House of R - 'Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse' Deep Dive
Episode Date: June 5, 2023It will be different this time. Joanna and Mal swing into the Spider-Verse and offer their deep dive for 'Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse' (05:17). They analyze the critical response and discuss w...hat they thought of the rip-roaring sequel. Then, they go character by character and discuss the newest arcs, including Miles, Gwen, and many more (50:41). Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson Senior Producer: Steve Ahlman Social: Jomi Adeniran Additional Production Support: Arjuna Ramgopal Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, media consumers. I'm Brian Curtis.
And I'm David Shoemaker.
We're the host of The Ringers Press Box podcast.
Twice a week, we have a free-flowing conversation.
We're two old, old friends talk about media and sports and a little politics.
Plus interviews with guests like John Crackauer and Jamel Hill,
funny stuff like the overworked Twitter joke of the week.
Join us every Monday and Friday on Spotify or wherever you get your podcast.
I think that's right.
For adults with Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis symptoms,
Every choice matters.
Tramphia offers self-injection or intravenous infusion from the start.
Tramphia is administered as injections under the skin or infusions through a vein every four weeks,
followed by injections under the skin every four or eight weeks.
If your doctor decides that you can self-inject trumphia, proper training is required.
Tramphia is a prescription medicine used to treat adults with moderately to severely active Crohn's disease
and adults with moderately to severely active ulcerative colitis.
serious allergic reactions, increased risk of infections or lower ability to fight them, and liver problems may occur.
Before treatment, get checked for infections and tuberculosis.
Tell your doctor if you have an infection, flu-like symptoms, or need a vaccine.
Explore what's possible.
Ask your doctor about Tramphia today.
Call 1-800-526-7736 to learn more, or visit Trimfairadio.com.
The playoffs are here, and you can predict the action all the way to the first.
finals with Fandul PREDICT.
Predict the spread, total points,
and even the game winner.
Sign up and get a $25 bonus.
Offered by Fandul prediction markets LLC,
a registered futures commission merchant, 18 plus.
Bonus is non-withdrawable and expire seven days after receipt.
Trading derivatives involve significant risk and may not be suitable for all investors.
Manage your activity with our consumer protection tool.
Restrictions apply.
See terms at Fandul.com slash predict slash bonus dash offer dash terms.
For years, I've been taking care of this little boy.
Making sure he is loved, that he feels like he belongs wherever he wants to be.
He wants to go out into the world and do great big things.
Not bad, kid.
And what I worry about most...
I love you, Maas.
Is they won't look out for you like us.
Want to get out of here?
Wherever you go from here, you have to promise to take care of that little boy for me.
make sure he never forgets where he came from and he never doubts that he's loved and he never
lets anyone tell him that he doesn't belong there you got to promise miles i promise
into the ringerverse your nexus podcast feed for all things fandom i'm doinger robinson
and joining me today as we prepared to traverse the arachno
humanoid polymultiverse.
It's Valerie Roman.
Hi, Valerie.
Joanna, hello.
Just so thrilled to be here with you where we can rejoice in the fact that our holes are
not a curse.
Wow, phrasing right at the top and I'm thrilled to hear it from you.
We are here today, of course, to speak about a very, very, very, very special film.
Spider-Man Across the Spider-Verse part one.
of two
second installment
in a trilogy.
Before we get into that,
quick programming reminders.
Wednesday,
the Midnight Boys,
Bipu,
are doing a time travel draft
that I'm really excited
to listen to.
I'm jealous that I'm not on that one.
And then Friday,
Mint Edition,
featuring the debut
of our new team member
just comes as long
as well as the Mint Edition
Boys,
Steve Allman,
and Jomey and Dinner on when we're talking about Transformer Rise of the Beast.
And then next week, next Monday, we'll be back again to do something.
They haven't quite nailed down yet.
We had a plan.
We've decided to change that plan.
Our new plan isn't set in stone yet, so I'm just going to leave you guessing.
But we will be back.
Miles Morales will return next year.
We will return next Monday with something for you.
And then we're swiftly into Flash territory.
So that's what's going on in the Ringarverse Feed.
Melary, how do you suggest that folks keep track of all of the great content to come?
Thanks for asking. My first suggestion would be to follow the pod.
Brilliant.
Follow the ringerverse on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. And of course, follow the ringerverse on our various social media feeds.
The ringer versus on Twitter. The ringer versus on Instagram. The ringer versus on TikTok.
You can get programming updates. You can see when pods are live. You can get some wonderful memes.
And if you.
have thoughts, if you have theories, if you have questions, if you have Apple takes, you can send
your emails to the House of R at Hobbits and Dragons at gmail.com.
Now it's time for your very aptly named friendly neighborhood. Spoiler warning, we are spoiling.
Guess what? All of Spider-Man ever. Movies, video games, TV shows. And of course,
comic books and of course this movie and it's the franchise it belongs to all spider
warnings are on the table mccc also on the table anything else not the succession finale because
mller hasn't seen it so we will not be spoiling that but everything else recently returned from
europe still incredibly jet lagged this is now the second podcast on the ringerverse where you all can
hear multiple hosts on one show talk about how jet lagged they are
Anything, Joe, that is touching that web of life.
It's fair game today.
It's sticky, sticky web.
All right.
Quick facts, of course.
This is Spider-Man Across the Spider-Verse's second installment
in this animated trilogy from Sony,
directed by Kemp Powers,
who you might know from his work on One Night in Miami and Seoul.
And his Knicks fandom, crucially.
This is a ringer pod.
And his next fandom.
Thank you, Joanna.
Joanne D'Augham.
Joaquin dos Santos, who you might know from Avatar and Cora ever heard of them.
And Justin K. Thompson, who was a production designer into the Spider-Verston and is crucially a long-time Lord and Miller guy going back to Cloudy, the chance of beatballs.
So he got promoted to director on this.
And well done.
Him written by Phil Lord, Chris Miller, and David Callahan, produced by Avi Arad.
Amy Pascal, Lord of Miller, music by Daniel Pemberton returning with his glorious score from Into the Spider-Verse and a runtime of two hours and 20 minutes.
Mallory Rubin, do you want to take us into the opening snapshot of how this particular film landed with audiences this weekend?
I'd be delighted to.
Thanks.
Let's do this one last time.
Joanna, people love this movie, and who can blame them?
It's fantastic.
The opening weekend response is bountiful, joyful, effusive.
This movie, of course, was supposed to come out a few years ago back in April of 2022,
delayed as many films and shows and projects were during the pandemic.
Five years between films, it's been a minute since we have gone into the Spider-Verse.
By the way, the namesake of this podcast feed, Ringerverse takes its name from Spider-Verse
an homage to a franchise that we adore.
And it was worth the wait.
And that seemed to be the mass response.
This movie crushed at the box office.
We are recording on Monday morning.
Sometimes these figures change while we are recording
and are updated in real time.
But as of Monday morning,
208.6 mil worldwide.
120.5 million domestic.
That is the second biggest opening of this calendar year,
2003 so far.
This has earned nearly three times what Into the Spider-First did in 2018, which is remarkable.
And it's the third biggest opening day for a Spider-Man movie period behind No Way
Homes, 121.9 and Spidey 3 is just astonishing to see Spidey 3 anywhere on a list of top things.
59.8.
And of course, for an animated film, I mean, these numbers are incredible to mental.
or what, right?
For an animated movie, and we love animated stories,
this is really exciting.
This is like atmospheric, stratospheric success.
What is interesting about 2023, though,
is that the top grossing film of the year is Super Mario Brothers,
so it's animation and one and two.
This just makes me super excited for everybody deciding to catch up
on clone moors and rebels before Soka comes out.
Let's all lean fully into this shared animation moment that we are enjoying together.
May I interest you in 200 plus episodes of Star Wars television before August.
Please, join us.
Definitely of time.
The water's warm.
Should we talk about your old pal rotten tomatoes?
Yeah.
You know how I feel low run tomatoes.
Perfect metric.
No questions asked about rotten tomatoes.
But, I mean, 95% critic score, 96% audience score.
are rare these days to see those things in lockstep.
But like the general consensus seems to be people love this movie.
Got an A cinema score.
Cinema score is something I always like to look at for audience reactions because this is
when they like ask you in the lobby what you thought of the movie rather than like the
self-report of Rotten Tomatoes.
So it got an A and it puts it on par with Homecoming and far from home.
But behind A-plus titles like No Way Home and Spider-Man into the Spider-iverse.
So just like one little dang down from A-plus in some people's eyes.
But plenty of people are many people are saying.
Is that because most people received that question 30 seconds after seeing it to be continued?
Yeah.
They're like flash across their screen.
Maybe they had like 15 minutes to process.
It would have been an A plus.
That's my guess.
Overall impressions of Spider-Man across the Spider-verse.
I'm going to go first, Mallory.
Please.
You usually let me go first, but I'm going to go first this time anyway.
Also, because I'm going to steal your line.
Mal?
I absolutely love this film
And like you know how hard it is for me
To shut off my critical brain when I watch things
And like doesn't mean I don't love them
But I'm often have like a running critical commentary
And there's something about these films
Both into the Spider-verse and across the Spider-verse
Where like
It's not that I'm not thinking about them critically
I am, we're really about to talk about this
For like multiple hours probably
But the joy, the beauty,
The emotionality
The excitement of seeing something
like it's like watching a puzzle just like click satisfactorily into place.
We know how messy multiverse stories can be.
We know how messy superhero IP can be.
We know how messy superhero sequels can be.
And so this the intellectual satisfaction of very, very smart storytellers telling a story well.
And then matching it beat for beat with just incredible emotional material.
I have 10 out of 10, like, actually zero notes from me on this film.
I loved it so much.
Mallory, tell me how you felt.
I thought this movie was exquisite.
I adored it.
It was absolutely beautiful.
I've seen it twice.
I feel confident saying that by the time I leave this mortal coil,
I will have seen this movie as many times as maybe any other movie in my life.
It just feels like, and I feel that way about into the Spider-Verse as well,
and I feel very confident that we will feel that way about beyond when we have the privilege of seeing it next spring, believe it or not.
Allegedly.
Hope so.
The joy of watching this for the first time, the joy are ready of getting to revisit it and return to it.
It's a world that I love to visit and spend time in.
It is a world full of worlds.
You know, I think that we talk a lot about when we see a movie or a show that feels like it hits that frequency that not only like elevates something about the art form, but really resonates with something that we hold like sacred as fans as people who spend a lot of our time caring deeply about certain characters, a certain canon. We will talk a lot about the idea of canon today. A sliver of some sort of fictional universe. Like, why do we choose to spend so much of our time in these places?
And when something really pops and it hits and it rewards that impulse, you know, we talk a lot about the idea of like how it felt like a love letter.
It felt like a love letter to us as fans.
It felt like a love letter to comic books.
It felt like a love letter to X, Y, Z.
This was like the rare, and again, I feel this way about into the Spider-verse as well.
This was the rare thing that almost moved beyond that.
It didn't just feel like a love letter.
It's like if the love letter came to life and it wrapped us up in its arms and its paper arms and it cradled us.
And it showed us that every single mark on that page could be a universe full of new possibility and that we could go anywhere and do anything and that anything was possible if we found people who cared about us and who we cared about.
And it's just like the most beautiful thing.
I feel like it's a love letter that wrapped us up and it's like papery arms and whispered to us.
I'm about to redefine your understanding of the word love.
Like, you think you love something before?
No, you ain't seen nothing yet.
It's interesting when we talk about sequels.
You know, there's always a chance, and often is the case,
the sequel does not live up to your...
Something I was, I think, I knew this was going to be good,
but I think a concern I had,
and I think the men I boys talked about this little bit,
is like, Into the Spiderverse was so good
and so shockingly, refreshingly good.
that we didn't have massively high...
I mean, we had like maybe
Lord and Miller expectations,
or we saw the trailer,
or we loved the Miles Morales comic books,
so we were like excited.
But I don't think anyone can properly claim
that they knew how good it was going to be.
And a huge part of the joy of it,
what was what a surprise was.
Absolutely.
So once you have those expectations set for a sequel,
will it possibly live up, you know,
without that element of surprise to it?
And I think the box off of this weekend speaks to that because, like, I think a lot of people discovered this into the Spider-verse at home, right?
They, like, heard good things about it.
But then it, like, they watched it at home or won the Oscar and they want, you know, like people maybe who didn't consider Spider-Man movie was going to be for them.
We're like, oh, one, oh, okay, you know.
And so, like, then it's blows out the quadrants of, like, you know, who you think of as the audience for this movie.
And so then, like, three times as many people or those of us who saw it twice, like, go see it in the opening weekend.
And what this sequel does and what all good sequels do is both deep in our understanding of characters that we're already invested in.
So, like, in this case, I would say maybe I think the two most successful iterations of that are Gwen's world and her family and her story.
And then as much as I love Miles and Miles is incredible in this movie and this is still in every way Miles's movie,
I would say I really, really responded to what they did for Rio for his mother in this movie
that just like really hooked into me.
So deep in our understandings of characters we already met and then add new and exciting characters
and interesting characters, you know, in this case, like Spider Cat.
But like Spider Punk or Miguel O'Hara or whatever the case would be.
And so I think this just hit it out of the park on both fronts in that regard in a way that
to me,
didn't feel overstuffed or
are imbalanced in any way.
How do you feel about its ability
to improve on or build upon
into the Spider-iverse?
A template.
I mean, flawless.
You know, I think we'll talk a little bit today
about how the increasingly vast sea
of Spidey movies stacks up for each of us individually.
And I'll tip my hand a tiny bit there
to say like,
I think that into the spider versus the best superhero movie ever made, and I still feel that way after seeing this one.
Me too.
That is still my favorite.
And for all the reasons that you just noted, like, there's something about the way that it altered, like, our DNA as moviegoers.
That movie was the radioactive spider that bit us, right?
And to have to follow that is like an really genuine, I mean, it's a privilege, but it's a privilege, but it's a
It's like an unenviable task.
Again, there's like a meta aspect to that, right?
With the power and the responsibility.
So we will not be the first podcast on this feed, on the Ringer podcast network podcast network.
And certainly out in the wider media landscape to invoke Empire Strikes Back.
But like, I think it's appropriate, right?
And the creators have talked about that idea a lot too.
In their many interviews, all of which are worth consuming, like the first movie was very dark
and very heavy in a lot of ways,
a lot of terribly sad
things happen in that film,
but there is a call to adventure,
an origin story,
an incredible amount of humor.
I mean, rewatching into the Spider-Verse,
like, I'm just cackling, like,
a loon the entire time,
selecting a bagel.
I mean, that movie's hysterical.
And there's, like,
there's plenty of comedy
in, across the Spider-Verse as well,
but it is just,
just a different vibe and an energy,
you have to tap in inside of this film
to the Luke on Dagaba aspect of what it means
to take that next step in your arc.
And I think the thing that this movie does
that like, you know, we chat a lot on our various pods
about what can multiversal storytelling do?
Like, what possibilities does it afford the creators
and the characters?
And it's like, well, what if Luke wasn't the only one
in the cave on Dagabaa?
What if there were many caves?
right, a connection of caves.
And every one of them had a Luke or another version of that character
who was confronting something like that.
And they got to see that about each other.
It's just an incredible thing.
I thought that like the storytelling and the themes and the tone
felt like a very natural and beautiful and artful evolution.
The evolution of the art, which like I know you want to talk about next,
is just astonishing.
Like there is, I mean, and the first movie is gobsmack.
as well, but this is like the most beautiful thing I've ever seen in my life.
I know sometimes in real time we get caught up in like the hyperbolic recency bias.
Joanna, I'm like, I just came back from Europe where I went to all these museums and saw all
these famous works of art.
And I'm like, fuck Vincent Van Gogh.
Should this movie be considered centuries from now the way that we talk about those
fake things, you know?
I mean, I think it gave us.
So, you know, something that the, you know, creators have all talked about is this idea of like, okay, in the first movie, all these different, differently drawn characters, you know, if you think especially like Spider-Nois, or Spider-Ham or Penny, like very different art styles, come to Miles's world.
Now, Miles is going to other worlds.
And so we are immersed in entire worlds of different art styles.
And the fact that we're going to talk about Gwen in the opening a little bit more detail later, but like,
we start in Gwen's world and it is so breathtakingly beautiful that I was like genuinely
gasping like the first few minutes. I was just like blown away and exhilarated.
I've consumed so many interviews by the creators that I could not tell you exactly like where
I heard every single little thing. But like the phrase that they use over and over and over again
when describing Gwen's world is this idea of like a mood ring. This idea of.
of the world is mood ring.
So it's this beautiful,
watercolor, impressionistic sort of world,
but that the colors change.
Gwen's hair color changes,
the environment around her changes,
based on her mood in a given moment
when she's drumming,
when she's arguing with her dad,
when she's sweeping in to save the day,
whatever the case may be.
And the way in which they're able to tell story
through that,
my favorite example being
the way that the cool tones
turn to a warm hue,
there are two hugs between Gwen and her dad,
you know, one sort of even more connected than the first.
But in both cases, the blue, gray, green tones blow out into warmth and light.
And just the ability to tell that story through color alone is something I thought about.
So, like, I'm not, I'm definitely not an animation expert, but for years in my old gig,
like when awards season were going to roll around,
just by default, I was like the animation person.
And so every year I got to
sort of more closely study the animated films
that were nominated for the Oscars
and also the short films.
