Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse Does Cinematic Diversity Right
The Little Mermaid was a dull exercise in box-checking. Spider-Verse uses its diverse cast as an opportunity for narrative delights.

It is perhaps fortuitous that Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse opens just one week after Disney's lavish-yet-feeble remake of The Little Mermaid.
One might not think of the two films as having much to do with each other, but both are attempts to diversify beloved decades-old pop-culture properties, broadening the racial mix on screen, and, in theory, making these stories relatable to a wider array of viewers in the process.
But only one succeeds. It's not just that Disney's update of its 1989 animated hit is lethargic and tepid, a dutiful-at-best slog that's the better part of an hour longer than the original. Its inclusion efforts feel more like mandatory H.R. training than any meaningful program of cultural expansion. Indeed, the movie's shallow approach to diversity ends up working against it, raising odd and frankly uncomfortable questions that cut against the mix of oceanic silliness and scariness that kept the first film afloat.
Spider-Verse, in contrast, uses its self-conscious displays of diversity as a portal into a wild and exuberant exploration of human individuality. It's a movie that finds joy and wonder in its portrayal of a multi-ethnic, multi-racial, multi-cultural, multi-attitudinal world of Spider-Men and Spider-Women and Spider-Somethingelses, whereas The Little Mermaid treats its diversity updates as a cautious exercise in obligatory box-checking.
The release of The Little Mermaid last week was cause for an amuse bouche of a controversy, a small bite of outrage over New York Times critic Wesley Morris' review, in which he lamented that the film "reek[ed] of obligation and noble intentions. Joy, fun, mystery, risk, flavor, kink—they're missing."
Er, Kink? One might reasonably argue with the choice of word, given that this is a movie about teenagers targeted in large part at younger girls. But later in the review, Morris served up a more pointed gripe: The movie's attempt to diversify its cast, not only with a black Ariel, but with a multi-ethnic panel of mermaid princesses—all, somehow, from the same mother and father?—as well as a black Caribbean queen as the adoptive mother of the title character's object of princely affection, raised more than a few questions.
"With all these Black women running around in a period that seems like the 19th century, the talk of ships and empire, Brazil and Cartagena just makes me wonder about the cargo on these boats," Morris wrote, in a passage about the strangeness of the choices. "It's really a misery," he concluded, "to notice these things."
A misery is precisely what it is, especially in a film that makes no argument for its own existence, and works only as a 135-minute reminder of how much funnier, fuller, more frenzied and alive the 83-minute animated original was.
Spider-Verse similarly populates its story with a diverse array of characters meant to broaden the superhero's horizons.
The main character, Miles Morales, is the biracial teenage son of an African American father and a Puerto Rican mother, but he's more of a Brooklynite than anything else.
In the first film, 2018's Into the Spider-Verse, Morales was bitten by a radioactive spider and became Spider-Man. He teamed up with the more familiar Spider-Man of comic-book history, Peter Parker, and encountered a cast of other Spider-Men—and Spider-Women, and Spider-Pigs, and Spider-Younameits—via a thematically convenient tear in the multiverse.
The movie's animating idea was that every strand of the multiverse had a Spider-Person of some kind, and since there were an infinite number of strands, that meant there were also an infinite number of Spider-Men. This meant that anyone and everyone could be Spider-Man, that the character was an idea, a generalizable heroic concept, to be cast and recast, not a single specific story about the guy named Peter Parker. We are all Spider-Man, the movie seemed to say. Spider-Man is universal.
Across the Spider-Verse takes this idea and builds on it, blowing out the Spider-Verse with an even wider and wilder array of Spider-Folks. There's an Indian Spider-Man who resides in a cross between Mumbai and Manhattan (Mumbattan); a British anarchist punk-rock Spider-Man who wields a guitar and wears pyramid spikes on his costume; and, as teased at the end of the first film, a futuristic Spider-Man—based on Spider-Man 2099—voiced by Oscar Isaac, who runs an elite team of multiversal agents.
Each one of these characters represents a type, a culture, an ethnicity, or an ancestral region—and yet each one is also a distinctive individual, a specific character with unique habits and quirks and ideas about the world. The movie touches on politics: the Indian Spider-Man tosses off a line about a museum showcasing all the stuff the British stole from his people; the anarchist Spider-Man makes a wry remark about a collapsing building serving as a metaphor for capitalism; Morales wears a Black Lives Matter pin on his schoolbag. Notably, however, his dad is also a cop, and the movie is in fact full of loving, doting, warm police officer father figures. Spider-Verse doesn't indulge in speechifying politics for the sake of speechifying politics; there's no speechifying at all. Rather, it amusingly showcases the ways that political ideas are part of these characters' lives and worldviews.
