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      • In the film, Parker asks Dr. Stephen Strange (Cumberbatch) to use magic to make his identity as Spider-Man a secret again after this was revealed to the world at the end of Far From Home. When the spell goes wrong because of Parker's actions, the multiverse is broken open and visitors from alternate realities are brought into Parker's universe.
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  2. Dec 17, 2021 · With Tom Holland, Zendaya, Benedict Cumberbatch, Jacob Batalon. With Spider-Man's identity now revealed, Peter asks Doctor Strange for help. When a spell goes wrong, dangerous foes from other worlds start to appear, forcing Peter to discover what it truly means to be Spider-Man.

    • (881K)
    • Action, Adventure, Fantasy
    • Jon Watts
    • 2021-12-17
  3. Jan 26, 2023 · Culture & Lifestyle. Published January 26, 2023. Tobey Maguire and Andrew Garfield on the making of 'SPIDER-MAN NO WAY HOME' Coming Feburary 28th, 'SPIDER-MAN NO WAY HOME: THE OFFICIAL MOVIE SPECIAL' features interviews with Maguire, Garfield as well as Tom Holland, Zendaya, and Benedict Cumberbatch! by Marvel.

  4. A bigger, bolder Spider-Man sequel, No Way Home expands the franchise's scope and stakes without losing sight of its humor and heart. Read Critics Reviews. Packed with action, emotion,...

    • (430)
    • Jon Watts
    • PG-13
    • Tom Holland
    • What's so special about Spider-Man No Way Home?1
    • What's so special about Spider-Man No Way Home?2
    • What's so special about Spider-Man No Way Home?3
    • What's so special about Spider-Man No Way Home?4
    • What's so special about Spider-Man No Way Home?5
    • Saturday morning cartoon meets deep MCU drama? More of this, please.
    • Spider-Man: No Way Home Trailer 2 Screenshots
    • What We Said About Spider-Man: Far From Home
    • What's your favorite MCU movie of 2021 so far?
    • Verdict
    • Spider-Man: No Way Home Review
    • More Reviews by Amelia Emberwing
    • IGN Recommends

    By Amelia Emberwing

    Updated: Dec 17, 2021 9:13 pm

    Posted: Dec 14, 2021 6:30 am

    This is a spoiler-free review of Spider-Man: No Way Home, which will hit theaters Dec 17th 2021.

    Once-in-a-lifetime films are pipe dreams for most studios, yet, here’s Marvel showing off the fact that they have us all in the palm of their hands yet again. Spider-Man: No Way Home is somehow a perfect harmony of a Saturday morning cartoon and the deep drama that we’ve come to expect from these epics. You’ll find no spoilers here, but the film will remind you repeatedly that there are a whole lot of reasons that Sony and Marvel kept the details of this one as close to the vest as possible.

    Despite the fact that there’s so much we can’t talk about here, we can still find plenty of tidbits to discuss, because there’s truly never a dull moment in Spider-Man: No Way Home. That’s due in no small part to stellar performances across the board. The MCU as a whole has never been a slouch when it comes to casting. Some of the best actors in the world now hold their own respective Marvel roles. But, whether it be the pandemic or No Way Home's lack of buildup from other installments in the MCU, the performances here feel like something different. Willem Dafoe nails everything he does, but his reprisal of Norman Osborn is something for the MCU history books. His character — like the rest of the villains who find their way into Peter’s (Tom Holland) universe — is given a new depth that was never explored in previous Spider-Man films.

    Built around performances like Dafoe’s — Alfred Molina’s Doc Oc and Jamie Foxx’s Electro aren’t anything to sneeze at, either — is the root of Spider-Man: No Way Home’s success. Amidst the laughs and the tears is a deep, heartfelt empathy that’s felt missing not just in the early MCU, but in the Spider-Man films that preceded this one. That’s not t...

    IGN's Jim Vejvoda gave the previous Spider-Man film, Far From Home, an 8.8, writing, "Spider-Man: Far From Home is a grandly entertaining culmination of the MCU wall-crawler’s journey so far. Thanks to its sweet humor, clever commentary, and deft action set-pieces, Far From Home continues the journey of Peter Parker from kid hero to Tony Stark’s successor. The movie sets the table for some exciting new adventures ahead for Spider-Man and his place in the MCU, pitting him against an antagonist who preys on Peter Parker’s fears and insecurities in ways no other villain quite has yet. Far From Home ends Marvel's Phase Three with a hell of a bang, thrusting its young wall-crawler into a treacherous but hugely exciting new era."

    The involvement of Doctor Strange (Benedict Cumberbatch) really helps to drive home the age difference between Pete and the rest of the Avengers, which furthers The Spectacular Spider-Man of it all. Underneath all of Tony Stark’s tech is a kid who just kinda wants to do kid stuff sometimes. Like, y’know, get into college or whatever.

    Black Widow

    Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings

    Eternals

    While there's a real thrill in watching a story of this scope, which takes from and adds so much to the MCU as a whole, I’m not going to tell you that Spider-Man: No Way Home is without its flaws. When folks talk about superhero fatigue, they’re often not talking about audiences becoming tired of seeing people in capes. What they typically mean is an overall boredom with tropes that have been long-standing staples in the genre. The MCU has been forced to reckon with these tropes over the years to varying degrees of success, but there are some moments in this one that fall into one of the most frustrating hero habits of them all: the lone hero. This complaint and the specific fallout from certain choices made by our friendly neighborhood Spider-Man will undoubtedly see resolution in later films. But, for now, they’re annoying.

    The vast majority of everything presented in this newest chapter works.

    Spider-Man: No Way Home hits all the right notes as the MCU's latest entry. Its impact on the universe as a whole, as well as the overall emotional beats, all feel earned. Stellar performances meet what feels like a Saturday morning cartoon rife with all the devastating punches we've come to expect from this sneaky universe. Though it struggles wit...

    Review scoring

    great

    Spider-Man: No Way Home bounces from hilarious to hurt with ease as both the darkest and funniest MCU Spider-Man entry to date.

    Amelia Emberwing

    Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom Review

    The Iron Claw Review

  5. Spider-Man: No Way Home is a 2021 American superhero film based on the Marvel Comics character Spider-Man, co-produced by Columbia Pictures and Marvel Studios, and distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing. It is the sequel to Spider-Man: Homecoming (2017) and Spider-Man: Far From Home (2019), and the 27th film in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU).

  6. Dec 14, 2021 · Powered by JustWatch. The best of “Spider-Man: No Way Home” reminded me why I used to love comic books, especially the ones about a boy named Peter Parker. There was a playful unpredictability to them that has often been missing from modern superhero movies, which feel so precisely calculated.

  7. Sony Pictures Entertainment. 7.19M subscribers. 2.9M. 82M views 2 years ago #Zendaya #DocOck #TomHolland. We started getting visitors… from every universe. Watch the official trailer for...

    • 3 min
    • 82.1M
    • Sony Pictures Entertainment
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