And watching this movie,
almost felt like watching the animated short films
because they are so wildly different in their styles.
Or also, there are certain years
in animated film nominations at the Oscars,
like the year that it was like,
there was a like a film
and,
and West Anderson made an aisle of dogs and blah, blah,
and, like, each one was different
and felt like a real exploration of what animation could do
outside of the tightly contained box that is
every Disney princess kind of looks the same,
and every Pixar character kind of looks the same.
Like, let's blow out what we can do with the art of animation,
stop motion, et cetera, et cetera.
And so that is the exhilaration.
I got from this.
And also, it builds upon something that the first one did so well with, like, the stippling dots or the color bleed,
the way in which the first film is a love letter to not just art, but comic book art, especially,
wanting it to look like a comic book.
And so when we start in Gwen's world and we not only get the, like, sort of drippy watercolor
that is an homage to the Gwen Stacy comic books, but more intensively.
of paneling than I think we get anywhere else in the film.
And that paneling is meant to show a separation between Gwen and her bandmates or separation
between Gwen and her dad.
And, like, again, that is just using the medium of, is this a film?
It's cinema.
It's art.
But it is, like, also very consciously comic book.
And that is something that I absolutely love because sometimes, you know, not the best
versions, but some comic book movies can shy away.
from the comic book and want to tell like,
oh, the grounded, gritty,
this isn't a comic book sort of thing.
And they're like, no, comic books rule.
They're beautiful.
And that's the kind of art that we want to celebrate.
Yeah, absolutely.
That's one of the really magical things about it.
Like, I think that at any point in your life from here on,
you could walk past a screen that somebody was watching and you would know they were watching this, right?
There's something unmistakable about the visual.
palette of this film. And yet, to your point, it feels like universal, even though it is so
specifically crafted by the hands who made this film, it feels like this universal embrace of
the art form to which it owes so much. And like the number of artists and animators who
worked on this movie, I mean, it's astonishing. And one of the things that has been really cool
to hear and to learn about is like the number of comic book
artists who were brought in to either consult or to help craft a certain character, like learning
that Rick Leonardi came on to work on Miguel or that Brian Stelphreuse came on to work on Jessica
Drew.
Like, the movie is made by people who care about the legacy of the characters, but also the
renderings.
Like, they're inseparable things, right?
They're inextricable from each other.
And to really, like, honor that properly is just a rare and special thing.
And so, like, you know, I love the way that Charles.
on both Big Pick and Midnight Boys, two great episodes, of course,
talked about like how every, every world you visited,
every character you were with,
like you could feel that you were in,
that the world had been pulled from the comics,
like from those pages and put together.
It made me think, obviously, this is at like a different scope and scale,
but it made me think a little bit of how, like,
when the first season of Star Wars visions came out,
it was really celebrated because you got to see all of the,
like, how would each of these anime,
anime houses have put its specific visual sensibility onto a Star Wars story. And it was really
fun to track like, well, what was a, what ended up feeling like a little bit of a through line,
right? Well, how many of the stories ended up being about Khyber crystals or whatever the case
may be? But then the things that felt like utterly particular to the particular crafting hand,
it's just like a really neat thing and the mashup of the different visuals. Like one of my
favorite visual sequences in the film was the Da Vinci paper.
vulture in the Guggenheim.
Yes.
Which I just thought was like hysterical and wonderful for so many different reasons, but was like my job was on the floor.
And that is like the kind of just inventiveness and ingenuity that I think is elemental to the soul of this film franchise.
And then you like have that with something like, you know, Spider-punk, a just delightful character, a wonderful performance from Daniel Scalia.
excited to talk about Spider-punk more.
But the visual rendering was unbelievable.
And, like, that's a choice.
Every single thing that happens on the screen
is a deliberate choice to make something feel distinct.
And then when everything is distinct,
how does it make sense together?
Well, like, this is how, right?
The care and the time and the thought that goes into it.
And then, like, it's not just the things that look different, right?
Like, I would say that one of the most beautiful visuals of the film
is like the wide shot,
the panoramic shot of Miles and Gwen
hanging upside down
from the Williamsburg Clark Power.
Like, I would have that as a fucking wall-sized tapestry
in my living room.
Like, it is just scale and scope
and who are these people in the world
that they're trying to inhabit and protect?
Like, to be able to capture all of that
while your frame rate changing a jacket
and a guitar is just incredible.
Yeah, the thing about the Hobie,
spider punks,
jacket being animated at different frame rate from the rest of his body.
Amazing.
Incredible.
And that was a character who was compelling with a mask on.
And then, you know, as Mel says, how are you even cooler with your mask off?
But, like, the facial expressions, like, I was just drawn to Hobie.
Like, my eyes were drawn in scenes where he's just, like, standing there observing.
They're drawn in, you know.
They're drawn to Pav, right?
To Spider-Man India.
Like, everything in Mombaton is so discon.
distinct and like the way that spot,
the spot visually evolves
over the course of the film?
Yes, as he absorbs the holes.
Phrasing, yeah.
So,
something that Justin Thompson told Indywire
is that they use 17 new tools just for spot.
And they wanted to have him,
like, look like an inkwell had spilled on the page.
So again,
And that's not only like a really cool conceptual, every time that spot is talking and like telling a story, whether it's his own backstory or like threatening Miles with what he's going to do, we get these like angry scribbled, like representations.
But the fact that again, we are engaging with the medium of comics of like what would happen to your comic book if you, the inker, like, oops, spilled all of your ink across the page.
Like, that's the calamity of making a comic,
and that's a calamity of what happens to Miles
and all these other worlds inside the, you know,
the metatectual understanding of this story.
It's just simply a slurgy.
But also, like, the port,
the idea of each of those holes or ink splots as a portal,
you know, like that the idea of what somebody is putting on the page
in a comic book that you held in your hands
or that you get to watch come to life on the screen in this way
can take you anywhere,
you want to go, like to take that larger idea of why we love art,
of why we love comics, why we really love stories,
and like make it manifest,
make it tangible and concrete in the villain
and to like turn a character like that from,
and I loved to,
we'll talk about the spot a little bit more later,
but like the way that the movie played with that idea
and embraced the idea of like,
let's take,
how do we make a villain of the week go from a joke
to the most terrifying thing possible?
Well, it's the link between the characters,
which we're looking forward to discussing.
But it's also that, like the idea that the multiverse
isn't just a plot device in the movie.
It is like, it's physical.
It's there.
It's in front of you.
It's there to touch and feel and make your way through.
I want to talk about the very specific way
that both the film and into this better verse
use the multiverse, which you already alluded to a little bit in a second.
But I do want to, before we get there,
just pause a minute on Daniel Pemberton's score.
Because again, another sort of,
virtue of a sequel is we already have emotional attachments to certain cues.
And so there is this, it's not even the hero cue for Miles.
I don't know, I was re-listening to the into Spider-Verst score.
You first hear it on the track Destiny and then again on Mia Moore.
And it's this like the slow like bassoon, gentle bassoon build.
And you hear it often when Rio is talking to Miles, which I think is why.
on the track, Mia Moore.
And it just absolutely squeezes my heart every time I hear it.
And when it hit across the Spiderverse, I was like, oh, I didn't even need, you didn't
need to prime the pump for me on this.
Like, you hit that music cue, and I am ready to lose it emotionally.
And similarly, the prowler cue, which is so...
Electric.
Scary and cool in the first one.
And then when it hits at the end of this as part of, like, the...
you know, the big twist at the end of this movie is just sort of like, it's thrilling that they got
Pepperton back. And then, of course, you know, outside of the score, the soundtrack of Into the
Spider-Verse where you've got Sunflower and What's a Danger, which are so iconic to it.
And it's like, how will we match that? Well, I think James Blake and Metro Women's Homingbird,
I might like it even more than those incredible tracks in the way that it's used. And I was
looking at the lyrics between sunflower, not Miles' like made up, like, version, but like the real
lyrics.
Like comparing those lyrics to Hummingbird, and Hummingbird is just, like, both of them are about,
you know, being proclied by a girl, but like Hummingbird is so tender and sweet and talking
about like our time, it's our time.
I know it.
Like, it's just such a beautiful track.
And I just, the care that is put.
into the music and the visuals is just like the gilding of the lily that is this like incredible
emotional story yeah i mean it all works together so harmoniously to like help make the film
just such an immersive viewing experience like it's interesting because when you were
beautifully describing the color palette and the watercolor paint paint nature and then that
that mootering aspect of Gwen's world,
I was thinking, like,
that's the way we typically describe
how a score, like, triggers an emotional response
and so to give us that in so many different ways.
Like, the auditory, the visual,
of course, the expressions and things that the characters
are actually doing and saying,
it's just, it's a symphony.
It's a symphony all around us of,
and, like, it's, that's hard then
to not tip into sensory overload.
I didn't feel that ever from,
the art style or the music.
The only time I felt that was I literally just couldn't read the comic font boxes that were popping up.
I was like, I can't wait for this to come out on streaming so I can pause and read these all.
They're just going away too quickly and there are too many of them.
I can't wait to take you to the optometrist.
No, wait, you didn't have this problem.
They were like going away so quickly.
Like I could read.
I probably got through like three quarters of the hammer space one.
And then obviously some of them were intentionally more there as like little like all of the different spot jokes.
Oh, I didn't catch all the spot jokes. Yeah, certainly not.
Intentionally impossible to all get unless you're free streaming. But yeah, that and then I was one of the one of the many out in the world who just legitimately was like in a state of panic on my first viewing that I couldn't hear anything Gwen was saying.
And have since learned that this was a shared experience and I had a much easier time on my second viewing.
But other than that, I thought all of the music and.
it was just purely
additive and wonderful.
Before we go
fully into the Spider-verse
into the Multiverse,
I wanted to pause quickly
on the Metaverse
and talk about sort of
like the way in which,
and again, this is
why this film works
on so many different levels
because it sort of tickles
your brain on the
larger conversations
we're having around
superhero or genre stories
in general, right?
Because we're in a very
multiversal
obsessive space, partially
inspired
by Into the Spider-verse and its success
five years ago.
But when you have
everything that's going on with the
MCU and, you know, very specifically
like Loki and
Dr. Strange and all that sort of stuff,
flashpoint,
the Flashpoint story that is going to be
at the center of the Flash film that's coming out
next week. And then
the best picture winner Oscar
film of the year, everything everywhere all at once,
like the multiverse of session is raging.
And you would think that perhaps we would have a little bit of fatigue around it at this point,
five years after, into the Spider-Verse did such a smashing job sort of introducing it.
And then we've had so many other imitators.
And then so then we're like, oh, are we tired of it?
But no, because it has this film.
And Lord and Miller in general in the way that they think about story and tropes and genre and stuff like that has so much on its mind
when it's thinking about what a multiversal story can say about the way in which we consume stories in general.
You already mentioned that thing that we love to talk about, which is like what happens when you meet yourself, a version of yourself,
and how that refracted idea of a character can help you understand and drill down on what that kind of character can mean.
the way in which
and allow me to
flog one more Ringer podcast
and say trial by content
show that I'm usually on
but wasn't on this week.
Dave Gonzalez, Neil Miller
and our pal Ben Lindberg
did such an incredible job
talking about all the Spider-Man films
that have ever been.
And they talked about this idea
about because we have seen
so many iterations
in such short succession
of Spider-Man,
Toby and Andrew,
and Tom,
and, you know, Shamique as Miles Morales, et cetera.
And part of that, a major reason for that is a quirk of the Sony contract.
The Sony has to constantly reboot this in order to maintain the rights from Marvel.
So it is one of the most frantically rebooted properties that we have.
Like, I think the closest competitor is Batman.
And that still doesn't even quite touch it, you know.
And because it has been rebooted so many different times,
It helps us try to figure out what we understand Spider-Man or Peter Parker or Miles Morales to be.
But then what this film, of course, very cleverly does is like then ask us the question of how limiting is that?
And should we put any borders around this at all?
What do you think?
I mean, I love a good multiverse tale.
One of the, you know, I was really excited for the MCU to enter its multiversal era as you and listeners for this podcast.
No, but even I, a sincere enthusiast, have to acknowledge, like, the level of fatigue might be putting it charitably, honestly, like active frustration that is set in among the fandom, not unreasonably, right?
I think some of that has to do with the varying, like, degrees of success inside of individual properties, but also just the demand.
of what you are expected to track and consume, etc., right?
This, much like everything everywhere all at once,
which a movie I, like, adored,
was just such a refreshing, rejuvenating reminder
of why this is a canvas that storytellers like to play on in the first place.
Like, what does it allow you to explore?
And again, like every aspect of the movie, whether it's the visuals or the themes or the characters or the arcs was really actively engaging with that.
Like I'm excited to talk about the canon events idea.
Really excited to talk about that because it's like one of that tapped into one of the things that we enjoy discussing the most, this like battle between free will and destiny and how do they relate to each other.
And I think it's like important for the.
the world in which the stories take place to, like, look at that clearly and ask its characters,
but also its audience, what it means if we always expect a story to go a certain way.
And that they're, like, to embrace the fact that there can be a, like, a love of and a respect for
the heart of the spirit of, it's a Spider-Man story.
So, like, the strands of DNA of the world or the character.
Yeah.
And also something new and different.
And like, I don't want to jump the gun too much
and talk about Miles' response to that limitation.
I'll save that for the Miles section.
But, like, what a remarkable way to show us
what a worthy hero he is, like the fact that he pushes back against that, you know?
So I just loved that.
And it makes me excited to be in the multiverse, in this universe more.
It makes me hopeful that, like, this can be, again, an inspiration
and not just like a, okay, let's all go try to make our version of lost.
And then we get a lot of really bad TV shows for five years.
Or let's all go try to make our version of Spider-Verse.
And we get a lot of like pale...
Impatators, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So...
Part of what makes this so good is that it's original.
It's fresh.
You have to try to do something fresh.
You can't just try to imitate.
Right.
And I think also it's...
I don't know how intentionally,
but I think intentionally because these are very smart people.
Like, engaging in some of the less attractive...
qualities of the fandom that gets kind of rigid about for sure what a story uh an ex story has to be yes
uh you know this is this isn't what star wars is this isn't what you know Tolkien is this isn't
what you know X Y Z is and how that is portrayed as you know villainous or at least you know
anti-heroic in this so um on the on the on the on the on the on the on the
theme of like what a multiversal story and specifically like what a spiderverse or a Spider-Man
multiversal story can do.
I was reminded again and again of the best parts of No Way Home where we get Tomuiguired,
Andrew Garfield, and Tom Holland all talking about shared experiences, like the two big moments,
I would say, I mean, there's like funny, fun moments later when they're talking about their backs and stuff like that.
Like, you know, there's the initial rooftop meeting and then there's like the lab scene.
Let's listen to In No Way Home, that rooftop meeting and the way in which that underlines this thing we got from the very beginning of into the Spider-Verse when Chris Pines, Peter Parker meets Miles Morales and they've got the squiggly lines of recognition and like, you're like me.
I thought I was the only one, right?
Steve, will you play this for us?
My uncle Ben was killed.
It was my fault.
I'll ask Gwen.
My, um, she was my MJ.
I couldn't save her.
I'm never gonna be able to forgive myself for that.
But I carried on, tried to, um, try to keep going,
try to keep being the, uh, friendly neighborhood Spider-Man,
because I know that's what she would have wanted,
but at some point, I just, I stopped pulling my punches.
I got rageful.
I got bitter.
I just don't want you to end up like, like me.
It took me a long time to learn to get,
through that darkness.
Why, I can still hear her voice in my head.
Even after she was hurt, she said to me that we did the right thing.
She told me that was great power.
Come to great responsibility.
Wait, what, how do you know that?
Uncle Ben said it.
The day he died.
Maybe she didn't die for nothing, Peter.
I'm like literally crying because...
Very emotional.
Fucking Andrew Garfield.
But, I mean,
I mean, Noe A Home is, I feel, I have, like, mixed feelings about that movie, but when it works and when it's the three of them together, it works so well in this idea.
As you know, I love that movie.
I know, I know, I know.
We did a whole podcast about it.
You can listen to that.
But, like, the, I love it any time I'm, like, I'm conflicted about this.
I'm, like, to be clear, I'm not.
No, no, horribly.
I just love that movie.
I think it's a great one.
I think the stuff with the three peters worked so well in that movie.
And I think this idea of like, you're not alone.
We've gone through shared trauma.
Shared trauma has made us who we are.
It's such an interesting, emotionally resonant concept in that film.
And then what I love is that this, what this film does is like, okay, but also, what if I don't want that trauma?
But can I also be Spider-Man if I don't have that?
And it doesn't take away from that scene in No Way Home,
but it just complicates it and adds on top of it.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
I think it's like, I don't want to overstate things.
This is like so brave.
But like I do think it's kind of bold and ambitious to,
you couldn't have picked a better quote or better clip to play
to kind of illustrate what their,
what they're building off of,
but also responding to, right?
Like that sound bite is something
that a lot of people went to the theater
that December when No Way Home came out
and fucking wept in their seats watching that.
Not only because it was such a beautiful moment
and beautifully portrayed,
but because it tapped into
decades of shared experiences as Spider-Man fans.
And like, you know,
Spider-Man is obvious,
It goes without saying, but just to say it, one of, if not the most iconic characters in
like the history of comic books, right?
Like true, true, true pantheon character.
