The Ringer-Verse - ‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ Deep Dive Analysis | House of R
Episode Date: December 21, 2021A note up top: This episode contains content that details the entire MCU. Proceed with caution! Your friendly, neighborhood Ringer-Verse gang is here to break down the latest in the Spider-Man series,... ‘Spider-Man: No Way Home.' The duo discuss Spider-Man as a character and his many iterations (24:00), overall plot points (1;02:00), their thoughts and predictions for future installments (1:49:50), and more. Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson Associate Producer: Lani Renaldo Social: Jomi Adeniran Additional Production: Steve Ahlman, TD St. Matthew-Daniel, and Arjuna Ramgopal Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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slash predict slash bonus dash offer dash terms. We started getting some visitors from every
universe. Greetings. And welcome into the ringerverse here on the ringer podcast network.
I'm Mallory Rubin.
And it is my absolute pleasure to invite you not only to the Midtown School of Science and Technology,
but also to join us on the Ringers Nexus podcast feed for all things fandom.
Joining me now via Slingering Portal!
It's my House of our working title, co-host, my favorite web crawler.
ringer senior staff writer joanna robinson joe what's up oh my god hello mallory this is what i have to say
about our friendship even if i were ever to forget you via some sort of magical spell i will still
wear a shard of venetian glass that you bought me on our school trip around my neck is that because it
reminds you of me or the murder both touching touching either way that's
Really beautiful. That's lovely.
Joe, we have a big show today.
We are, of course, here to chat about the cinematic event of the season of the year.
Spider-Man, no way home.
Let's quickly issue some programming reminders before we swing into things.
It is another busy stretch on the ringer-verse feed.
A lot of pods.
The Midnight Boys, Dan and Charles.
Poo-Pew-Poo!
Dooku.
I already have their No Way Home instant reaction pot up for you.
And they went house of our length on this one.
Two hour instant reaction.
That's how much there is to talk about.
Listen to that if you have not already.
The Midnight Boys will be back in mere days.
They will be with you on Wednesday with their instant reaction thoughts on the Hawkeye finale
because somehow the Hawkeye finale is already here.
What is time?
I don't know.
then we will be back on Friday with our Hawkeye finale Deep dive.
Keep an eye out for some Matrix chat on the feed as well.
And then, of course, head back next week because it's Star Wars time.
Next week is the Boba Fett premiere and we will be here with you to dive in.
How can you follow all of that, Joanna?
I'm so glad you out.
I could tell you we're about to ask. How can everyone follow that?
Where?
Follow the pot.
On Spotify, or wherever you get your podcast.
Follow our social feeds. The ringer verse is on Twitter.
The ringer verse is on Instagram. The ringer versus on Facebook.
And of course, one more note.
And this is a big one today. I mean, it's always a big one, but it's a really big one today.
please bear in mind our friendly neighborhood spoiler warning we will be going into great detail
on the plot of spider man no way home and we will be doing it right from the jump so if you have not
seen the film please come back and listen to this pod after you have we will be talking about the
entire MCU run to date including some hawkeye talk we're going to get into some hawkeye talk later
So keep that in mind as you go.
We are going to be talking about all of the Sony Spider-Men movies.
We're going to be talking about Marvel, Spidey, Comics, Canon, all of it.
This is a vast and sprawling spoiler warning.
So please proceed with caution.
Proceed with more caution than Peter did when he asked Dr. Strange to amend his spell.
Okay.
Okay.
Programming notes issued.
Quick question for you.
Web shooters at the ready.
Wait, wait, wait, quick, quick, overarch.
ringerverse question for you.
Yes.
I know you're so excited to talk about Book of Boba Fett.
It feels far away because we've got like 90 shows to record before then.
But you're so excited to talk about Book of Bov Fett.
I'm also excited to talk to you about it.
I'm going to drop you this prompt now.
Hopefully you can talk about it for a Hawkeye episode.
Can you give me like a primer of like what I should watch to get ready for
Boba Fett on the Hawkeye episode in a couple days?
Absolutely.
I'm putting in that request.
now. Absolutely. Great idea.
I want to get on your level. I'll need you to remind me between now and then.
I will remind you. I want to get on your level now.
Great idea. I'd love to introduce you to
140-some episodes of Cloud Wars.
You have time for that the next week and a half?
I'm asking you to...
Give you a more targeted list than that. Guide me through 140 episodes of Club Wars.
Anyway, we're here to talk about Spider-People people. Let's do it.
My Boba prep list for you will just be showing you pictures of my boba, Lego, Helmet.
No, I'll give you an actual list.
It'll be great.
This is going to be fun.
We get to talk about Star Wars together.
What a joy.
What a time.
Can't wait.
What a girl.
One more thing, actually, before we start today.
Got a shout out.
Lonnie.
Lonnie Ronaldo is here with us today to produce this episode, helping out on the ringerverse.
What a first ringer verse episode.
Lonnie, here's our promise to you.
And by promise, I mean, we're going to try.
we're not going to go longer than the runtime of the film.
Okay?
If we do, we'll ask Dr. Strange to cast a spell
so that everyone forgets I ever said this.
Lonnie, I hope you're well hydrated.
Let's do it. Let's go.
Okay.
We are here.
Let's talk about Spider-Man, No Way Home,
directed by John Watts, written by Chris McKenna,
Eric Summers, directed, of course, by,
I already said directed,
produced by Kevin Feige and Amy Pascal,
a joint Sony Disney Venture runtime, 148 minutes.
This is, of course, the fourth film of Phase 4, 27th MCU film overall,
starring quite a cast, including some delightful surprises.
We have so much to hit on today,
but as always, we're going to start with some big picture thoughts,
not to be confused with the Big Picture podcast,
where you can also listen to some Spider-Man-No way home doc.
Overall impressions, Joe.
Impressions, Joe.
A snapshot of your thoughts and your feelings,
all of which we will return to in more depth
throughout the discussion today.
How'd you feel about No Way Home?
Well, I will just say, so if people
have been listening to us talk about this
leading up to the release,
you will know that I was deeply cynical and skeptical
doing my full MJ skepticism vibe
going into this.
And then most of the Ringervor's folks,
everyone else actually, the ringerverse, saw this a day before me.
And so I was so eager.
Oh, I missed you.
I was so eager to hear what they thought.
And even the most, like, even my co-sceptics liked it.
So that put me in a skeptical but hopeful place when I saw it at the press screening that I went to on a Tuesday.
And you guys went to a really rowdy packed screening.
Mine was the usual San Francisco quiet, socially distant, 10 people in a room screening.
So not the same experience.
However, I loved it.
And I cried as I texted you afterwards.
I like wept into my mask for half the movie.
And that's how I feel.
And would I say, I mean, A, I think my low expectations helped me love it, honestly.
And B, I would say that have I thought about a lot of details that don't make sense in the ensuing days?
Do I have issues with some of the story elements?
Yes.
But I'm not going to ding it for that.
to talk about it, but I'm not going to ding it for that because they landed it emotionally,
and that's ultimately for me what matters at the end of the day. So they got, they landed all
the emotional beats they needed to get me fully invested in the story. And so I have a lot of praise
for this film. They did it. Mallory Rubin. What's your, I know, I mean, I listen to the big picture
pod, so I already heard your big picture thoughts, but I want to hear your big picture thoughts here
on our show right now. Joanne, I loved the movie. I loved it so much.
It was a delight and a joy.
And sincerely, it's something that I will remember seeing and feeling for quite some time.
I mean, getting to see this again, you were sincerely, deeply miss.
Getting to see it with most of the Ring or Verse family was such a treat.
And, you know, I knew how I was feeling about the movie watching it.
A lot of laughter.
A lot of tears, a lot of gasps, a lot of clutching the arms of the people sitting on either side of me.
And in the instant moments after debriefing, two things were clear to me.
Charles liked the movie a lot and Amanda liked the movie a lot.
And that was when I knew that they had done it.
Wild.
To Sean, they got Charles, they got Dobbins.
They fucking did it.
And they did.
They did it.
I love the movie so much.
I mean, there were so many moments that I will remember, like, exactly where I was and who I was with and how it felt to see that for the first time and to experience them in the theater.
Like, this was, you and I've discussed this before, but this was for me probably the first.
Boy, am I glad I saw that in the theater with a lot of people sharing that moment together experience for me.
And in a couple of years now, the portal opening, Andrew Garfield coming through, the three, three, three.
Spider-Men swinging together.
The look on Peter's face when he doesn't tell MJ,
when he doesn't read the letter at the donut shop,
on and on the list goes,
there were so many impactful, powerful moments in the movie.
And broadly, it felt like,
I think the way that it concluded is an on-ramp
to a number of fascinating possibilities
for future installments,
which we will obviously discuss later
and speculate about later.
But it felt like a culmination
and a celebration,
not only of the
MCU
Spider-Man trilogy,
but of all the Spider-Man films before,
more broadly of Spider-Man as a character,
recognition of why fans love
this character and this part of the
superhero universe so much.
And it was just a splendid thing
to be able to watch and share together.
I'm delighted.
I was nervous,
and I am so, so relieved and thrilled and delighted.
And guess what?
We're not the only people who like the movie.
It's a smash it.
Well, yeah, it's, because both you and I think Steve said this on The Midnight Boys, and I do, like, I don't know if envy's the word, but I do think that, you know, that added theatrical thrill of people hooting and hollering at certain spots.
There's only one hoot and hoot in my screening and it was like when Charlie Cox appeared.
And I think that person was like, oh, I'm the only one hooting.
I won't hoot again.
You know what I mean?
So it was like a pretty quiet screening, but I still, I think I probably would have, I don't know.
I don't know if I could have loved it more because I really, they got me emotionally.
And that's like what I was looking for.
And maybe my closest analog in the post-COVID, except we're not post-COVID, but like in the
we're going back to theater phase is Dune, where I felt this like theatrical shock and awe
of seeing Dune.
But, but yeah, I mean, I'm so glad you guys had the hooting and the hooding and the hollering.
Tell me how much money this movie, how grossly we unrest.
estimated when we predicted the box office last week.
Yeah, the studios are hooting and hollering.
That's for sure.
It's true.
The numbers are massive.
No Way Home netted $260 million domestically,
$340.8 million internationally, $600.8 million globally.
That's the second biggest domestic box office opening ever
and the third biggest global opening behind Endgame.
an infinity war that is astonishing.
The reception is also matching the box office.
This is an incredibly well-reviewed film.
Critics love it.
Fans love it.
There seems to be a lot of shared euphoria.
I think that the relief aspect that you mentioned,
you know, going in maybe with some healthy skepticism,
that MJ-esque idea in the movie itself, you know,
if you're expecting to be disappointed,
the fact that they pulled it off
and that this felt so fully realized.
And I think there is this larger sense
of like all of us being able to just say,
hey, look how wonderful this thing is.
They did it.
What an amazing marker, not only for the MCU
and the superhero genre,
but what this might mean moving forward.
And that's one of the things I was curious to ask you about
because there have been, you know,
I think I've enjoyed Phase 4 so far.
You know, I love the Disney Plus show.
so that's really helped my
phase four experience overall.
But I think that there's been some
oh, how is phase four going?
Yeah.
Shatter, right?
Yeah.
Out there in the viewing public.
How big of a deal do you think this movie's success is?
And I'm curious for your perspective
in two different lanes here.
For the movie industry,
more broadly.
Yeah.
But also for the vibes around,
the way phase four is taking shape. And, you know, within that, too, the Sony of it all.
Because obviously, this is not just a Disney MCU vehicle. This is a joint venture with Sony,
which is in the midst of unspooling and expanding its own Spider Universe. Yeah. The movie industry
question is complicated because it's, this comes off the disappointing box office returns
for West Side Story, massively disappointing box office returns for West Side Story.
that had people really worried about the future of theaters.
And I think this, despite this being a big win for Sony and Disney,
this still has people worried about the future of movie theaters
because it's not that people aren't coming out to the movie theaters at all.
It's that they aren't coming out to anything but a big spectacle movie.
And that I love a big spectacle movie.
We do a whole podcast, long podcasts about them and I love them.
But like most movie fans, I would like a variety.
variety to be able to live and thrive at the, this is the doom and gloom sort of forecast that
people who have been, you know, low on superhero movies have been saying that, that it would
squeeze out other films. And I've been resistant to that, but like, this is, I don't know,
I'm having to think about it this week, for sure. It's hard to read the tea leaves of the box office
metrics right now at all, though, because of the COVID factor. Right. Which is a real thing.
Absolutely. I know people who are huge movie fans, who love,
liked this movie and are still a little troubled by the disproportionate responses,
those two movies.
It's Disney movie versus Disney movies.
So we'll all be living in the House of Mouse anyway at the end of the day.
So we're going to get into the future of the Spider franchise a bit more later.
But I will say that, you know, when it comes to to the bargaining table that they might
want to be headed to, to negotiate certain people's contracts, et cetera, et cetera.
the financial success of this movie is going to be a huge factor in what willing people are willing
to pony up to have another go at this.
And then in terms of the phase four of it all, I think that if this movie had whiffed,
there would be so many headlines of Marvel and trouble.
You know, because I think, I love you saying you love the Disney plus shows because that was
one of my favorite exchanges on the big picture.
Sean is like, they're just fine.
And you're like, they're great.
And I love you.
Sean is wrong.
And that's fine.
But I think people are feeling like a kind of,
this felt like, you know,
people are talking about this like an end game level event.
And the,
and the shine of bringing Toby and Andrew
and all the villains into this,
plus casting forward by bringing in Charlie Cox,
all that sort of stuff.
There's just a lot of dazzle and star power to this
that maybe some of the new movies,
like Shang-chi or Eternals,
even though there's a lot of star power reternals.
These aren't characters that we like know
and are excited and are like screaming to see.
These are characters we're getting to know.
And it's worth remembering that like, you know,
when Thor debuted and when Cap debuted,
like people were only mixed excited about those.
You know, so I think you needed something this big and familiar
to get people to go, oh yeah.
Oh yeah.
I remember what Marvel could do.
I don't know.
What do you think?
Yeah, I think that's,
That's a great point because it's often difficult to send ourselves back mentally to the dawn of the MCU,
you know, the pre-Iroman moment and to think about how much of that choice to launch with Tony Stark stemmed from IP rights issues, right?
What was even possible?
Yeah.
And focus groups centered around toys and what the people looking to make money thought people would buy.
Like the fact that the MCU, and of course, you know, we are both as deep into the nerd versus we can be, we love this stuff.
We love the comic books like, we're the target audience.
So the tradition of fandom dates back decades and decades and decades.
You know, Spider-Roman is about to celebrate a 60th anniversary as a character, right?
it's not like this is new, but superhero movies becoming the central driving force of mainstream
pop culture.
Yeah.
It took a lot of things and a lot of surprising developments to get us to this point and to go
this way.
And so I really love that last point you made because the end game comp is really interesting.
I think they are obviously different movies and the things that built.
up to them, you know, the Infinity Saga for Endgame, and then all of the Spider-Man movies here are different.
But there is this massive backlog and shared history of watching all of these Spider-Man
movies and reading Spider-Man's stories over the years.
And in that sense, even though I think there is this for fans and the people making movies
alike, probably this sigh of relief that this is so beloved and sparking so much excitement
and could potentially spawn so many.
wonderful and thrilling stories to come in some ways it is still an aberration even inside of
this context because Spider-Man is the most popular Marvel character. And of course, there are
other very, very, very popular Marvel characters, but Spider-Man is a character who just means a lot
to a lot of people and has for a long time. And I'm curious for to pan back even further for a second
before we dive into the film and the characters and the themes to ask you about that. Like,
what is your relationship to Spider-Man as a character and to the previous films inside of the
MCU and out heading into No Way Home and how did that inform your expectations and your experience
with the movie? Yeah, I mean, I'm a spider fan. I'm not a born and raised on the comic Spider-fan,
but like been a fan of the movies, my opinion of the movies have changed over the years, but I'm a huge
fan of the Tom Holland Spider-Man. I know not every. I know it's so interesting because you hear different
Like, I thought I understood what Spider-Man purists, like people who were longtime comic book fans and they're like, this is who Peter really is.
I thought I understood what they wanted.
