on the plane and Happy was watching in awe. He saw what the audience was meant to see which was Peter acting like Tony Stark.
I have also enjoyed his progression from Tony’s bodyguard to Spider-Man’s right-hand man. Not only did he come and save Peter from the Netherlands, but also he saved Peter’s school friends and put himself in danger in the process.
I really hope Happy continues to be a part of the MCU, even if it is in the Spider-Man movies but also branching out elsewhere.
Brad:
Hudson from Neighbours is in this movie. For anyone that doesn’t know what I’m on about there was a minor-recurring character a few years ago who was a gay competitive swimmer who became romantically involved with a main character at the time but also got into trouble with the police, this was him and I am so glad to see him still working.
I am unsure if the character was part of the first movie, but I am happy to see him here as he was a great example of how The Blip affected Midtown High.
He did present himself as a bit of a douche but also he did start off simply as a decent guy, it was just that he let his competitiveness for wanting to be with MJ and screwing over Peter get the better of him.
This did cause problems for me as the movie progressed, not only did he become the whistle blower that no one listened to and simply came across as a bitter individual, but also there was never really any resolve to his story after the outburst of questioning why Peter was always disappearing.
Aunt May:
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Marisa Tomei continues to be a great and innovative Aunt May. I’m still unsure about having a younger and somewhat hotter Aunt rather than the sweet old lady we are used to but I still say Sally Field in The Amazing Spider-Man movies was my favourite of the bunch.
I am really happy that she set up her charitable rehoming shelter as she has done in the comics and the latest Spider-Man game. Her delivery of when she “blipped back” into existence and the new tenants of her apartment thought she was a ghost or a mistress was hilarious.
I do think May was a bit harsh to Happy, I don’t think she led him on but she clearly invited him to her office and you don’t do that if there’s not something there more than just a summer fling.
I am a fan of the fact that May now knows of Peter being Spider-Man and supporting him in his endeavours, as well as using him to boost support for her homeless campaign.
Maria Hill:
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Much like Fury, it is hard to say how well Maria did in this movie because she spent the entire movie as a Skrull. However in terms of Cobie Smulders performance, I am glad she got more screen time than she has done recently.
Although she didn’t have many lines, she had a lot to do action wise. I loved in the climactic battle when she went to the roof with that bazooka because both she and Fury had anticipated Mysterio’s drone being sent to assassinate the two.
Ned:
If I found Ned annoying in Spider-Man: Homecoming, I found him unbearable in this one. Not only are the negative qualities of him from the first movie back in force here, but that added story of Ned and Betty getting into a relationship was simply pointless and made Ned even more unlikeable if possible.
First of all, I don’t care how he defends himself, Ned got a girlfriend and then blew Peter off despite not only being adamant in wanting the two guys to be American bachelors in Europe but also in supposedly being Spider-Man’s “guy in the chair”.
Also, Brad’s jealousy over Peter was understandable and actually good for the movie, Ned being jealous of MJ after she found out about Peter being Spider-Man was just pathetic. Not only because that is the point when he actually tries to help Spider-Man but also because MJ didn’t really need him, no one did.
Teachers:
With the teachers in the movie, I will say I miss Selenis Leyva as physics teacher Monica Warren from the first movie. Not only because her being Latina fit in rather well with the Queens neighbourhood, but also because it was some gender diversity in the ranks.
Here we have the Caucasian Harrington and Mr. Dell who I believe was created for the movie after J.B. Smoove was involved in the Audi commercial with Tom Holland to promote the first movie.
I do agree with Dell about there being no science on the science field trip and this is also why I’d prefer Monica Warren to be there over Harrington, Harrington is a crap teacher. Not only did he not plan ahead with the trip but also his incompetence nearly got a bus-load of students killed. Bearing in mind he was also the teacher responsible during the Washington incident.
Students:
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Aside from the students already mentioned, the other students involved in the movie are Betty Brandt, Flash Thompson and Jason Ionello. I thought on the whole the students of Midtown High still continue to be a great and modernly accurate portrayal of Queens in the present day, but also they proved themselves necessary to the movie rather than just clutter in the way.
Post-Credits:
Alright so we have two very juicy post-credits scenes that not only shape the next Spider-Man movie but also the future of the MCU.
The first scene picks up directly where the movie ended and has Peter return MJ to the ground before taking off for some superheroism. However he is then stopped by a breaking news bulletin which was set up by Mysterio and delivered by William Ginter Riva showing a doctored version of events in the climactic battle where apparently Spider-Man was the one orchestrating the drone strike and Mysterio was the hero who Spider-Man killed.
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The bulletin then cut to none other than J. Jonah Jameson, returning to the live-action Spider-Man movies portrayed by the one and only J.K. Simmons. My audience cheered at this point because not only is it about time Jameson returned to the movies but to have J.K. reprise the role he is probably most notable for is a delight.
Although here, the Daily Bugle seems to be an online media outlet rather than a newspaper company but for the modern day it works rather well.
However, believing that Peter will one day get a job at the Daily Bugle seems very slim with the reveal that Mysterio identified Spider-Man as Peter Parker, meaning the world now knows Spider-Man’s identity. I want to see the fallout now.