And so people's attachment goes well beyond the Toby McGuire, Andrew Garfield, Tom Holland,
and like those recent live action films to decades of comic book consumption, etc.
So to be able to like tap into that moment and like the truth of it and the power of it
and to understand and like recognize and I think appreciate the fact that like a big part of what makes these stories feel like they're part of that web of life, that Spider-Verse, is those recurring beats that are like familiar and feel inseparable from what we think of as a Spider-Man story, right?
But also to like do what you're saying and interrogate, well, Joe, I'm going to mention devs, your favorite thing when I mentioned devs, like, or alluded to devs.
But like that idea, like, do you have to ride along the tram line?
once you know it's there.
Like, why should you?
And also, of course, like, Miles, I'll just keep saying,
has suffered a lot of loss and trauma already.
Already, yeah.
Spider, any of the spider people in this story
and in the various stories that we've consumed
are ultimately going to be, like, special and worthy
for reasons beyond the pain that they have suffered, right?
They're not all just going to be Allie
and Yellow Jacket's season one's finale,
like out there talking about their trauma bond.
So, but you also have to like, you have to value the fact that, like, seeing Uncle Ben or Aunt May or Uncle Aaron die is something that, like, has been a really meaningful thing, not only for the characters, but for the viewers and readers for a long time, that's a hard balance to strike.
But does it, does it make a character like, like, Spider-Man, India, like any less of a Spider-Man that he has not experienced any trauma?
He's like, it's super easy.
This is easy and this is fun, and I love it and look how great my hair is.
also I don't have to work out in the morning.
And like, that's wonderful too.
I don't have to try. It's cool, but I do anyway, you know?
The other great thing about to your like metaverse and how was the multiverse
explored in this movie point, like, that's worth saying is, it's just one of the things
that was so cool about the movie is it's not just Miles considering other spider people.
It's that he gets to meet another Miles, right?
So he has a couple different ways into that, like, thing we used to love talking about
with, like, Loki and Sylvie, right?
What does it look like to confront a version of yourself?
That makes me so excited.
for the third installment.
Like, you wouldn't believe.
Makes me excited for the third Air Jordan one drop that Nike's got planned.
Because the origin stories were instantly iconic.
Next chapter, wonderful.
I have a pair.
When Prouler, when Earth 42 Prallor walked out and we flashed to those Air Jordans,
I was like, put them off the sneakers app now.
Every time I saw a single shoe, I thought about you in this movie.
Wonderful.
And we should say that in case folks did know, Jarel Jore.
is voicing that other
Miles, Miles G. Morales.
And I kind of like
that they're not having Schemeek more
voice both of them.
You know, because they haven't had the same actor voice
all the Peters. So I just thought that was interesting.
One last thing before you and I are going to do
a little ranking experiment.
And I just like to bring this up because it's just like,
it's such an interesting
lesson for
all Hollywood execs,
studio heads, etc., etc. When
Amy Pascal, who is
the exact producer on this film and on all the Spider-Man films and
and Little Women and Amy is doing very well for herself.
But once in a time she was ahead of Sony picture.
She is no longer.
And they were, Sony was like really struggling to try to keep up with EMCU, try to spin
out their own IP.
They were really struggling to make.
They were like, is it men in black?
Is it Ghostbusters?
Like, what is their IP?
What do we have?
21 Jump Street.
How far can we go?
like blah blah. Unlike right now when Sony is thriving, cranking out those Morbius and Craven movies
that Steve can't wait to see. You don't love the tale of Dr. Michael Morbius? That's not your
favorite story that you've ever seen. Anyway, I'm sorry, Steve, I had to. Amy Pascal was
complained in an email when she was talking about like, what am I supposed to do, right? And she's like,
according to the contract, right? All I have is Spider-Man, his enemies, his relatives, his girlfriend.
How am I supposed to build a whole universe out of that? And it's like, I mean...
She did it, right?
I'm not trying to grind her face into it because she's the one who did it.
Like, she is the exact producer on these films, but it's like, you did it, Amy.
This is how.
Old takes exposed.
For Amy.
For all of the studio execs out there who are thinking, how am I supposed to accomplish blank?
I only have blank.
Keep thinking and keep pushing because this is what you can do with.
What's hilarious if you've ever read the Sony contract for Spider-Man,
which is hilarious and lengthy.
We're going to talk about another aspect of it a little later on.
But the list of characters is so long.
There are so many Spider-Man villains.
It is bananas.
And so for her to be like, what am I supposed to do with these 900 characters?
And it's like, Amy, well, she figured it out.
Anyway.
This episode is brought to you by WeatherTech.
Everyone knows winter is the MVP and making a mess.
You don't need WeatherTech floor liners in the summer unless you hit the beach or go camping.
Then you'd want a cargo liner or a road trip goes sideways.
Ketchup goes rogue ice cream drips.
Yeah, you'd be pretty happy about those weather tech seat protectors.
So just to be clear as the mud, you're inevitably going to step into the summer.
You don't need weather tech unless you plan on doing summer.
Visit weathertech.com today.
Speaking of 900 characters, you and I, maybe, maybe inspired by the fact that I wasn't on trial by content this week, I thought maybe you and I could do a quick check-in ranking of our, of the 10 Spidey movies.
Okay.
You want to do them all?
You want to do a top three, top five?
What's in your heart?
Full ten.
All right.
Take me through your list.
Bottom or start at the bottom?
I'm going to start at the bottom.
The bottom for me is Spider-Man 3.
Yeah.
Of course.
Amazing Spider-Man 2.
We have the same 10 and 9.
And I'm glad you agree because this is a fight that Neil had a fight by himself
and trial by content.
I'm just saying, House of ours with you, Neil.
Spider-Man 3, absolutely at the bottom.
Amazing Spider-Man 2.
Then Amazing Spider-Man.
Yep.
I'm with you so far.
Then Spider-Man 2 controversially.
Okay, I have that a little higher, but not as high as many people will probably be expecting.
And then Spider-Man.
And then Far from Home, No Way Home.
homecoming, then across the Spider-Verse and then into the Spider-Verse.
Okay.
We have pretty similar lists.
Yeah.
Pretty similar.
Yeah.
I'll go top-bottom.
I'm doing this off the dome because I'm always constantly...
Well, my bottom three is the same as yours, so I'll only go through seven.
Into the Spider-Verse number one.
I'm torn on...
I think I'm going to put across the Spider-verse at two.
No Way Home at 3.
homecoming
F4
I guess I'll put
Spidey 2 at 5
but more for its
historical value
historic merit
than how much
I enjoy returning to it
frankly one of our
more shared controversial
takes
then far from home
then Spider-Man
and then we have
the same bottom three
pretty close
these lists sir
you know they evolve
in real time
I will say like
I think
I believe
that the movies
should be assessed
in a vacuum on their standalone merit,
particularly with a to be continued banner splashing across the screen,
I think it'll be impossible for us not to assess the success of this movie in either direction
does our,
does our feeling about a change after we see beyond?
Like, will we feel even more highly about it?
Will we feel less strongly about it?
And it's possible that a cross will hop above into the Spider-a-verse at some point.
I'm not ready to put it there yet.
I've watched into the Spider-Verse an embarrassing amount of times.
Like I watched, I rewatch it this weekend, but like, did I have to?
No, I can just close my eyes and play it.
I've seen that movie so many times.
Do I want you?
It kills me.
Immediately.
Like, I love that movie.
So I've only seen a cross with Spider-Verse twice, so it's going to need a few more ties
before I'm willing to consider it above into Spider-verse.
But that is where we are.
Okay.
I'm excited to hear you take later on the cliffhanger debate.
You know, we're big dune heads over here.
I was going to say.
Probably less thrown by it.
But it's been on a certain.
only a conversation point, so we'll have to discuss that.
I suppose, but like, they called it part one.
You know what I mean?
And so, like, I don't feel like they would.
Just like, did they change it?
Yeah, now it's just across the spider verse and then beyond the spider verse instead of
across the spider verse part one.
They should have called it part one.
Yeah.
It was doomed part one, wasn't it?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Give people like some warning.
Yeah.
Though to your point about the Empire Strikes back comp, like, you know, it wasn't, it wasn't
like Empire Strikes back.
part one, and this has a very empire ending, you know?
So, like...
Yeah, I think, like, the guys talked about this for a while on Midnight Boys Day, and I agree,
even though I loved, and I will say I enjoyed, because I was like, oh, my God, the movie's
over now when I saw it for the first time, just because even though it's two hours and 16
minutes, I don't know, for me, it blew by.
I'm like, that's half the length of a typical house of our recording.
I've settled in.
I'm ready for more.
Yeah.
But when I saw it a second time and, like, the music is bill.
it's surging and you know
you're about to see that flash
it landed even more impactfully for me.
I do agree that there's a difference
between a literal to be continued
and the concluding
like this story has ended
and we will pick up, you know, in the future
with Luke Skywalker and Han Solo
and Leia, etc.
Or like, you know, the guys talked about
two towers.
and like, I think the question of like, what if the, Steve, your point of like,
what if it just said to be continued as Gandalf was surging down the hill?
Like, I didn't feel that way about it, but I do understand if people bumped on that
versus something that felt a little more truly like conclusive.
I think that the time frame of the next release will have some bearing on how people
ultimately feel about that.
Like, if it truly is next March.
I don't know, that's just not that long to wait for like the next step and it builds a lot of anticipation.
I mean, I guess similarly like Infinity War, like, did people walk out of Infinity War being like, well, everyone's dust now?
Like, you know what I mean?
Like, yeah, like some of it is just the, it's almost like semantics, right?
It's like if Infinity War had splashed to be continued with people have been like, how dare they when obviously endgame is a continuation of that story?
like, you know, I think mileage may vary on whether people bumped on that.
But it does seem like some people are.
I will just say, no, definitely plenty of people did.
And like, I mean, I will say that I was, I didn't see this at a press screening because
we were out of the country.
And so, like, I saw it with a Jedpop and one of.
People gasped when that flashed.
No one of our pals in my, in my screening, but one of, one of our pals, who's a film critic,
was like, I was talking to me before I saw it.
And he was like, oh, yeah, I forgot that it was.
just part one of two.
And so, like, him saying that firmly reminded me that this is probably going to end in the
middle of something.
Do you know what I mean?
So I guess that's true.
And, like, I'm old enough to remember when Back to the Future Part 2 and 3 came out in theaters.
And it was very rare to do a 2B continued.
Like, that was one of the earliest examples of 2B continued.
And I remember, like, the whole theater laughed and, like, lost their.
their minds when the 2B continue came up.
And so, yeah, I don't know.
It was also like, it felt like a, I mean, this is a compliment.
Like, it felt like a TV thing in a way that like, even though this was such a vast and
cinematic experience and like truly, you know, I'm rarely actually, like, you must see
this on the biggest screen possible person.
I'm like, I must watch this at home in my pajamas person.
But like, that aspect, to be continued, the sequence is the movie just starting with, here's time with Gwen and her dad.
Here's time with Miles and his family.
Like, that felt like a television style approach as well.
Like, these are like episodes with the characters in their homes before the action picks up.
And I thought that was ultimately, like, to its benefit.
Yeah, I guess the ending with like everyone sort of walking into body.
in our hero in dire circumstances does feel like the penalty episode of a, you know, a very
exciting television show that are watching.
And then next week, we're going to find out how our heroes make it out of this one.
All right, let's do what we do best, which is we're going to go a little bit like character
by character through the movie.
We're going to start with our main spiders.
Let's do it.
And as we learned into the spider's universe, anyone can wear the mask.
So let's start.
as you say, we start with Gwen Stacy, Spider Woman, in Chelsea, New York, Earth 65.
This is, of course, Haley Stinefield, returning as Gwen.
And I love that the opening line of this movie is, let's do things differently this time, so differently.
And what we learn when you, what you learn when you rewatch this film is how much this opening sequence with her on
drum is actually like a precap of the entire movie because we get things that we've already
seen like Uncle Aaron dying, et cetera, et cetera.
But there's a lot of stuff in the images that flash in this sequence where she's drumming
that is the movie, like leading up to, you know, and talking about letting miles down
and hurting people and all this thing that she's talking about.
She's talking about it's almost like a preamble to the very end of the movie when the drums
come back in and she's talking about putting her.
the new band.
Band together, yeah.
Do you think they'll also be called the Mary Jane's or no?
I think they should be.
But I think it should be referred to their shoes.
And I think they should all wear shiny little Mary Jane shoes.
Gwen's moved on to the Aqua Chucks.
And I have no notes.
Well, she wasn't wearing Mary Jane at the first place.
She's wearing ballet slippers, which I always really loved.
But I love the chucks too.
Much of the sequence, the drumming and a lot of what she says here is taken directly from
the edge of the Spider-Verse number two comic.
where we first see Gwen and learn about her backstories, stuff like that.
But I like that she starts with this, like, urgent thesis of this installment or, like, quite possibly the next installment,
which is can she or any spider person escape their destiny of loss, heartache, and trauma?
Let's do things differently this time, so differently.
And what's funny is, like, what's fun is when you watch it, and,
And, you know, we got used to the end to the Spider-Verst rhythm of like, okay, let's do this one last time.
You know what I mean?
And it's like the intro.
And she's like, let's do things differently this time.
And it's just like a fun little interplay with it.
And you think that that is just about that.
We're going to intro things differently this time.
But it's what it is is about this bigger idea of the story, which I love so much.
Yeah.
And that just connects to like what we were talking about earlier, nodding back and connecting so fully to the first film, but also building, evolving, growing.
Like when we think about canon events and the canon of this universe, does changing that always have to be thought of as like a break or can it be an evolution, an update, like an amendment?
And I also really enjoyed, I mean, Gwen is ultimately the, is incredibly present and, you know, has a very high TRT across the entire film.
But like, is ultimately the book end at the beginning and end of the story.
And I think there's like an almost an initial, oh my God, like the first person.
I'm with is not Miles moment as you sit down at the theater. But then you remember, well,
we started with Chris Pine's Peter, who you already mentioned. And so I love that too as a structure
because I think like you're saying with that so differently, like unlocking something larger about
the thesis and like the central preoccupation of the story, one of like what it really is
interested in examining and asking. And I think that structurally they're achieving the same
thing, right? Because Miles is like, without question our central figure and our protagonist,
but you can open the movie with different characters without diminishing that in any way.
In fact, it helps to reinforce a lot of what they're examining because these questions of like,
again, what do we share? What do we need to share? How are we the same? How are we different?
And like for Miles and Gwen in particular, I mean, their bond is so beautiful and like so heart-wrenching
in so many different ways and just lovely.
They have a number of different lines across the film
that we'll talk about the tap into this idea in some fashion,
either that they're sharing with each other
or that they're sharing with other people alone.
But that moment in Williamsburg, like that were the same.
Miles is saying this to Gwen and then he kind of pauses
and they look at each other in the ways that matter.
Yeah.
It's just such a lovely idea and to position them as characters
in this larger sea of figures who aren't necessarily thinking that way or have been told
that they can't think that way.
Now, yes, they're part of a spider society.
They are definitionally uniting in some fashion, but they're united almost in accepting some
sort of limitation, right?
Some sort of like confinement.
And Miles and Gwen are, even though for Gwen, it's a journey across the film, right?
That's not where we find her.
we find her, much to Miles and our eventual chagrin and despair, not telling him the truth about
everything, knowing just as Peter B. will learn does, that he is this anomaly because of the Spider-42
bite and not sharing that with him, which is like a devastating thing. But ultimately, like,
this bond that they share is just stronger than that. It's bigger than that. And like the other
characters who stand there with Gwen at the end have chosen to believe.
leave that too.
Well, I think, I think, you know, in terms of we're the same, one of the strongest
threads of sameness between the two of them in both of their respective openings is this aching
loneliness.
Yes.
Like, you know, two halves of a whole that are separated sort of thing.
But I like how it stands in contrast to the fun Zippy introductions we get for the various
spider people where they would.
often finish their little opener with
I am the one and only
Spider-Man, right?
In contrast to Gwen's drum solo
here, drum solo,
her drum solo here where she says
repeatedly, and he's not the only
one. This happened to Miles and he's not the only
one, right? And
we already spoke about the visuals
and, you know, the
auditor, the music aspect of this. And you couple
like the artistic visuals
with the very cool and like
jazzy drums that she is that she is doing plus the artistry of this opener i have no proof as to
who wrote this but i know that it's a little bit more like complicated than lord and miller and
callahan wrote it and then the direct like the directors are also writing the film as they go
and i i'm i'm wary of giving someone credit without knowing for certain that they wrote it but like
camp powers who is a playwright who wrote one night in miami like this almost
sounds like beautiful spoken word sort of poetry the way that she's repeating phrases and the
drumbeat behind her and the beautiful like art that comes with it and again it's just sort of like
i'm watching art and i just i think it's so incredible and then the fact that she says you think you
know the rest and you don't and that's just like a fun way to start a movie it's a fun flip of
all those Spider-Man intros of Mentioned Spider-Verse of like, you know how this goes.
I did this, I did that, and then I did that.
And these are all my, like, canon data points that I hit.
I fell in love.
I lost my Uncle Ben.
Like, all these things happened to me.
And she says, you think you know the rest.
You don't.
Offering hope, you know, that she and Miles can change their destinies, you know.
Can go beyond the Spireverse.
What did you say?
Can make two cakes so they can have it and eat it too?
Who knows?