But I actually feel like I get different takes from different people about like which iteration, which cinematic iteration feels the closest to what they think Peter Parker really is.
I don't think there's one.
But that's part of what's fun about it, right, that the character means different things to different people.
Totally, totally.
but there isn't one like all the purest cosine, you know,
the platonic idea of this adaptation.
I think my Spider-Man fandom leaptive
several octaves up after Into the Spider-Verse.
I think that's one of the best comic movies all time.
Strongly agree.
I got really, really into the world much more after that.
But I think that, I think it's interesting to think to the Spider-Man legacy
in the MCU is so important for the origin story of everything. It's impossible to overstate
how important the Sam Ramey films were for what Marvel Studios is today, not just because,
you know, the amount of money they made showed, showed Marvel proper how much money they were
leaving on the table by farming the rights of their characters out. So they wanted to bring it all
sort of in-house and do the movies themselves.
That's one aspect of it.
But also that Kevin Feigy himself was working on these films as like an assistant.
He was on the set of these Spider-Man films observing.
I mean, he shouts out Sam Ramey and he shouts out Avia Rod, though my Avia Rod feelings
are very complicated.
But the other person he shouts out that I think gets forgotten is Laura Ziskin, who was
the head producer on the Sam Ramey Spider-Man films and the first Andrew Garfield film.
and then she passed away.
But a lot of people talk about her as this guiding force.
Amy Pascal is also obviously, Amy hired Laura.
Amy Pascal has also been a huge part of this whole legacy.
But my understanding is that Laura's attitude on that set was very much like,
let's not be afraid to make a comic book movie.
Whereas on the X-Men set, the X-Men, Brian Singer X-Men movies,
Brian Singer banned comic books from the set, right?
Those characters were not allowed to wear the yellow suits.
You know, they had to wear these like black leather tactical suits and stuff like that.
You know, it was very much like, we're not making a comic movie.
We're making this.
And Laura's like, how about we make a comic book movie?
And I think that that spirit of like joy and like childlike wonder that comes from that
that attitude that Laura had, that Sam Ramey had, I think Kevin
Feigey has said that Sam always talked about making the movie with the childlike wonder of the audience in mind.
Like all of that stuff just goes down the decade with Spider-Man.
So it's just a core story of the, it's like the keystone story of the Marvel cinematic universe, I think.
That's fascinating.
I think that what you said about the way that people have like different.
feelings and thoughts on the ideal
version of Peter
and which of the actors is there, Peter, etc.
To get to midnight court to hear a ring reverse debate
on this very subject is always so interesting
because again, the character means different things
to different people.
Some of the response is universal and some of it is so highly specific.
And that's one of the reasons that we love stories
and we love worlds that we can fall into immersively.
I love Spider-Man.
Let me say that, Joanna.
Let's get that on the record.
Hot take.
Hot take now.
Scorchy take.
I love Spider-Man.
I love Spider-Man movies.
I have re-watched the...
I have re-watched all of the Spider-Man movies.
The Toby movies, the Garfield movies, the Holland movies, twice now in the last few months,
because I watched all of them to prepare for just the trailer.
It's just felt a compulsion.
Guess what? It was a blast.
And then obviously, this past week did a full rewatch again.
Obviously.
I love you.
Spider-verse, I think we're all in agreement that Spider-verse is an all-time achievement.
Just an absolutely astonishing, sublime movie.
My feelings on the original Ramey trilogy are complex.
I think the best way, no, go ahead, go ahead.
They haven't aged super well for me.
Every time every we watch them, I have a tougher hang with them.
Yeah, I have a similar experience with it where I think, like, I recognize and always will how important they are.
And obviously, Spider-Man 2 in particular is like seminal, right?
And the role that they play not only in getting us to a place like No Way Home, but more broadly,
the superhero movie genre is irrefutable.
He is not my number one Peter on the power rankings, and that's fine.
The Garfield movies obviously are flawed,
but I've always thought that Andrew Garfield was a fabulous Peter Parker and a fabulous Spider-Man.
And we're going to talk about him more in a minute, but getting to see,
I mean, getting to see both Toby and Andrew was a delight,
But getting to see Andrew Garfield get another crack at this was just such a treat.
Tom Holland is my favorite Peter Parker.
Again, check out Midnight Court for the winning argument that Jomey and I delivered.
But part of that, and I know that this is not an opinion that everybody shares.
Part of that is because I love the way that Peter Parker as a character,
has been deployed in the MCU across the shared team-up movies
and the standalone films alike.
One of the things that I love best
about the standalone MCU Spider-Man films
is the way that the trilogy functions as a coming-of-age story.
I mean, Homecoming.
You know, we talked about this a bit,
Sean and Amanda and I talked about this a bit on Big Pick,
and, you know, Jason and I talked about this for hours on binge mode,
that John Hughes-esque, like, true, let's make a high school movie spirit,
inside of the superhero rapper, you know, one of the shots that I love best in the MCU
when Peter has trapped in the facility chatting with Karen and he's wearing his full Spider-Man
suit, but he has the midtown tech debate jacket over it. And this is perfect encapsulation
of the dissonance and many realities in his own life, right? This movie, No Way Home, one of the things
I loved about it so much, is that it is a recognition that a coming of age story necessarily
features evolution and growth, but you don't ever have to lose that spirit.
You know, the coming of age aspect of the story, growing up, losing the people you love,
making choices about the next phase of your life.
That is still so central, even inside a very dark film.
I think that there's been a tonal progression across the three movies.
You know, I think that far from home is actually quite heavy in many respects coming on the wake of endgame.
So much of that movie centers on Peter grappling with the burden of inheriting Iron Man's mantle.
But this movie, No Way Home, is like a recognition, recognizes and engages with how the intervening years have been a coming of age story more broadly, not just for the Tom Holland Spider-Man.
But for Spider-Man movies and for the superhero genre as a whole.
And I think that that was one of the things that made this such a rewarding moviegoing experience.
It is so self-aware, but not in a way that felt like cheap or overly navel-gazy.
It was really impactful and insightful and smart and funny and poignant.
And I just loved it.
Did you love it?
But they nailed it.
I loved it.
It's interesting that you point that out because, you know, when I came out of it saying I loved it,
my friend and your Dave Gonzalez, who is the number one spider fan that I know, was like,
oh, you loved it, did you?
Let me give you a litany of reasons why you shouldn't have loved it.
And though he didn't, like, move my needle on my love meter.
God, I don't know.
I didn't know how to say that.
One of the things that he was interested in talking about was that idea that the prompt
when they made this was like, okay, so basically,
Figeyke works on the original Ramey Trilogy,
not in a, you know, super official Marvel Studios capacity.
He is an producer, exact producer, on the two Garfield movies
because that's part, that was part of the whole Sony Marvel deal at the time
is that Marvel gets to weigh in.
And if you've read some of that leaked-tack Sony emails,
which you can feel one way or another about doing that.
But if you have, you know that Faggie was
giving active commentary on the Andrew Garfield films.
It's just they didn't have to listen to him if they didn't want to.
But like he was allowed to weigh in as per their contract, you know.
And then he gets to make the Tom Holland movies.
The Tom Holland movies are by being like finally.
Like I watched some things go down as an assistant.
I watch things go down as an executive producer without a lot of power.
And now I finally get to like steer the ship how I want it to go.
Amy Pascal had this really interesting quote about Kevin Feigy where she was talking about how he was the assistant who was in the room for years and said nothing and was just sitting and listening and fetching coffee and saying nothing.
And then when he finally opens his mouth, she's like, oh my God.
She's like the strength to probably have better ideas than most people in the room, but know that you're working your way up the ladder so you don't say anything.
But you're just holding onto these notes you have.
So then he gets to make this movie, which is not just a culmination of the of the Holland trilogy that he had a heavy hand in crafting.
But him getting to sort of like put some spit shine on these two other franchises that he was less empowered to work on.
So it's the ultimate.
This is the ultimate Fygi Fix It moment, right?
Like we talk about that with Ultron.
We talked about it with Thor, The Dark World and the way in which those rock.
Marvel movies have been sort of polished up by some recent phase four slash end of phase three
properties. This is the ultimate version of that of like, I can fix how you feel about the
Tomi and Guire movies. I can fix your bad opinion about Andrew Garfield because those of you who
saying he wasn't good. No, he's great. Guess what? Let me show you. All that sort of stuff.
But what it does do in the process is get away from the original prompt, which was we're not going to do
the same Spider-Man story. So in this story, you have the Spider-Bite is mentioned. You've got the
Uncle Ben moment with Aunt May. You know, you've got all the stuff that they said they weren't going to do,
that they kind of do it here. I'm not mad about it. And I like your point about you need evolution,
you need growth, you need, maybe we've just been watching a three movie origin story. Like,
maybe that's all we're talking about. But basically, essentially, the end of this movie,
Tom Holland is placed in the exact same spot that all the Spider-Boys have been placed before.
Yeah.
When Marvel and Sony did such a good job of giving us something so fresh, do you know?
So, again, that didn't change my, that didn't make me have a bad opinion of the movie, but I don't know, it is interesting to think about it.
And I am less, we're going to get all to all of this, but I am less excited about the movie after this.
Okay.
Oh, interesting.
potentially we'll talk about it depends what it is but yeah i i'm glad you just mentioned that because
i've been thinking about that a lot actually in part because of the fact that i love the mccum tom holland
movie so much for all of those reasons like in terms of the i mean we honestly we could just
talk about this part of this for for two hours both well in terms of the number of moments in the
movie where there's this like self-referential self-deprecating quality, you know, making fun of a
rhino, like iconic. I mean, there's just so many great moments that fall into that, that figy
polished job that you're describing. And as you're saying, the inverse was also true, which I thought
about a lot. I was actually thinking about that quite actively in real time watching it because it is,
it hits you when these things that you have grown accustomed to not seeing in the MCU are suddenly there.
And that's a delicate balancing act.
I mean, the MCU movies are in a lot of ways a active response to the structure and the recurring beats in the prior films.
And honestly, in so many of the comic versions, even though, of course, those are like the DNA strands.
radioactive spider bite modifications and all that allow all of these things to be possible.
But think of something like, this is true, not even just in the standalone films, but in the
conversations that Peter has in other movies, you know, in his introductory scene, his first
conversation with Tony and Captain American Civil War where he talks about like how he'd like
to play football, but I couldn't then, so I shouldn't now.
and compare that idea to something like Garfield's Peter dunking on Flash and shattering the backboard in that movie.
Or, of course, not showing Ben's death.
Peter mentions to Ned, you know, the spider bite.
We hear them talking about it and Homecoming, but we don't see that.
We don't go through those origin story beats.
The Ben, the Ben Death is really interesting.
I think we'll circle back to this point specifically when we talk about Aunt May, RIP in a little bit.
But I always thought that when Peter said to Tony in Civil War, when you can do the things that I can, but you don't.
And then the bad things happen.
They happen because of you.
I always thought that that was the MCU's way of saying Ben Parker lived and died and a choice that Peter made somehow directly connected to those events just as you have always experienced and they're often experienced in these stories.
but we didn't play out those beats in the MCU.
Now, another thing, this is a small one,
but this has always kind of stood out to me.
Heights, the way that Peter swings when we first see him.
Like the fact that he is scared to scale the Washington monument
and Homecoming because it is so high.
And I've always been struck by there's a,
there's a 2017 Q&A in the Hollywood reporter with Aaron Couch
where Jonathan Goldstein, one of the screenwriters for Homecoming,
coming said, quote, we wanted the movie to focus on him coming to terms with his new abilities
and not yet being good with them and carrying with him some real human fears and weaknesses like a
fear of heights because nobody ever dealt with that before. You just sort of assumed he gets
bitten by a spider. He's totally comfortable on top of tall buildings. But why did that have to be
the case? And I always thought that that was such an interesting question and one that really tapped
into the overall perspective and approach of homecoming and of the deployment of Peter Parker inside
of the MCU. So that can all, it's great. It's great, right? Because right, why would he just immediately
be comfortable swinging from the highest buildings in New York? Why? Like, it's a fascinating question to
ask. And I think we got a lot of really interesting movies because they asked those questions.
So all of that is true. And all of that was important to giving us this version of Peter.
I think, and this is sort of where I've landed after thinking about this for a few days,
I think that all of that can be true and is elemental to our MCU experience. And it's
can also be true that this movie is a recognition and celebration of the shared universe and
evolution and impact on the masses through that because something like what you said about how
Peter ends up where Spidey tends to be i'm saying Peter everyone's Peter hollins Peter
he should have come up with like a code of them nicknames Peter one Peter one exactly oh my god the
Peter two Peter three things so funny just great stuff
Peter won, ending up sewing his own suit. I think like a lot of people are like,
oh, finally, Peter made his own suit. And I'm like, well, he started with a suit that he had made
before he took the Stark Tech. You know, he had his little sweatsuits, Spider-Boys, by the
lady. Exactly. And even the moment when he's, yes, he's using Stark Tech on the plane and far from home,
but he's making his own suit and these connections to Tony and the roots inside of the M-Suit,
but also Peter's origin, the fact that he's going into an apartment,
that of course makes us think of Toby's apartment in the Ramey films, right?
Fix the door!
All of it.
And he is alone.
And that is so deeply sad.
And there is a part of me, yes, that agrees with Dave and thinks,
is it strange to have worked through three movies plus all of these other team-up experiences
to get to the point where we're used to starting?
I think there's something that is philosophically and thematically and incredibly
rich and interesting to parse there, though, about the core of Peter's character and the way that
loss shapes his life.
I want to zoom back to something you said about the different ways that the Peters react to
getting their powers.
This is this sort of revelation I had rewatching the Toby and Andrew films, which is like,
why do I love the Holland films so much more than the Toby and Andrew films?
One of them is like the way in which women are used, it feels fundamentally different to me.
Because if you go back and watch the Toby films, the way that Peter is like spying on MJ while she changes and the way that MJ is such like an object to be like thrown off bridges or one passed around between male characters, like all that stuff really bugs me these many years later.
And then I was even in the Andrew films where like Gwen Stacy's given a little bit more agency.
But like the first thing that Uncle Ben says about her is like that's a pretty girl.
And the first thing that Aunt Mays is about her is that's a pretty girl.
And I'm just like, okay.
But like, compare that to like how.
Let's talk about her being valedictorian, damn it.
Right.
Let's talk about her.
Getting into Oxford.
Wearing thigh highs while she does it.
You know, like so, you know, we get to MJ.
We get to Zendaya.
Like it's such a breath of fresh air.
And then what's also true about Tom Holland
And I've been thinking a lot about
The Lipsink Battle umbrella dance
An iconic moment
In Internet Dumb and TV Dumb, right?
That Tom Holland goes on lip sync battle
And does singing in the rain
And then he does wearing Rihanna's umbrella
And he does it straight
And by straight I mean he's not making fun of the fact
That he's like doing this thing in drag
He's just like, I'm doing this
And automatically I think a lot of women watch that
and feel like safe.
Like this is a guy who is like respects women.
That's how,
that's what I feel coming off Tom Holland.
I'm not saying Andrew Garfield doesn't or Toby Ware doesn't,
but we don't have this moment in the spider.
It's important.
It sounds silly, but it's important.
And when I was rewatching those Andrew and Toby films,
I was like, there's this Revenge of the Nerds vibe about these Peters,
where it's like these Peters who have been bullied are like,
ha ha, now I'm top of the world, I'm going to show you.
And that's just never the vibe that you get off of Peter 1.
He is remarkably unchanged by this big change that happened to him.
And that's, I think, why this trilogy has been my favorite,
barring into the Spider-verse has been my favorite.
Anyway, I think we're maybe a little lost in the weeds,
but that's that was sort of something I was thinking about a lot
and we're going to get back to it when we circle back to like May
but like the way that the spider franchise treats women in general
is something worth talking about I think
an extraordinary number of moments in the original trilogy
where if you just hit pause at any point you would pause on a screaming woman
being thrown off a building of some sort you know what I mean
and what I loved about the Holland trilogy is that a woman was never thrown off a building until now
And so, you know.
And did I cry?
To hear your thoughts about that scene, yeah, given that, yes, I cried.
I cried.
Yeah, he did.
I cried.
The three Spider-Man.
