Total Film

Spider-man: into the spider-verse

Miles ahead…

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The animated (web) spinoff from Lord and Miller.

Of all the characters in all the fictional universes, Spider-Man feels like the one least in need of another new spin. The character’s been done in live-action three times in recent memory, and is currently in very rude health in the form of Tom Holland’s MCU-traversing Peter Parker. Into The Spider-Verse gleefully obliterate­s this assumption with a smart, funny, dimension-crossing adventure, one that introduces a new Spidey alongside some familiar iconograph­y and tropes. It’s also visually astonishin­g, bringing the dynamism of the comics to life in a way that surpasses the live-action efforts.

It’s jointly directed by Bob Persichett­i, Peter Ramsey and Rodney Rothman, but the hallmarks of producers Phil Lord and Christophe­r Miller are all over this punky take like graffiti (Lord came up with the story and co-wrote the screenplay). SpiderMan: Into The Spider-Verse has an irreverent ‘meta’ tone, reminiscen­t of Lord and Miller’s 21 Jump Street and The Lego Movie, but it also has unexpected heart and thrilling action. And it’s very, very funny, skewering Spider-Man with the same irreverenc­e The Lego Batman Movie slayed the Dark Knight.

Our lead Spider-Man this time around is Miles Morales (Shameik Moore), an alternativ­e webslinger who’s been in the comics since 2011. He’s not as much of a tech nerd as Peter Parker, but he’s smart, likeable and struggling to feel at home in the elite boarding school at which he’s won a place. Having a father who’s a cop isn’t making his adolescent years any easier, either. Of course, he winds up being bitten by a funky-looking arachnid, and… you know the drill.

WELL MULTIVERSE­D

Or not quite. Because Miles also gets caught up with an atom collider that tears a hole in the space-time continuum, introducin­g him to a schlubby Peter Parker from a parallel universe (given pitch-perfect cynicism by Jake Johnson’s croak). It’s up to this paunchy mentor to show Morales the ways of the web and help him get a sticky-palmed grasp of life as a hero.

Miles and Peter aren’t the only two Spider-people on the scene though. The disruption of the space-time fabric also brings Gwen Stacy/ Spider-Woman (Hailee Steinfeld) into their orbit, as well as other Spidey characters from the multiverse. If on paper it sounds overly complicate­d, on screen it’s surprising­ly elegant. It helps that the action is grounded in Miles’ dimension, and the goal for him and his superteam is a simple one – stop that particle collider going off again and turning NYC into one giant glitch.

Miles has a gratifying­ly slow-burn origin, as far as these things go. He doesn’t instantly take to his gifts; the mind is willing but the superpower­s are hard to master. Along the way he learns some lessons about what it means to be a hero, but the filmmakers manage to make these moments feel heartfelt rather than sappy. It helps that the voice cast is

‘VISUALLY ASTONISHIN­G, IT’S A POP-ART COMIC COME TO LIFE’

ace, nailing the comedy as well as the more emotional moments. Brian Tyree Henry and Mahershala Ali, in particular, bring real gravitas to their supporting roles as Miles’ father figures. Nic Cage, meanwhile, is a delight as Spider-Man Noir, a black-and-white Spidey from the ’30s spouting era-specific one-liners.

DOT STUFF

Visually, the film eludes comparison­s to anything that’s come before. It’s a pop-art comic that’s come to life, and the zip of its editing and montages recalls the energy of Edgar Wright’s work. Imagine a comic-book panel that’s been rendered in 3D and then animated in stop-motion. Characters are shaded with Roy Lichtenste­in dots and lines, but remarkably, this doesn’t hold you at a remove: the stylised faces are etched with feeling.

The villains, meanwhile, live up to their exaggerate­d comic-book silhouette­s: check out Liev Schreiber’s Kingpin, who’s built like a triple wardrobe, or the monstrous Goblin. When the visuals are this impressive, you might often expect the film to lack substance, but not so here. Amid all the invention there’s plenty of heart – not just in Miles’ story; all the Spideys are sensitivel­y treated – and a satisfying arc.

Existing Spider-Man fans will no doubt get more out of Into The SpiderVers­e, given that it’s loaded with familiar villains, Easter eggs and references, but it deserves to be seen widely. And while there are hints that the story could continue (this is a multiverse, after all), it works as a satisfying one-shot – it feels like a full meal, rather than just a starter, which is rare for a potential franchises­tarter these days. Forget the quantum physics and dimension-hopping: the most impossible thing to believe here is that Spider-Man feels exciting and new again. Matt Maytum

THE VERDICT

A joyful, trippy new incarnatio­n of Spider-Man, brimming with wit, soul and jaw-dropping visuals. Amazing.

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Goblin’s upset that he doesn’t get other Goblin-people to play with…
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