I loved it.
cake a bit. But I love that
her solitude is so different from Miles'
because she is actively rejecting
people. Like her bandmates are reaching out
to her. And
her dad, though he fucks it
up at the Guggenheim obviously, but also is
in his own way trying to reach out to her
when she first walks in and he's
wearing his Visions Academy gymnastics
sweatshirt, you know, and trying to talk to her.
Like, these are
people trying to connect with her,
but she's so traumatized
by losing her Peter.
Right.
And we get the story of the lizard,
which we got a flash of into the Spider-Verse.
We get like a little bit more of the story.
We get good old Stewie himself, Jack Quaid,
giving a very Stew-esque reasoning for taking a super serum,
which is he just wants to be as strong as his girlfriend, right?
And the revelation, the tragic revelation to her that he knew who she was.
Right.
Which he reveals to her only as he's,
dying, that he knew the whole of her, unlike anyone else. And now he's gone and she's way
too scared to reach out and make that connection with anyone else. Absolutely devastating.
You know, when she says to her dad elsewhere in the film, I could do all these things,
but I couldn't help the people out of the most. And they can only know half of who I am.
I mean, that was one of the most emotionally impactful moments in the film. Absolutely.
heart-wrenching, and I think you're identifying something crucial, which is, like,
that feels really true to Gwen, but it's a truth that she is, like, spinning into reality
because of that fear, right? Because of not wanting to feel that kind of pain or loss again.
And I like the contrast you're drawing with Miles, who is like, well, yeah, no, I have all these
friends. You just don't know them, like, Guanda, left town, and Peter, left town. And, like, sure,
you don't like that Genke calls you by your first names,
but you've always liked him.
And it's like, well, none of those people are actually really present in his life
in the way that he would want.
And he's like longing for that companionship to the point where he's just like,
what can I do to get an invite to this spider society?
How do I get a watch?
And then what does he find waiting for him when he finally makes his way into the clubhouse
that he thinks is like the holy grail of companionship, right?
It's not what he thought it was at all.
And like either of those extremes is almost too devastating to like contemplate.
There has to be some truth in the middle.
And it's like ultimately finding the people who.
To that point of loneliness.
I mean, I think again, that's like one of the reasons that so many people, us included,
love Spider-Man as a character or Spider-Woman as a character or Spider-Man.
Annie, pick your spider person, you know?
like there's this
it's a very classic coming of age
aspect to the character right
and like that's also something
we'll put a pin in that and come back to that with Miguel
as like a pretty interesting distinction
between Miguel and like a typical
spy origin story that this is really like
worth parsing
very few people perhaps none
who are watching this movie or reading a Spider-Man comic
at any point in their lives can actually relate
to what it is like sadly to be a superhero
who has been bitten by a radioactive spider
and actually gained supernatural powers.
But that sense of being a teenager who feels alone,
who feels isolated, who is experiencing that like discomfort
or pain or strangeness,
something unfamiliar and unmooring about like growing up
and trying to find your sense of belonging,
but then also the magic of changing
and like discovering not just who you are,
but who you can become,
and then finding the people who not just see you clearly,
but like specifically see the thing that other people might make you feel bad about
or different because of and say like that is why you're special.
Like that's just the most, that's like the heart of any story that we love.
Yeah, and you're that, that, it's like, it's a shame angle of like if someone really knew all of me.
there's no way they would love or accept me.
You know what I mean?
And maybe that the only way for some of these people,
specifically like a Gwen or a Miles,
the other way is to find someone who knows precisely
the kind of isolation that they feel.
I love the way that there's a shot at the beginning
where Gwen is sneaking in
and she sees her masked face,
but she's not masked.
And then later it's flipped.
You know what he means?
This bifurcated part of her personality.
And also the way in which Gwen Stacy herself,
like Miles Morales is obviously a very interesting spider person
in the way in which they were like,
let's just reboot the whole Peter Parker idea
and do something very different.
But Gwen Stacy specifically is, I think of this idea of canon
as it relates to her is so interesting
because I very, very specifically remember
getting in a long argument with our friend Dave Gonzalez when Amazing Spider-Man 2 came out in 2014.
And in all the trailers, Emma Stone is wearing a very similar outfit to the outfit that Gwen Stacy famously wears when she falls to her death in the comic books.
And so Dave was like, oh, Emma Stone's going to die in this movie.
And I was like, no fucking way are they killing Emma Stone.
and her chemistry with Andrew Garfield is so good.
It would be so stupid of them.
And he's like, but this is what Gwen Stacy does.
She dies.
Like, that's what she does in the canon, right?
Like, Dave is, Dave is Miguel O'Hara.
And he's like, that's her canon event.
Gwen Stacy has to die.
So that, and then, like, I, you know, we were in the heat of 2014,
heat of, like, the fridging conversation.
And I was like, I reject this idea that the girlfriend has to die
so that the hero can, like, figure out XYZ.
And we got in this, like, huge, huge, huge,
argument about it. And then, of course, of course, she did die and, like, exactly the way that he
said that she was going to. And I was like, I was so mad about it. And then in reaction, almost,
at the same time in the comic books, Spider-Gwen makes her debut. And Spider-Gwen is almost this
response to this horrible date with destiny that all Gwen Stacey's have, which is like,
what if she's not the girlfriend who has to fall to her death to motivate? But like, what if the
Peter dies in her world and she is the spider person instead.
And like, what does that mean?
And so it is like one of these like Miles and Miguel and a few other, you know,
Hobie, et cetera, et cetera, these non-Peter Parker Spider-Men are interesting spins on it.
But Gwen seems more than anything else, a direct reaction to that idea of inescapable canon.
And how can we take this date with death, this date with destiny that looms over?
over Gwen Stacy and give her a different story.
And that's why I love that this very idea of being locked into canon and using Gwen Stacy or Spider-Gwen as a way into thinking about that story is so interesting to me.
Yeah, I agree.
And I think that like the way that the movie does a couple things to really lean into that potential.
because it would be, like, it's not clean, right?
It's not, it's quite messy and tangled for Gwen.
Like, that moment when they're sitting on the clock tower together
and Gwen says to Miles, who's like, you know, looking over her, hopefully,
hey, you know, about today, again, except with a pinky tap instead of a shoulder touch
in every other universe Gwen Stacey falls for Spider-Man
and in every other universe it doesn't end well.
Gwen has this knowledge, right?
This is a version of, well, a captain has to die.
Right.
And sorry, Miles, but that's going to be your dad.
And so we can't let you out because you'll try to stop it
and you're not allowed to and you weren't supposed to save Captain Singh either
and look at what you've done in the dark matter
is about to consume Pab's entire reality as a result of you trying to do the thing that we're
actually all supposed to do, which has help people.
So there's a version of it where Gwen is like, well, in every other universe, but like, fuck it.
Give me a kiss.
I love you too.
But that's not what she does.
Like, she's afraid.
She's afraid to actually try to do the different thing.
And that's so much more interesting.
And so how clever for the wording to be falls for.
Spider-Man.
Anguish, Joanna, anguish.
But also, like,
when we were chatting a couple minutes ago
about this shared bond
that is built in part on their
like respective loneliness
and feeling of isolation,
I thought one of the most gutting moments
of the movie because they each have their relationship
with their parental figure, right?
And this question of like,
can I show my full self,
like to my dad and Gwen's case,
to my parents,
to Miles' case, what will they do once they see me in full?
Will they accept who I am?
Will they be proud of me?
Will they be even more afraid for me than they already are?
But also, will they be mad at me?
Because I lied.
And, like, there's a version of the story where Gwen is just like, I did it.
And it didn't go the way I wanted, but you should definitely still do it anyway.
Because, like, that's what heroes do.
But that's not what she tells Miles.
She says, don't do it.
Yeah.
Because she's so scarred by how that.
went for her. And like, I mean, that's, you, you expect in a, in a certain kind of like archetypal
story for that companion, that pal, that partner to be the one who says, just do the thing that you're
afraid to do. But for them to each kind of be like in this like police system with each other,
where it's like, actually, I'm really afraid of that too. And like, I really wish I hadn't done
that thing or hadn't had to confront what happened after is just this like really messy,
beautiful, real human thing. I love when you're watching a film or reading a book.
and various heroes disagree,
and you're actually not sure who's right.
Oh.
And we're...
So many times in this movie.
We're pretty sure that Miles is right that his dad doesn't have to die,
but like, what if he's not?
You know what I mean?
And the thing that complicates it is not Miguel,
who we just met and don't trust,
because he's very tall and his cheekbones are very angular.
But Peter B. Pied.
who we already know is like, not always, right?
Like a trusted source says not always.
And so we're like, oh, no.
And so, and we think Gwen is wrong.
And we know she's wrong by the end in terms of like revealing yourself to your parent
because eventually her dad does do the right thing, right?
But she's on her own learning arc as well.
And that's what's so beautiful about the story.
When into the Spider-Verse first came out,
it was such a smash-ola hit, Amy Pascal was like, well, the next film is going to be
Gwen and Miles.
And in fact, there was, I forget which year that comic book came out.
I want to say it was 2019.
But there's the comic book with like Gwen and Miles like smooching on the cover of a comic book.
You know, it's sort of like this idea of Gwen and Miles and their romance.
He's only 13 in the first.
I feel like they've fucked around with the age a little bit to make them closer an age in this film.
And that's great.
I love his growth spurt for him.
But this is so much more of a two-hander than the first one was.
And Gwen is on her own arc of discovery of her own leadership abilities to lead a band
and her own ability to open herself up to connection in a way she closed herself off to when her Peter died.
They're both so eager to impress each other but also other people.
Like you have these kind of like back-to-back sequential sequence.
moments where Miles is like, let me show you what I can do and how I can swing and all the moves
I've learned.
Gwen can't wait to make Jessica proud of her.
Like, I'm learning all these amazing things from my new mentor.
And like, and then to watch the way the mentors also were constantly like, did I teach them
that?
I taught them that.
Or I didn't teach them that.
Or like, well, I'm just a terrible teacher.
Like this, again, it's very much a web, right?
Of like how they're learning from each other and how that can be like a little bit of a
feedback loop if there's so much shared experience and shared context, but also like there's always
a little bit that's different for each of them. And yeah, the Gwen, the Gwen Miles Bond is just
really, really wonderful. I adore them. I'm written for them. I would encourage Gwen and anyone else
in the Spider-Verse to never again open a portal unannounced into the ceiling of a teenage
boys' room. That's just a note for me to Gwen and everyone in the Spider-verse. You've been.
I mean because she might stumble upon their perfectly innocent notebook full of beautiful drawings of her?
Yeah, that's what I meant.
That's like, yeah.
Okay, cool.
Bad baby.
Bad baby, there it is.
Season waiting for it.
I was like, where's the bad baby?
Oh, man, Joe, talking about relatable content.
Gwen going through Miles' like merch cave and opening all these collectors.
Did you choke?
It's just like, yes, this is like, this is the closest I've ever understood to what it's like to be a superhero is like, don't fuck with my merch.
The, um, before we leave the sort of the Gwen only section, we'll return to Gwen and Miles a little bit.
But like, I just want to say that like, I, the way in which Spider-Man or Spider-people move through the world is so uniquely spidery, right?
with the webs and the swinging and the way that they can like draw their legs up and like bunch and like dart and
it's so beautiful and it is nowhere more beautiful I think than in these into the spiderverse movies because like you can kind of capture it on the page and you can kind of capture it with digital doubles in live action
but the way in which specifically I would say Gwen on her way to the Guggenheim sort of like swoops through the city with her balletic
point shoes and like everything.
She's just like so graceful,
so beautiful, so powerful.
And it's just like,
I don't think there's any better way
to capture the uniquely cool way
in which this particular superhero
most of the world than in these beautiful
animated films.
Like it's so exhilarating.
It's like watching choreography.
And as you know,
I love a coordinated dance sequence.
So you think just to sum up
that Gwen is more graceful than Ben Riley.
Is that what you're saying?
Perfect pose.
You don't think he captures the gazelle-like fluidity of.
This episode is brought to you by Spectrum Business.
Fast, reliable Internet means everything for your business.
And even this podcast, that's why I trust Spectrum Business.
It keep companies of all sizes connected with Internet,
advanced Wi-Fi, phone, TV, mobile services,
plus 24-7 U.S.-based support.
Millions of business owners already trust Spectrum business.
Visit spectrum.com slash business to learn more.
Restrictions apply.
Services not available in all areas.
This episode is brought to you by Sweet Green.
The day doesn't ask for permission.
Lunch window?
Gone before you saw it coming.
You deserve a break that actually satisfies.
Sweet Green's new wraps have got you.
Real ingredients?
Zero shortcuts.
Everything you love in one hand.
Think green goddess chicken.
Garlic aoli.
Crumbled bacon.
Corn salsa.
40 grams of protein.
Made to keep up with whatever comes next.
New sweet green wraps hit different.
Order now at order.
Dot sweetgreen.com.
Miles Morales, Brooklyn, Earth, 1610.
He says over the last year and four months,
so to like return to this theme of loneliness,
which you already talked about a bit beautifully with Miles,
like this is how long he's been alone, right?
And I do think, like, you talked about the way in which this,
it's a reason why we respond to,
Spider-Man stories especially because that loneliness of being a teenager.
But what I think is interesting is if you think about the Tom Holland story, like we haven't
really, until the very end of No Way Home, we haven't really had to watch Tom Holland as Spider-Man
suffer alone because, you know, from the very first moment we meet him, Tony Stark knows
who he is, and then all the Avengers know who he is, and then Happy Hogan knows who he is, and then
Ned very quickly knows who he is, and May know who he knows he is, and the Michelle knows
who is he hasn't he hasn't been skulking around secretly at the same degree that other spider
boys have in other stories and so this and similarly with miles we met him into the spiderverse
like he meets peter parker right away and then very quickly meets peter b parker and gwen and
like all this sort of stuff like that so this extreme isolation is actually something you know
we haven't been marinating in in a spider on-screen spider story for a while.
And the fact that even, like, Genki, who is canonically, like, a companion of Miles Morales
is like, I'm not your guy in the chair.
Unbelievable.
I just, this is not the time or the place to say this, but I simply must.
To borrow someone's Air Jordans without asking, I mean, at all, but without asking, is
a violation that I can barely find the words to articulate.
I am confident that you and I are not the same size shoe,
but if we were and I were to do that,
is that friendship over?
If you borrowed them without asking?
Yeah.
Like, a friendship with you will never be over
because you're so dear to me.
But I would have to say,
did you think this would be okay with me
and what does that tell me about what you know about me?
It would be like when Adam bought me a Joe Flacco jersey.
And I was like, do you not know,
know who I am. Can we move forward?
I know exactly.
I know exactly what you mean by that.
Did you Google Josh Allen after I sent the text about Haley Steinfeld and Josh Allen?
I was just a real ringer.
You sent a team up there.
About Haley Seinfeld dating Josh Allen.
And I was like, because I don't recognize this guy's name, I bet you 100% he's an athlete.
And then I Googled it.
Buffalo Bills.
Is that right?
That's right.
Yeah.
Quarterback of the Buffalo Bill.
See it.
She can be taught.
Look at you.
But here's the deal, Mallory.
I have seen photos of your shoe closet.
Yeah.
I would never.
I don't even want to go in there.
I don't even want to look at photos of it.
It seems too pristine and too private and too personal.
And I don't.
Yeah.
I wouldn't.
Thank you.
See, you see me clearly for who I am.
And thus you would never steal a pair of my precious Air Jordans.
Your point about the loneliness and how we've been away from that from in it,
It was not something I had really thought about quite consciously or actively until you put it in our outline.
And I was like really, it unlocked something for me about why I love the Holland, Peter and movies so much in a way that I recognize and acknowledge is like to some Spider-Man enthusiasts.
Canon breaking.
Yeah.
But exactly.
So like this movie, because I mean, you know, we.
there's a midnight court episode
that everyone can catch up on
where this core question
of whether Peter's relationship
to Tony Stark
and proximity to the Avengers, etc.,
was like a feature or a bug.
I was on the feature side.
End one.
But this movie,
this movie, and your point here
unlocked something for me about,
I think, why I appreciated that so much.
Not only because it was fun
to watch those characters together,
but because, like,
I like pushing up against that idea that Peter always has to be alone.
Like, why?
Why?
Why can't he be a part of something bigger, you know?
And so like, and even to your point about into the Spider-Verse, I mean, Miles does
quickly form those attachments, but when he's, when we first watch him making his way
through visions, he's like, these are not my friends.
Like, I don't, you know, I don't feel like I belong here.
And so, of course, like, when we're with.
were in these scenes with him in Rio
in this movie and she's talking about this idea
of like...
Yeah, belonging.
In any room you're in.
Yeah, like people who will make you feel like you deserve to be there.
There's obviously like a larger meta quality there
to the...
The racial class...
Yeah, the bad response, the toxic response
to some people had to Miles being Spider-Man in the first place.
But what I love about into the Spider-verse is like it's Miles
is the one who feels lonely and isolated,
and Spider-Man has friends,
friends and family, you know?
And I think in that, you know, as with any sort of like Lord of Miller cartoon,
the sequence of what Miles was up to for the last year
in four months is, like, funny, obviously, hilarious.
Remarkable.
But also, like, if you view to the lens of this is a literal kid who's
13 when we last, from 13 to 15, dealing with being a superhero by himself.
So, like, stuff that's funny, like, I endorse baby powder.