Let's talk about what happens in the movie a little bit more here.
Let's do it.
Joe, they did it.
It was rumored, talked about for Ions felt inevitable.
And yet.
I can only speak for myself here, but I'll say this too.
I would draw the distinction, and this we can talk a little bit about how we personally navigate the internet between rumors and leaks.
Because I actually did not know definitively.
I try to avoid leaks and don't always succeed.
The internet is misperilous, right?
But I try.
The rumors were just so pervasive that this felt flat out inevitable, right?
They were going to be in the movie.
it would have been, I think, shocking
if they had not been in the movie.
And yet, when Ned opens the portal
and you see Spider-Man,
and then he turns around and you realize
the shape of his body, his height,
the length of his neck, the exact
the exact details of the suit,
all of it, you realize it's Andrew
and everyone gasps and shouts,
Charles and are like clutching each other.
That goes high, high, high, quickly,
high on my all.
all time. I will remember how that felt seeing that for the first time list. It was just so incredible.
How did that movie land for you? And more broadly, what did you make about the amount of the
amount of time that Peter 2 and Peter 3 were in this movie because I was shocked, delighted,
but shocked that they were in so much of the movie. I thought we would spend a few scenes.
I didn't know how it would happen, but I thought we would spend a little bit of time with them
overall that's one of the things that impressed me most about the film both with the three peters
and with all of the villains so many moving parts so many things to balance and the calibration
somehow just felt exactly right yeah i mean i will i will agree with that with the peters we can
talk about the villain stuff in a little bit but like the peter stuff all like those are my favorite
scenes and watching the movie again they remain my favorite scenes um they're charming they're funny
they're emotional.
When the three peters are like crying together on the roof talking about loss and Peter
Peter two and Peter three are forced into these mentor roles, I just, I absolutely lost it.
Yes, I knew they were coming.
Yes, I knew how they were coming.
Yes, I knew when in the movie they were coming because I do read all the leaks.
It didn't, for me, honestly, it didn't change my emotional reaction to it.
I still started crying when I saw Andrew Garfield's giraffe neck.
I got so excited because I love Andrew Garfield so much.
And then I felt and I didn't expect to feel anything for Toby.
And I felt it.
You know, and I part, I want to talk a little bit about nostalgia in this moment because
weaponized nostalgia is like, you know, one of the strongest engines driving Hollywood right now where they're just sort of like, we're going to get you excited to go see Neo again.
We're going to get you excited to care about BobaFet.
We're going to get you excited about that.
It's all IP, including your feelings.
It's all familiar, you know.
like that. When nostalgia is most, like, artistically used is when the passage of time matters
to the story. And so seeing Toby and seeing Andrew, both of whom look great and fit and great in
their Spider-Man suits. How about the youth pastor outfit for Toby? Incredible moment. Like,
that's maybe one of the best lines of the whole movie. So funny. The youth pastor vibe off of
Toby. But like, but the passage of time is on their faces. And these are older Peter.
these are Peters who have endured something.
And it's especially great for Andrew who,
I mean,
both of those men had to pretend to be teenagers when they weren't.
But like,
it's just especially great for Andrew to just be like,
all the care,
all the trauma is on his face as he's talking about everything.
He's not clean-shaven.
Like, it's so interesting what they did with his character.
And like, when Electro says something,
like,
you're just a kid. He goes, eh.
Like, I'm not a kid. I never was.
I was always like a 29 year old playing a teenager.
But like I just, I love that moment of putting them, you know, we, we talked about the various
mentors that Tom Hollins, Peter has had.
You know, Tony's a big one.
Dr. Strange isn't really that character in this film.
He kind of is, like especially his goodbye to Peter is emotional.
But the mentors in this film are himself.
And it's that into the Spider-verse magic of no one else in the world can understand what I've gone through except myself.
You know?
And so like these three men who have carried this burden of what it has been to be Spider-Man to finally have someone else who immediately understands.
Yes.
Exactly how you're feeling.
That's so powerful.
So yes, I knew it was coming.
I don't think me knowing
dampened my experience whatsoever.
Here's what happens.
When I like spoil myself, quote unquote,
this is why I don't think spoilers matter that much,
though I respect everyone's individual spoiler boundaries.
Spoiler is a consent.
Like, you have to consent to being spoiled.
But I just, I don't think shock and surprise
is the most valuable thing in a storytelling.
Because like if the shock and surprise it happened,
then they like and then the Andrew and Toby stuff was boring or not funny or cheesy or whatever.
But it was emotionally rich and all that sort of stuff.
So I just I I get excited to to watch how they're going to execute the thing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I obviously, you know, we have a, I think a different relationship to the leaks.
But I agree with you obviously that ultimately what matters is not just the most.
of the reveal, but how
the story is told, how it's executed,
how it lands, and this was just
this was so
so poignant. I think that
even beyond this movie,
part of the reason this
got me so excited about
the MC moving forward, and I think
this is also coming on the heels of Loki
where there's a
similar quality at play.
This
successful rendering
is what excites me about the
promise.
of multiversal storytelling in the MCU.
That idea of being able to confront and challenge
and learn from other versions of yourself
and there's so much comedic potential.
I mean, the web shooter chat, again, iconic,
love the organic web shooters are so divisive.
So just engaging with that and interrogating that was great.
But you get a little, oh, where else can you?
Your body can you?
sling white goop from kind of moment, like a joke that blue humor-leaning fans like yours truly
have made probably 4,000 times in the last three months alone.
Like all of that just felt like simultaneously the conversations that we as fans have about
how these things would go.
And also like a conversation that only these three people could possibly ever have together.
And that is like a magical combination and a magical brew.
the discussion about loss and Ben and May and Gwen and the weight of that, the discussion of that lesson about responsibility.
I think what you said about the passage of time is so crucial here, especially given, you know, I guess I will say like the contrasting point to, oh, this is the possibility that multiversal storytelling affords.
is of course, well, can we track it?
Does it all make sense?
To what extent does it need to?
How much do we have to be able to grasp the magic of it?
It's not like a one-to-one, but there's like a sum corollary to, you know, did the time-heist, time-travel mechanics and end-game?
Totally makes sense for everybody on first viewing in particular.
Did they need to, et cetera, right?
But when we get to hear Peter 2 and Peter 3 talk about their lives since,
we've left them because they're not pulled out of the timeline of the earlier movies like their
villains are they have lived their lives and to hear them talking about relationships and like i'm
seriously might start crying here because it's like it's him so hard watching the movie
whether they have anybody and when we realize that Andrew Garfield's Peter is just like alone and
has not allowed himself to love again and open up and like have somebody who he can love
and can love him because he is just consumed still by that loss and that guilt from Gwen's death
is devastating. So we have not been there with him all of those steps along the way, all of those
intervening years, but we are able to glean this defining truth about who he is and how he has
spend that time. That is like an incredible thing to be able to pull off in a movie with this many
characters and this many moving parts. And then you combine something that emotionally resonant
with something as just levity induced and rich like the back pain sequence. Some of that is like
the meta wink to Toby's back injury. Yeah. Right around Spider-Man too. But just like again,
well, what would it be like to swing off of webs for this many years of your life?
I've been stabbed before as a little line at the moments where we could think of having
seen that.
Like, it didn't, it could have gone wrong.
It could have gone wrong in so many ways and it didn't.
And then you get the payoff not only of those emotional conversations, but something like
seeing, seeing them swing together really was just a incredible all-time moment.
Like, not only for the cinematic.
Yes.
Yes, not only the cinematic thrill of it, which of course is one level on which we're just like, holy fuck, we're floored by it.
But the commentary at play there on who Peter is and the role that teamwork plays in his life.
And again, what that speaks to about how different these movies have been, right?
With, like, Holland as part of the Avengers.
You also get that like, okay, oh, they don't know what the Avengers are.
Well, like, yeah, the Avengers aren't in the Sony stories, right?
But also, like, some of that is studio IP meta commentary and some of that is like, those are.
Peters were so alone and used to working alone.
And then we have our Peter who has been a part of this, you know, Earth's Mightiest Heroes,
this elemental team and has to now face what it might mean to try to do this without anyone.
It's just incredible.
Yeah.
Andrew's line reading of, are you in a band?
It's like, so good.
He was incredible.
Was he the MVP of the movie for you?
Yes, absolutely.
100% Andrew Garfield. But like to go back to the to the MJ drop and the Gwen Stacy death,
even though it is for a minute. Yeah. It's an iconic comic book move. Yes.
Has always rubbed me the wrong way. That movie's a mess. I, you know, I rewatched it as much as I love Andrew Garfield.
The way that they try to jam the Green Goblin storyline in there and then like it just doesn't, it doesn't work.
The Green Goblin stuff in that movie is very poor. It's abysmal and the Electro stuff is not that much better.
you know what you mean and what the the jewel of those two movies is the like
electric chemistry between emistone and andrew garfield who of course we're dating in real life actually
i just found this week i didn't know that kirsten dunson tommy mcguire dated so that's all three
spider men in there plus ones have dated unbelievable unbelievable but emiston andrew grapfield their
chemistry that love story mean oh my god and so then they killed her off and you're like well why bother making
more movies when you've when you've killed like the the heart of your of your film and emma so
ash was such an incredible oh so good she's fantastic fantastic and so like that has always bothered
me it always rub me the wrong way and uh and but to make it so important that it's something that
this character is still hanging on to whatever a decade later in his life you know at the end of
that movie, you see him standing in the graveyard for like all four seasons of the year or something
like that. But he's like, well, time to get back to work and fight the rhino in the street, I guess,
you know? And so, but this is like, no, he's like still in that cemetery. You know what I mean?
It has been until he catches MJ. So I do not love that they threw Zendaya off scaffolding.
I saw it in the trailer. I didn't like it. Everyone was like, well, the danger's going to come in and
get great. So I expected that that was going to happen. Okay. I was still like not happy about it.
And then he cried and then I cried. I was like, well, okay. Okay, fine. It worked on me.
I was mad about it, but I worked on me. I think I feel the same way about it as you do.
You know, I've always, I've always found the decision to kill Gwen in the amazing Spider-Man 2.
Very upsetting. Even though I also felt that that scene in the movie was incredibly impactful, same
thing here. Do we need to throw MJ off the Statue of Liberty? We don't. But I must to be honest
with you that I was a puddle in my seat watching that. I mean, when he says to her, you know,
is asking her, are you right? Are you okay? And the emotion and the history and the feelings
playing out on his face in that moment, I mean, it was. God-wrenching. I mean, she says, are you okay?
And he's like, yeah, but crying.
Oh, my God.
It's just, yeah, it's incredible.
So again, that's what I mean about like, spoiler leaks versus execution is like,
I knew it was going to happen and I wasn't happy about it.
And then I saw a play out and I was like, actually, I changed my mind.
You know, so I still, I mean, I still wish there was a way they could have done that
that didn't involve.
I mean, when I expressed my feelings on Twitter about them throwing MJ off the Statue of Liberty
in the trailer.
a bunch of people are like, well, what, you know, what are you supposed to do with a,
with a hero who swings around from things?
You got to throw people for him to catch.
And I'm like, I don't know, they did a pretty good job in the first two movies of not
doing that at all.
You didn't miss it.
And it doesn't happen into the Spiderverse either.
And I think a problem, I mean, we'll get to this more when we talk about May,
but like, I think a problem in the Spider films is like, if you've got a Spider-Gwen, you know,
or like a Jessica Drew or a Silk.
or something like that, like, I'm less worried about a woman in peril because you've got women
who are like doing some of the active fighting as well. And there's a lot for MJ to do in this movie
and I am grateful for that. But it's, I don't know, my feelings are complicated. Yeah, I think there's
the rational assessment of the storytelling choices at play and then there's the emotional impact,
which we agree was forceful in that moment. I mean,
I really was. I was like, I was a weeping, freely weeping watching that. And it's also like you,
you have again, to kind of think about like the meta aspects. I think you do have a moment there
where you're thinking about Andrew Garfield, the actor, not just the character and everything at play
there and this like moment of real closure. And I was thinking too of like the line in Amazing Spider-Man too,
where he says to Gwen, you know, we're not on different paths. You're my path. And you're
always going to be my path. And you just feel in this moment, and also when he's talking, you know,
about how he had let the rage guide him, you feel how true that is, how much she has remained
his path, even through all of these ensuing years. And part of what I really love about thinking back
to that and how a moment like Andrew Garfield's Peter asking MJ if she is okay and everything
that we're thinking about and we know he is thinking about in that moment.
moment is that it doesn't just work for his Peter and his character because you think about that
path line. And then when we see Tom Holland make the choice that he makes at the end, not only to
have everyone forget him, but then in the donut shop to not read the letter to MJ and not remind her.
And you think about his path. And are MJ and Ned going to remain his path? Does he have to find
another path without them? What does it mean to make a choice like that when you are doing it
because you're trying to protect people you love from the pain that you know,
just the reality of your existence can cause them.
Yeah.
When the last conversation that you had was, I will tell you, I will find you,
we will be together again.
And the choice that he has to make there,
and let's talk about Peter's choices for a minute here, because...
Can I just really quickly say?
I don't love to, like, ascribe motivations to people, like, real-life motivations to people,
But I did put in my notes the meta relationship stuff with Emma and Andrew, right?
Because like, the Emma and Andrew stuff is if you've read any interview with Andrew Garfield, like, post their breakup, you know, he's just constantly like Emma's it.
Like Emma's my desert island pick, Emma, Emma, you know what I mean?
So I think he, again, I don't want to put like real world thoughts in someone's head.
But like Andrew Garfield seems like the kind of actor who would access his own.
personal pain of a separation in a moment like that and it pays off.
So yeah, okay.
So back to Tom.
Back to Tom and Zendaya,
who hopefully will never break up and be together forever or not,
whatever they choose.
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Parker, don't you realize that in the
multiverse, there are an infinite number
of people who know Peter Parker
is Spider-Man. And if that spell
gets loose, they're all coming here.
Look, I know, I get it, but we can't just
send them home to die. It's their fake.
Peter won.
Peter won and his choices, his choices which drive the story.
There are a few of them, Joe, we can kind of quickly parse.
Let's start with Peter deciding to ask Dr. Strange for help in the first place,
and then hedging and making all of these amendments and messing up the spell.
The movie starts.
Right, right where far from home concludes with J. Jonah Jameson, revealing, thanks to Mysterio's fake news, Peter's identity to the world.
Now, the question of Peter's identity and who could know and when has, of course, been a through line of his MCU films.
you know, think of when Ned first learns as he's there with the Lego Death Star and sees Peter crawling on the ceiling.
He's like, I'm going to be a real deal.
I cannot keep the secret.
And Peter begs him because he doesn't want to put May through more.
Then, of course, May finds out.
And it's okay, well, if you send me to Prague, this is what he tells, you know, fake Nick Fury, Delos and far from home, all my classmates are going to learn who I am, can't have it.
I always think it's worth remembering that while Peter's secret identity is elemental to the Spider-Man canon,
of course, Peter revealing his identity in the comics in the Civil War storyline is what his sparks then the ensuing,
highly derided, widely derided, one more day, comic line that actually has a lot of connective tissue to this story.
Another example, I think, in many ways of what you'll like to talk about of, you know, kind of like updating and improving.
existing canon.
Peter's
secret identity is a
huge rarity
in the MCU.
This is not common
for the heroes in the MCU.
Everyone knows that Tony Stark is Iron Man.
Everyone knows that Natasha Romanov
is Black Widow, on and on the list goes.
Peter Parker
is a kid.
When we meet him in Homecoming,
he's 15. We meet him in Civil War.
But when we are with him in Homecoming,
and he's talking to Tony and Tony says, you know,
if you're nothing without that suit, then you shouldn't have it.
All of these reminders time and time again that he is a young teenager
just beginning to make his way through life.
He does not want people to know who he is, but not just for himself,
for the people around him to keep them safe,
to avoid a comics-esque kingpin.
Wouldn't be a pod on the riververse this holiday season
if we didn't mention Kingpin, targeting Aunt May to get at Peter, etc.
He doesn't want that.
And so this desire to roll back the clock and go back to a moment in time
where people do not know who he is is the inciting event from which all of this unspools.
