You’ll have never left a Marvel film with so much uncertainty as to what comes next.
Tom Holland and Zendaya in a high-flying scene from “Spider-Man: No Way Home” ©Sony Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection He’s surely way more fun to play than Vincent van Gogh. Doctor Octopus (Alfred Molina), Electro (Jamie Foxx), Sandman (Thomas Haden Church) and the greatest Marvel actor ever, Willem Dafoe as the Green Goblin, all collide in the same place and time.ĭafoe remains exquisite as Norman Osborne, by the way, and sinks his teeth into the Jekyll and Hyde shtick like a Wendy’s Baconator. Villains from the past films that featured Tobey Maguire and Andrew Garfield start pouring into New York. However, they don’t all look alike or even have the same name. The Multiverse, I’m 80 percent sure, is an infinite number of realities where bizarro Spider-Men and Mary Janes live and make totally different choices. Peter Parker (Tom Holland), Ned (Jacob Batalon) and MJ (Zendaya) work to save the universe. But, wouldn’t you know, the spell backfires and the Multiverse is ripped open. Peter’s controversy causes MJ (Zendaya) and Ned (Jacob Batalon) to be rejected by MIT, so the guilt-stricken teen asks magical Doctor Strange (Benedict Cumberbatch) to make everyone forget he was ever Spidey. “The web-headed war criminal!” Jameson screams. Simmons) - descend on his apartment and condemn the poor kid as a villain.
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The media - led by the Daily Bugle’s editor, J. Watts likes to aggressively shake up his films’ circumstances, so at the start, the vanquished Mysterio (Jake Gyllenhaal) has revealed that Spider-Man’s true identity is Queens high school student Peter Parker.
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There’s a healthy dose of seriousness here that Kevin Feige’s Marvel Cinematic Universe has, for the most part, given The Blip.Īnd newfound dramatic weight isn’t the only element from the older films at play in “No Way Home.” (Don’t worry, spoiler paranoiacs, I’m not going to reveal anything in this review that’s not clearly visible from readily available movie trailers that you’ve watched 2 million times.) Tom Holland returns as Peter Parker in “Spider-Man: No Way Home.” ©Sony Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection Jon Watts’ Spidey reboot series, which shrewdly re-envisions the web-slinger’s adventures as old high school comedies, still delivers on the jokes, only it’s starting to nix the constant cute and instead embraces the mythic power that pulsed through Sam Raimi’s aughts films. Running time: 148 minutes. Rated PG-13 (action, violence, some language, brief suggestive comments).