The end-credits scene shows Fury and Hill in a car before shapeshifting into Talos and his wife Soren from Captain Marvel. Talos reports to the real Nick Fury who is in front of the most fake green-screen imaginable as it is revealed he is actually on some form of space-station crewed by Skrulls.
This could be a myriad of things, but my favourite theory is that this is the start of S.W.O.R.D. to become Fury’s new organization after S.H.I.E.L.D.
Overall I rate the movie an 8/10, I’m not going to say it’s a perfect movie but it is a brilliant movie and definitely the movie needed to follow up after Avengers: Endgame.
So that’s my review of Spider-Man: Far From Home, what did you guys think? Post your comments and check out more Marvel Movie Reviews as well as other Movie Reviews and posts.
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traincat · 5 years
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So I recently rematched ASM and ASM2, and I must say it’s nice to be validated as to why I liked them so much when they first came out. I have nothing against Rami SM, but I just liked ASM better. Plus that scene in the first one where Peter comes out of the sewer and kind of crawls along the ground even tho he could totally walk like a normal human. He just *skitter skitter* away and shoves a 300lb manhole cover back over the hole. A responsible boy.
Plus! Now that I’m more into the comics than I was even back then, I totally see more of 616 Peter in Andrew Garfield’s Peter. He’s doing his best but half the time he has to manage his own Chaotic Dumbass decisions more than anything else. Sometimes he’s a Dick and an Asshole but sometimes it just be like that. I never understood why people didn’t like ASM more.
I really love how spider-y TASM!Peter’s movements are! The skittering with the manhole is a great example, but I also love him making a web and just hanging out on it playing games on his phone during the Lizard stakeout right before, and when he’s hanging upside down in his room designing the costume. I think that physicality is so important to the character, and to see it so embraced in both movies is great. It’s not spider-y, but the scene where Peter distracts the Oscorp security so Gwen can get away is so funny and relies so much on Andrew Garfield being able to pull off that physical humor. It’s great. (He also does his chin touch move in the bedroom scene with Gwen in the first movie! Don’t know if anyone else noticed that tends to be a thing in the comic, or if everyone just knows face touching is very romantic, but I appreciate it happening all the same.) 
Out of the live action adaptation Peters, I do think TASM is the closest to 616 Peter that exists, in part because of that embrace of his physicality and in part because they actually let anger be a part of his personality, which is a big thing. (Out of all the film Peters, though – both Spider-Verse’s RIPeter and Peter B. Parker were amazing ringers for their comic book counterpart and I was so delighted.) Embracing the spider in Spider-Man is kind of important – one of my big problems with the MCU is how thoroughly they’ve pushed the spider out. The webs are there, sure, but the spider logo is so blocky and computerized looking, and I can’t say for sure what purpose the breaks in the webbing pattern in the costume were supposed to serve (I do think it’s suspicious that they’re in the same place Miles has red stripes across his shoulders) but the lines on the costume do make Tom Holland appear physically smaller than I think he actually is, which is a choice that I’m sure appeals to a lot of people despite my hating it, but even as a teen in 616 Peter was 5′10″ and described as muscular. Where are the spiders, MCU! Get weird! It’s like they only had one bug in the budget and they went “hmm… ants.” And I know the Raimi films are beloved, but they really just leave me cold. I tweeted recently that between Harry and Peter, if you cast the more conventionally attractive actor to be Harry, you automatically don’t get the dynamic, and I stand by that.
I do think part of the recent TASM bashing comes from it always being in the current adaptation’s favor to frame the previous as not being very good – otherwise, why would anyone want the next one? And Disney has a lot of money on their film being The First Real Peter Parker Film, to the point where their screenwriters have openly bashed TASM in interviews. I remember one where they shaded TASM by saying their May has a job and doesn’t just “wait around for Peter to bring home the eggs.” Because living up to even the small responsibilities isn’t part of what Spider-Man is about, clearly. Anyway, we know what jobs, plural, TASM’s May had. The MCU apparently didn’t consider it a worthy use of screentime to do the same for its own May. But yeah, the detail work in TASM is incredible. I’d rather have a movie that is interesting that a movie that might look technically perfect, and the amount of stuff TASM/2 manages to cram into the series and communicate through not just words but actions and scenery is like catnip to me.
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aion-rsa · 3 years
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The Spider-Man Game That Made Spider-Man 3: No Way Home Possible
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After a night of trolling by actors Tom Holland, Zendaya, and Jacob Batalon, Sony and Marvel Studios finally revealed the title of their third Spidey movie: Spider-Man: No Way Home. It’s an apt title for a film that will reportedly see heroes and villains from across the Spider-Verse collide once again, but this time, it’ll happen in live-action, which likely means the return of a few big-screen favorites.
It’s been reported that the movie will not only include Benedict Cumberbatch as Doctor Strange, taking over from the late Tony Stark as Peter’s mentor, but also Jamie Foxx and Alfred Molina, reprising their roles as Electro from The Amazing Spider-Man 2 and Dr. Octopus from the original Spider-Man 2 respectively. It’s also long been rumored that these villains will be bringing along their own Spider-Men, played once again by Andrew Garfield and Tobey Maguire. That last bit is still worth taking with a grain of salt, but there’s bound to be at least some multiversal shenanigans when Strange and two villains from other Spidey movie universes are involved.