What did you think of Peter's first choice here to go to Dr. Strange in the first place?
Seems like something a teenager would do.
Yes.
I think it's a bad idea.
The fact that Strange decides to go with it,
Can we just talk about this?
I know we're supposed to talk about Peter and his choices for a minute,
but while we're here, can we just talk about the Dr. Strange thing for a second?
Yeah.
Okay.
This is my single biggest nitpick of the film, of all of the, does it make sense things?
Dr. Strange would not watch that spell like that.
No.
I don't think he would do that spell in the first place.
There's a couple things at play here.
Number one is whatever muddiness is going on with the fact that,
Multiverse of Mattis was supposed to come out before this movie.
So, like, there's just been a lot of storytelling moving of parts to make the story work in reverse, you know, because we know we're going to get into, like, the Dr. Strange, the full Dr. Strange trailer that we get at the end of this movie.
But, like, it seems he's being, like, punished for what he did here when, like, anyway, my best assessment of Stephen's motivation here is.
is a sense of injured pride that he's not sorcerer supreme anymore
and just sort of like feeling emasculated by Wong, et cetera,
and wanting to just sort of like prove himself.
This is Wong's time. Let Wong thrive.
Yeah, long's time to shine. Exactly.
So what is fascinating is that the line that Wong says in the trailer,
don't do that spell, is not in the final cut of the movie,
but it is in the trailer for Dr. Strange.
So I don't know what to tell you about all of that.
But that's my best, that's the movie's best reason for why Stephen would even do the spell in the first place, let alone, you know, mess it up.
I don't know.
Obviously.
And one of many nitpicks that I'm like, if you pull up this movie, it falls apart so quickly.
But I'm not mad about it.
I don't know.
What do you think?
This is the strange aspect of it is, I think, again, the thing I have like the hardest time with, because on the one hand, sure.
strange working spells,
whether people can remember Peter,
that is all a part of the comics canon
that at least in part inspires some of these events.
However, they change things from the comics all the time, right?
And so I don't know if the MCU's version of Dr. Strange
would agree to do that spell in the first place.
I have a hard time with that.
His whole, you know, I always like to quote him saying,
to Tony in Infinity World, like, protecting your reality, douchebag.
That's his whole thing.
That's the one job.
Brutality. But he doesn't have his Infinity Stone anymore.
He's feeling, you know.
It's true. He's operating in a new world, and that would be consistent with phase four,
where the characters are becoming accustomed to this new circumstance.
I think there is an aspect of Dr. Stephen Strange's hubris that would lead to this, right,
where he's like, I can do anything on the best.
Jomey agrees with you.
I mean, it might be the same thing
that leads Tony Stark to, like, create Ultron.
You know what I mean?
It's just that sort of like,
I'm going to keep pushing the boundaries of like...
Ultron, my fault.
It's true.
Maybe we'll get an Ultron my fault,
desk line from Strange.
But the fact that he would,
again, I get that the magic
becomes very complex as Peter keeps amending it,
but the fact that he would botch it like that,
I just have a very hard time with.
He's the pinnacle, you know?
It's very tough.
Anyway, in terms of Peter making the ask, the next big choice that he makes, many little choices along the way.
But in terms of driving plot engines in the film, is the decision to try to cure the villains.
There's been a lot of fascinating discussion and fan debate about this, about whether this is a thing that Peter would or should do.
Did this strike you in any way as surprising or does this feel completely consistent with Peter Parker?
Well, it's not something he decided on his own, right?
It's like May's heavy influence is what it gets him to do this, right?
So that I buy into, should?
That's a great question, Mark.
And I mean, that's the whole Dr. Strange point or whatever.
It's like whose life is more valuable, et cetera, and all of this.
And the cost, the great personal cost.
of trying to save these guys.
I don't know.
I think it's,
I think it fits with the,
with the film's overarching message coming from the two peters of like,
don't let grief.
And it's not just the grief of losing May because it's the grief of like the shock of
being exposed or,
you know,
the grief of losing your shot at MIT or whatever.
Don't let that push you into such a dark place that,
you know,
you lose yourself.
So I don't know.
This works for me.
What's the fan debate?
Like, they think he would never do this?
Or?
Well, like, Sean mentioned this on Big Picture.
It's come up a few times.
Like, just, would Peter think that these characters were worth trying to save and at this cost?
I think I have the same read on it that you do.
It feels consistent to me in a couple different respects.
One, the May point is, I think.
key, right? The fact that she is pushing him and encouraging him to try to help and to try to make a
positive impact is like a direct cause and effect variable just just inside of this movie.
Yeah. Broadly, if you pan back to the MCU and then to just Peter as a character, I think it works
in those respects too. You know, the MCU at large. Now, of course, to be clear, I see the distinction
between heroes and villains in this respect.
But even if you think of something like Caps,
we don't trade lives, vision,
line in Infinity War,
you know, the calculus for the characters
is going to be,
how can we try to save and help,
not just,
and in particular because they know that they would be sending them
back to this moment of demise.
There's a finality and a definitive quality to that
where the stakes are really high.
with Peter in particular, Peter wanting to help.
You know, it makes me, it's like we can get into like the lost, do no harm aspect here, right?
But having to really wrestle with what it means to do harm and the weight of his actions and his, and his choices, what the consequences of those are and to see it crystallized.
So definitively here is a heavy, heavy thing.
And we know that Peter doesn't want to kill, doesn't want to harm, wants to save.
Think of even like in Spider-Man Homecoming, Vulture, I mean, at the near cost of his own life,
Peter's like, I'm just trying to save you.
He doesn't want to let him, doesn't want to let the wingsuit explode.
He doesn't want to let him die.
And then I think one of the other ways that it really works is that what's one of the
of what's one of the final notes in Far From Home, which again is right before this.
It's mysterious saying to Peter, you're a good person, Peter, such a weakness.
Like, you can't let the villains win by believing that's true. Being a good person can't be a
weakness for Peter. That has to be the source of his strength. And so I think him attempting
to work toward a solution other than press the button and send them all back.
to their demise feels true to the spirit of this character.
So I was fine with it.
I think what's also true is that a friend of mine pointing this out to me yesterday when he got
out of his screening.
And he was like one of the things that I've always disliked about the villains in the
Toby and Andrew movies is that they all feel the same, which is like some good guy twisted
by science, right?
Some good guy who science gets out of control and twists him in some way.
And like, that's a hallmark.
of a Spider-Man villain, right?
Is like someone who botched a science experiment,
which is lampshaded a bit in the movie,
which like, you know, careful how you fall.
But like, at the core of them,
they're all like nice guys who get it twisted, right?
Whereas the Holland, the Tom Holland villains are all,
I mean, you can argue with me about nice guys
who get it twisted.
That's fine.
I see your face.
But I don't know if Norman Osborne was ever a nice guy.
Sure.
Fair.
Genius scientist.
Sure.
But the Holland villains have all been, they've been byproducts of Tony Stark's mistakes, right?
That's different.
They're not in the same Rokes Gallery as these other guys.
So I think, okay, barring Norman Osborne, when you talk about Kirk Connors or you talk about Octavius,
like all of those characters are characters maybe even more worth saving than Jake Jelenhall,
who's mad about Tony Stark.
You know what I mean?
it's it's um it's complicated it's interesting and i think i think it's actively engaging with
how the villains have played out in these other five films yeah we'll talk about the hills a little bit
more but i thought it was one of the one of the smart choices was bringing doc act back into the
alliance fighting for good you know by fixing the inhibitor chip earlier than that had to happen for
for that reason in particular because, you know, I think that there's a lot to parts in terms of like hubris and greed and what drives a person to think that they can make certain decisions and do certain things on behalf of all mankind. But I think, you know, again, plenty of people would observe that Tony's no different, right? He does that time and time again, too, but we root for him and we love him. And, you know, the, yeah, I do. The fact that characters make mistakes is not inherently what makes them villains, right? The, the,
our heroes are ultimately going to be the most impactful and linger with us and be the most lasting
if they make mistakes too because that's what makes them human beings. You know, if they're perfect,
that's not interesting. They have to be flawed. That's what makes them human. But it's the intention.
We talk about this a lot, right? It's the intention that stands out as the distinction.
And it works thematically because Peter's intentions are at the core of all of these decisions,
including ultimately saying, okay, got to erase myself.
We're going to come back later today when we talk about, you know, where the end of this movie,
what that might mean for future installments, but also some of the, you know,
we have a lot of mailbag questions about some of the potential ramifications of the magic
and having everybody forget Peter Parker.
We don't necessarily have the answer to those questions, to be clear, but we'll talk about
a few of them.
So there's a lot of that to circle back to, but just in terms of the emotional impact
of Peter's sacrifice and the way that his relationship to, you know,
opportunity and longing, wanting more and homecoming and then feeling weighed down by the
burden of it and then this clarity here, how did that all, how did that all work for you?
Again, it's like a classic, you know, Spider-Man films, the first Andrew film and the first
Toby film end with him walking away from like his love interest to protect her.
Right? This is like on a small scale, a choice that these cinematic Spattermans have had to make in the past.
They don't hold to it longer than one film. But, you know, it's something they've tried to do.
This is such a bigger, bigger choice for erasing Peter Parker. It's hard not to see, we talked about this a lot leading up to this film.
It's hard not to see the pragmatic film business reasons to do this, right?
Leave all options open.
Right.
This film ends in a way that if Marvel and Sony don't collaborate it again, you could do Tom Holland off on his own adventure and you don't have anything tying him to the MCU at all.
That's an option.
If Tom Holland decides he doesn't want to do any more Spider-Man films after this, which he hasn't made that decision yet, you end his trilogy in a way that feels tied up and satisfying and, you know, close the book on that chapter in his life.
So all of that stuff is sort of in the mix.
But it's a very profoundly moving sacrifice that he makes here.
A very, very moving moment played excellently with Bennett and Cumberbatch.
Again, there's a meta quality to it because, like, have you seen those supercut videos
of Bennett Cumberbatch and Tom Holland on the, on the promo circuits for endgame?
I don't think so.
Okay.
So basically, here's what happened.
Tom Holland, as we know, was so bad at keeping secrets.
Yeah.
that when they sent him out on the end game tour,
they sent Bennett-Cumberbatch out as his babysitter.
So it's the two of them paired in every interview.
It's Bennett and Comerbatch and Tom Holland.
And every time that Tom Holland starts to say something,
Bennett-Cumberbush is like,
ah-ba-ah-da-uh-uh, right?
Okay, so like they spent a lot of time together these two,
even though they were only in a little bit of a movie together,
like they bonded on the road.
And so Bennett-Coverdush being like-
We got the what-as-he-year-ward line, so.
Right, but like, we got it all, really.
all of us who love you sort of thing.
It's like if Tom doesn't get to work in the MCU again,
like this is a goodbye to these actors as well.
So I don't know.
I thought it was really really powerful while also acknowledging the like
scaffolding of movie business choices in it, you know.
Agreed.
And I thought that the choice after the choice going to the donut shop
preparing to tell to help MJ remember.
seeing Ned too and then not doing it because he sees that they are getting to do the things that
they wanted to do. Going to get to go to MIT. They're happy. Their lives are full of
possibility instead of compromise and sacrifice makes him feel that then his sacrifice needs to
be lasting. And I just thought this was like that donut shop scene. I thought was just completely
anguish-inducing. Great performances from Zendaya, Jacob, Tom.
all of them. That trio is just such as a light. I will be very, very, very sad if we don't get
to see them in another movie together. I really hope that's not the case. But I thought that
this landed so, so, so powerfully. We got a lot of mailback questions that boil down to some
version of, why can't any Peter be happy? And I'm curious what you think about that.
Well, I mean, youth pastor Toby seems to have found some manner of peace with whatever arrangement he has with MJ.
It's true.
It says they work through it, right?
Yeah.
That's something.
I don't know.
Yeah, it's interesting.
I was wondering the same question.
I mean, this fees writing to me wanting to talk about Aunt May.
I know we've got a few other things to talk about, but I don't think anyone in the Marvel world is marked by loss the way that Peter Parker is.
I mean, in the DC comics, like the death of the wanes or, you know, Superman's exile from his home planet, all that trauma is the foundation.
And most superhero stories originate in some kind of trauma.
And that trauma, that wound becomes their greatest weapon and all that sort of stuff.
But all that good Joseph Campbell stuff.
But I think Peter more than certainly anyone in the MCU has been marked by this idea of like,
What is J. Jonah Jameson say on his everything Spider-Man touches turns to ruin and you can't disagree as Tom Holland is like freely bleeding in the rain while while he says that in front of one of the many big screens that are set up around the city for people to watch this this news blog from some guys home.
Anyway, yeah, why can I don't know, Peter Parker, there's a thing about Peter Parker that he is like,
he's forever morning.
He's in a cemetery a lot.
That's his thing.
He is in a cemetery a lot.
I think that ultimately this version of Peter
can find connection and belonging again
and that that will hopefully be a part of his journey moving forward.
I think that the idea that happiness is an impossibility for him
would be like, that's almost like too deflating for me to accept.
But I do think that it's true.
that loss and grief are a through line of his experience,
and that that is one of the reasons.
Not the only reason, but one of the reasons,
that he's such a relatable and meaningful character
for so many people.
You know, not everybody who's reading a Spider-Man comic
or watching a Spider-Man movie has wielded an infinity stone, right?
But...
Speak for yourself.
Well, I've never had the pleasure.
I do have a Lego gauntlet behind my head.
But we've all lost somebody, right?
We've all had to move beyond a certain phase in our life
and try to find our way into whatever is next.
And that is, despite the, of course, unique and specific aspects
of everybody's experience in everybody's life,
that is a universal quality that makes Peter such a lasting character.
I think that before you're right that we should talk about May,
I think the only, probably a million other things to say,
but the only other thing I think that I wanted to mention
about the three Spidey's and Peter I,
and the setting and the backdrop for this film,
I thought it was fascinating to place the final battle.
Hmm.
On Captain America's fallen shield,
the shield that has fallen off the new and approved Statue of Liberty,
which you can also hear about at Hawkeye.
We'll talk about that more in a few minutes.
this, again, simultaneous, for the MCU to date and the Spider-Man
to date, this simultaneous recognition of the past and shared history and mission statement
that we are moving forward into something new.
I thought that was strong symbolism.
Yeah, and this idea that Peter learned so much from Iron Man from Tony Stark,
and he has been in many ways positioned to be a new sort of Iron Man-esque figure,
but he puts himself, like, when the Avengers assemble,
it's cap calling the plays, not Tony Stark usually,
unless they're fighting on a tarmac and they're on different sides.
And so when Peter puts himself in the position to call the plays for the team,
like he puts himself in the cap roll, which I think is so interesting.
But then I thought it was so interesting when he has the glider and he's facing down Norman
and Toby's Peter steps in and he grabs the other side of it,
looked to me, it looked framed so similarly to Cap and Thanos with that gauntlet sort of power
struggle moment from Infinity War, that iconic moment. And putting Peter in like the Thanos
position, I thought was a really interesting moment and that internal struggle. I mean, it's so cheesy,
of course, to, on the one hand to say like, it's Peter fighting his like worse nature or his younger
yourself or whatever, but it's, but it works. It just works emotionally so well. It's just beautiful.
That's a part of the Spidey Cannon too, right? There's that line at some point in one of the classes,
like, I had a professor once who told me there were only 10 stories I were told, but there's really
only one. Who am I? Right. And like that's the truth of, that is the truth of the heart of
the story as it is for so many of the stories that grip us. Should we talk about it for a minute?
Is it time? Let's get out the tissue.
She doesn't talk about Aunt May.
How did you feel about this death?
I have a few conflicting thoughts.
I thought Van and Charles did a really good job talking about this.
And I was really gratified.
I love those boys so much, but I was really gratified to hear Charles talk about the idea
of fridging in general.
That was really made my heart whole.
I don't know if I'm ready to call this a fridge moment.
