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Writer's pictureGus Keller

Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse



Into the Spider-Verse is a complete gem with earned emotions, creativity, and awareness. Its self-referential conflict pushes the story into postmodernism. The protagonists are distinct, motivated, and vulnerable. There's productive dialogue, complicated relationships, foreshadowing, patient drama, and developed arcs. Its natural comedy is derived from likable characters and meta situations. There are themes of self-belief, expectations, and belonging. Its narrative even adds loss, surprises, growing pains, and moral complexity. The voice acting provides chemistry, timing, range, and endearing innocence. Thus, Into the Spider-Verse is a heartwarming and refreshing coming-of-age adventure.


Technically, Into the Spider-Verse is a trendsetter. Its dazzling imagery utilizes motion, composition, framing, angles, palettes, and paneling. The cast has fame, inclusivity, and cameos. Its music is tonal, regional, evolving, thematic, and bookended. The sound adds stings, narration, action, split cuts, layers, risers, smash cuts, and distortions. Its editing uses inserts, split screens, jump cuts, pacing, intercuts, frame rates, montages, and match cuts. The production design and effects create a new visual language of diverse animation, textures, choppy motion, pop frames, and Ben-Day dots, breaking away from photorealism. Overall, Into the Spider-Verse's bold vision redefined its genre.


Writing: 8/10

Direction: 10/10

Cinematography: 10/10

Acting: 8/10

Editing: 10/10

Sound: 10/10

Score/Soundtrack: 9/10

Production Design: 10/10

Casting: 8/10

Effects: 10/10


Overall Score: 9.3/10

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