Visually Dense
This movie is visually exhausting to watch. I mean that as a compliment and a complaint. There are so many details to catch, plus little text bubbles that don’t appear long enough to fully parse. This is one of the few movies I could enjoy watching at one-quarter speed. And even at that rate, there are still places I’d have to pause or even rewatch to fully parse everything going on.
Embrace the Multi-Verse
I don’t want to get into the specific details, but I think this story embraces the possibilities of the multi-verse better than any that have come before it and I’m excited to see how the story goes forward in the next movie. I’m not sure this will make a lot of sense to everyone, but my feeling is that Dr. Strange in the Multiverse of Madness used the multiverse as a prop, whereas Across the Spider-Verse uses the multi-verse as a foundation.
Grade: A-
About The Peetimes: I expected it to be hard to do Peetimes for this movie, but sheeeesh! It was nearly impossible. The second Peetime is the only one I would recommend. The first Peetime has some relationship development, and the last Peetime is full of action and humor.
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There are extra scenes during, or after, the end credits of Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse.
| Rated: | (N/A) Thematic Elements | Some Language | Animated Action Violence |
| Genres: | Action, Adventure, Animation |
| Starring: | Shameik Moore, Hailee Steinfeld, Oscar Isaac |
| Director: | Joaquim Dos Santos, Kemp Powers, Justin K. Thompson |
| Writer(s): | Phil Lord, Christopher Miller, Dave Callaham |
| Language: | English |
| Country: | United States |
Plot
Miles Morales returns for the next chapter of the Oscar®-winning Spider-Verse saga, an epic adventure that will transport Brooklyn’s full-time, friendly neighborhood Spider-Man across the Multiverse to join forces with Gwen Stacy and a new team of Spider-People to face off with a villain more powerful than anything they have ever encountered.
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This app provides info about movies, reviews, ratings from people who have seen it before and after viewing. It has links to info about the movies. It let's you know when there will be a lull in the action and how long it will last. If you want to know what happens during that time, you can check the brief synopsis (you have to click a link, so no accidental spoilers). It has a timer you can set (silent) to alert you to a break. It also tells you whether there is anything extra during or after the credits. It's really a wonderful app. I've subscribed for a couple of years to support the developers, but I noticed some of the links to provide feedback didn't seem to work today. They also made it free, with voluntary donations to see the pee-times. If you haven't tried it, I encourage you to do so, and subscribe if you like it. I really hope the app is supported so it can continue to be maintained!
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i have to say, i give this my once-per-year A++. i was blown away and left wanting more. and that’s HARD to find nowadays in cinema.
I loved the movie until the ending. Much of my love for it was the cinematography. The story was great thought the middle seemed to be an action sequence that was too long. Time that could have been used to develop their enemy who as it stand is a foil for the sake of being a fool. [spoiler alert]
A story needs to be self contained, unless you’re Dadaist, even if a sequel is planned. Here the end is abrupt without any resolution. It’s as if a 5 hour film was spliced at a random point in the middle. It would have been better to have named the film as part 1 so the ticket buyer knows there has to be a commitment to see part 2. Like Harry Potter did with the last book Deathly Hallows. As it is the filmmaker has broken his/her pact w the audience. Booo!
Nothing was resolved, I can’t recall a more abrupt stop to a movie.
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