I don't know because so much of it is tied into Aunt May's own storyline in this film,
which is like her determination, her, she takes an act.
role in in this she she joins the fight actively so like that but again when you only have two women
in your in your story when you've got five villains and they're all men and you've got dr strange and
you've got you know ned and you've got all you know all this stuff and you've got literally like
two women it's tough it's a little tough again if if spider if the spider franchise didn't have
such a like dicey history in my view of like how it traces women like i i would maybe not be
carrying so much baggage into this decision. And last one at least, and I found this out recently,
both Marissa Tomey and Sally Field, really not having a great time playing Aunt May,
is my understanding. They think that Aunt May is just, like, Sally Field was like, I hated that
role. I only took it because my friend Loris this kid asked me to. I had a really hard time finding
any kind of character in there. Not a fan of my time with that. And Marissa Tomei has said similar
things about how she she was like horrified when she found out how old Aunt May was supposed to be in
the comics. Like she didn't know that she was signing up to this sort of like matronly role or whatever.
And she was like it was the character supposed to get a refresh, but it didn't and all this sort of stuff.
So like, do you agree with that? I mean, who am I to Dane to question the absolute legend Marissa Tomey?
But do you agree that Aunt May didn't get a refresh in the MCU? I don't agree with that.
I feel mixed about it. I think it's definitely a.
a massive improvement, but at the end of the day,
May is always a character who is just there to sort of hold,
like Peter.
Do you know what you mean?
And that's,
that's okay.
There are characters like that all over the place.
But again,
MJ gets like,
I think such a big,
Michelle is such a different character than Mary Jane.
And that's like huge.
So they've done a lot of movement here.
I still think there's some room for improvement.
I mean,
like,
you know,
Amay is almost entirely sidelined from the second film because it's a like,
European vacation. She's barely in it, right? And they tried to give her some storylines,
like a romance with Happy or like her charity work or whatever, but it still just feels like
her job is, you know, to be there for Peter, which, you know, all, all heroes have characters
around them like that. And, you know, it's not unique to this role. But I just thought it was
interesting that the actresses, who, two of the actresses who played M.A. were like,
eh, not my fave. I don't know. What do you think?
I mean, I larb
I larb
Marissa Tomey's aunt
Mama
I larv her a lot
I larb you
do larby
not larby enough
I love the larv scene
she is obviously
Marcia Tomei is
you know she's
incredible
I have enjoyed
the elements
of the MCUs May
that do feel refreshed
you know
obviously
I mean, just a younger character.
You know, I think Marcus and McPhile,
because obviously May and Peter were introduced
in Captain America Civil War,
before the standalone Spider-Man homecoming launch.
They've talked in interviews about, like,
why would May have been as old as she is typically rendered
if May and Ben should be peers to Peter's parents?
all of that, just the fact that she's got this like, you know, the charitable work and her
efforts to help people, which obviously we just talked about how that comes into play
here in terms of her guidance for Peter, the fact, like the fact that she's got this love life
and this just independent life that Peter's like, I'm going to sit you guys down and ask you
to tell me about this because you've got your own thing going on. You know, I agree that it would
always be nice to spend more time with Marissa Domay's aunt May. I would love it. But I do think that
there have been some updates. So again, of course, like, who am I to, to argue with the person
playing the role? That's not my intention. For the death itself, it's a little bit similar
to looking back to Gwen or the way Gwen's loss is, you know, referenced and called upon here,
where I have like some dissonance and a couple different responses to.
it. Emotionally, the scene watching May Die, watching Peter grieve her, even seeing
happy pull up and realize what had happened, devastating. Devastated. So soaked my mask with tears.
It's just like absolutely heart-wrenching. Very, very, very, very, very, very sad. So good.
This scene landed for me. I will also say, though, like I, and I agree that Dan and Charles had a
great discussion about this. I don't love.
deciding to update Ben's death by killing May instead.
Again, there's this aspect where like her,
May being in mortal peril is a part of this comic line
that some of this story connects to.
But again, that comic is like so, so loathed that.
I don't think that aspect of it needed to be maintained.
I don't think that's why they did it.
That's not what I mean.
But, you know, you can always say,
well, has this happened before?
What does that mean?
Let's update things that don't work, though, right?
that's part of the point. So to update Ben's death is essential part of Spidey Cannon by killing off
one of the most central women in the story is is very tough. I think Van also had an interesting
point with, like, though they really killed Aunt May so the green goblin could live, which is
it's a good note. I mean, it's a good note. Obviously, like they're getting Peter to this point
at the end of the story where he has nothing, but I think that I think that, I think that,
that he could have been facing the same dilemma with May that he is with MJ and Ned and that
very touching scene with Happy at the grave where there were ways to lose people and feel their
absence in your life without killing them. So it makes his choice even like tougher if he's also
giving up May. You know what I mean? Yeah. Agreed. Absolutely. Absolutely. So, you know,
some nitpicks there, but it did, it did still land emotionally for sure. Again, I have so many. I have so
many issues of this movie and I don't care because I loved it you know how did I feel about
me delivering the responsibility line the and and we should say by the way she says with great power
there must also come great responsibility so she she reads the comics accurate line you know I just
rewatched the Andrew films over the weekend I don't think that Martin Sheen's character
says with great power comes great responsibility.
No, they talk about responsibility.
Yeah, they talk about responsibility, but it's not the exact.
But it's not the exact line.
Yeah.
So, I thought it was fine, especially because she had been talking about responsibility, you know, in previous scenes in this movie.
I thought it was fine.
But then I thought it was really powerful when the three Peters bonded over it.
I liked the payoff of it.
In the moment, I was like, okay, on the one hand, like, it's, I was.
always going to hit when you hear that line. On the other hand, to get back to what we were talking
about at the very beginning of the show, I've actually always really admired the MCU Spidey films
from not feeling like they had to hit every single beat before. So on the one hand, I was like,
ah, you actually didn't have to do it. It's really been okay without giving us that line. We all
know the line. It's a part of our Spider-Man experience to this point. We didn't need it here.
On the other hand, it does build toward that shared connection that is so rich and rewarding when we
see it with the with the spydies.
Can I ask you about Happy for a second?
You think he's going to be okay?
Very worried about our guy.
Happy Hogan.
Well, he gets to get a new apartment, I guess.
I mean, I hope he goes.
I love that he had dummy hanging out in his apartment.
Just great stuff.
My guy, dummy.
The whole design of his sad condo was was a lot for me.
Anyway, I hope he goes to stay with Pepper for a little bit and just sort of like, you
know, gets to be the godfather for a bit.
That would be nice.
Yeah.
Some cheeseburgers with Morgan.
Yeah.
That's exactly what happy need.
Yeah, that's a great one.
MJ and Ned, we've talked about them a lot today.
Anything else you want to hit on there?
A few things here.
We talked about how meaningful their trilogy,
this trio is to this trilogy and to these stories.
I think, again, maintaining that coming of age spirit in a story that's dark was really important.
And having so much room for them in this movie that is so crowded, I thought that was incredible work.
Because they are a part of Peter's journey and of Peter's life.
And it makes you feel the absence so keenly at the end.
Like what does life look like for him without them?
It's really it's painful and hard to think about.
And I mean, I will say the MJ thing is interesting because she, when he makes that big decision to do the spell and then afterwards is basically like, are you guys mad at me?
and MJ's like, no, but like, hey, if you're going to make a big decision like this,
like, maybe include us and we can talk about it.
There are other solutions.
And then he does the same thing again at the end where he like makes this big decision
without talking to them about it.
It's a beautiful sacrifice.
And then she goes, no, I don't want this.
I don't want this.
I don't want this.
Right.
Then he's like, I'll come find you and I'll tell you.
And then he doesn't.
Yeah.
And you're like, okay.
But the sling ring, I didn't know this was such a big deal until Jomi let me know
that apparently he was all Van was talking about when you guys got out of.
the theater, Ned using the sling ring. And I think, I mean, it's an extension of the,
of the quarter debate that's going on around Hawkeye, which is just like, I don't think it's a,
it's not a gendered thing. It's like a van has a very strong opinions about if something
looks like it took a while to learn, it should take a while for the next person to learn how to do
it. It doesn't bother me at all. Zero percent. I'm not bothered by it, especially because like
Stephen kind of, Stephen's like, you open a portal and it's just sort of like, hmm, you know what I mean?
like Stephen acknowledges like this is this is interesting and you know we get this you know
idea that there's magic that runs on their family all that sort of stuff but of course it's just
an expedient plot thing I'm not mad about it because it gives us that Andrew Garfield moment so who can
be mad again the payoff kind of helps us accept anything and that's the that's definitely true
it's also helpful it's also helpful that he's not very good at it I was going to say that too yeah the fact
that he like doesn't know how to close the portal at the end it's not like he has complete
dominance of this ability so far. I was rewatching the training sequences in Dr. Strange. And,
you know, there's a, there's a handy bit of exposition from Mordo where he says, all you need to do is
focus, visualize, see the destination in your mind, look beyond the world in front of you.
Imagine every detail, the clearer, the picture the quicker and easier the gateway will come.
No, on the one hand, you can say, well, no one ever told that to Ned. But I think that it helps us
a little bit except that this is possible. Yes, with training and tutelage, but possible.
But speaking of the training and tutelage part, it does get me excited for some future possibilities with Ned.
Like, on the one hand, I love that we got the supervillain exchange about, you know, with Harry, right?
And Peters.
A hobgoblin.
Best friend betraying him and then dying in his arms.
And Ned's like, oh, my God, like, am I going to become a super villain?
And you've got the hobgoblin.
Very complex, we should say, comics canon with a hobgoblin.
But still, that was a fun little wink.
wait, I just need to really quickly shout out Andrew Garfield, two moments there.
One, Toby tells the story straight-faced while, like, working a pipette.
You know what I mean?
Like, he's doing science while he's talking about this.
And Andrew, just in the background just goes like, dude, incredible line.
I love that whole scene.
And then when Ned promises Tom, Tom Hollins, Peter, that he's not going to betray him,
Andrew just gives him this, like, shoulder grab and nod of like, it's okay, buddy.
just great just great work for
all the way through all the way through
that's the spirit ned
do you think that we will see ned
in like a strange academy
style Disney Plus show
or story in the future world he would be studying
the mystic arts well follow question
who owns Ned
this is this is like where will
where will Ned and all of these characters be
I mean I don't know if we'll have room for this
specific prompt when we get to
are questions later on what's to come.
But this is definitely one of them
because there are some fascinating setups.
I have read the contracts about,
because there's 900 characters, I think,
that Sony has ownership of.
I think it's something like that.
And I've read the lists of what they have ownership of,
and I'm pretty sure that they own.
I mean, this is the hilarious thing
about the Sony leaks of the emails, right?
Which is that Amy Pascal said,
how am I supposed to build a franchise?
all I've got are villains and girlfriends.
I've got one hero and villains and girlfriends.
And that just shows you like the limitations of like Amy wasn't thinking galaxy brain.
You know what I mean?
And like into the Spider-Verse shows us one thing.
Like, oh, you've only got Spider-Man?
No, you've got all the Spider-Men.
You know what I mean?
Amy, you could do all this sort of stuff.
And oh, you only have girlfriends?
Okay.
But like they could be MJ and rule.
I think Sony owns Ned.
That's what I think.
Okay.
MJ, we get the Watson name reveal in this movie at long last.
Michelle Jones Watson, not Mary Jane's, but.
Love the coordinated.
Don't say anything without a lawyer of Aunt May and MJ at the same time as they're walking through damage control.
Man, damage control.
Those fuckers, never up to any good.
Villain time.
Chat about the villains for a few moments.
They've obviously come up throughout our just.
discussion today, but we hinted at this earlier. The overall balance, the deployment across the movie,
we get one villain from every Toby and Andrew film, obviously Green Goblin, the first Toby movie,
Doc Doc, the second, Saman, Spider-Man, Spider-Man, Lizard, the first Amazing Spider-Man,
Electro, the second amazing Spider-Man. For me, I thought this could have been very unfocused and overly
crowded and convoluted.
But I thought that
the balance worked, as is so often
the case, that balance is
key inside of a Marvel movie. I often cite
Infinity War and the character pairings
there and the math of how long we're with
which grouping and how well it works.
And they just have such a knack for being able
to nail that. And I think they did
a good job of it here too.
And more broadly,
a discussion we have a lot,
turning a weakness into
a strength.
I think that is very much at the fore here
because while the villains are not necessarily
the thing we all come out of the movie talking about,
obviously we're talking about
the three Spider-Man and seeing Daredevil
and the Doctor Strange trailer at the end, etc.
But the specific critique of too many villains
poorly deployed
is a really
central part of Spider-Man movie past.
with both Spider-Man 3 and the Amazing Spider-Man 2.
And so not being afraid of that and actually working to bring some of those characters in here
and try to make that part of the movie home, I think is pretty impressive.
We obviously did not get The Sinister Six quite literally, as many people expected.
We didn't get a Holland villain to round out the Six.
I guess you could say like having Venom at the very end is kind of a way to get a six,
but not really.
We get five villains in the bulk of the movie.
And the media, maybe the media is the sixth villain,
of this of this all.
They made some really smart choices in making essentially Dr. Connors and Sandman, like, barely
characters, right?
They're sort of barely here.
Thomas Hayden Church and Recyphins did one day, you know, basically on this film.
And the D.H, I don't know the, I don't know the mentality behind that.
The D.H is sort of like a mixed bag like it looks, they spent all the money on Willem Defoe and,
and Alpha Molina and they're like Thomas Aiden Church.
They're like, eh, you're just going to see him for a second.
It'll be fine.
So, yeah, so balancing the scales there, they, like, put those two guys, you know,
on the real back burner.
Jimmy Fox also, like, doesn't have a ton to.
He's really Docok and Norman Osborne, right?
Like, electro and, we should say, this electro doesn't bear much of a resemblance to the
Electro from the Andrew
Grafiel films at all.
He doesn't look like.
Yeah.
But again, yeah, that's
the foggy whole thing of like,
let me pluck what works and ignore
what doesn't.
And I think with like Norman
dropping the Green Goblin mask into the
dumpster right away, he's like,
we're going to keep Norman, we're going to ditch this
dumb-ass costume.
We don't like it.
We'll put it there for the original fans,
but it looks like a Power Rangers villain,
so we're going to dump it right away, right?
And Electro's design
in Amazing Spider-Man to
was pretty garbage on both ends of the spectrum.
So we're just going to have them look like Jamie Fox.
And you know what?
That's great.
Logistically, this is the biggest nitpick of these villains coming over.
Because one theory is they're brought over right before they die.
Another theory is they're brought over right when they find out who Peter Parker is.
But neither of those theories apply to all the villains, right?
Because not all the villains know who Peter Parker is and not all the villains die.
Right.
Sandman and lizard don't die.
Electro doesn't learn exactly who's under.
At all who's under?
Yeah, he doesn't know that Peter Parker.
Yeah.
So it does not at all make sense that all five of these villains were pulled through in any of the various theorems that these heroes put forth.
Well, yeah.
But also, like, why wouldn't other villains come through?
Why wouldn't other people who knew Peter, those Peters come through?
ultimately the answer is because they wanted those five villains one for every movie in the in the story why did
venom come through at all so my read on venom is in the venom let there be carnage stinger where we
is the hide vine yeah i think so right because venom is connecting to the symbiote hive mind accessing
all of that shared knowledge.
And so a version of Venom knows Peter Parker.
And so that is how he's called through.
That's my sense of it.
Yeah.
Why a little piece of him is left behind when the magic sends everything else back is,
I guess the answer is again, because they have movies to make.
And I just, you know.
Is Danny Rojas in trouble?
I don't know.
Amazing to see him.
That was a delight.
Did you think, I'm talking.
curious, like, I was a little bit surprised. I think not in a bad way to be clear, like,
but Green Goblin is really the main villain, even inside of this team of villains.
I thought just from the marketing and how central Doc Ak was that he would probably be the
primary antagonist, but ultimately I really liked the way this played out because part of why
Spider-Man 2 is such a cherished movie is Alfred Molina's Doc Ack and that portrayal and that character
and the tragedy of Otto Octavius, you know, the power of the sun and the palm of my hand.
I do love the holding the arc reactor and it's like, yeah, you know, again, like Tony kind of just,
you know, did a lot of the same stuff, but he was a hero and it worked. He made it work. Good for you,
Tony. You made it work. The fact that Doc Ack is old.
ultimately helping Peter and our heroes in these key moments after they fix the inhibitor chip.