This is the opposite of treating diversity as a dull duty, a cultural-political requirement. Rather, it's an opportunity for weirder and more wondrous stories and characters, for stranger and sillier antics, for awe and the unexpected. It understands diversity as a way of exploring the infinite and dizzying delights of specific human individuals, even when every single one of those individuals is Spider-Man.
It's not a misery to notice these things, for it is never a misery to notice the quirks and kinks of fully-realized fictional characters. Like the movie itself, it's a joy and delight.
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Karl Marx himself, could not have written a finer review.
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Nice reference.
I think that was the animated film shows is that if the characters are good and make sense no-one except the diversity at all costs clowns care who or what they are. That a radioactive spider just bites people at random over different universes it makes sense not all of the people are going to be Peter Parker.
Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse Does Cinematic Diversity Right
False. It does it better but it is still shitty storytelling that feels very overtly forced and very much shortchanges its minority character protagonist newcomer(s). Peter Parker’s journey was a lone journey of self-discovery, he becomes a hero by his own failures and actions. Miles Morales’ (movie) journey is a hodge podge of his Mom and Dad, his Uncle, his crush, and Peter Parker… or several. He becomes a hero because all those other people failed or are unaware of the evil that’s about to befall them. He has no choice.
The sequel continues this trend. Miles isn’t the center of the story. The expanse and diversity of the Spiderverse is. He isn’t “more of a Brooklynite than anything else”. Unlike Peter and Queens, Miles’ parents live in Brooklyn, one of his classmates from the Spiderverse goes/went to school in Brooklyn, the premise alone diluting the essence of being ‘from Brooklyn more than anything else’, especially as opposed to ‘your friendly neighborhood Spiderman’. More than anything else, Miles Morales is just another different-shaped-and-colored face under the Spiderman mask.
The premise of the race swap was better done and the pre-written back story was better that The Little Mermaid remake, but that's among the lowest bars to cross and there are far better race swaps and far better people who’ve carried them off.
Yea, Samuel L. Jackson is a perfect Nick Fury. Because his persona embodies the character. His skin color is incidental, and has nothing to do with his identity.
Same thing could work if they wanted to make Idris Elba the new James Bond despite, rather than because of, his color.
It's a problem when the race swapping is emphasized because it's a tell that the writers don't understand, or don't care about, the character or storytelling. I haven't seen any of the Morales Spider-Man stuff, so I don't know there. At least it seems he's a different character than original Spider-Man.
I do enjoy the memes of Ryan Gosling as Mandela though. Kevin James as Martin Luther King, Jr could be fun.
I'm still waiting for Ben Stiller as Malcolm X directed by Wes Anderson.
I can't wait for the Harriet Tubman movie starring Chris Pratt.
Yea, Samuel L. Jackson is a perfect Nick Fury. Because his persona embodies the character. His skin color is incidental, and has nothing to do with his identity.
Nick Fury was also always a B-tier, Man-Of-Mystery and in the movie, Sam Jackson is just another über capable actor metaphorically (or not) strutting around in his character’s yoga pants. I think Idris Elba could play James Bond competently, but I think both something like Morgan Freemen as Q or M would be both better and better received, *moreover* virtually any black face (except all the ones like Queen Latifa’s) as The Equalizer would be better still.
Samuel L. Jackson is a one dimensional actor. He plays "angry black man" in everything he does but does it well enough that he has made a very fine living at it.
Samuel L. Jackson is a one dimensional actor.
I think this is a conveniently trite statement that represents selection bias more than anything else. Remember Samuel L. Jackson getting angry at everyone in Jurassic Park? No? How about Patriot Games? Jules, in Pulp Fiction pretty flatly lays out that "I just say that shit 'cuz it sounds cool." indicating that he's not actually mad, he's just playing bad cop. There are plenty of movies where Sam is better described as 'energetic' or 'adament' rather than 'angry': SWAT, The Kingsman, Unbreakable, 1408, The Hitman's Bodygaurd. And even if you do limit him to "angry black man" you have to acknowledge that between Shaft and Django Unchained there is no definitive one angry black man any more than there is definitively one angry white man (named John).
I freely admit he does loud and angry (which are not the same) a lot, but he's more than demonstrated, successfully, that it is by no means the limit of his ability.
