Story Movie
Peter Parker's life and reputation are threatened as Mysterio reveals Spider-Man's secret identity to the world. Trying to rectify the situation, Peter enlists the help of Stephen Strange, but things soon become much more dangerous.
Review 4K Movie
Cinema is an important part of our lives, a separate cultural milieu and an understandable topic of conversation for everyone. But first and foremost it is an attraction, a moving picture designed to evoke vivid emotions. Ask yourself this: how long has it been since you've seen something truly unprecedented in cinema? Something that evokes a feeling akin to the first time you've been on a roller coaster or jumped off a bungee jump?
Rarely does a film come out that can rally audiences as much as No Way Home likely can. In recent years, pundits have been talking as one about the death of the box office, but the final installment of the spider trilogy does the industry justice and brings big audiences back into the halls (even if only for a couple of weekends). The key to this phenomenon lies in more than just the fanbase: John Watts' superheroics summarize not only the events of the new reboot, but also the two previous Peter Parker series, thereby making the audience breathe, laugh and cry in unison.
There are indeed a lot of local jokes, references and characters in "No Way Home." But at the same time, there is such an impressive cult following around the previous two incarnations of Spidey in particular and the giant Marvel universe in general that there doesn't seem to be anyone left among potential viewers who doesn't know about the "I am my own kind of scientist" meme, the eternal debate about a better Peter Parker (Tobey Maguire, of course!) and other fan interjections. In a couple of decades, a small cohort of geeks has grown to an army of comic book, movie and TV series connoisseurs. That's why the new Spider must be seen in the audience, picking up oohs and sighs, clapping and stomping feet - simply put, sharing a unique cinematic experience with other viewers who have also carried Peter Parker with them from adolescence to adolescence and finally to adulthood.
The film rises above the Marvel Cinematic Universe and heralds the coming of an even bigger giant, the Marvel Multiverse! And even if you know what's going to happen next, you can't prepare for it. Truly, it's better to see it once in a movie theater than to read a hundred spoilers.
Actually, it's all been there, with the same character and not so long ago. We're talking about the cartoon Spider-Man: Through the Universes, which colorfully told of different universes with different fates of the same heroes - but that was a separate work. And within the confines of a tightly structured film universe, you'd expect something less out of step with the overall tone.
"No Way Home" truly opens the fourth phase of the MCU and makes it clear that there are no limits to its expansion. The universe now includes not only the future, but also the past. Your childhood is now part of it too, whether you want it to be or not.
The film makes references to both favorite places from old movies and memes, but places them tastefully, without overdoing it. They brought back everyone they thought was necessary-even those they didn't miss too much. Each villain gets a share of screen time equivalent to his recognition. Willem Dafoe and Alfred Molina come off like they did in their younger years, Jamie Foxx rehabilitates after his character missteps in "High Tension." "No Way Home" focuses at all on mending -- both the fates of individual characters and entire films. Everyone deserves a second chance - that's the kind of pro-Christian truth John Watts' optimistic film brings to dystopian times.
It's best approached without knowing anything about the film, but those living on social media, of course, will have a hard time achieving that. "No Way Home" is the rare superhero movie in which you can't know what's going to happen the next minute, and that's one of its main strengths. It has its trademark spidey dichotomy -- searing banter on one side and a flavor of tragedy, existential crisis and the desire to quit everything on the other. With neither enormous power nor infinite resources, Spider-Man continues to take on more than he can handle because he feels responsible for everyone at once. Fortunately, this time the hero will have no shortage of helpers, and with them the weight of the whole world will come in handy.
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