I've never been a big Spider-Man fan. My fondest memories of the web slinger is the 1990's Saturday morning cartoon. My brother and I would settle in for TV watching that included Spider-Man, Batman, and X-Men. My brother Patrick however is a HUGE Spider-Man fan. Everything I know about Spider-Man comes from me reading his comic book collection when he wasn't home. Like most big brothers, he didn't like me getting into his things. As a whole I like the Tobey Maguire trilogy, but never really warmed up to the Andrew Garfield films. I have, however, enjoyed Tom Holland's portrayal of Peter Parker. So heading into his third film I was curious what was going to happen in No Way Home, and who was going to show up. The correct answer for both of those questions was EVERYTHING!
This film picks up right where Far From Home ended. Peter's identity is exposed to the whole world, and those closest to him are being hurt because of it. Peter turns to Doctor Stephen Strange to help him make the world forget he is Spider-Man. But when the spell goes wrong it brings in everyone from the multiverse who knows Peter Parker is Spider-Man, which included villains (and heroes) from all the Spider-Man films Sony has released in the last 20 years. It all comes down to a climactic battle at the Statue of Liberty with three Spidermen versus the Sinister Five. Yes, FIVE. When they were all captured my first thought was, "there has to be one more to make it the Sinister Six." But there wasn't.
First off, my problem with this film is the same reasons I, and many other, geeked out so hard while watching it. It's filled with cameos from all the previous Spider-Man films; and then some. It had great references and the money shot of all three Spidermen, in costume, ready to battle. But, earlier I hopped on YouTube to rewatch the Matt Murdock scene. I remember freaking out when he appeared and I just kept thinking, "Charlie Cox's Daredevil is in the MCU." And in the 80 seconds or so he was in the film I didn't process any dialogue or anything else in that scene. I was in a daze and missed everything else being said. I just kept wondering when the next cameo was coming instead of focusing on this Peter's emotional journey.
But, despite two other Spidey's in the film, the heart of it was still Tom Holland's Spider-Man. It was his hopefulness of not giving up on the villains. Trying to not just send them back to their deaths, but to try and help them. The end of the film ended with Peter making everyone forget not Spider-man, but Peter Parker; even his friends. The last scene with Peter and MJ killed me Peter was about to tell MJ who he was till he noticed the bandage above her eye and believed the best way to keep her safe was for him not to be in her life. This reminds me of a comic book storyline called Brand New Day. After Civil War everyone knew who Spider-Man was, and this led to Aunt May being shot. So, Peter made a deal with Mephisto (yes, that Mephisto) that he would save May's life if Peter would give up is life with Mary Jane. Thus, causing everyone to forget he was Spider-Man, never meeting or marrying MJ, and him living the bachelor life with his buddy Harry Osborn in their New York apartment. That's what the end of the film felt like to me; that it's a brand-new day for Spider-Man. Peter has his own New York apartment, struggling to get by, and most important; sewing his own costume. This is the basics of who Spider-Man is to me, and I can't wait to see what comes next.
Speaking of what's next, the mid-credit scene saw Tom Hardy's Eddie Brock getting the 411 on the MCU. The bartender explaining it all is Ted Lasso's Cristo Fernandez. Football is life!! Anyway, Eddie then gets zapped back to his reality thanks to Peter and the events of the film but leaves behind a piece of the symbiote. And every comic book fan's immediate thought was not only "Black Costume Saga" but also, "Is the MCU gonna do their own Venom?" Now, I'm still confused how Eddie ended up in the MCU. We assume it's from the Strange spell, so then why would he get zapped to the MCU if he had no idea who Peter Parker was? This feeds into the fan theory that Venom's hive mind with other symbiotes includes the one from Spider-Man 3, and Venom, not Eddie, knew Peter was Spider-Man, and why Eddie came to the MCU, and then returned to the Sonyverse.
I believe No Way Home is love letter to everyone who has been watching Spider-Man films for the last 20 yrs. It remembers the past but set up so much for the future of the character, and also raises so many questions like; did they bring Tom Hardy's Venom over just to leave the symbiote piece behind? Does Zendaya's MJ ever get back with Peter or is this the actresses' way out of the franchise? And what's up with Morbius? We know he's in the same universe as Venom, but that Spider-Man mural is in the background in the trailer and so is Michael Keaton. Also, Keaton's Vulture no longer knows who Spider-Man is according to the rules. If Jon Watts and crew got a non-loving Spider-Man guy like me to get excited about the possibilities, I can't wait to see what he does with Fantastic Four!
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