On the time travel vs multiverse thing - again, I don’t think I agree. The potential for wrecking the gooseberry fool out of your 20+ film franchise with time travel is much more real than chucking a few alt-Spideys in there. I don’t even think Endgame managed to avoid it completely as it ultimately had to *introduce the multiverse* to get around the timey-wimey bollocks! The Ancient One brings the concept in when she’s talking to The Hulk about the infinity stones!
If they do the multiverse stuff right it’ll be referential rather than integral. The actors they’ve got from previous franchises will be cameos, stuff for eagle eyed and hardcore viewers that doesn’t really impact on the wider film and storyline. And if it does, it won’t be “look at the Spider-Men from different franchises!” It’ll be “look at all these Spider-Men from different universes!” similar time Spider-Verse.
Oh, and mark my words it’ll end with a riff on One More Day, it Strange is involved. Spidey goes to Strange for a spell to put his secret back in the box after the Mysterio reveal at the end of the last film, strawberry floats it across the universe stream, they sort it out and he gets his spell but MJ and Ned forget his identity.
Mafro wrote:Venom wrote:Mafro wrote:Watch as Miles Morales isn't in this.
Sony want to expand the Spider-verse, movies with characters they have the rights to. MM was a possibility before, after the PlayStation game raising his profile this has made him a legit mainstream character I think it’s a certainty. But Holland plays a school age Spider-Man so maybe 3 years to separate them.
https://wegotthiscovered.com/movies/son ... -asap/amp/
I'll go back to what I said years ago in that it should have been Miles in the MCU to begin with rather than a 3rd Peter Parker Spider-Man reboot.
Completely, absolutely agree with this and I think I did at the time as well. I don’t think it was a gamble at all, either. Morales was *so* popular after his introduction that they should’ve been chomping at the bit to get him into the larger franchise.
He’s also much more representative of modern New York City - Parker’s very good but he’s also coming up on sixty years old. It’s tough to keep that relevant.