I really loved because it is so devastating to see Doc Ak fall in Spider-Man 2 and to see
the AI take over and to see him lose control, even though, again, we can recognize that
he was doing something and pushing and pushing maybe in a way that he shouldn't have been,
but ultimately it wasn't completely his choice or his fault to descend the way that.
that he did. So I liked that. And, you know, DeFoe's Goblin is like iconic, right? So getting to see him
at the center of this menace was really, really fun. I also, for Electro, he got a lot of zingers in and a lot of
great lines. And he also has a really key line in terms of saying that he thought Spider-Man would
be black in terms of Miles and promising Miles' eventual introduction into the live action. Of course,
we have Spideverse.
Promise is a strong word, right?
Well, we'll get there.
Hence that.
Yeah, when.
When Sony, you're late.
I think J.B. Fox has said that he wants Miles to like fight.
He wants to be in the Miles intro movie.
And I mean, there is a theory that this electro is a variant electro that is not Andrew
Garfield's electro.
Do you know what I mean?
because he looks so different.
Interesting.
I don't know that they would do that.
I think they just did that
because they liked the character design differently,
so they gave him like fireman clothing.
But like I,
it's possible that he was pulled from a different universe.
Interesting.
Yeah.
So, yeah.
Can do anything with the multiverse.
You know,
we know frighteningly little about the multiverse
as Dr. Strange would tell us.
I would have loved to have seen.
If Miles had shown up in this movie,
I think that would have pulled things.
Yeah.
Over the top.
That would have been amazing.
But that was another, you know, I don't want to make excuses for why they didn't.
I think they should have, I don't know if it should have been Schemeck more, if it should
have been someone, you know, if Schemeck feels too old, if it should have been someone else,
if that would feel too confusing with the, you know, the animated world that they're creating.
I don't know, but I'm more than ready for a live action.
I thought, I really did think we might, we might see Miles in a stinger.
I really did. I can't wait.
I can't wait. Or like in the, in the, like, in the mist where we see Craven, like when,
when they all start coming through.
But then again,
Stevens whole theory is that is...
Like,
we know that Miles exists
in the prime
MCU continuity.
We know his uncle exists.
But he,
but what is,
what does Aaron Davis say?
He says,
my nephew lives here.
Yeah,
but like,
but he is acknowledging that
that's an acknowledgement
of Miles's existence.
Miles exists,
but has Miles been spider?
Radioactive Spider?
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know, yeah.
Yeah.
If not, then he
maybe will be soon.
soon.
Soon, Tony.
Soon.
We're going to talk about that
and what we might see
in future movies
more in just a moment.
But before we do, Joe,
Daredevil,
Daredevil chatter for a second here.
Charlie!
We got it.
Charlie Cox's Matt Murdoch
is in the MCU.
Thrilling.
I was delighted.
I screamed.
I would have loved to see him
even more in the movie.
I was sad to only get that one sequence,
but also delighted.
And of course,
the Hawkeye overlap timing implications of this are pretty vast because we have Vincent
Zonofrio's kingpin in Hawkeye on the same week that we got Charlie Cox's Matt Murdoch in Spider-Man.
The Netflix Daredevil characters are in the MCU.
This is happening.
They're coming.
How it exactly manifests moving forward, who knows?
But I would expect it to be pretty central, at least to what's happening on Disney Plus and
probably in the films as well.
I'm excited.
There's another Hawkeye connection here, too, beyond just Daredevil that we should mention,
which is like the timing overlap is very deliberately established.
We see Rogers the musical billboards in the city.
So this is happening at the same time as Hawkeye.
That comment about the new and improved statue of Liberty in Hawkeye
directly connects to the Statue of Liberty with Capshield that we see here.
Peter swinging at the end, you know, this movie like mostly,
far from home is set in summer of 2024 after the blip, right,
eight months after the blip, then this movie picks up immediately there. But because of the Halloween
decoration sequence, we can kind of deduce that it's mostly taking place in like November of
2024 into then December and Christmas, because when Peter's swinging over Rockefeller Center,
Christmas tree lit, Rockefeller Center. We know this is going to be one of the main settings in the
Hawkeye finale, which is mere days away. So specifically, what do you think the payoff will be in the
Hawkeye finale of this timing overlap and more broadly, how hyped are you that Charlie Cox's
Matt Murdoch is in the MCU? Delighted. Again, this is, I mean, and also there's the meta, like,
John Favreau, foggy from the Daredevil film in the scene, uh, trying to like stumble his way
through some like legalese, pretty delightful. Um, I think that I'm, I'm thrilled. I love Charlie Cox's
Matt Murdoch. Um, I'm so delighted.
that he's here. I'm so delighted that Donofrio's Kingpin is here. Again, it's, that's Figey
cherry picking because, like, as we've discussed elsewhere, like, Feigey doesn't, like, didn't
have control of the Netflix shows, and he does have control of all of Marvel content,
filmed content now. And so he's sort of cherry picking what he liked from those shows and bringing
them over. So, like, for me, DeNofrio's Kingpin and Charlie Cox's, Matt Murdoch are cream of the crop and other
people might disagree, but I'm glad that Feige's like, yep, this is, I don't think he's just
going chronologically. I think this is like the thematically the priority. And then, yeah, I would
love to see him more, but again, that might be like a complicated like Marvel owns him sort of borrow
out kind of thing. It's all, it's all very complicated, but I'm excited to see him in the Disney Plus
shows. I think we're going to see him in She Hulk. I think we might see him an echo. I think we're
to see a lot of him going forward and I'm so delighted. In a metacontractual way, this is kind of interesting
because when Sony was trying to launch the Sinister Six movie,
they were trying to do it with Drew Goddard, right?
And Drew Goddard at the time was also making Daredevil for Netflix.
And so Ike Pallmutter, who was running Marvel Entertainment at the time,
basically told Amy Pascal at Sony,
you can't have Drew Goddard, he's doing Daredevil for us.
And it was this whole awful, messy, ugly standoff that basically led to Sony having to make the Marvel deal
around Spider-Man because, like, Sinister 6 was their big idea for, let's, you know, liven up the
franchise, and then they got stymied on it, and they didn't know what to do, and then they finally
had to play ball with Marvel. So it's funny to see Daredevil and Sinister 6, like, all in the soup
again. Everything old is new again. But I don't, I mean, I don't think we're going to see,
I mean, possibly we'll see Peter Parker swing by the Christmas tree, but I really doubt we're
going to see Peter Parker in the Hawkeye finale. I actually even doubt we're going to
see Matt Murdoch in the
Hawkeye finale.
Yeah.
But it is nice to know this is all happening
at the same time.
Yeah.
It really is fun.
Did you see that?
So we talked about this in Hawkeye
how they sort of put something
in front of the date.
Yes.
In Hawkeye episode
and in this when they get to
A.
May's Greystone.
Boy, was I looking at that tombstone.
So funny.
They just like,
it was so overt.
The flowers they plugged in front of the
dates.
It was.
It was.
But in this movie does.
feel like one where it actually is possible to place it in time, right?
Yeah.
The math that you just spooled out is correct.
Yeah.
You know, it's just like...
What's interesting is really how that helps us play Hawkeye then.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's baffling.
Baffling.
We've talking about that.
Okay.
Stingers.
The mid credits is that bit of venom left behind.
We've talked about venom a bit.
Anything else do you want to add here?
Did you expect to see Tom Hardy's venom and Eddie in this more?
after the Let There Be Carnage Stinger?
No.
I think I was, well, I guess I had read the leaks.
So no, I did not expect him to be in the movie.
Right.
Sorry.
No, no, no, no.
You don't have to.
I was just sort of like, why didn't I think that?
I was like, oh, yeah, that's right,
because I read the whole plot of the movie.
However, I do feel good that I, when you asked me what I thought the post-creds were
being, and I would said one for them, one for Sony, one for Marvel, right?
And so I did think it was going to be morbisious, but that it's Venom.
make sense. My understanding is that people lost their minds when Venom shows up in the Stinger.
I don't know. I mean, I think they're just leaving all doors open, right?
Right. So all sticky symbiot doors open.
What do you think this means? We're getting into the portion here where, yes, we're talking about the Stingers, but we're also asking questions looking ahead.
Do you think that the fact that this little bit of symbiote lingered behind is setting up another
symbiote venom spider-man story for future films.
I was wondering, I acknowledge that this is
probably not what's going to happen.
And a little, a few too many connected pieces
for this to really be the reason why.
But I was thinking about Thor Love and Thunder
because my guy, Gore the God Butcher,
is going to be in that movie.
Can't fucking wait.
I love the Gore, Jason Aaron run.
so much.
I was like,
well,
could there be any chance
that this bit of symbiote
will connect to that
because gore wields
the all black,
the necrosword,
the symbiote weapon
could it connect in any way,
but I don't know,
are they really going to open
love and thunder
by connecting to a
Sony-centric,
no-way home stinger
unlikely,
but maybe.
Maybe.
I mean,
I was wondering
the future of the Marvel Sony Spider crossover is unclear.
Yeah, this is right.
But this is, yes, because can we have a Venom Spider-Man black suit symbiote story
if the Tom Hardy Venom movies are being made?
Can that all happen at the same time in different movies?
In different universes?
You know, it's confusing.
We do know that the Spider-Woman Jessica Drew movie.
is coming and we're pretty sure that that's a Marvel
Sonny Copro. It's not been made official official,
but Olivia Wilde talked about
working with Kevin Feige and she's directing that
Spider Woman movie.
So I don't know. Could a symbiote
suit have something to do with that movie?
I don't know because it feels like they would want to pitch
to something that was coming soon-ish.
Do you know?
So I don't know. I honestly, I don't have a great answer here.
Interesting. I'll be very curious to hear what our listeners think
because I am. But again,
I guess this is a cheap answer, but I will just say it just feels like them leaving all doors open to possibilities.
Agreed. Agreed. There's goop in all universes is what they're trying to tell us.
That sure is. No, sure is. Post credits. We got a full Doctor Strange in the multiverse of madness trailer.
I was shocked. I was absolutely floored by this. In hindsight, maybe shouldn't have been surprised because the Ramee of it all, you know, Ramey's directing the movie.
No Way Home is so so indebted to the Rabyverse and the Ramey movies.
still I was shocked. I just was not expecting it. I was Florida. It was delighted. So much to parse.
You know, it's hard to do a full trailer breakdown as we like to without being able to go like frame by
frame on YouTube or something. Eventually we'll we'll get this. But just off the initial viewing of the
trailer, what stood out? We got to see so many different glimpses here. Mordo, Wanda,
America Chavez, possibly Ashemagora. There's a lot, a lot, a lot of what if energy here.
if people have not watched What If, specifically the Strange Supreme episode, which was the fourth episode, and then that character's ensuing appearances across the rest of What If, that feels like it's going to be pretty central to what happens.
It was, you know, Van and Charles talked about this.
Was that evil-looking, strange variant that we saw in the trailer, actually that same character, Strange Supreme from What If?
Is it another variant who has taken some sort of turn?
Who knows?
can't wait to find out.
But I think the what-if connection is interesting
for a couple reasons,
what it might indicate about
how Strange's character arc
will play out across that movie
and more broadly,
Strange's really central role in phase four
because of the multiversal aspects
of what's unfolding.
Like, will the watcher come in,
given the watcher strange pairing in what-if?
But also I was thinking about what-if
because Strange's guidance to Peter
in No Way Home about not being able to save.
If everyone really made me think of his arc in what if, given his refusal to accept that
Christine has died and will die and will keep dying, he was not capable.
And again, the Christine is not the same as the Green Goblin, but he was not able to do
and accept the very thing that he tells Peter in Noe A Home, which was, you're there with
the quote for me here, in the grand calculus of the multiverse, their sacrifice means
infinitely more than their lives. I'm sorry, kid, if they die, they die. Now, very cold,
very, very cold, but makes you think of what happens when a version of this character
can't do the thing that this character said here. So this is going to be a doozy of a movie.
I mean, we don't know how much Strange Supreme is going to be in this next movie. You know what
you mean? If like, because there's been rumors that maybe Hiliatwell's, this is not a leak.
It's a rumor that maybe Peggy Carter, like Captain Carter is going to, you know, maybe there
be might be a few what if characters, but maybe in a sort of like flashy, uh-oh, everything's
sort of breaking apart, variants are coming through kind of way. Or strange Supreme could be central.
I do want to shout out, and that might not be strange Supreme at all. All of those things are
options. I do want to shout you out, though, because I feel like you've been so certain that Strange
Supreme would be part of things going forward. And I was like, you're dreaming now. But I think
when I saw that in the trailer, I was like, oh,
Malice. He's so happy right now.
I was that.
Her boyfriend, Strange Supreme, is here.
The thing I will say, and again, I'm not going to spoil anything that I do or don't know about the movie.
But what the trailer indicates to me is that there's been like a pretty major structural shift from my understanding what the plot of the movie was before.
Maybe when, and we've heard a lot about major reshoot.
So, I don't know, which is not a bad thing because Marvel is no famous.
for fixing things in a reshoot or whatever
or changing things in a reshoot.
So it doesn't make me uncertain about the movie.
Well, and that could be, if that is the case,
that could be the product of what you were saying earlier to
or connected at least to release schedule changes, right?
And if this movie is following things
that it wasn't originally intended to follow,
then what needs to be adjusted to, you know,
account for that and where we are in the,
not only Stranges arc, but the multiverse of it all.
It is called in the multiverse of madness after all.
Yeah, I have a lot.
I mean, we don't even have time to go and do it,
all, but I have a lot of multiverse questions as they relate to like, sort of how it's been deployed
across all of these films and TV shows. And, you know, when all of a sudden, I'll figure that
out. I think my main takeaway from the trailer is how good Chodilajivore Mordo looked. The new
look is incredible. That's my main. It's my main point here. There was a lot of exciting stuff.
in the trailer, but it was really fun to see Bordeaux.
It was really fun to see America Chavez,
and it was obviously thrilling
to see how much Wanda there was in the trailer.
This is going to be a doozy.
Okay, we've talked a lot about Dr. Strange.
We've talked a lot about Daredevil.
Quickly.
We're going to put a bow on some of the,
what's the future of the Spider-Man characters questions
we've been asking throughout the pod.
This is our not-so-sinister six.
Our six biggest questions about the future
after No Way Home,
and these are specific to Spider-Man, Peter Parker, Miles, other spider beings and those characters
and what might happen there.
Many of your questions about Dr. Strange and Ned and the sling ring and Matt Murdoch and everything
else.
Spider-Man specific.
Here's the first one.
We're going to keep a rapid fire, put a bow on it.
Feel free to throw out formal predictions, Joanna, if you should so desire.
Will Tom Holland return as Spider-Man?
This is question number one.
I actually, I used to think no, but I actually think yes.
Me too.
I think he's figuring out how much money he can get out of them to do so.
But I would say if his other movies were doing better, I would say I would maybe be leaning towards no.
Because he said certain things on not wanting to be Spider-Man anymore.
But like his other projects haven't done well.
And I think, you know, I don't blame him for wanting to make movies that people want to see.
So if it's Spider-Man, it's Spider-Man.
So yeah, that's what I think.
There's a ton to parse here, a ton.
I agree with you that broadly, the end of the movie sets itself up,
so people don't remember Peter and they could go in any number of ways.
But think of like Aunt May saying in The Amazing Spider-Man secrets have a cost.
They're not free, not now, not ever, right?
And what will the cost be of resolving this secret of who Peter Parker is whether it's foggy
or Amy Pascal or Holland or anybody else,
there are so many comments to parse already.
I think what you noted about Holland,
how he's talked about the role like that GQ interview
from a little while ago,
if I'm playing Spider-Man after I'm 30,
I've done something wrong.
And now, you know, saying to people, like,
first of all, he's talked about how he'd really like to see other characters
come into the fold.
You know, he said, quote,
I would love to see a future of Spider-Man
that's more diverse.
Maybe you have a spider Gwen or a spider woman.
We've had three spider man's in a row.
We've all been the same.
It'd be nice to see something different.
I think we agree with that, certainly.
He's, I think there are plenty of storytelling versions where all of this could be true at once,
where Tom Holland's Peter Parker could remain in the movies.
