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Oscar Isaac as Miguel O'Hara / Spider-Man 2099: [24] A "ninja-vampire" Spider-Man from Earth-928 set in the year 2099, [25] who is the leader of the Spider-Society, a group of Spider-People from alternate universes tasked with protecting the multiverse. [11] Isaac described Miguel as "the one Spider-Man that doesn't have a sense of humor". [26]
Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness revealed that the main MCU universe was considered Earth-616, but Marvel fans (including Kamala Khan herself, Iman Vellani) disagreed.
[20] [23] An archival recording of Cliff Robertson from Spider-Man 2 (2004) was used for a flashback scene involving the character Ben Parker. Spider-Man co-creator Stan Lee appears in a posthumous cameo, as a character named Stan who sells a Spider-Man costume to Morales. Lord and Miller said it was important to give Lee a bigger moment in the ...
At the time of Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’s release, there had been eight different Spider-Man films with three different actors as Peter Parker over the course of a decade. Yet ...
Spider-Man: Beyond the Spider-Verse is an upcoming American animated superhero film featuring the Marvel Comics character Miles Morales / Spider-Man, produced by Columbia Pictures and Sony Pictures Animation, and to be distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing.
Between Into the Spider-Verse 2, Marvel’s incoming Madame Web film and rumors flying about a fourth Tom Holland Spider-Man movie in the works, navigating the Spider-verse is becoming a feat fit ...
Gwen Stacy, also known by her alias Spider-Woman, and colloquially as Spider-Gwen, is a character appearing in the Spider-Verse film franchise, based on the Marvel Comics Multiverse character of the same name by Jason Latour and Robbi Rodriguez, in-turn inspired by the original Gwen Stacy comic book character by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko.
Mary Jane Watson, as drawn by the character's co-creator John Romita Sr., on a variant cover of The Amazing Spider-Man #601 (August 2009).. Mary Jane Watson is mentioned in The Amazing Spider-Man #15 (August 1964), and is initially used as a running joke of the series, as Peter Parker's Aunt May repeatedly attempts to set her unwilling nephew up on a date with her.