Then I had to apologize for endorsing baby powder.
I made another mistake.
Like, it's funny, but it's, think about a kid doing that by himself without even his
parents to, like, advise him.
And without even a way to contact his mentor who gave him the baby powder advice in the
first place.
Thank you, Peter B.
As usual.
Don't listen to Peter B. Parker, by the way.
And I do love, so something that in one of the interviews that I saw with him, Kept Powers is talking about.
I think it was with Cartoon Brew.
The person who was interviewing him was like, hey, I'm a fan of your work as a playwright.
For something like one night in Miami when you've got all your characters who are just like in a hotel room together for like the whole play, the whole movie.
Like how do you think about that in contrast to you making such a wide, multiversal, sprawling story?
And Kemp was like, well, actually my favorite scene is in the guidance counselor office when it's just four people crammed in a room together.
And the big ideas that we're talking about, he's like, I actually spent a really long time on that part of the movie.
And I think it's easy to dismiss it because there's like a lot of comedy and fun stuff going on.
But there's also, of course, really clever, interesting groundwork being laid here about this idea of writing your own story because the guidance counselor.
Miss Weber, as played by the great Rachel Dratch, you know, is to your point about the sort of the larger racial class questions around Miles Morales as a superhero.
She's trying to paint the story of him as this like, you know, struggling, having a story, immigrant, you know, and Rio and Jeff are both pushing back on these things, you know.
And I love that Miles says having a quote-unquote story at all seems great.
gross. Like all of that pushback on like this is the only reason why Miles is interesting because he's
not white because he comes from like this class, like blah, blah. And I love the pushback on that.
And I love his point from the minute he walks in the room and makes that joke about, well,
what if you have two cakes? You can't have your cake in a two. What if you have your two cakes?
That's his attitude to the whole. I can save everyone. I can save the world and my dad. I can have both cakes. I can write my own.
story. And then he continues to give this speech about what he wants to do.
And I love how Rio and Jeff can read that as I want to go to Princeton to do these
cool scientific things and expand. And what he's saying is, I want to do this so I can
find Peter and Gwen again. You know what I mean? And the fact that it works on those levels and
they can understand at one level and he can push it on another. I do. I think there's so much
in this scene that I'm really glad that kind of
have powers a long time on.
What do you think?
Oh, I thought the scene was wonderful.
I mean, you have, again, like the comedy of seeing the sequences in the back and the
auto corrects on the text messages, et cetera, just Jeff's response as Miles describing
the quantum physics and, like, what he wants to do with Princeton.
New Jersey is too far from New York.
Like, the scene is crackling with a lot of, like, rhythm and energy.
But the heart of it, I mean, this is one of the great through lines of the franchise.
great expectations, right?
What is the graffiti mural that Miles paints with Aaron down in the, down in the station where he eventually is bitten, right?
And so that idea of expectations.
And, like, I know you want to talk about the parents more later.
So I will just quickly mention this.
We'll save the substance of it for when we get to Rio and Jeff in more detail.
But, like, Miles' parents are present in his life and care deeply about him and want wonderful things for him.
it's it's not like they don't want they don't want him to succeed but they have their version of it
and they have the view of his future that they have worked to position him to attain and it's not
that he's ungrateful for that but he wants things for himself as any young person does and so like
ultimately again i think this is just one of the beautiful things about the story that even though we are
not spider people feels like so relatable to so many people watching whoever the person is in your
life who cares about you and who you care about like you can recognize that someone wants something
good for you and it doesn't have to be the same thing that you want and like both of those things can
be true and there could be a lot of tension in that but also like if you're able to find a way to work
through that together then it can become an even more meaningful and rewarding bond on the other side
of it and so the thing that miles is grappling with is like well how how do I push through will
they accept me if I show them what I'm wearing on my chest
And I loved like when Miles goes to Earth 42
and tells Rio
doesn't see that he's clearly not standing in his bedroom
that his mother has different colored eyes, etc.
Finally musters the courage to say,
I'm Spider-Man and she's like,
I don't know who you're talking about
and we get the saddest little thwip-imaginable.
We got to like workshop it
and Miles got to try it out
before it actually happened.
And that's, I always love when stories are able to do that in a way that doesn't actually rob the eventual scene of any of its magnitude.
On that, on that beat of expectations and what is looming around him, it feeds back into that idea of destiny.
Like, they're not really hammering.
You know, when they talk about these candid events, this thing that, you know, you have to hit these specific marks to be a Spider-Man, right?
They're not really talking about it in terms of destiny, but that is what it is.
you already alluded to this.
This is like a trope of the genre, right?
Can you escape your destiny?
Can you embrace your destiny?
When is destiny a burden?
And I was just like, when I was really listening to the Daniel Pemberton score,
listening for that theme that I love so much,
the fact that it comes off a track called Destiny and that Destiny track plays
when Peter Parker, Chris Pines, Peter Parker, is talking to Miles
also the first time about who he is.
And Peter says,
I thought I was the only one.
You're like me.
Miles says, I don't want to be.
Peter says, I don't think you've a choice, kiddo.
Right?
So, like, from the beginning,
Miles is chafing on this destiny sort of expectations idea.
But the musical cue that we get from it in the first film is this is an anointing.
this is a passing of the torch moment
and the way it becomes a cage for him
in this movie is such an interesting
evolution of that idea that I really love.
I cannot stress enough
how much I loved this whole canon events aspect of the story.
We come out of the first movie
with this idea that anyone can wear the mask, right?
The Stanley Miles scene
when he goes to get the costume,
literally a costume, right,
that you would wear for Halloween
or to cosplay and isn't sure it's going to fit
and what does Dan say to him?
It always fits eventually.
And this question of predestination,
like, you know, we've chatted about this a lot already,
but just like I really felt
there were a lot of things watching the movie
where I was like felt like my breath taken away.
Some of it was the visual splendor,
some of it was just the heart of it.
This was one of the things,
this whole idea and examination,
like Miles,
I was about to say having the courage,
and it is courageous,
but like it almost,
it's almost more innate than that for him.
He's just like,
I'm going to do my own thing
and pushes back against this idea
that things have to be set in stone,
that he should sit back
and watch his father die.
Like, we come on,
one of the one of the one of the spider-man lines that i quote the most often and love the most is from
captain america civil war in that first peter tony scene when peter whose origin we never saw in the
mc u says to tony you know when you can do the things that i can but you don't and then the bad
things happen they happen because of you yeah and what what
what would our relationship to Miles be?
Now, of course, like the flip side of it is, well, yeah, Miguel is saying to him in very clear terms,
it's one person against the whole world.
And so, sure, we want the whole multiverse and all of the people in it to be okay.
But what would our relationship to Miles be if he said, I understand?
And you have this against Miguel, like, also very impactfully, I think, saying and appealing to a lot of what we know to be true about the legacy of Spider-Man stories,
being Spider-Man is a sacrifice.
And in many ways it is.
But should you have to make this sacrifice
because someone told you that it always goes that way?
Like, Miles deciding to challenge this accepted, universal, eternal truth
about what it means to put on that mask
and to assume that mantle?
Like, what more do we want out of a hero ever than that,
than the willingness to say,
I refuse to accept that that has to be the way.
way it goes. Right. I just thought this was amazing. Like, yeah, do you have to go to crime
alley in order for there to be a Batman, right? You know, like, does Ben, does Ben have to die? And,
like, that is one of the things that the MCU Spider-Man that they were trying to avoid in the
first place is just, like, giving us the spider bite and Uncle Ben dying or whatever. Like,
it all happened, but it happened off screen, you know? And the, and the idea of a Miles Morales
is like, well, yeah, there's spider bite, but, like, does it have to happen at all? It's a defiant
sort of stance is very interesting.
We talked a lot already about the Gwen and Miles love story,
so I don't mean to belabor it, but I do.
I think we actually even just recited all the lines that are in this clip,
but I want to hear it anyway because it's so charming.
So, Steve, will you play Gwen and Miles, please?
You and me, it's...
We're the same.
In the important ways, you know?
In every other universe, Gwen Stacy falls for Spider-Man.
And in every other universe,
It doesn't end well.
Well, it's the first time for everything, right?
And there's that defiance, right?
That, like, it doesn't have to be that way for us.
Wrapped in this very teenage package of a boy who likes a girl, right?
This is a star-crossed multiverse story,
a story that we've been talking about a lot in our discussion of his dark materials in Will and Lyra,
in spoilers for Doctor Who, in our discussion of,
of Tannen Rose and Dr. Who, trapped on either sides of a barriers not supposed to cross in a
multiverse.
What a great genre trope.
Maybe we'll do a trope's course about that someday.
I don't know how many other examples there are.
I love it.
But he's so sweetly, romantically pining for her.
The very sweet drawings he's made of her.
The fact that he's kept the ticket from their bus trip in the first movie is like in his little
journal.
And she has the selfie.
Like in her secret drum stash.
Yeah.
Yeah, with Peter B. Parker passed out in the background.
It's really sweet.
Iconic.
But like, what I love of their little, like, Peter B.
Let's call it a date, shall we?
That they have, you want to get out of here?
Their little, like, date that they have.
So good.
Is she's more graceful than he is, right, zipping through.
But, like, if you contrast the ease, he's still.
fucks up and hits trucks and stuff like that, but you contrast the relative ease, which they're
zipping through the city and threading the needle, et cetera, et cetera, to the absolute struggle
bus odyssey of him trying to get to the guidance counselor meeting, trying to get the cakes
back home, all that sort of stuff like that.
You know, the cake stick a ride.
It's easier together, right? And it's just sort of like that freedom, that soaring.
We haven't seen him sore. We've seen him flop about with a goose and a little.
a foam party and like falling through holes and like all this sort of phrasing like all this sort of
shit but like when she's there it's it's absolutely beautiful i love that we're the same in the
ways that matter like obviously they're very different but i like this idea of a gwen and a miles
finding each other in like a sea of peters there's so many peters but there's only a few miles
and there's only a few spider gwens you know what i mean it's like they're they're they're
very different in their own way.
They get the iconic upside down.
They don't kiss, but him invisible hanging upside down right above her.
And I love the upside down cityscape background of the Williamsburg Bank moment.
Like them, as you already mentioned, them sitting upside down, her little ponytail hanging up in the air is so beautiful.
But the fact that the cityscape is upside down has to make us think of his very, you mentioned,
and wanting their date as like a massive poster on your wall.
I have a poster of Miles Morales' leap of faith, obviously,
from the first movie,
because it's one of the most breathtaking images
that has ever happened in a film.
So to give us that upside-down cityscape,
but the leap of faith for him this time is like trying to inch his little hand
closer to her hand on the ledge of a Williamsburg building is just like,
but that can feel as big to a teenager.
is jumping up from a roof, you know?
Yeah.
Absolutely.
Exactly.
Climbing up to the top and flipping your webs to hang on.
Like, that's the easy thing for them, right?
It's like making that next step and like risking that you might be hurt or rejected,
that's the hard part.
And like, I love how many moments with their relationship in this movie are again just like so
utterly relatable, like everything with Hobie.
And like Miles has his little.
Oh, who's Miguel?
His hobby.
Yeah.
The Hobie stuff was like.
like amazing right like wait just what's a jumper wait does that mean like you you stay over like the jealousy
all of that stuff is so palpable and and just truly like teenage but also eternal of course
and then like i like i really love that you called out the the swinging tour through the city
you know while is spider man grounded because like that in the the sea of all of the relatable stuff
It's like that is, that's just so specific to who they are and what they share.
And like my, I think there were a lot of really beautiful lines in the movie, but I think my favorite in terms of the Gwen Miles relationship was maybe some things are just for us when Miles says that to her up top there.
And it's like you feel it so much in that sequence.
And like that's the other side of that feeling of isolation and loneliness is like when you build something with somebody.
else inside of that, it can be the biggest thing in the world. Beautiful.
Well, he's just an incredibly emotionally mature guy.
I know what you say.
So funny.
Let us talk about Miguel O'Hara, Spider-Man, 299, New York, Earth, 9-28.
And we'll be coming back to prowler miles in case anyone is wondering.
Of course.
Yes.
Miguel O'Hare, a.k.a. the Blue Panther, a.k. The Cape Blue Sater,
a.k. Dark Garfield, aka Macha Libre. Real piece of work, this guy.
Miguel O'Hara, just some quick comics background, right, created by Peter David and Rick Leonardi.
And it was introduced to the first non-white version of Spider-Man in a preview of June 1992's Amazing Spider-Man number 365.
Received his own title in September of that year. I read in a fjord in normal.
way. I read the original Miguel O'Hara comics. I had never read them before. The 90s. What a wild time in comics. Because let me just like, for folks who don't know, can I just please recap the origin story that is Miguel O'Hara? Because as you alluded to earlier, unlike most other, I can't speak for Peter Parked Carr, but I think for most other spider people, a hallmark, a canon aspect of Spider-Man is that this happens to them as
teenagers, right? These spider people oftentimes, I don't know about Spider-Ham, but like, you know, for the
most part. Your body is changing. Yeah. You're slinging white stuff. Take off the room and you don't
understand. Yeah, a very teenage tale. But Miguel O'Hara was a grown-ass adult, right? He was
working at Alchamax. Alchamax, right? He's the head of the genetics department. And he was trying,
this is 2099 in some of the future, and he's trying to create the original Spider-Man's power
to give Alchemex genetically enhanced super soldiers.
They'll stop you if you've heard this before,
but Super Soldiers!
Tell us all this time.
So he's like, maybe I shouldn't do this, right?
So he tries to quit his job.
And what happens next is Taylor's all this time.
You know how you're trying to quit your job?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And then your boss gets you hooked on drugs.
Slips a Mickey into your farewell toast.
Oh, God.
it's an instantly addictive drug known as a rapture.
And the only person who makes it, by the way, is Alchemex.
So you're not going anywhere, Miguel O'Hara.
You work for AlchemX because now you're hooked on trucks.
And it was 1992.
What a time to be alive.
And he, like, he, like, goes home and, like, smacks the shit out of his, like, girlfriend, his fiance.
It's, like, it's a real 90s comic origin story.
So what he does to try to combat the effects of.
like to try to get himself unhooked from Rapture
as he starts fucking around with science
and as you know in common books
when you start to fuck around with science
everything works out fine.
So he makes himself his own test object
in trying to replicate Spider-Man's power
and during an experiment,
oops, his DNA becomes 50% spider.
Hey, when that happens.
Tale is all this time.
So.
when you see him with his like talons and his fangs and everything you see him injecting himself
with a drug in the shoulder that like could be spider venom but might be rapture who knows
that's all part of his origin like they're obviously they give him a completely different backstory
in this film in terms of this like multiverse hopping thing that he does to try to you know
connect with a daughter etc etc reminded me a lot of the way that he was looking at his
Greens remind me a lot of minority report, by the way.
But that animalistic, more is more spider than men now, like aside of Miguel O'Hara, that has to do with his original origin story.
When refers to him as like a vampire, I mean, I think she's just kind of kidding.
Well, you know, fangs and light sensitivity and yeah.
Yes.
You know.
It's tough.
I have a question about 2099.
Okay.
What, like, do you think they're just sort of yada yottying?
Like, because in the Intent Spiderverse, post-credits, like, are we meant to think anything about time at all or just ignore that aspect of Miguel O'Hara?
I think we're supposed to embrace that we're moving across space and time alike.
Oh.
Yeah.
And now when and Miguel are the same?
I'm sorry, Gwen and Miles are the same age.
Oh, boy.
I loved your description there.
Your summation of the comics canon genuinely driven.
I wish you could have seen my face as I was reading these comics.
You know, what's so interesting.
What a setting to picture you in.
I mean, there are a lot of things, obviously,
that are interesting about that origin story,
but it is, I think everyone listening or everyone who's read it
will probably have thought,
hey, this is much more reminiscent
of a typical Spider-Man
villain origin story
than a Spider-Man hero origin story
fucking around in the lab
and taking a dose of myself
with a syrup.
Now, as you noted with the rapture,
he's responding to something someone has done to him.
It's not that he's purely seeking power.
But that is very notable,
especially given his deployment in this film,
we're like, yes, the spot is
villain in the movie, but like, I would argue
that Miguel is ultimately the prime villain
or antagonist, at least in the story.
In our notes, I have, we just come back to him in the villain section.
You know what I mean?
We can talk about that here.
But yeah, like, his origin is not that dissimilar from the spot.
His origin story is also very close to the Kingpin's story and motivation in the first film, right?
Which I love because I loved it and into the Spider-iverse.
I love it here because even though we don't get quite as much context,
and information with Miguel,
which I'm looking forward to getting more of
and beyond and assume we will.
But like, that's,
that's something that Miles understands
and is pursuing himself too.
I will not lose this family member.
I won't, right?
And so, like, for the villain and the hero
or the antagonist and the hero to be,
yeah, on some level to,
and Miguel invokes that directly
by saying, like, I've made this,
what he thinks is a mistake, right?
I've made this mistake.
Like, I know what happened.
when you fuck with the canon.
But the fact that that thing can be a tie
and that ultimately makes us
even as we're appalled by watching
what Kingpin is doing with the Collider
and the first film,
and of course so are Vanessa and Richard
when they see, which is like,
you know, just hits you with a Kingpin-esque wallop.
Like, I think that tie is important.
They're not just like going after something
that is like completely impossible
for us to understand.
They're trying to be with people that they love.