And we can get Miles and Live Action and we can get, as you mentioned, Jessica Drew,
and we can get Spider-Gwen, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
Fige said this.
to Brooks Barnes and the New York Times
just this past week around the release of the film.
Amy and I and Disney and Sony are talking about,
yes, we're actively beginning to develop
where the story heads next,
which I only say outright because I don't want fans
to go through any separation trauma
like what happened after Far From Home.
That will not be occurring this time.
Now, that quote is on the heels
of the kind of fascinating Amy Pascal comments
saying overtly to Fandango in November,
this is not the last movie that we are going to make with Marvel
and then kind of walking it back and hedging a little bit
and actually saying to Variety on the red carpet at the No Way Home Premiere,
don't get me in trouble again.
But if I have my way, we will, meaning making more Tom Holland movies,
there's a lot to figure out with Sony and Disney here,
but there is so much on the line and on offer here,
both in terms of money for the studios,
and movies and stories that people,
are excited about that I would just be shocked if they did not find a way to keep doing this as long as
Tom Holland wants to. Yeah, exactly. They just need to, Dave and I were workshopping this phrase.
I think we came up with like back the money lorry up to Tom Holland's flat. You know what I mean?
Like how much money? They've done it before, right? Like they had to lock down Robert Downey Jr. at one point. So,
you know, they have the money if they choose to spend it.
for sure. Yeah, and then like Tom can come to the negotiation tables with these box office receipts and be like, okay, cool. I made you a cool bill or more or whatever, like give the people what they want, which is more me. But the question, I want to, I know you're running the table on this, but I want to, that brings me to a question that I want to jump the line with, which is like, do I even want a Tom Holland, Peter Parker movie without Zendaya or Jacob? I think, you know, I don't.
I need, there's plenty of juicy promise in this movie for like this whole like,
tell me when you find me, you know, like, or I'll figure it out or her weird look,
sort of when he leaves, you know, like I'd be all for MJ figuring it out again on her own or
whatever the case may be.
But I don't want Tom Holland, Peter Parker.
She'd be the first to say if she could figure it out again.
I don't want Tom Holland, Peter Parker in his like Spangley, New Brue.
blue suit, Bachelor in the City, taking his GED. That's not, that's not the story I want.
I've seen that story. Yeah. And like I, I need that Spider Fam around him, which is Sondaya and
Jacob. So they better back up the money, Lori, to Jacob and Zendaya's houses as well.
I'm with you. I'm with you. I mean, I think there's a lot of, obviously, they're just a vast
character set. And even just, you know, in our in our mailbag questions this week, there are a lot
of like, oh, will we see Felicia now, for example?
will this Peter meet his Gwen, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
Do, you know, we hear there's no Oz Corp,
but that doesn't mean there aren't the Oz-borns,
like how could other characters come to play?
But I'm with you.
These relationships just feel inextricable from this character
and what these stories have been.
I would be so, so sad.
I always try to keep it up my mind with this stuff,
but I would be so, so, so sad to not see Zendaya and Jacob, M.J.
and Ned, I love those characters.
I love them.
They're just delights.
I'm honestly just as interested in what their future in the MCU or Sonyverse is.
So I really hope.
If Sony wants to make an MJ,
Ned go to MIT TV show, I would watch it.
How'd you feel about Flash getting into MIT?
That's the real big question.
That's not actually one of our sex questions.
I think his parents made a donation about it.
building.
Peter didn't think to call MIT, which I found charming because he doesn't like to take
advantage of his ability and his celebrity.
But, you know, Tony did say to him, I got some pull at MIT and we can, we can, we can rest
assured that that Flashes crew took advantage of any pull they had.
I do love that, like, he's, he won, his dream school is, is Tony's school.
I think that's very charming.
If Jacob Battlon does come back to these movies.
Strange Academy.
Let's do it.
Here's my request for him.
that they let him shave his head because the Nedwig in this movie was not top tier as far as I'm concerned.
So let Jacob rock his chrome dome.
I love it.
My wish for him is that he just continued to build as many Lego sets as he desires because I love the recurring Lego through line.
As a Lego enthusiast myself, I can't tell you how many Lego sets I've built during this work from home, remote era of our lives.
and I just, I just absolutely love.
Peter, seeing the Legos on the table and Electro's like,
are there's your Legos?
Killed me.
So funny, but like the fact that Peter brought like one sentimental possession really
with him to his sad apartment and his Palpatine.
El Palpatine.
I mean, well, you know, can't get rid of Palpe, Joe.
We know it.
Oh, my God.
Yeah.
Okay.
Somehow Lego Palpatine returned.
Maybe that's a clone of the original Lego Pappy from Homecoming.
Who can say how many sets in we are, you know?
Oh, boy.
Okay.
Question number three.
We talked about this earlier, but let's get it.
Let's get the prediction and the hopes and dreams.
Question number three.
When will we see Miles Morales in live action?
Do you think that this will happen in tandem with the ensuing Spider-Verse film?
or are they going to wait until after the Spiderverse animated series concludes to introduce Miles in live action?
Well, I hope the Spiderverse animated movie is going forever.
Me too.
I know that I said that I don't want another Tom Holland Peter Parker movie without MJ and Ned.
But someone somewhere, and I forget where, floated the idea of Peter as mentor.
Miles in Spider-Man 3?
This would be great.
I'm into it.
Me too.
As soon as possible is how I feel about getting fucking fan favorite Miles Morales
into the live action movies.
It's time.
I hope it happens in the next movie.
I really hope we don't have to wait any longer.
I also could not possibly be more excited for the next Spider-Verse movie, which looks fucking incredible.
Amazing.
Question number four.
Andrew and Toby.
What?
Yes.
More.
Yes.
Do we want to see?
And maybe the question is really, how?
You know, we got this amazing gift.
Are you ready to say goodbye now?
I don't know how interested Toby is in doing this anymore.
But Andrew, I mean, but Andrew said a lot of things in the lead up to this.
And he was like, he was just trash-hocking his time as Spider-Man, but also just lying through his teeth about being in Spider-Man.
I hope that Andrew was delighted by how happy everyone is with his performance here.
I would love to see Andrew get another turn as the lead.
I mean, maybe
So in a separate series of movies
that live independently from the MCU
or as part of the ongoing
MCU Sony experience.
Maybe Andrew gets to mentor Miles
for all this. Maybe that's
what happens. And Electro
is there for all of that.
I mean, I think the bare minimum
multiverse of madness,
I would like to see at least a glimpse of them.
But like what's wild to me
about this whole, and again,
I'm stealing a point from my pal David
Gonzalez on this. He was like, did they not play their strongest hand on a multiverse by putting
three Spider-Pepts, three Spider-Man in a movie together? Like, how do you top this in multiverse
storytelling? How do you top the moment of seeing Andrew, Toby, and Peter swinging through the
air at the same time together? That will be really, really, really hard to top. I mean, that is the
pinnacle in some ways. I guess my answer would be we had no expectation.
that's seeing Loki and Sylvie.
And, you know, classic Loki and Alligator,
Loki and Kid Loki would be as fulfilling as it was.
And, you know, I adored that show, couldn't have loved it more.
So I think that there are a lot of different variations of multiversal variant
storytelling.
And also, like, we get to look forward to seeing Jonathan Majors
as a bazillion different variants of Kang.
Like, how thrilling is that?
So yes, the three Spidey's, the three Peters together, it's going to be tough to top.
That's like Pantheon stuff.
But I'm choosing to look at it more as this like helps to solidify the template for what is possible and less like will eternally be measuring everything against this.
But you never know.
It's possible.
Question number five.
Which other spider people?
Spider beings are you most?
excited to see. Limit yourself if you can to your top three. I'm only going to hit you with two.
One is Silk. And to be clear, this is in addition to we've already, we've already said miles.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. So Silk. Silk is on my list too. Top, top character for me. And then I think I've said
this elsewhere before. I'm going to try to not bungle this name. Paveterre Pavakar,
who's Indian Spider-Man. I love him. And I love his design.
And I think he would be a really, really cool edition.
It was a way to take the story global, which would be kind of cool in the way that
Eternals tried to and stuff like that.
Yeah, that's an awesome one.
Those are my top two.
That's a great one.
For Silk, do you think, because Cindy is in the MCU films, would we get that, would
you want to see that Cindy or a Cindy from another universe brought in and developed a new,
like a new introduction for Silk?
think a new new intro okay this is so hard obviously miles is number one on my list overall
i think you know i'd really like to see it's on the one hand it's like spider gwen in
the animated universe is just so incredible and perfect that it's like that's enough but also
i want more so i would love to see spider gwen in live action
some May Day Parker.
Oh.
I mean, there are a lot of possibilities with
Spidey offspring.
You know, you could go any number of ways.
We could go with Spider Girl.
We could go with Spider-Ling.
I think it would be fun at some point
with all of the young Avengers stuff
happening to introduce a progeny.
At some point, I'm open on who,
which alternate universe version we get.
Oh, my God.
I don't know.
I mean, should we do Spider-wolf
while we're at it, Joe.
What do you think?
We could, we could.
You know, we had a few, a few people in the mailbag questions mentioned the exiles story arc
as like an interesting possibility for how we could maybe see these characters from this film
deployed in the future, but that's also a rich text for other comics characters who could
come in, like maybe some sort of spider being who was connected in some way to,
exiles and this like interdimensional travel that could be really cool and interesting i don't know just
put you know what put spider ham in everything and i'll be fine
live action spider ham i'm also very excited about about jessica drew and and
spider man is jessica drew like is that still in the this is heavily rumored and assumed camp
or is it confirmed that the olivia wild movie will be a jesska drew movie we know it's a spider woman
I'm pretty sure Jessica Drew is confirmed.
What remains unconfirmed is how much this is a Marvel Sony co-pro.
Okay.
I think that's true.
Our final question here, we did not actually get the Sinister Six here in name
and in full formation, though, of course, there are many different variations of the Sinister Six across the comics.
Are we going to get, at long last, it's been Sony's desire for so long, a sinister
six movie in Sony's Spider-Man universe.
We know Craven is coming.
Have you read some of the treatments for what their Sinister Six movie was going to be?
Yeah.
They sound,
they seem like terrible ideas to me.
I don't,
I don't really want the Sinister Six is how I feel about it.
Do you not want what seemed like it was being set up with the amazing Spider-Man
to teases,
you know,
walking through the special projects,
cells with the rhinosuit and the vulture wings and that.
Gok Gox Tentacles and all that, or more broadly, or you're not interested in what a new version of
this could be? Because I do think it feels like overall with the Sony Disney mashup projects,
but also just with like how fun the Venom movies have been, that Sony could do something now
that's better than what we would have gotten a few years ago. And like, we know Craven is coming,
right? We're getting a Craven movie. We see Michael Keaton. We see Tooms in the Morbius trailer,
which I have a lot of questions about.
I'm fascinated to see how that is all explained
and how that works exactly.
Maybe I feel like we will get this.
I'm wondering when and how.
My answer right now is, no, I don't want this.
I'm happy to revisit this after we see Morbius.
Okay, fair.
But like, Benham still feels like a fluke to me
in terms of like Sony's ability to like give us a movie that works.
Okay.
We'll see.
Totally fair.
We'll see.
Okay.
Time to reach into the Easter egg basket.
In many ways, this entire movie is, and I say this as a compliment,
stitched together Easter egg by Easter egg.
It's almost impossible to run through all the Easter eggs here.
We would just be reciting the plot again of the entire movie.
So we're going to limit ourselves to a favorite each.
Tons of choices.
Do you have one Easter egg that you enjoyed the most,
either because of an emotional connection or what it promises about the films moving forward?
Yeah, I wanted to surprise you with it.
So it's not on our list.
it's definitely not an emotional connection
but I just want to point out
in their ransacking
of the undercroft
right
down nabby
MD no MJ finds
like just for men and a goatee guard
that was great yeah that's my number one
that was really good how does
strange because first of all I didn't think
Ben's uh Benedict's coverbatch's wig
looked incredible in this movie
but the uh
I love the wig comment
Terry from you always.
I'm always watching for those hairlines and how they're laid.
But I mean, to compliment them, Aunt May's wig is so good that for a long time, I was like,
Morrison Tomey just has incredibly long hair.
And then I was like, oh, no, that's a wig, you dummy.
Anyway, that's an incredible wig.
Anyway, point B, just for men and the goatee guard.
I love it.
Incredible.
Incredible stuff from Benedict Commerbatch's Dr.
Steven Strange.
Mal, what's your, what's your history pick?
this is so hard i mean i always i already shouted out my dude dummy
and the legos obviously i loved all that the the dick go graffiti nice to see i love that
you're like me where you're like i'm not i refuse to actually just give you one answer
on my way to one answer i will give you other answers we're going to pick three spider spider spider people
and i'm always like well or oh my god i think you know the super villain ned thing we already
about that's in the running certainly i obviously love the getting hearing norman say i'm something of a
scientist myself was a great moment for meme culture that was really fun joamy we left the theater
and jomi was like they've seen the memes and he's right they've seen the memes so that was
really fun the pointing meme the fact that they like had to do the pointing meme and it didn't like
and i didn't hate it that's an incredible work it's a high bar to clear i'm still going to go with though
ultimately my actual pick is the characters that we've limped through the cracks in the multiverse as
strange was working to contain the spell because that's one where I'm like, okay, I could only
see so many things at first. I can't wait to be able to like go frame by frame and freeze this and
parse and see on subsequent viewings how many of these characters we can spot and what that
might tease for future installments. Definitely saw rhinos scorpion and Craven. Those were the
ones that our screening group was confident we saw. But there were like dozens and dozens and
dozens of characters there. So who else was there? I can't wait to find out more. That's my
something that I forgot to say when we were talking about Tom Holland's future in the MCU
is to clarify what's left on his contract really quickly, which is he only has one
MCU appearance left.
So it's not a full film.
It's like an appearance in another film on like cameo if you want to call it that or,
you know, like the level that you said this isn't likely.
But so if he showed up in the Hawkeye finale, let's say, which I don't think we think is going
to happen.
But if he did, that would be it.
That would be a wrap.
I don't know if TV appearance is the same as film appearance contractually.
I think most people expect that he was going to show up in multiverse of madness,
especially when that was supposed to come before this movie.
The question is, is he still in multiverse of madness now that it comes after?
By the way, I love to seeing the cloak of levitation on Ned,
especially after we got to see the cloak on Peter in What If?
Delightful.
I love the cloak.
This is how you know it was a Sony movie.
Ned calls it a cape, but like...
Well, he's got a lot to learn.
He's got to head to the symptom.
It's very important.
If you've ever interviewed the costume designer, you have to call that a cloak.
They never call it a cape.
See, I do that more as like Ned has a lot to train and learn and less like Spider-Man
Homecoming completely destroyed the MCU timeline by saying eight years later after the Battle
of New York when that is not when that movie takes place.
Anyway.
Anyway.
It's time for one of our favorite traditions.
Secret? Scroll. Watch.
Here's my prediction.
We're going to have the same pick for this.
We did not put it in the outline.
We're surprising each other. I feel sure we will have the same pick.
And I think it's like our most likely scroll yet.
Like the other ones are kind of jokes to me, but this one I kind of feel like might be true.
Say it on the count of three.
Watch it not be the same.
But if it is, I'm going to be so excited.
One, two, three.
Stewie.
I am my head.
Ancient Cleary from damage control
because right,
damage control is coming back into the story.
This feels notable in some way.
He knows that Fury has been off planet for like a while.
Yes.
This just felt,
yes,
this isn't it.
And I don't feel like you cast Ariah Moyan.
Maybe you do.
But I don't think you cast him for like,
and he was great.
He had like 10 minutes of screen time max.
And he was incredible.
That we picked the same one.
I love this.
I hope it's true.
Me too.
This is the payoff of Secret Scroll Watch 2021.
But yeah, I'm really hoping that he's a scroll.
Me too.
I loved him in this movie.
I want to see him more.
Stewie from Succession.
Come back to us.
Okay.
Mailback.
Let's pause for a minute and figure out which ones we want to.
Here was my real anxiety.
You're like on the count of three and I was like, how is she going to say it?
Is she going to say Stewie from Succession?