And it’s not like the Spider-Man franchise is a stranger to big, epic storytelling involving multiple timelines and Earths. Just look at 2018’s Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, which is arguably the best movie starring the character ever made. In the animated film, young Miles Morales gains the powers of Spider-Man and is immediately thrust into an adventure full of Spider-Men, including a deadbeat Peter Parker from another Earth who is down on his luck. There’s also Spider-Woman, Spider-Man Noir, Spider-Man 2099, the mechanical SP//dr, and even Spider-Ham. Together, they team up to take down Kingpin and Doc Ock before they can shatter reality.
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It was the Spider-extravaganza of the decade, one that performed well at the box office and received rave reviews, so it’s no surprise that Sony and Marvel want to push the Spider-Verse concept even further with an animated sequel as well as No Way Home. But as we prepare to watch three big-screen Spider-Men team up to fight crime in the MCU (again, a rumor!), we should also take a moment to celebrate the video game that made this all possible: Beenox and Activision’s Spider-Man: Shattered Dimensions, the game from 2010 that first introduced the “Spider-Verse” as we know it today.
Developed as a single-player title that allowed fans to take on a whole list of baddies while switching between four Spider-Men — Amazing, 2099, Noir, and Ultimate — Shattered Dimensions was a unique video game treat for its time, sending gamers on adventures that spanned four different and distinct versions of Spider-Man’s world. One level you could be swinging through Marvel’s classic vision of New York City, while the next could send you to the black-and-white, 1930s-inspired Noir universe or the futuristic cityscape of 2099. Each Spider-Man had unique abilities too, and their levels usually required specific playstyles — Noir missions, for example, involved more stealth while 2099 could slow down time, and even featured boss battles with universe-specific baddies like The Goblin (a 1930s version of the villain) and Doc Ock 2099.
The story that ties all of these universes and Spider-Men together is pretty good, too: Spidey accidentally shatters a mystical artifact known as the Tablet of Order and Chaos while fighting Electro, breaking it into 17 fragments that end up scattered across the four universes. So Madame Web recruits the four aforementioned webslingers to recover the fragments and bring order back to the multiverse.
This is the kind of setup fans of comic book crossover events would undoubtedly love, and each level in the game does really feel like another chapter (or issue) of the story. It makes perfect sense, then, that the game’s story was written by Dan Slott, who was just at the start of his decade-long Spider-Man run (2008-2018), the longest in Marvel history, when Beenox began work on the game.
Inspired by other Spider-Men stories from the ’90s like the controversial “Clone Saga” and the “Spider Wars” arc in Spider-Man: The Animated Series, which also opens with Madame Web recruiting and training a group of Spider-Men to save the multiverse, Slott’s work on Shattered Dimensions was a precursor for what would come next at Marvel Comics: several multiversal clashes that seriously expanded the scope of what Spidey stories could be.
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In 2012, Brian Michael Bendis finally introduced Peter Parker to his Ultimate Marvel counterpart Miles Morales in the 5-issue miniseries Spider-Men, which partly inspired Into the Spider-Verse. While an extremely popular addition to the Spidey mythos, Miles had existed solely in his own universe and timeline in the comics up until this point. It’d taken 12 years for Ultimate Marvel characters to cross over with the main Marvel universe, but even this meeting of Spider-Men was small-scale when compared to what Slott brought to the table next: 2014’s “Spider-Verse” storyline that brought together all of the versions of the hero he had used in Shattered Dimensions plus quite a few others.
“Spider-Verse” was a game-changing, status quo-shattering story that introduced infinite possibilities for who Spider-Man could be and how all of these different versions of the webslinger could come together to fight a common enemy. Even if you’ve never read these comics, you’ll likely feel their influence in what’s to come for Tom Holland (and maybe Tobey Maguire and Andrew Garfield, too).
Slott’s massive event has received several follow-ups since 2014, including tie-ins to Jonathan Hickman’s seminal Secret Wars and a direct sequel called Spider-Geddon. And Shattered Dimensions got a sequel, too.
Written by another Marvel legend, Peter David, Spider-Man: Edge of Time cut back on the cast, this time bringing back only the original Spidey and his 2099 counterpart for a romp through time and space. But Beenox sophomore Marvel effort didn’t quite capture the same magic, delivering a much rougher gameplay experience this time around, even if the story of Miguel O’Hara trying to save Peter Parker’s life int he past was a generally captivating one. This would be the end of this particular corner of the Spider-Verse.
Whether No Way Home truly picks up the multiple Spider-Men torch, or we’re simply treated to Peter, MJ, and Ned dealing with a few villainous blasts from past, it’s worth remembering Shattered Dimensions place in Spidey history and how it helped get us to a point where we can speculate about this stuff in the first place.
Spider-Man: No Way Home is out on Dec. 17.
The post The Spider-Man Game That Made Spider-Man 3: No Way Home Possible appeared first on Den of Geek.
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