Dayton Daily News

Animated ‘Spider-Man’ injects joy into franchise

This playful reboot borrows cheekiness of ‘Deadpool’ franchise.

- By Katie Walsh Grade: Starring:

“Spider-Man” is the superhero franchise that may suffer the most from reboot fatigue.

In the past 16 years, there have been six Spider-Man movies starring three different actors as Peter Parker, with another on the way. Could we really stand yet another Spider-Man 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 Spider-Man 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 aesthetica­lly outré style. The climax is a wild and colorful headtrip 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 selfreflec­tive 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-Latinx 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 like 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 smart and spry Spider-Gwen is also incredible, in her hooded suit and ballet shoes.

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 Spider-Verse” bring a newfound sense of joy and playfulnes­s to the beloved character — in every iteration.

‘Mortal Engines’ ‘SPIDER-MAN: INTO THE SPIDER-VERSE’

A

Voices of Shameik Moore, Hailee Steinfeld, Jake Johnson, Brian Tyree Henry, Mahershala Ali, John Mulaney, Nicolas Cage, Chris Pine, Kimiko Glenn

Bob Persichett­i, Peter A. Ramsey and Rodney Rothman 117 minutes PG for sequences of animated action violence, thematic elements, and mild language

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 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Shameik Moore in “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse.”
CONTRIBUTE­D Shameik Moore in “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse.”

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