Is she going to say Agent Cleary?
Is she going to say the actor name?
I was only ever going to say Stewie.
When Mysterio revealed my identity, my entire life got screwed up.
I was wondering if maybe you could make it so that he never did.
All right, it's mailback time.
We got so many amazing questions.
We've touched on some of it already today.
We're going to answer a few questions here.
Who knows?
Maybe in the new year, if everyone's still buzzing swinging through their no-way home discussions
will return to a mailbag in the future.
Who can stay?
We're here, as always, for the mailbag with Jomi Adon, Lord of the Memes.
me what do we got? Oh, we got a lot of good stuff. You know, some people would say, you know,
I'm a really good podcast question getter. So, you know, I'd say that. I'm here for it.
First question is we got like a double pack, right? The first one's from Kelly. What point in their
timelines are the villains going back to? Do they have a chance to make better choices? And how does
that affect the lives of their spodies.
And Caitlin also asked,
did Spider-Man 1, Doom Spider-Man 2 and 3
to be forgotten the way he was
since everyone had to forget Peter Parker?
We got a lot of questions like this,
like the implication in the other universes
for the other Peters and those characters
of what the thought of the spell is going to be.
Joe, what do you make of this?
I think for Caitlin's question,
I think this only affects this Peter Parker
would be my guess about that.
That was my read too.
Everyone's going to forget this Peter Parker.
In this universe.
Yeah.
For what point in their timelines of buildings going back to
do they have a chance to make better choices
and how does that affect the lives of their Spydies?
I think, and it could be wrong,
but I think we have to look to the end game time travel rules for this.
I could be wrong about this.
But like if, let's say, Norman Osborne comes back
and he's no longer green goblinized.
And let's say he does other stuff,
it's still not, for some reason,
it's still not going to change Toby's Peter
because your past is always,
I mean, the endgame time rule still don't make sense to me.
Interesting.
I was wondering, and this gets complex too,
I think the really short answer to all of these questions
and the other versions of questions that are similar
is we have a lot to learn about the rules of this inside of the MCU.
And they have a lot of explaining to do in subsequent stories about how all this works.
Because I'll give you an example.
One of my thoughts, and we had a lot of other people tweeting at us in the mailback
questions with a similar read on it is like, well, this would be different sending them
back.
It would have a ripple effect.
Our Andrew, our Toby could not end up.
where they then came into this story.
Now, the bootstrap, like,
if you want to carve out a few hours and talk about Netflix's dark
and time travel and paradoxes, I'm here for at any time.
There is this question, right, of did it always happen this way?
And so it must happen this way.
But inside of the universe of the MCU,
we know that new timelines can shoot off
when something happens that wasn't
supposed to happen or something has changed.
However, the thing that the reason I said, well, they have a lot of explaining to do is because
so would this spark a new like a variant timeline inside of those universes?
A note I made for myself is, does the TVA just prune all these people as soon as they go back to
their reality?
I'm glad you're, I'm glad you're asking that because that's what I was going to say.
So would they be basically candidates for pruning except is that even happening?
because of course there's no sacred timeline anymore because of what happened with Sylvie and
you remains. What is the TVA doing? We do see the TVA is there, right? When when Loki goes and realizes
that Mobius and they don't know who he is anymore and he sees the King statue, but they're still
looking and saying, well, are we supposed to just let all these go? Which implies that they are managing
timelines outside of this one like chaotic unfurling, right? So that's a really long way of saying,
I don't know, but it seems like
it seems like they might be variants who start new timelines
and whether the TVA now in this new post-Loki finale version
allows that to continue is the question.
Maybe that's a bad read.
I don't know.
No, I think the question is we don't know
what the new TVA is up to, right?
Like, we just don't know.
So for us to speak on what they're doing right now.
This is interesting?
Because like, is the multiverse too confusing
and doesn't matter question?
Like, we know we're going to get a season two of Loki
and we'll get those answers then,
but we're going to have so many multiverse stories
between the end of Loki season one and Loki season two.
So don't we have to understand this at some point?
Do we? Do they?
I mean, exactly.
They're just going to yada yada.
You know, and also like we can't, we can't.
Ultimately, the multiverse is a tool that they're going to use.
Broadly. This is not specific to this movie or even the MCU.
This is a cross-fantasy story telling.
I'm okay with almost any set of rules, but you have to establish what they are at some point.
You have to establish the rules of the universe and then live by them.
So I'm just curious to know when we will.
And it's fine.
Like this is new.
So we'll learn more and more story after story.
But it's interesting, even like you go back and you hear them talk about the multiverse and Dr.
Strange and they're talking about these different dimensions, right?
We have dimensions like the ashtral dimension and the mirror dimension.
That's part of the multiverse.
We have all of these different worlds and universes, right?
that's part of the multiverse.
We have the timeline that has cracked open.
So it's not just a sacred timeline.
That's part of the multiverse.
All of this stuff is part of the multiverse.
Great.
But how does it work?
Like, Dr. Strange didn't open the multiverse with a spell.
The multiverse exists.
That's acknowledged in the film.
They pull characters out of it.
And then there's a threat at the end that more could come through.
But the characters that they're pulling out are from different timelines,
even though they're from the same experience.
Again, let me.
Not different timelines, different moments on their time.
line, I should say.
I feel like sometimes when we get multi-hours into a podcast, someone's going to forget what
I said at the top.
So let me say again, as many hours later.
I loved this movie.
Yeah.
I feel very emotionally connected to this movie.
This shit makes no sense.
And like this shit, I thought made no sense an end game.
Like when people were debating the time travel rules in end game, I'm like, this shit
makes no sense.
But it doesn't matter to me if Tony Stark gets to have a conversation with his dad, if the time travel
doesn't make sense.
to me it's only when characters behave inconsistently that I get super stressed out.
If in the world of comic book storytelling or fantasy storytelling, you want to yada yada time travel
rules or multiverse rules because you've made it too complicated for yourself or put some
flowers in front of Aunt May's tombstone because you don't know what the fuck you're doing with
your timeline, I'm going to be able to roll with it because emotionally it works for me.
Logistically, it makes no sense for a cured doc to go back into the timeline.
and for that not to have some impact
on youth pastor Toby McGuire's life.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, I don't think, like Mal said,
I don't think we'll get answers
until season two of Loki.
But ultimately, I think,
ultimately, I think the multiverse
is a tool, right?
Like in this movie,
and I assume in Multiverse of Madness,
it's just a tool to pull,
plug stuff out of
that we already have knowledge of
that we don't have to, like,
they don't have to do too much thinking,
I don't agree with that.
I think that that's when, to Vans point,
like that will be where a lot of the things
that Vant has been pointing out become a real,
real problem moving forward.
The Infinity Stones are McGuffins.
Now, yes, they're central to how the plot of the story plays out,
but they are plot devices and tools.
The multiverse is the world in which the characters exist now.
and we have to understand that.
It doesn't have to happen right away,
but we have to understand that.
I hope you get what you want.
Now, comic book stories,
the rules change all the time.
I'm ready to swing with it.
I've already got the back pain.
I will swing with it every update along the way.
But I think they have to at least try
to explain some of the stuff at some point.
I'm fine with it now.
I'm just like,
I'm ready to learn a little bit more.
I hope we get that soon.
It'll be fun to talk about if nothing else.
That would be nice.
Hopefully they could give us a little something in multiverse of madness to tide us over.
It's not far away.
That movie soon.
It's going to be May, right?
It's going to be May before we know it.
I know.
It's going to be right there.
Okay.
What's next?
Next question comes from Mel.
Mel's like, okay, I think I have the spell sorted.
Everyone forgets him.
Nothing else changes.
However, do pictures remain?
Or are they memories that disembate?
that disappear.
Great question.
We don't actually know the answer to this
so we can just interpret and guess
and speculate.
What do you both think?
I think it's going to be like a,
for me, I think it's,
I think Jemmy has a different answer,
but for me it's going to be like,
hmm, your mind kind of glosses over it.
Do you know what I mean?
Like, like, if Tony Stark were still alive,
which he's not, rest and peace,
he would,
he would remember that he pulled space,
Spider-Man into the Civil War fight, but not that he pulled Peter Parker.
Do you know what he mean?
Right.
Spider-Man exists for sure.
People know Spider-Man.
Like, happy- He knows Spider-Man.
He just doesn't remember Peter.
When he remembers it, he's going to remember, oh, I went and got this kid who's Spider-Man.
But not, I went to his apartment and hit on his aunt, and he was wearing a pizza t-shirt.
Yeah.
I agree with that, but what happens when MJ is scrolling through her camera roll?
I think those photos are gone.
You think that the footprint of Peter's life has been erased.
I guess it would have to be or how else would people not,
she's just going to be looking through the text and that sweet sad boy who cried
when he paid for the coffee.
That guy.
I think poor Martin Starr's display case that he made at the high school,
beautiful, beautiful artwork from Martin Starr's character is gone.
Wow.
Okay.
Like, snap down of existence.
Yeah.
I think that's a good.
I think that's a good take.
I think mine,
almost.
I think mine's a little different in the sense that like,
you know,
he still exists as a human being.
But like,
it's just like one of those memories where like,
I can't,
you can't remember who all was there or whatever.
Just like a little,
like you said,
like they gloss over,
you know,
like so,
and this is like a thing,
an interesting tool for the future.
If they want to bring him back for like an Avengers movie,
they can be like,
oh, let's bring back Spider-Man.
We remember Spider-Man,
but they don't know it's Peter.
That doesn't really.
That's also one where I'm like, are the Avengers fighting alongside someone they don't know?
I mean, they know Spider-Man.
They remember Spider-Man.
They won't remember that Spider-Man is Peter Parker.
I think that very quickly in the next, if Tom Holland's Peter Parker returns,
I think very quickly people will start to remember who he is.
I think that probably has to happen.
We will only find out of Tom Holland signs up for more movies.
But like, what kind of ID docs documentation does Peter Parker have?
does he still have a social security number?
Does he have, you know, all that sort of stuff?
You know, Jomey points out how was he able to get a lease if he doesn't.
I mean, that apartment seems off the books to me, that shitty apartment.
But we, sorry, really quickly.
Can I just shout out one thing I forgot to mention on the vein of shitty apartments and Peter,
the standards that Peter has allowed himself to live by.
I just want to shout at his super wrinkly suit that he wears when he goes to track down the,
the MIT lady on the, like, this is a suit and a dress shirt that has been jammed in a backpack.
It's like, it's perfect.
They never, no one even mentions it.
It's just sort of like, yes.
Sometime a teenager just puts on teenage life.
I love it.
He doesn't have the nanotech for his dresswear, I guess.
Tony Stark didn't think that ahead.
I guess not.
All right.
What else we got, Joe?
All right.
Our last question comes from Brandon.
rust. Would you cast a spell to have everyone forget something leaked or revealed in the trailers
leading up to the movie? And what would it be? Andrew and Toby? Matt Murdoch? Here's my pick,
showing MJ Fall in the trailer. We all knew what was going to happen when we saw that.
I'm with Brandon. M.J. Fall. Yeah. That's a good pick. That's a good pick to cut. That would have been
I think also there are so much like what or whom is punching lizard and has been digitally removed from this shot.
It was a kick.
That was my favorite part of that shot was that it was a kick, not a punch.
That would have been a funny thing to not have there.
Though I personally, I don't mind this because I think it's exciting that it sparked all of this speculation.
I don't know.
I don't mind it.
I think it was a really interesting strategy because I think Tom Holland said at one point that they were going to try to not even like talk about the villains coming through.
and I think then
Alvin Molina just like
was like hey I'm in this movie
and then they were like well new strategy
but I think they were going to try to keep all of that a secret
and I think the half secret actually worked in their favorites
and the and the Andrew and Toby rumors work in their favor
because it's like producer Juno says
that Tom said that the original marketing plan
was to make it look like it was Spidey versus Strange
and keep all that other stuff a secret
just like how Robert Rodriguez recently said in an interview
that everything in the trailer for Boba Fed is from the first half of the first episode,
which maybe makes you Mal feel more optimistic about the Boba show,
because you're like, what is this trailer?
And it's like, it's the first half of the first episode.
That's what it is.
I'm ready for nothing but surprises.
So, yeah, so people are like, I don't know.
I feel like people get too uptight about spoilers again, as I've said before.
But I do think that whole like, okay, go see this opening weekend.
You got to see it right away before it gets spoiled for you,
this thing that everyone already pretty much knows.
But you got to go see it for yourself.
Don't get spoiled.
And it's like, I don't know.
It's, it worked for Sony in the end.
I think I would have paid it in godly sum of money to have the rumors of Andrew and Toby
wiped for my brain before seeing this for the first time.
Like, could you imagine having no idea?
And then he opens the, he opens the portal.
And, oh, man, I would have, I would have lost my mind.
I would have lost my mind.
You know, it was lost your mind anyway, right?
It was still exciting.
Yeah, it was still exciting in the movie, you know.
But if you had like no idea, like actually know.
It would have been incredible.
It would have been.
I think the nature of, and this is one of the things that's so fun about watching all
these stories together and talking about them together, there's so much theorizing and
speculating.
As soon as we heard the Green Goblin laugh and saw the pumpkin bomb and saw Doc
Ack in the first trailer, we would have said those are villains from the Toby movies.
What does that mean?
Is there a chance Toby's going to be in this movie?
I think no matter what people would have started speculating, right?
I know 100%.
But like, you know, I'm online.
I know, Joe, you saw.
You saw like the leaks, you know, like you read the stuff.
I, you know, spent some time online, you see pictures.
You see things like, oh, man.
Oh, yeah, they're first people DM me.
Hey, they're definitely in the movie.
So I was like, oh, for show.
You know what I mean?
But if I had gone in like no, you know, headroom, just like, let's see what happens.
You know, this is a Spider-Man movie.
If Sony had been able to market this movie to make it look like Spidey versus Strange,
would they have made the amount of money they made this?
Yeah, exactly.
I think it's actually smart.
market it with some degree of candor about what's going to happen in the movie.
You don't want to give it all the way, but they didn't.
They didn't actually.
To circle back to the very beginning, they did it.
I will just say like, I think when people say, oh my God, you spoiled it, you've ruined
the movie for me.
That's the thing that I just like, again, I don't want to spoil anyone who doesn't want to
know ever.
I don't ever want to do that.
I really don't think it's going to ruin the movie for you.
I think you're going to get so excited to see Andrew and Toby no matter what, you know what I mean.
And I know that's not what you're saying.
And that's me speaking to someone else.
I think to Mow's point, like we just make movies differently.
So like the thing is to get people into the theaters, you know, like it made what?
Over $250 million in the U.S. alone opening weekend.
So like it did its job.
But imagine if we had just got, oh, it's trained versus Spidey and then we walked out to all of that.
our minds would have been
like just like
you'd walk out
the theater like
oh my God
like what did
what if I just witnessed
what did I just see
you know
there's different levels
but you know
it's just the way things are now
I guess I just don't know
maybe it happened that way
I don't I guess I just don't know
how to like
I don't know how to watch movies
like like when we walked out
of Infinity War
and I remember people being like
oh my God all these people are dead
and I'm like no obviously
they're not like what are you talking about
No, very clearly they're not.
What are you talking about?
That's weird because we knew endgame was coming like the next year.
Exactly.
But like, what is it like to live like that?
Where you're like, oh my God, they killed Tom Holland in Infinity War.
I'm like, of course they didn't.
I don't know.
All right.
On that note, MIT admissions is calling, so it's time to wrap today's episode.
Thank you.
Thank you so much.
much. Really thank you to our friendly neighborhood producer Lonnie Rinaldo for swinging in
to produce this overstuffed, super-sized episode. Thank you to our favorite webheads.
Steve Allman, Arjuna Ramgapal, and TD St. Matthew Daniel for their additional production work on
this episode. And thank you to Jomea Denneron. He's something of a meme scientist.
artist himself for his work on the social for this episode.
Remember to follow the Ringerverse on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.
Follow the Ringiverse across our social feeds.
Head back into the Ringerverse on Wednesday for the Midnight Boys Hawkeye Finale
Instagram reaction and Friday for the House of our working title, Hawkeye Finale Deep
Done.
Until then, careful what you wish.
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