They all team up with the Aunt May from Miles’ dimension to stop Kingpin. Then, there’s Peter Porker, a talking pig with Spider-Man powers. There’s Peni Parker, a Japanese girl from the future with spider powers and a robot. There’s a noir Peter Parker in black and white, who talks like a cynical private detective from the 1940s. There’s an older Peter Parker who’s divorced from Mary Jane. Meanwhile, Miles starts running into versions of Spider-Man from other dimensions brought into Miles’ dimension by Kingpin’s machine. Kingpin sends his henchmen after Miles to get the key. Miles promises Peter he will use the key to stop the machine before Kingpin can make it fully operational. As he lies dying, Peter hands Miles a key to the machine that can stop it. So he hesitates while the villains mortally wound Peter. Miles wants to help Peter but he’s never really used his powers and can’t control them. Peter believes the machine will destroy a major part of the city and kill many people, but Kingpin won’t listen. They’re fighting over a huge machine, a special atomic collider, that Kingpin is trying to use to bring back his beloved wife and son. While there, Miles hears some noises coming from the closed lab building, where he finds Peter Parker aka Spider-Man battling the ruthless crime boss Kingpin and his henchmen. This causes all sorts of trouble for Miles at school, so he decides to return to the underground subway connection and find the dead spider that bit his hand. Miles gets bitten by a radioactive spider infused with electrical powers and by morning is transformed into a budding Spider-Man in his dorm room.
He finds a comforting soul in his older uncle, Aaron, who, like Miles, wants to be free from rules and responsibility.Īaron takes Miles to an underground, abandoned subway connection near the headquarters of a closed cutting-edge lab that went bust, where Miles and Aaron can use their graffiti skills as artists. Miles would rather go to his old school in Brooklyn.
The movie opens with young Miles Morales, the teenage son of a black police officer and a Hispanic nurse, chafing at having to attend a special charter school for gifted students where he’ll live in a dorm with another student. Playful, fun and lively, SPIDER-MAN: INTO THE SPIDER-VERSE is an exciting, funny movie with lots of action, heart and faith, but there’s plenty of intense action violence, so caution is advised for children. SPIDER-MAN: INTO THE SPIDER-VERSE is an animated comic book adventure where different incarnations of Spider-Man from other dimensions, including two females and a talking pig, team together to stop a ruthless crime boss from destroying reality when using a gigantic machine to bring back his dead wife and son. Its redemptive pro-family themes extol love, sacrifice, forgiveness, doing the right thing, saving others, and getting a second chance. SPIDER-MAN: INTO THE SPIDER-VERSE has an uplifting Christian, moral worldview. Some of the action violence is intense, so caution is advised for children. The movie has lots of cartoon action violence and some light slapstick violence. SPIDER-MAN: INTO THE SPIDER-VERSE is a terrific, enjoyable animated adventure with clever, funny writing.
Meanwhile, Miles meets versions of Spider-Man from other dimensions brought into Miles’ world by Kingpin’s machine. A dying Peter Parker gives Miles a key to stop a huge machine that the crime boss, Kingpin, is using to resurrect his dead wife and son, but that could destroy the world. In one dimension, Miles, a black Hispanic teenager, gets bitten by a radioactive spider. SPIDER-MAN: INTO THE SPIDER-VERSE is an animated comic book adventure where different incarnations of Spider-Man from other dimensions, including two females and a talking pig, team up to fight evil.