Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse movie review (2023)

Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse movie review (2023)

Spider-Man

“Across the Spider-Verse” opens just over a year after the action of the first movie. Gwen Stacy (Hailee Steinfeld) is back in her universe, trying to keep her identity secret from her father, George (Shea Whigham). When an alternate version of the villainous Vulture (Jorma Taccone) drops into her reality, the bad guy ends up trailed by the intense Spider-Man 2099 (Oscar Isaac) and confident Spider-Woman (Issa Rae). They reveal to Gwen that they’re part of a secret Spider-Society that has been cleaning up inter-universe messes, capturing villains who end up in the wrong one and sending them home again. When Gwen’s identity is blown with her dad, she joins the Spider-Crew, correcting the errors of multi-verse.

Of course, fans will remember that Miles Morales (Shameik Moore) was basically one of those blunders. Peter Parker in his universe died trying to save him, and the spider that bit Miles was never meant to be there. But it was. And now? The backbone of this story is about pushing back against determinism and moving forward with what lies ahead of you. Superhero culture has used multiverse stories to expand the concept of potential, but this movie (and I hope those themes actually emerge in its sequel) shows that clinging to reality is far more important than imagining all the other things that could have been. It’s more about taking control of your own destiny than giving in to a pre-written heroism narrative. More than most superhero movies, it’s more about strength than fate. And it is something powerful.

Back to Miles. He’s in his version of Brooklyn, trying to strike a balance between being a good student and being a neighborhood friendly Spider-Man. He’s considering telling his mother, Rio (Luna Lauren Vélez), and father, Jefferson (Brian Tyree Henry), the truth, but worries what it could do to their relationship if he does. One day, an odd duck that Miles thinks is just a “villain of the week” pops up in the form of The Spot (Jason Schwartzman). Formerly known as Dr. Jonathan Ohnn, the once-Alchemax-employee was forever altered by the first movie’s action, able to control time and space through a series of portals. At first, it’s kind of cute how he tries to steal an ATM with a portal, but The Spot ends up being significantly more dangerous as his powers grow, opening passages that can destroy worlds.

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