They're doing it in a terrible misguided way.
but that's ultimately what they're striving for.
I also, and I haven't heard the filmmakers talk about this,
but something I think is interesting is like the way, you know,
they're trying to do sort of unique art-based design differences
for our various characters.
Hobie is like the most obvious example,
but the way in which the spot is drawn like sort of an unfinished figure drawing
where you're seeing sort of the lines, the line work is still,
there, like, as if the inker hasn't gotten to the design yet.
Miguel has similar, like, specific design aspects where the line work is still, like,
he's colored in, but the linework is still kind of there for his character.
So I thought that was an interesting visual connection.
I'm not saying he has a spot.
That's not a conspiracy theory of mine, but, like, I think it is an intentional connection
between these two villainous, or at least a villainous and an antagonistic.
You know, I think maybe it's more appropriate to put Miguel in the antagonist category than in the villain category.
Yeah.
But the would-be hero who's lost his way.
Yeah.
For sure.
He is so menacing in his physicality.
You know, you noted the cheekbones, like the, there are certain shots where it looks like his face is almost like horribly scarred.
And then certain shots where it looks like it's more like shading and linework.
The, to go, if you go back to the vulture fight from the Gwen opening, when...
Miguel and Jessica arrive in the first place, he's about to, like, eat Vulture's face with his vampire
spider fangs. Like, it's shocking some of the violence. Well, and that's the other thing, right?
It's like, you know, not to go all Tywin Lannister, like any man who needs to say he's king is no king,
but like any man who needs to say we are, we are, when challenged on whether he's the good guy,
isn't. And that is something that the movie repeatedly shows us clearly.
I want to talk about some of that.
Like, we already touched on a little bit, but this, this idea of the canon, the canon restriction, and specifically Miguel,
Miguel, O'Hara, by the way, not a Peter Parker, but Miguel O'Hara telling Miles Morales,
you're not supposed to be here, right?
In direct contrast to the thing that Rio told him, right, which is they're going to, you know, you belong in any room that you're
in, you belong there, right?
He's like, you don't belong here.
You're a mistake.
You're an anomaly.
And not only does he say it, but Gwen and Peter B.
sort of like half-heartedly agree as they're simultaneously tried to climb a train.
Anyway, the contrast between anyone can wear the mask and this is who Spider-Man has to be is interesting.
And I think, again, on a meta-level, it made me think, again, of that Sony-Spiderman contract that came
out publicly via the Sony hack in 2015, I think it was.
And a lot was made of some of the restrictions around what Spider-Man could be according to
this Sony Marvel deal.
So I just want to read some of the things, right?
Mandatory Spider-Man character traits, Spider-Man, whether Peter Parker or an alternative
Spider-Man character, must always strictly conform to the following mandatory character strikes.
Does not torture, does not kill unless a defense of self or other.
does not use foul language beyond PG-13, does not smoke tobacco,
does not sell distributed illegal drugs, does not abuse alcohol,
does not have sex before the age of 16,
does not have sex with anyone under the age of 16,
not a homosexual unless Marvel has portrayed that alter ego as a homosexual.
And then Peter Parker character traits,
his depiction of Peter Parker or his Spider-Man alter ego
must conform to the following character traits.
His full name is Peter Benjamin Parker.
He is Caucasian and a heterosexual.
His parents became absent from his life,
childhood. From the time his parents become absent, he is raised by Aunt May and Uncle Ben in New York City. He gains his powers while attending either middle school or college. He gains his powers from being bitten by a spider. He designs his first red and blue costume. The black costume is a symbiote and not designed by him. He is raised in a middle class household in Queens, New York. He attends or attends high school in Queens, New York. And he attends or attended college in New York City, New York. So, definitely. And like, the live action rights are sort of.
different from the animated rights.
It's a big part of like why what's going on in the animated Spider-Man films are different
from what happens in live action, et cetera, et cetera.
But I remember so distinctly the kerfuffle on the internet when this came out of like
Spider-Man has to be white and straight, like, was, you know, a horrible thing to read,
to hear, to know.
And all of these, again, it just feels like.
like Miguel O'Hara standing there being like, this is going to have to happen and this is going to have to happen and this is going to have to happen in order for you to be a legitimate Spider-Man.
And I can't help but think that this, because this was a big thing when it came out, I can't help but think that this was on their mind at least a little bit when they were putting together this story.
You know what I mean?
Oh, yeah.
Absolutely.
Let's talk about the multiverse and how much do you think that glowing.
white tree looks like the sacred timeline from Loki.
I mean, it was.
It was.
There were a few, obviously there are a lot of visual manifestations from other Spider-Man
stories in this Spider-verse sequence, in this web.
We get to see Andrew Garfield.
We get to see Toby.
We see a lot of familiar moments from familiar scenes with Donald Glover is just there
in live action.
Uncle Aaron, that's the prowler.
a couple of the specific calls to the MCU though
and this had been a line in the trailer
but the don't get me started on Dr. Strange
and that little nerd back on Earth,
1-99-99-99-9-99.
Like to invoke the MCU directly in that way
it felt like significant
and the physical rendering of the multiverse
as the exact same visual
that we have now seen in multiple MCU properties
since we were at the Citadel at the end of time
in the season one finale
If Loki, it's just, in a way that I enjoy, because I think that can be enough.
It doesn't have to necessarily go beyond that.
But to show, to show that these stories are all part of the same fight or verse.
It's so murky.
Like, legally it's so murky.
And Lord and Miller are out there in the press being like, although it was just like a throwaway joke from us.
Yeah.
Which, like, of course, that's what they have to say.
But, like, also, if you're showing all of these other, and I know some, you know, some folks don't like the live action snippets,
this is separate from the tree, but just at all, right?
And that's also again completely...
Yeah, completely fine.
I enjoyed it.
But to me, I was like, it wouldn't make sense
not to see them
because that's what we're exploring in that moment
is the Spider-Verse, the connection across all of these...
I think in a post...
I think in a post-no-way home world,
I think it does make sense to have those...
And it was sparingly used live-action moments.
And I think especially, like, in a film
And we had a full-length scene where we went to spend time with Mrs. Chen in the Venom universe.
But yes, sparingly used.
It wasn't a long scene.
I loved it.
They got some venom and gum.
One of the Spider-Verse nodes, the Canada vets that we see is just venom stuff.
That was the funniest Sony-specific thing in the entire film.
The funniest Sony-specific thing is his Sony-branded headphones that have prominent play.
In both films.
You have to just respect that, right?
It's like, yeah.
You got to push the part of it.
Of course.
Yeah, I mean, I was fine with the live action stuff.
I don't think it should be used much more than it was used.
Like, I thought the Donald Glover thing was, I thought it was funny.
And I think that, especially in a world where we go to like the Lego universe, like, you can put the live action universe in here briefly.
It's fine.
Wonderful.
The image of Spider-
Thank you, Peter.
You're one of our best.
Yeah, but the image of Spider-Punk
Kobe being the one to bring
Aaron down,
the prowler down in like a real universe.
I just want it in my head.
I don't want to actually see it,
but like I just want that idea
in my head that it was Spider-punk himself.
All right, let's talk about Jessica Drew,
and this is like, okay, I lied.
I said I had no notes.
This is maybe like one minor note
that I have for this film, right?
Issa Rays, Jessica Drew,
Spider-Woman, Earth, 6-16,
question mark, is so cool, like effortlessly cool.
Like, pregnant on a motorcycle, so cool, doesn't wear a mask because yellow goggles is, like,
very distinct from other spider people because she doesn't wear a mask, et cetera.
It shows up to be sort of the Peter B. Parker to Gwen Stacy, the mentor, et cetera, et cetera,
is the one that urges Miguel to take her in, all the sort of stuff like that.
I'm just not sure she feels like a fully sketched out character to me.
like she's got aspects, but she doesn't feel like a full character the way that Peter B. Parker felt like a full character when he met Miles and into the Spider-verse.
And so it's possible that some of the stuff, like she alludes to her extremely hot husband.
It's possible.
Incredible woman. He's super corny, but so hot. I love Issa Ria so much.
Yeah.
She's great.
No, and all of her.
Like, she's fantastic.
Like, no notes on Issa.
But, like, I would just.
like a little bit more of like who Jessica Drew is.
Yeah.
I'm wondering.
I agree because she's such an interesting character.
I'm assuming or in hoping that because of the split in the spider society faction,
because of the band that Gwen forms to go help Miles at the end, that Jessica will have more
time in beyond because she is one of the one of the lieutenants who remain loyal to Miguel and
like whether that will continue to be the case or she will also have a, uh, a, uh, well,
question.
She doesn't, she doesn't, right?
Because she, she, she pulls up outside.
I think she knows that Gwen's in there and she kind of lets Gwen go.
You know what I mean?
So like, so I thought there was a way to interpret that as her.
I thought I, I, I, my less charitable read on that is that she's, she knows Gwen's going
to figure out where Miles is and she's tracking her.
Just tracking Gwen.
All right.
Yeah.
But like, so to your point, though, about like, did we get it off?
I really want to understand more about.
about, okay, Gwen thinks it's this incredibly meaningful bond.
And then Jessica's very willing to say, like, and she does warn her, right?
Like, if you fuck up again, I can't help you.
But then it's kind of shocking when she's actually like, well, I told you I couldn't help you.
And I'm like, I want to know more about a character who makes that call.
Like, that's a, that's a brutal decision to make.
Now, there are a lot of brutal decisions from a lot of the characters, right?
That's part of the dilemma they're always facing.
But like, and she says, too, there's that moment of like, well, you know, haven't you ever, I'm forgetting the exact phrasing, but like, haven't you ever cared about someone you weren't supposed to or like done a thing you weren't supposed to?
She's like, I have.
Yeah.
So, like, what was that for her?
Will we learn?
I think this is also, even though Miguel had much more time, like also a little true for Miguel in the movie.
Like, we get these glimpses, you know, my, this Miguel and this other earth died and I went and took over his life and I wanted to be with my family and then all of this.
characters in that world or all the people in that world were eliminated from existence,
but it's like, well, what happened to him that made him make that choice? I'm sure we'll find out,
but I do want to know more about both of them and their history. Sure. I just think that
the fact that he gets to monologue about his backstory and his big choice he made and all this
sort of stuff like that and the tragedy of it, and we could see his whole flashback makes him
substantially more fleshed out than her in this installment. But yeah. Even to go with the
Kingpin comp, like, I think that there could be a level of confidence when people are watching
into the Spiderverse that there's just a lot more familiarity with, like, Kingpin's history with his
family and his family discovering what he's capable of and what he does and being appalled by it and how he
then has to, like, grapple with that, et cetera. So did Miguel lose his, like, this is, we should say,
like, the stuff with the kid is new. That's not part of his comics, can. It has new the film. So, like,
does that mean he had a family that he lost?
And then the other question
Does he just want a thing that he never had?
I don't want to skip too far ahead,
but like we have questions about Peter B. Parker's involvement in all of this.
And that is something that I feel certain has to be paid off in the third film
because like he's there in that world.
It starts to crumble.
But I don't feel like that can be his world because his Mary Jane.
still exists and you know
I don't think that's a different Mary Jane
and so like why was he there
he's not just he's there in the flashback there
so why is he there what is he alluding to
and when you know when Miles says
we can figure it out we're Spider-Man whatever and he's like not always
right you know so there's there's some mystery
for him as well um
but that feels more like a tantalizing mystery
and less like yeah
We forgot to make this character a whole character.
But I'm really hopeful that in the third installment, we'll get more.
I hope we get an entire Peter B franchise at some point.
This Jake Johnson performance is so amazing.
Phenomenal.
He is just such a riot coming out in the bathroom in slippers with his baby Bjorn.
Just simply exceptional.
I absolutely love him.
We've already talked about Pov, Spider-Man, India a bit.
And Moomba, is there anything else we want to say about that?
incredible character incredible world loved this uh i thought that there was a lot of wonderful charm
and comedy loved the chai tea the conversation would you ask for coffee coffee with room for cream
cream that was really wonderful and even though that was like a pretty quick sequence it did give us
such a sense of the place that pav inhabits like all of his community of his relationships and then i was
really happy that he was in, you know, other sequences in the film, including in the band
at the end and like just really excited to spend more time with him in the future.
Just such a, such a cool character.
Incredible design.
We also want to talk about Hobie, Spider-Punk.
We already talked about his design a bit, but just some history of him, right?
So he's, this is Olivier Copiel's design for Spider-U.K.
and it didn't really fit,
but Dan Slott liked the design of the character so much
that he's like, let's just make another guy, Spider-Punk.
There's also a story of Spider-Punk
where he was originally a vigilante called The Prouler,
ever heard of him lad,
before he's put on the straight and arrow by Spider-Man.
So there's like a hobie who was the Prouler, etc.
But I love his whole, a very fun intro,
speech about playing shows, not being a role model, briefly a runway model, hate the AM,
hate the PM as in the Prime Minister, hate labels, not a hero.
To call yourself a hero is self-mythologizing, narcissistic autocrat.
And I just love that in a story about to conform or not conform, his whole thing is non-conformity.
His very design is non-conformist.
and I also love his like rocket raccoon-esque boosting of equipment all along the way
so that he can make his own little goober later to pass on to Gwen.
And even as he had said to Miles, like just make, you want to watch it about, like make your own.
So we were primed for that.
There was the conversation about between him and Miles.
Like, well, maybe it was important before he pulled it off the wall.
So they drew our attention to that and built toward that in a really nice way.
I loved even just like the, again, the visuals of seeing.
no longer captain you know captain stacey hand over that boxed Gwen and it's like it belongs in her
hand because of their relationship and their history but it couldn't look like less a part of that
universe that was just like a wonderful very little moment and then the way that the portals the tunnels
that that open from the watch he made look it's just that was all really incredible and delightful
and like the little subtle organic in real time moment that's just that was all really incredible and delightful and like the little
subtle, organic, in real time moments of like mentorship between.
Yeah.
Hobie and Miles.
His little asides.
Yeah.
Your whole palm.
And then that ends up being really important when Miles breaks free, right?
And like that was all.
He's like, no, what you're like, his little aside is they're walking in.
He's like, no, you're walking into.
Like, I wouldn't be so excited.
And then, of course, they're like really adorable when May Day takes a crap and he's
like taking shit on the establishment.
That's great.
Honestly.
Wonderful.
Fantastic.
Loved him.
And like a really credible, you know, entry into a love triangle.
You know what I mean?
Like a credible threat to Miles.
Absolutely.
And even he's not necessarily having a ton of super protracted heart-to-heart convos,
but he does have that moment where he's like, oh, your parents are like in your life,
you're going to have a hard time relating to everyone else here.
And that was like another really interesting primer for what was.
come. And he calls Gwen Gwendi, which is just, like, kind of cute. All right. In the villain
category, we've already talked about Miguel. We don't need to talk about him. I don't want to spend
too much time on the vulture because it's just like a funny gag. But like, again, on the design front,
great stuff from German Tocone in the voice. And the fact that his character is called
Adriano Tumino instead of Adrian Tum. This is so funny. It's great.
Let's have to the spot.
Jonathan Schwartzman.
Fucking love Schwartzman.
I love a Schwartzman villain.
Gives me Scott Pilgrim vibes.
Loved it.
Love that this is the bagel guy.
This is like a great little tiny gag that we all like loved.
Selecting a bagel.
Genuinely one of my favorite moments in movie history.
I'm obsessed with the moment in the very beginning of the ATM machine heist when he says I was actually considered handsome by scientist standards.
That was wonderful as well.
He's a very empathetic origin story, right?
Like he, again, like so many Spider-Man villains, he is the result of a scientific experiment gone wrong.
But I thought it was so interesting because you and I have been talking about this taxonomy of Spider-Man villains and how, so this very interesting idea of like Miles created him, he created Miles.
And like, historically, Spider-Man villains are like Goblin.
Rock, Lizard, these results of a scientific experiment gone wrong, these mentor figures to Peter, people have soft spots for Peter, something has gone wrong. That's not quite what we're dealing with here. And in the Tom Holland films, as you and I have discussed when we talked about No Way Home, in the first two installments in Homecoming and far from home, the villains are like the fallout of Tony Stark's fuck-ups, vulture Mysterio, are the messes that Peter has to.
to clean up, which I always thought was super interesting about those two installments.
Yes.
And then in No Way Home, we get the Rokes Gallery that's just sort of like the Peters through time and space and all of their, you know, ghosts coming home to Root.
But this is something like completely different, this idea of I created you, you created me.
I created you.
Fairly common villain concept.
You think about like Tony and Ultron, read Britchard's.
Dr. Doom.
My fault.
Peter and Eddie Brocker, Peter and Harry Osborne, Bruce and the Ridler, Luke and Kylo, Robert Brathian, sending an assassin to kill baby DeNaris Targaryen, you know, et cetera, et cetera.
She's a child, Robert.
But you created in me is a much rare phenomenon.
And one of the only examples I could think of is the Joker, specifically Michael Keaton's Joker when you put the Joker in Crime Alley.
And there's even a line from the 89 Batman
where Michael Keaton's Bruce Wayne Batman says to the Joker,
I made you, but you made me first.
So I love that the spot is trying, again,
this like C-string villain of the week,
nobody comic book character that they have decided to elevate
to this nemesis level in these films.
And the way he's trying to get Peter to acknowledge,
I created you, you created me, this is special.
we are the same you and I in the way in which the art will like slam their faces together
or superimpose Miles' face on onto the spot's face and stuff like that.
