Times Colonist

New Spiderman adds fun to character

- KATIE WALSH

Spider Man: Into the Spider-Verse Where: Capitol 6, Cineplex Odeon Westshore, SilverCity Imax Starring: Voices of Shameik Moore, Jake Johnson, Hailee Steinfeld Directed by: Bob Persichett­i, Peter Ramsey, Rodney Rothman Parental advisory: PG Rating: Four stars

Spider-Man is the superhero franchise that might suffer the most from reboot fatigue. In the past 16 years, there have been six SpiderMan movies starring three different actors as Peter Parker, with another on the way. Could we really stand yet another SpiderMan movie? Animated feature Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse is here to prove new life can be injected into the franchise by reminding us all where SpiderMan comes from: the comic books.

Right away, Spider-Verse, directed by Bob Persichett­i, Peter Ramsey and Rodney Rothman, with a screenplay by Phil Lord, reveals itself to be a completely different animal, unlike any other superhero or animated film that has come before. The animation style is like watching a comic book come to life. The characters look hand-drawn, with distinctiv­e strokes and lines. The images even have a pointillis­t style reminiscen­t of the Ben-Day dots paper printing technique, complete with red-blue aura around the characters. There’s a tactile sense of a comic book page on the screen, fluidly rendered, with an ingenious use of text boxes, married with a technologi­cally and esthetical­ly outré style. The climax is a wild and colourful head-trip of neon and pastel, a big bang fight scene exploding in pink and green and blue and purple.

Spider-Verse also firmly exists in a post-Deadpool environmen­t, where it seems the only fresh way into a century-old superhero is to skewer the tropes, make fun of the merchandis­ing and acknowledg­e the cultural significan­ce of it all in a cheeky and self-reflective manner. Don’t worry, Spidey isn’t as crude, violent or nihilistic as Deadpool, but this is a universe where Peter Parker exists as a cultural icon, one that could take a good ribbing or two.

This universe is a multi-verse — a “spider-verse” if you will — and the story clashes together all the different Spider-people that have proliferat­ed throughout the comic books. Our hero is Miles Morales (Shameik Moore), an Afro-Latino kid from Brooklyn whose father is a cop. Peter Parker (Chris Pine) exists in his world, and there’s a Peter B. Parker (Jake Johnson) from an alternate universe who crashes in when the evil mobster Kingpin (Liev Schreiber) fires up a portal to another dimension to bring back his family. Spider-Gwen (Hailee Steinfeld), Spider-Man Noir (Nicolas Cage), Spider-Ham, aka Peter Porker (John Mulaney), and the anime-inspired Peni Parker (Kimiko Glenn) all crash the party too, helping Miles get in touch with his new abilities and inner hero.

It’s so refreshing to have a character such as Miles in the lead, and his relationsh­ips, particular­ly with his father (Brian Tyree Henry) and uncle (Mahershala Ali) have real heart and stakes. Johnson balances that with his hilarious take on washed-up Peter B. Parker, who’s packed on a few pounds and shows Miles the ropes in his sweatpants.

The key to the balance of selfaware and sweet is Lord, who along with his writing/directing partner Chris Miller, penned the incredibly smart The Lego Batman Movie. There’s a deep sense of love for the characters and tropes, but also a willingnes­s to have some fun with it. Not all superhero reboots need to be gritty and dark, and the delights of Spider-Man: Into the SpiderVers­e bring a newfound sense of joy and playfulnes­s to the beloved character — in every iteration.

 ??  ?? Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse is unlike any other superhero or animated film that has come before.
Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse is unlike any other superhero or animated film that has come before.

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