In turn, and because of Jameson’s incessant meddling, disaster ensues. Instead of capturing and sending the villains straight back, Peter listens to his better angel, Aunt May, who in this universe utters the iconic line, “With great power comes great responsibility.” This leads to a dispute with Strange and Peter absconds with and tries to fix the broken villains. Charges are avoided, but the misery starts piling up for those closest to the main character, which leads Spider-Man to use his super contacts. This leads to Peter’s friends’ lives being impacted negatively, but it does open up the long-awaited introduction of Charlie Cox as attorney Matt Murdock representing Peter, Aunt May and Happy Hogan. Jonah Jameson, reveals Spider-Man’s identity and the Daily Bugle’s incessant (and wrong) messaging that he’s a villain. P icking up only moments after the second installment of the Tom Holland trilogy, J.K. J ust in time for Christmas, Marvel’s “Spider-Man: No Way Home,” delivers a story that combines old school comic book history with modern MCU chronology by tidily gift wrapping the end of Peter Parker’s Thanos snap-delayed high school career, personal growth as a solo hero and Avenger, a tale of loss, multiple cases of redemption, and even the introduction of a possible new street-level ally everything either a diehard or casual comics fan could ask for or want to put an end to the Homecoming trilogy and introduce Spider-Man as an adult superhero.
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