I just think of this is such an interesting, complicated concept and the idea that like
the only analog I can think of as Batman and the Joker, the two most iconic like two sides
of a coin sort of characters.
What do you think of this positioning of the spot as the villain?
Elite company there.
I also really loved it.
I mean, I couldn't help but think of the opening speech
from Tony and Ironman 3, your favorite movie in the history of the MCU.
But that like we create our own demons.
I know you do.
We create our own demons, right, and how like central that is to so many of these stories
you're observing.
But then like when you put a little twist on it, it lands even more firmly.
You know, you mentioned Mysterio as like a distinction because of the Tony-fueled nature
of that. But I was thinking of him as a comp as well in terms of just more structurally,
like taking a character who had been in the background of something, like learning about
the barf, you know, impetus and everything with Quentin Beck was, that was a fun thing to
think about, like these small moments in history that seems so insignificant that can become
colossal and defining the design of the spot. Joanna, have you ever played the video game
Portal. No, but I know. It's wonderful. It's addictive. It's incredibly fun. It's interesting.
It makes you think about spatial reasoning in a way that I found quite rewarding. Cake isn't real.
The cake is a lie. That's correct. The cake is a lie. Yeah. Yeah. See, good, good work. I kept thinking of Portal watching the spot, of course.
Just a fascinating character and like Miles thinking about, because, you know, do your point from earlier about like with destiny spinning, oh my God, I get to, I get to, I
get to embrace this heroic mission, right?
This destiny that awaits to then having to rebel against that.
This is really deftly connected to, like, thinking about the moments in your own life and, like,
what they have wrought.
And so it's so comedically presented and staged at first where the spot is just like,
you left in the middle of our fight and that was rude, which really made me laugh and was
just so amusing and Jason
Shortsman is the god
but he means that right
like that hurt his feelings it made him feel
insignificant it made him feel like he wasn't
valued or seen and in a
very different way Miles is having his version
of that so they're they're having
this influence on each other beyond
just the I brought Spider-Man
I brought Spider-42 from Earth 42
into your universe because of King Pins
Glider and it bit you and so now you're and it
wasn't supposed to. And so you shouldn't be Spider-Man like Miguel O'Hara is telling you. And this
Earth now doesn't have a Spider-Man like it should, as Miguel is telling him. When the spots
design warped across the film and in some ways now I, you said earlier, you're not an animator,
this is where I will say I am not a animator. But in some ways I thought the design like
looked simpler in a fashion as it evolved.
like flatter in a way
almost like he was more
as the dark matter
as he explored
and came to understand his holes
and the power of his holes Joanna
and
what a wonderful stretch in the film
the guy like at construction workers
is like he can't stop talking about your holes
you're making all this uncomfortable
agonic but when he kind of becomes
that dark matter
incarnate
And it looked to me, it made me think of Miles's, again, that, that expectations graffiti mural from the first and that like silhouette of himself that is right there at the center of it.
And it's like, they kind of visually, they visually call upon each other with these shapes, right?
And what can you do with the shape?
Like, what can it mean?
Well, it can be an absence, right?
But it can also be something that you fill with purpose, with intention.
with achievement, maybe with mistakes.
So I really like this.
I felt that the spot, I adored the movie,
I did miss the spot a little bit in the third act of the film,
but I feel like this will be so present in beyond,
at least initially, that it's okay.
But then again, I don't know.
Maybe I don't think that because I just feel like Miguel's going to be the real.
Yeah.
Well, I don't want to underestimate the spot because that was Miles' mistake in the first place.
But, like, I, I think that there's a little bit of red herring villainy there for him.
I thought it was really interesting.
Kemp Powers is an interview with discussing film.
He was like, he had this quote about the stakes of this conflict, right?
And he says, when every film has world destroying stakes, how do you differentiate yourself?
How about the stakes being, colon, I just need to save my dad.
And I really love that because we talk sometimes about like the escalation of like,
what is the world ending event this time?
How do we top Thanos now, like snapping out, you know, the population?
And it's like, what if we bring it all the way back down?
This is a street level, friendly neighborhood Spider-Man, you know?
So let's go on.
The other thing about that Gwen and Miles shot, it's like that is the thing that are trying to protect.
You can see it on your screen.
To that end, I do want to talk about the spider parents.
And it's very specifically on that front.
I was thinking about, like, very specifically the party that they're having for Jeff's promotion, right?
And when Gwen thinks she's leaving Miles forever, and then when Miles follows her, maybe not knowing when or if he can return, they both.
are looking at that party, and it reminded me of what we talk about when we talk about
franchising, wanting, rich franchises wanting to make sure that you understand what's being
protected, was being defended.
You already alluded, I'm so excited to talk about all the parents in this movie, right?
Because we've got Jess is pregnant, Miguel, and his, you know, multiversal daughter,
Peter B. Parker, new parent.
And then, of course, we've got.
Peter B. Parker as a father of a daughter and the son of a mother?
I wouldn't. I just wouldn't. I shut up.
Peter B.
And then of course Miles's parents and Gwen's dad.
And like the parental stuff is so strong in this movie.
And what you already alluded to is this moment when Hobie is like, oh, you've got parents, right?
So a canonical aspect of most Peter Parker's most Spider-Man is.
according to that Sony contract,
your parents are gone
from the time they're very young
and they're in the custody of
Aunt May, Uncle Ben.
And Uncle Ben,
usually not around for very long
and Aunt May with love and respect.
And I respect all alternative families
and all parents are parents,
and I support that.
But I thought Ken Powers put it really beautifully
in an interview with Cartoon Brew
where he was like,
Jeff and Rio are helicopter parents
and one of them is a cop versus Aunt May
who was quote unquote
not the most observant person.
Right? So this difference, what does it mean to be a spider person with actively involved parents?
Something that, you know, honestly, with love and respect to all the maize, maybe maybe Aunt Tomé, as Ben Lindberg called her.
Marissa Tomey, like, is a bit more involved, but not like, not in the degree that Jeff and Rio are.
So it's just like a very different prospect.
And I love that Kemp Powers and this interview with discussing film, he's like, we wanted to make a coming of age story for both.
the kids and for the parents, because when a kid comes of age, a parent also has to come of age
in a very different way. There's a massive thing you go through as a parent when you go from
raising an adolescent to a young adult. And that takes us to Rio Morales and that speech we heard
at the top of the episode. The moment, for me, honestly, of the movie. Like, it stunned me the
first time and the second time I openly wept through it when she's talking to Miles about how he was
just her little boy just a moment ago and how he now has to parent himself because she can't
follow him everywhere that he's going to go and she's worried that the whole world won't love
and support him the way that his people do, I just lost it at this moment. I thought it was
incredible. And it's just this important reiteration. He never lets anyone at those big,
fancy places he's going to be to tell him that he doesn't belong in there. And when he comes home and he
better come home, you're going to be early. You're going to be holding a normal nice case.
And then she says, just don't get lost. And of course, what does he do? He gets lost in the wrong
universe. But it's this really important, loving parental reiteration of the first film's message
that anyone can wear the mask, right? Then in the face of a number of people telling him that he
doesn't belong on the team in another universe, the Spider-Man at all, Rio's message, like, stiffens
his spine and allows him to have that defiant, you can't tell, no, I'm going to do my own thing.
You can't tell me who I am.
And again, that is something that he has that these other Peters don't have, because with great
power comes great responsibility is a fine enough message.
I'm not knocking this very important, canonically important Spider-Man message, but I don't
that it holds a candle to this speech from Rio Morales that I think we all wish we had from
our parents at one point or another.
How do you feel about the way Rio is used in this film, Melriorven?
Beautiful.
Absolutely beautiful.
And I liked that we got to see a different Rio and a different Earth and what was the
same, what was distinct.
But that conversation between Rio and Miles and the heart and substance of what she is
telling him and the belief in the hope, but also the fear in the fear that Miles has,
that he will let them down, paired with the really, like, fervently held desire that he has to go do the
thing that he wants. And then Jeff is, you know, very much a part of this too. We'll talk about him
in a minute. But, like, hearing him say, like, I just figured out how to do this. And then, like,
he went and changed. And now I have to figure it all out again. I love the way that the Rio and Jeff
stories are working in parallel with Miles.
Like, they're all on a journey of evolution and discovery and having to confront, like,
how to best love someone in the way that is right for them and not for you.
And, like, that that is maybe the hardest thing you ever have to do for somebody you really
care about, you know?
And, like, I thought that, you know, to the larger point, your observation you're making about,
how distinct this particular family unit is in the larger canon and how this, of course,
connects to the canon events examination side of the movie.
Like, the thing I kept thinking about watching it is like, well, what do we see about Miles already?
He is Spider-Man.
And that's true.
And he became a hero.
He's still learning.
He's still growing.
Every Spider-Man is.
Every Spider-Man is.
I'm sure Spider-Nois has things to learn still and things that he can do about.
better job of if he tried. But like having those people in his life didn't prevent Miles
from being a worthy hero who wanted to help other people and who earned our love, right?
At all. And so like why should that have to change? Right. And I love that like, you know,
because there's again the kind of like quintessential teenage stubbornness of like, I know what is best
and I know what is right and I know who I am. And there's to your point earlier about like not
knowing sometimes in scenes which character you're aligned with.
Like, when Miles is saying these things and he's like, when he's in his Spider-Man
get up talking to Jeff and Jeff, of course, doesn't know that he's talking to his own son.
And I was like, I'm sorry, I'm mixing Jeff and Rio.
Yeah, no, no, no.
You know, the moment when Miles is like, like, you just got to let him spread his wings,
man.
Spread his wings.
Yeah.
And it was so, it hit me so hard that like, Miles without the mascot couldn't say that to Jeff.
you know, it's like the whatever
and the fight on the
rooftop and the tension
like they have breakthroughs
with each other, sure.
But there's the worry
that you're going to disappoint somebody
who on some level you're frustrated
with like how they're like cramping your style
but on the other hand you know
truly wants what is what is best for you
and like I just, I don't know,
I really loved all of that.
And then of course like
when we're on Earth 42,
and we see that there is no Jeff there, right?
Aaron is alive, but Jeff is gone.
And, like, what is that four smiles to confront and think about?
Like, this was just all, I mean, this could have been the entire movie.
This is just one piece of, like, a vast tale.
But Rio, Rio and Jeff are, like, of all the different family units that we glimpse.
You know, there's a lot of Captain Stacey.
There's a lot of May Day.
But Rio and Jeff are, like, central, central, central figures in this story.
Yeah, and again, we need to be reminded of, like, what's at stake here?
What is it, you know, what is Miles fighting to protect?
And so we need to have Jeff present enough that we really care outside of vaguely caring,
whether or not a person's dad's supervisors, of course, we vaguely care,
but to, like, know how special the Jeff Miles thing is and not just special,
but, like, how they have, they have, no pun intended,
and Miles to go in their relationship,
that we want to see them traverse, right?
Like, Miles can say things with the mask on to his dad
that he can't say with the mask off
because in part it has to do with him,
but also in part it has to do with what Jeff can hear
and from whom he could hear it.
And, like, as Rio says, like,
it's so hard for them to think of him as not their little boy, right?
Yeah, he's 15. He's not an adult.
He has a lot to learn on ways to go.
But Jeff is able to hear Spider-Man
say certain things
and repeat those things later
to Rio, let him spread
his wings, that he wouldn't
be able to hear from Miles.
You know what he mean? So like, it's comedy
for Miles to adopt
that lower tone of voice
when he's wearing the mask and talking to his dad,
but it's also true that like
his dad is taking
him seriously as an equal
to a certain extent in a way that he can't
to his own son. And I think that also
So when you pair that scene that you think you're getting pretty good at being a parent,
you think you got it licked, and then they grow up, and I just want to lose, don't want him to lose him.
You pair that.
By the way, on the backdrop of the beautiful shimmering roof of the ruined Alchemex building, like beautiful scenes.
You pair that with what Río says about parenting yourself.
And we get this, like, bigger picture idea of what it means to parent yourself or what it means
for the child to parent the parent
an evolution
we all go through at some point in our lives
if we're lucky.
And like,
I think that feeds then
back into that a multiversal idea
of when you have someone
like Peter B. Parker show up to
advise Miles Morales. Or when you have
Toby McGuire and Andrew Garfield talking
to Tom Holland and roof and say,
I just don't want you to turn out like me,
that's the Spider-Man
parenting his inner child of a Spider-Man, right?
Right.
What did I need to hear when I was freshly Spider-Man and trying to figure this out, freshly bitten?
What did I need?
And we get to watch Peter B. Parker do that.
We get to watch Andrew Garfield and Toby McGuire do that.
And to go back to that Miguel O'Hara point, Miguel does not have that context of having been a teen and bitten.
because he was drugged with rapture and experimented on himself as a grown-ass adult.
So he doesn't have that inner spider boy that needs nurturing, you know?
And also, and perhaps because of that, perhaps because of other reasons,
he does not seem capable of or interested in providing that.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Like the Lego moment, like, thanks Peter, you're one of our best, is funny.
But it actually stands out because it's like,
a very, very rare moment
when we hear Miguel say anything,
anything kind to somebody.
And so the only thing
that he is giving Miles
is instruction, right?
It's limitation.
It's a wall in a push beyond.
Yeah, and rejection, right.
And like, it's the, it's the exact thing
that Rio was warning him against.
And again, in the context of the exact place
he was trying to reach and thought
he would find this ultimate sense of belonging,
like what a dead.
devastating thing to actually meet on the other end.
I want to shout out.
Luna Lauren Belize who plays Rio.
I think it's really interesting because, like, Rio has such a smaller role in the first film.
And I think you can tell, by the way, the role is cast because, like, she is one of the smaller names of all the, like, main character, voice actors.
She's done great live action work.
She's an incredible actress.
But, like, she's, you know, they didn't get, like, a name name for this role.
And I think...
Merchala Ali is Uncle Aaron.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like, two-time Oscar winner,
Merchola Ali is here, you know.
Well, one time Oscar winner, Daniel Kalu is here.
You know, Oscar nominee.
Brian Tyree Henry's here, like, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
But they just grew the character because they were interested in that character.
They didn't, you know, they shrunk Mary Jane down to nothing.
And so Zoe Kravitz is like, yeah, I'm not going to come back to do that.
You can get someone else to do four lines for Mary Jane.
That's not going to be me.
Let's talk about George Stacey, Shea Wiggum, who I think was another huge standout for me.
And this is not just because of Shea Wiggham, an actor.
Shout out, Ford Walk Empire Hive.
Massive. Massive fan of.
Shout out wrist cutters.
Like, love him.
His performance is great.
The design work on his incredibly emotionally expressive face, his face that looks a lot like Gwen's face.
also looks a lot like what the beast looks like when he turns back into a human at the end of meeting
and the beast.
She's a very expressive eyes and eyebrows.
Can you see it?
Are you okay?
Great.
Joanna, I was like, what does this remind me of?
And that was it.
Thank you.
You're welcome.
Tugging at my brain.
But on the children parenting their parents front, when Gwen comes back, what she said to him,
she says, you look skinny, like you haven't been eating, right?
And then she gives this whole speech.
to him, like a parent would give to a kid, right?
She gives this big moralistic speech to him.
You already cited the killer line, and they can only know half of who I am.
But, you know, you put on that badge because you know if you don't, someone who shouldn't will.
But you have to understand this mask is my badge, and I'm trying to be good, too.
I was trying so hard to wear this thing the way that you would want, and I didn't.
I didn't.
I could do all these things, but I couldn't help the people I love the most.
And then he just like quits his job in the middle of this speech
because Dean being her dad is more important
and he says you're the best thing I've ever done.
And then she says, you're not going to be a captain.
There's her loophole in the destiny, right?
If he's not a captain, then he's no longer that that canon, you know, benchmark for her.
It's interesting.
Maybe.
Like, did her, would Miguel say that she interfered?
with a canon event then, like that her conversation changed the course there.
That would be really interesting.
It's like absolutely harrowing.
I mean, we already have the, we talked about already the moment where Miles looks down at Gwen and Peter B.
during the incredible Nueva York sequence and is like, you knew?
Yeah.
And that just deep sense of betrayal that he feels.
But like thinking about this, like Gwen isn't just watching Miles grapple with this about Jeff.
she has been carrying this with her about her own father.
But she's kind of hiding out.
She's just not going home.
I think in the idea of like if she doesn't go home,
she doesn't have to deal with the choice at all.
Yeah.
That's just,
to think of what they've each been carrying away from each other
is really heavy.
And like when she goes back and like opens the drum
and sees that he has taken, you know,
the Miles photo.
and like he's been, without having the chance to talk to her or apologize yet,
like he's been considering something about who she is, right?
And the choices that she's made is the penguin with the walkie-talkie in it, etc.
And like the moment at the beginning in the,
in the Volta Guggenheim sequence,
when she does take off the mask and is met not with acceptance,
but with like to horror.
How long have you been lying to me?
How long have you been lying to me?
And like the reflex when he lifts his gun, like, holy fuck.
that was just an absolutely gut-wrenching thing to see,
and of course for both of them to carry after.
So the moment of reconciliation,
you know,
you talked already earlier beautifully
about the color palettes
and the way they change
and like the melting despair all around them
as they don't know if they're going to be able
to find their way back together.
