Teen Miles Morales becomes the Spider-Man of his universe and must join with five spider-powered individuals from other dimensions to stop a threat for all realities.Teen Miles Morales becomes the Spider-Man of his universe and must join with five spider-powered individuals from other dimensions to stop a threat for all realities.Teen Miles Morales becomes the Spider-Man of his universe and must join with five spider-powered individuals from other dimensions to stop a threat for all realities.
- Won 1 Oscar
- 85 wins & 61 nominations total
Shameik Moore
- Miles Morales
- (voice)
Jake Johnson
- Peter B. Parker
- (voice)
Hailee Steinfeld
- Gwen Stacy
- (voice)
Mahershala Ali
- Uncle Aaron
- (voice)
Lily Tomlin
- Aunt May
- (voice)
Luna Lauren Velez
- Rio Morales
- (voice)
Zoë Kravitz
- Mary Jane
- (voice)
John Mulaney
- Spider-Ham
- (voice)
Kimiko Glenn
- Peni Parker
- (voice)
Nicolas Cage
- Spider-Man Noir
- (voice)
Kathryn Hahn
- Doc Ock
- (voice)
Liev Schreiber
- Wilson Fisk
- (voice)
Chris Pine
- Peter Parker
- (voice)
Natalie Morales
- Miss Calleros
- (voice)
Edwin R. Habacon
- Brooklyn Visions Security Guard
- (voice)
- (as Edwin H. Bravo)
'Spider-Verse' Cast Share Their Dream Spidey Versions
'Spider-Verse' Cast Share Their Dream Spidey Versions
From Spider-Ma'am to a hip-hop version of the superhero, the stars of Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse share the versions of Spider-Man that they want to see on the big screen.
Storyline
Did you know
- GoofsMiles is nearly a foot shorter than Peter Parker, yet when Miles takes one of Peter's old costumes to use as his own, it fits him perfectly. This was done intentionally by the filmmakers, meant to be an illustration of Miles' earlier conversation with Stan, the comic shop owner ("It always fits. Eventually."). Miles has grown more confident, more skillful, and more comfortable with his new powers and is finally ready to take on the role of Spider-Man; thus the costume (like the role itself) finally "fits".
- Crazy creditsThere is a dedication in the closing credits to "Spider-Man" creators Stan Lee and Steve Ditko, who passed away in 2018.
It is an image of Stan Lee's glasses with a quote: "That person who helps others simply because it should or must be done, and because it is the right thing to do, is indeed without a doubt, a real superhero. - Stan Lee" "Thank you Stan Lee & Steve Ditko for telling us we're not the only ones."
- Alternate versionsThe Blu-Ray for the film features an "Alternate Universe Cut," featuring unseen, unfinished and unused footage, which shows alternate scenarios for certain scenes and extends the runtime to 2h 23m instead of the original 1h 57m.
- ConnectionsEdited from Cat Ballou (1965)
- SoundtracksPeople Get Up and Drive Your Funky Soul (Remix)
Written by James Brown, St. Clair Pinckney and Fred Wesley
Performed by James Brown
Courtesy of Republic Records
Under license from Universal Music Enterprises
Featured review
Heads-up: I'm only going to be talking about Peter Parker in this review. I'll make a separate one for the film laterm I just feel like he deserves his own review. That's how great Peter is in this film.
Into The Spider-verse reminds us why we love Spiderman so much, and does so in an original and humane way.
I used to love Spiderman as a kid. I got obssessed with the cartoons he starred in as well as the original movie trilogy, one that actually helped me get interested in the character and marvel as a whole. But my love for this character, as most things, dissolved and it never got around to build itself up again, even after constant remakes and wonderful performances. I never felt that spark again, that love I felt for this charming dude was gone, dead.
Then Into The Spider-verse came, and my whole world turned upside down. I felt a fire inside my stomach. There it was, that long-forgotten love for Peter Parker, one that I thought I would never experience again, expanding continuously as the movie progressed, hitting me in all the right places.
I'd even dare to say that this movie made me understand the reason as to why spider-man is universally loved:
He's an everyday guy with super powers, that's it. He's flawed but pure at heart. He's relatable. He belongs to the people. He's one of us.
This movie's fresh take on Peter Parker is exactly what we needed to fully grasp that, how compelling this character can be without using any of his super powers. This version of Peter Parker is fat, subtly depressed, and tired, yet he's the most charming and lovable version of this character yet. It's something we haven't seen in quite a while, the genuine humanity that makes Peter Parker such a charismatic character, and one can only be thankful for it.
Spider-man is cool again, but in a totally different, and perhaps even better, way. Just your everyday dude taking a leap of faith, giving the audience who relates to his struggles courage to do the same. This is what Spiderman can be and what he should be. A character that's ours, a character that teaches you that anyone can be a hero, that's the real Spiderman. This is the true Homecoming. Spiderman is freaking back! Welcome home!
Into The Spider-verse reminds us why we love Spiderman so much, and does so in an original and humane way.
I used to love Spiderman as a kid. I got obssessed with the cartoons he starred in as well as the original movie trilogy, one that actually helped me get interested in the character and marvel as a whole. But my love for this character, as most things, dissolved and it never got around to build itself up again, even after constant remakes and wonderful performances. I never felt that spark again, that love I felt for this charming dude was gone, dead.
Then Into The Spider-verse came, and my whole world turned upside down. I felt a fire inside my stomach. There it was, that long-forgotten love for Peter Parker, one that I thought I would never experience again, expanding continuously as the movie progressed, hitting me in all the right places.
I'd even dare to say that this movie made me understand the reason as to why spider-man is universally loved:
He's an everyday guy with super powers, that's it. He's flawed but pure at heart. He's relatable. He belongs to the people. He's one of us.
This movie's fresh take on Peter Parker is exactly what we needed to fully grasp that, how compelling this character can be without using any of his super powers. This version of Peter Parker is fat, subtly depressed, and tired, yet he's the most charming and lovable version of this character yet. It's something we haven't seen in quite a while, the genuine humanity that makes Peter Parker such a charismatic character, and one can only be thankful for it.
Spider-man is cool again, but in a totally different, and perhaps even better, way. Just your everyday dude taking a leap of faith, giving the audience who relates to his struggles courage to do the same. This is what Spiderman can be and what he should be. A character that's ours, a character that teaches you that anyone can be a hero, that's the real Spiderman. This is the true Homecoming. Spiderman is freaking back! Welcome home!
- How long is Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- Spider-Man: Un nuevo universo
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $90,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $190,241,310
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $35,363,376
- Dec 16, 2018
- Gross worldwide
- $393,602,435
- Runtime1 hour 57 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
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