And then like,
because the whole nature of the watercolor color palette
is like there's a lot of like merging
and morphing of brushstrokes, right?
And like that moment of not just the shift in hues, as you noted, but like there's a bright, clear, sharp burst of color and imagery and shapes and clarity.
And it's like to have finally pushed to a place where they could give that to each other again was just really lovely.
And it's like a nice, like it's never too late.
It seemed like it was going to be too late, right?
But it doesn't have to be too late.
And that's a nice thing to know.
When they're talking to each other right before the hug and the background is just,
abstract shapes.
Art.
This movie is art.
All right, we talked a lot about Peter B. Parker
already, but I just want to say a couple things.
He's the best.
Number one, he rejects
he rejects capes in the first film,
but his robe is awfully cape
like in this film.
May Day Parker, May Day Parker.
Like, there is no character
in this film that I can think of
other than, like, Miguel's daughter
who does not have a counterpart
in the comics. Like, every little spider
person comes from
somewhere in the comics.
And May Day Parker is no exception, right?
Created in the late 90s, the Spider-Girl, child of Peter Parker and Mary Jane Watson.
She's had the longest running superhero book with a lead female character ever published by Marvel before we relaunched as the amazing spider girl.
Love Mayday Parker.
Love this.
She's so fucking cute in every single frame.
Adorable.
It's wonderful stuff.
The day-past bit with like, I didn't know they made those first.
It's so funny.
The part where Peter, who, you know, of course, we should say just in case anyone doesn't remember, like,
a huge part of Peter B's arc and into the Spider-Verse is like he and his Mary Jane broke up,
and his MJ broke up because he didn't want to have kids.
Yeah.
And like, as he tells Miles in this movie,
what he found with Miles,
like that nurturing spirit and pride
and like investment in another person
literally fundamentally changed his life.
And it's such a funny moment in the first movie
when he's like, I love you and I'm proud of you.
Wait, do I want kids?
It just kills me.
It's superfect.
And then you get the really heartfelt follow-up
in this one where he's like,
I did this because of you
because I think you're incredible.
And Miles is like,
And I like spending time with you.
Yeah.
Like there would have been a moment where that would have been the most meaningful thing in the world to him.
And he's, what does he do?
He leaves because he's like, I thought that about you and look what you did to me.
Like, look what choice you made.
Look what you didn't tell me.
Well, we don't know how that would have gone if like the watch hadn't gone off, which like, you know, I don't believe that Peter was trying to trap him.
I think he was trying to, you know, pull him aside.
But yeah, this.
This is showing the baby photos.
Peter going from where he wasn't.
this one up. You're going to crack up with this one, right? Or he's like, he's like, Miguel's
going to love this one, you know, like, bowl of like, as if Miguel has ever smiled at a baby
photo in his life. But the end of Into the Spiderverse, after the like, wait, do I want kids,
like the very last sequence, right? You got to go home, man, Miles says. And Peter says, how do I
know I'm not going to mess it up again? And Miles says, you won't. Peter says, right, it's a leap
of faith, right? The leap of faith thread threw into the Spider-verse. But that's reflected, right,
at the end of this movie, right, when he says to his MJ, like, am I going to be good at this, right?
And she's like, you're asking this now?
But she says, there's no playbook for raising someone like her being someone like you, just got to make the right adjustments at halftime.
And then they have, Mallory, frankly, I've never felt so represented on screen as when MJ tries to explain to him what half time is.
And he's like watching Joel and Ellie talk about fourth downs.
It's like any podcast I do with any, any ringer podcaster.
Yeah, but now you know who Josh Allen is.
So you're good.
Buffalo Bills.
All right.
Anything we want to say about Peter B.
Before we move on?
I just adore him.
It is such an incredible character.
I would have liked a little more of him in the movie.
Harsh reality, Spider-Man.
What was the exact one is?
That was so funny.
Yeah, I agree.
He, that was the,
I would have liked more of him too.
I thought that his particular humor
was such a like a sprinkling of magic
across the first film
and I would have loved to touch more of it here.
He's the best.
All right, we've done our main spider people,
our villains, our parents.
We're going to get to the other spiders.
But, P.S., there are reportedly
over 280 spider people in this movie,
so we are not going to get to all of them.
We're just going to talk about Spider Cap.
And spider T-Rex.
Spider-Wolf.
All right, we really only have a couple that we want to mention here.
Margot Kes slash Spider Bite from Earth 2-2-1-9-1.
And you mention little flirtation, meet the little squiggly lines of recognition.
What was that about Mallory Rubin?
A crush.
You know, they had some energy.
And that's great.
That's great.
I obviously strongly ship Miles and Gwen, as I think many do.
but, you know, there are a lot of people out there in the multiverse.
For her to feel a little, a little threatened.
Yeah.
Like an old manless Denberg.
Yeah.
Also, there was, like, it was nice to have a real spark that helped build toward Spider-Bite's decision not to reboot, right?
The go-home.
The go-home machine.
As she's watching as Miles is about to escape.
And she joins the band at the end.
So, yeah, she's like, this guy's cute.
I'm going to give risk it all.
Hoops among us.
Indeed.
We didn't risk at all for post-growth spurt, Miles Morales.
All right.
Ben Riley, Scarlet Spider, shout-outs.
My palineers, Dave Gonzalez, who has been talking about Ben Riley for literally
like a decade of our friendship.
What a time to be, Dave.
Thrilled for him.
Seriously.
I'm so happy for Dave that Ben Riley, who's from like, it's,
complicated. David has explained it to me many times. It's a clone song situation. But people who
read Spider-Man comics in the 90s have this particular attachment to Ben Riley. So showing up as
voiced by Andy Sandberg, kind of doing his Nicholas Cage impression to make us miss Spider-Noire.
Genuinely fantastic stuff. Really, really incredible. The Uber 90s design, the muscles on top
of muscle stuff. Hilarious. Wonderful.
It's truly a delight.
We already mentioned the Lego sequence, which was added after the teaser came out and a 14-year-old kid from Canada recreated the scene with Legos, the teaser trailer.
And they're like, hey, kid, can we hire you to do a Lego sequence in the movie?
And he did.
So that's rad.
Earth 13122 Lego sequence.
J. Jonah Jameson is just always J.K. Simmons.
And I find that comforting.
Anything you want to say about that, Mallory?
I know that the larger examination is that things can be different across the multiverse, but not this.
Not this.
There is one constant.
Yeah.
And it is J.K. Simmons.
Penny?
Is that you, Penn?
Penny?
You answer.
All right.
You already mentioned most of the live action appearances.
I don't think we need to go into this other than just to say hearing Elph and Molina say, hello, Peter.
It's like, hello, Peter.
Really fun.
Should I should either of us read this long list of other spider people that's in this movie?
Life too short.
That's a long list.
I will just, I will call out the anomaly villain, the anomaly villain run through, which was amazing.
We get all the Doc Ox.
Moose stereo and Mistereo genuinely very funny, a boring rhino and interesting Craven.
This was great.
Did you like the typeface guy?
Yeah.
Go ahead.
Helvetica and then Miles going bold.
Loved it.
Loved it. Loved it. Loved it.
Peter Parked car, by the way, the car called Peter Parked Car.
Does kind of make a brief appearance and into the Spider-Verse.
Like, you see it in Aunt May's, it's, the car is in Aunt May's, like, warehouse thing.
And Dan Slott told me back when that film came out that that was, like, he, like, screamed
in the theater when he saw Peter Parked Car in the first.
movie of the million
Easter eggs. All right, that brings us to the end.
To Earth 42 and the cliffhanger,
we already talked about the nature of the cliffhanger a little bit earlier,
but let's talk about Clause of the Prellor,
the return of Uncle Aaron and the introduction of Miles G.
Morales.
Something that's really fun and rewarding on a second watch
is that the art of this world of Earth 42
is absolutely different
from Miles' home world.
Did you figure it out before
When did you figure it out?
Right away, because the go-home machine shows...
We flashed to it quickly and it says Earth 42 when it reads his DNA.
She's so sharp.
There's not getting anything past Mallory.
I think Adam was mad at me because I turned him and I was like, he's not going to his universe
and I think he was annoyed with me.
It's like in the outfit.
But then, you know, there are other, like the shading of the world.
His room is very different.
Rio's eyes are different.
So the clues like mount pretty quickly.
quickly, but the quick flash of the Earth 42.
But like, building toward Miles as the prowler still really hit me.
I was like, what is going to happen here on Earth 42?
This is going to be intense.
Also, Gwen being on 1610, so that even though I knew more Miles was, I was like,
oh, boy, the cutting.
And this is like, it was just really well edited as a sequence to have the like suspense
and tension now.
When Aaron walked through the door and, like, Miles and Gwen both have the moment where they figure it out.
There's a lot going on.
It's an intense moment for Miles.
I think, you know, would you recognize your own room or the color of your mother's eyes maybe?
But that's okay.
There's a busy day.
I feel like.
The office.
Well, he's going through something.
He's trying to make, he's having a big moment where he's trying to reveal something.
Yeah.
But like when his, oh, my God, his face when Aaron walks in, it was like, devastating.
It was like hopeful, but then like, terrible.
terrifying.
Yeah.
And the fucking prowler theme.
Yes.
The shot, when he sees the mural of his dad,
and then what happens is that Aaron's phone lights up,
which I have to imagine is like the other Miles texting him to be like,
I'm on my way or something like that.
And he just slides his eye over to look at our Miles.
So scary.
Very scared for him.
We got a punching bag.
Call back.
Call back to Peter B. Parker tied up in the punchy bag.
And how did Peter B. Parker get out of that in the first film?
He says, don't watch the mouth, watch the hands.
And when we see one little fingertip, I mean, we would love for him to have access to the full palm.
But he's got one little fingertip on the chain.
I love this.
I love the design of the other Miles, his hair.
And I love how our Miles is trying to look brave while clearly.
being terrified.
Like, I feel like in the animation style, you can see his, the rapidity of his breath or
like his pulse almost, but he's trying to keep very still and very brave in this moment
of extreme fear.
And something that I didn't see the first time until I need to look for it is that when
the spot talks about the spider 42 that was yanked out of Earth 42, it looks like it's
on its way to bite Miles G. Morales.
So it's not that it would have been
Peter Parker in that universe.
I think we're supposed to think that it
would have been Miles G. Morales, who would have
been bit by the Spider-Nearith
of already, too. Yeah, I think, I think so.
This was another extreme
empire strikes back
stretch where like...
Hans in trouble.
Hans in trouble, but also like, what if the face
you saw inside the mask was quite
literally your own, right? And having to
confront that was just like kind of sent a shiver up my spine.
And especially because like Miles is giving Aaron this whole speech, right?
Like you could be one of the good guys.
And then to see that another version of him is the prowler.
But like that I guess that's my question for you is do you think that Miles G,
the prowler of Earth 42, is going to end up being actually a bad guy in the third movie?
Because I do not.
Okay.
We're going to agree with.
Yeah.
I think he's an anti-herty.
virulante sort of thing.
I'm with you.
Okay.
Yeah.
Okay.
Wonderful.
This is great.
When we agree.
Gwen starts a new band.
Yes.
The drum music comes back.
So it's Peter B. Parker, Hobie, Pove, Spider-Man noir, Spider-Bite, Spider-Ham, and Penny.
Yes.
Right?
So the gang from the first film and the bit of the gang from the second film is here.
That's exciting.
Yes.
in Spider-Man, beyond the Spider-verse.
I don't know that we need to spend too much time speculating what's going to happen,
but I do like re-watching the film that both Gwen and Miles promised their parents
they'll be back.
Incredibly concerning.
Yeah.
Gwen says right back.
Yeah.
Right.
Miles is going to be back with cake, right?
I never like a promise.
You know, we're too much in the Promise Me Ned.
Yeah.
It's based to ever be comfortable when the word promise is uttered in the story.
The reason I think the prowler is an anti-hero.
vigilante sort of thing
is because we get that mention of the
Sinister Six cartel.
Like it feels like he and
O'Gallel are fighting the Sinister Six
cartel. But something I forgot to mention in the Jeff
section that I think is so interesting is
when we're talking about that Empire Strikes Back
idea of like looking in the mask,
Luke sees his own face, etc., etc.
This idea that Jeff has a shadow
self and it's Aaron, the fact that
like Jeff and Aaron were
you know, came up on the other side of the law as young men in their neighborhood.
The fact that, like, Jeff talks a bunch and into Spider-Verts about choices when it comes to Aaron, right?
Like, this sort of idea of, like, there before the grace go-eye kind of idea.
And, like, the Midnight Boys talked a bit about the fact that Jeff and Aaron in the comics,
and actually in the first film, their last name is Davis.
and they sort of reconded that and changed it
so that Jefferson Davis,
a horribly, racially problematic name
is no longer the name of the father in this story.
He's Jeff Morales.
Now he's billed as Jeff Morales in across the Spiderverse.
But what I love is,
canonically in the canon, he's Jeff Davis.
That would make Miles Davis.
But I don't think that's why it's not his last name.
Canonically in the comics,
Jeff says,
my dad, Miles's grandfather, made the name Davis, like mud in this neighborhood.
He was a criminal, bad reputation around it.
I don't want you to grow up with that.
You're going to have your mom's last name.
So it's Miles Morales after his mom, which I really, I just like love that whole idea
that Jeff is haunted by this darker choice, this darker path for himself and the ways
in which Miles, depending on how it goes with Miles G's Morales, I do believe he's a vigilante,
but like how far is he willing to go as a vigilante?
You know what I mean?
Like I think he's still going to be a hero, but is he a hero with different moral boundaries than our Miles has, you know, something like that.
I don't know.
But scheduled for March 29th, 2024.
I can't wait.
Yes.
Be on the Spider-Mird?
Yes, I am.
Anything you want to say about these other.
Spider projects that Amy Pascal and Avia Rod were teasing on the red carpet at the premiere
to variety?
As always, when they're teasing future Spider-Man stuff, only questions.
It's just when in a way, Avey is always a loose canon.
Like, never trust anything that I'll be.
Like, we go back through history of Avia Rod quotes, almost always bullshit.
Amy, much more reliable, but still, like, speaks more hopefully than.
maybe practically.
But she says,
a Spider Woman
in a live action
Miles Morales movie
are in the works.
She says you'll see all of it.
Avi says
you'll see a Spider Woman
movie sooner than you expect.
I don't know what to think.
What does that mean?
Avi, I don't know.
And then Amy also says
a four Spider-Man movie
with Tom Holland
and Zadaya is still in the works,
but the writer strike
is pause development.
We're in the process,
she says.
I would love another
Tom Holland,
Spider-Man MCU movie
at some point in the
the future, I would absolutely love a live action Miles Morales movie at some point in the future.
I think, like, let's like a finish Spider-Verse.
Yeah, wrap this up.
And enjoy one of the most remarkable things that we've ever gotten to witness.
And then, and then go from there.
Do you think, my question is, do you think that the live action Miles movie will be a part of the MCU-connected canon or a son?
Sony Solo.
I don't think it's part of the deal.
I think it's just Peter Parker that is like sort of the shared thing.
And so I think it would fall more into the Dr. Michael Morbius, Venom Craven the Hunter camp.
So, ominous.
Okay.
Not to Steve.
Not to Steve.
The world's number one Dr. Michael Morbius fan.
Okay.
Anything you want to say on the Easter egg front, there are a million of them.
I mean, we talked about so many of them already because obviously there are a lot.
in the canon events, sequences, et cetera.
I think that the Venom, the Earth's 6th 8, 8,
and it's just Jen visit was probably my favorite of those.
I did love that it's a bankruptcy callback.
I did a little trip into phone party
because Jeff and Miles had the conversation about,
phone party and into the Spider-Verso.
It was pretty funny to go on the inside there.
I enjoyed that.
What about you?
I'm going to point out two things.
One thing in terms of the Miles and Gwen connection thing,
I like that.
So Miles has a Black Lives Matter BLM pin on his backpack, and she's got this like protect trans kids poster on her wall.
And I just like, you know, they're like activist millennials.
I love that.
Or Gen Z's, sorry.
And I love that for them and their potential connection there.
And then also T-Rex, the way that his whip was captioned T-whip, T-Hip.
Yeah, wonderful.
Extraordinary stuff.
I also really enjoyed the Michelle Obama.
sticker in Miles room. Yes. Fantastic. We did it. I'm so impressed with us. I am sad to leave this
discussion. It has been such a joy to talk to you about the arachno-humanoid polymultiverse.
Anything else you want to say before we go, Mallory Grubin? Let me guess. He died.
Incredible moment in movie history.
Thanks, as always. To our very own.
Spider Society.
All.
Right?
An elite squad.
That includes
production work
from our dinner and
Paul.
Social.
From Jomi and Dineran.
And of course
our long-suffering
palsy involvement on this edit
that involves
many interruptions
from cats and gardeners
and other things.
A lot going on today.
The men and I boys will be back
on Wednesday with time travel
draft.
Again, we were very
threatened
and scared and sad and jealous about that.
We're excited.
Can't wait to hear.
And then Friday, Mint Edition is here.
So Stephen Jomey will be there on Mint Edition, but also debut of our new pal, our new partner
in crime.
Jess Klamans will be here talk about Transformers' Rise of the Beast.
We're so excited to have her here.
Please tune in and check that out.
And then Mal and I will be back on Monday with a mystery.
You'll find out along with the rest of us on Monday.
that might be. We'll see you then. Bye!