That's why the Marvel universe Spiderman fizzled compared to the Sony version -- Spiderman was reimagined as Robin to Tony Stark's Batman, needing high tech toys from Stark Industries to join the Avengers, instead of inventing them himself, as in the comics.
I disagree. If the spider bites different people across several dimensions or universes then those people are going to have far different reactions and stories as a result. Parker was one person in this dimension and his experience is his own. The others are different. If your a comic fan then you are well versed in this. Superman, for instance, was far different people in the different realities although they had the same abilities.
None of what you said refutes or even disagrees with (or even addresses) anything I wrote. If you're a comic fan then you know Peter Parker came first, the Spider/Multi-verse came second, and Miles Morales came third and the fact that a Spider-verse dilutes out the story of any given spider denizen is just a fact of storytelling that's got nothing to do with Peter Parker or Miles Morales (or Gwen Stacy... or Mary Jane Watson... or Miguel O'Hara... or Flash Thompson... or Eddie Brock... or Kletus Kasady... or Jessica Drew... or Julia Carpenter... or Madame Web... ... ...)
There are some multi-verse stories that are good and some multi-verse-style non-linear storytelling that's good but 9/10 times, a multi-verse is just a writer's insert saying "This old topic isn't making money or is personally boring (or otherwise disliked), but rather than creating something completely original, which is risky, I'll just shoehorn it in here and rely on my audience to just accept the fact that the special or unique or different story I've been weaving thus far wasn't really special or unique or different at all."
Skin color is the most important thing
LOL
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[Video]
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Germanic Fren @DeutscherJ1776
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Clicked on link:
Uh... wut?
Looks like the white house made a call and had Twitter make a business decision.
Yeah, I'm pretty sure we all knew where it was headed. Stolzmonat is about equality but some forms of Stolz are, of course, more equal than others.
I don't know if you've followed The Daily Caller stuff but it seems Musk may still have some housecleaning to do at Twitter. That or I'd be interested to see how German law bans one of their own duly-formed political parties from flying the national flag.
I thought (hoped) there might be a definition of kink that I was unaware of.
I can’t believe Disney cut the scene where Ariel has a gangbang with a bunch of sealions.
#FurErasure
#FurryGenocide
And they cut the scene where Ursala tentacle rapes Sebastian while King Triton sits in corner and masturbates.
So disappointing. Do better Disney.
Kids need to know this stuff
/jeff
"Do you hate knowledge?!" - t. Jeff
Kink: A difficulty or flaw that is likely to impede operation, as in a plan or system.
They had planned to open another shop downtown, but their plan had a few kinks.
Source: Kink on Wiktionary
Kink is not the word I would use to describe character flaws, quirks and abnormalities, but it is not a terrible word to describe those things.
And it doesn't necessarily mean something sexual.
Yeah, and a New York Times writer would never intentionally use a word that 98% of his readers would think meant something else...
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I enjoyed the first movie, but then I'm a comics nerd at heart and I just liked it as a fun movie and was glad it wasn't excessively preachy.
Yes, it was the first Spider-Man movie in decades that felt like it was Spider-Man rather than a young webslinging Tony Stark. And it was pure comic book Spider-man as well, with the classic humanized villains and character quirkiness and visual oddities.
My favorite was Spider-Gwen. Lots of fun, more than I remember Gwen Stacy as being.
Though, to be fair, as somebody who read Spiderman from near his origin until the 90's...
He actually was a young Tony Stark, without a rich dad to provide starting capital, and with a superhero career starting so early he never had the time to seriously develop his technical side.
He invented the webshooters as a teen, the spider webbing was going to be a science faire project. He invented his own spider tracers. He frequently won the day through his scientific and technical chops, not his ability to bench press a semi-truck.
Remember when he had to fight the Super-Skrull, for instance, and noticing the overhead powerlines interfering with the SS's power beam, threw together a jammer to depower him? He did stuff like that all the time.
FTFY.
AKA, "Updated for Modern Audiences."
and Spider-Somethingelses,
Hard pass. Hard. Pass.
Oh come on! The comic that this is adapted from features such delightful Spider-Somethingelses as "Spiders-Man," the swarm of telepathic spiders that combine into a humanoid figure, "Spider-Monkey," a monkey with spider-powers, and "Spider-Ham," a giant anthropomorphic spider that was bitten by a radioactive pig! How is that not the best thing ever!
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>>attempts to diversify beloved decades-old pop-culture properties
a. Spider Man & Ariel are incomparable as pop-culture properties
b. Why do we gotta diversify Spidey? maybe come up with something ... new?
New ideas in Hollywood? LOL
"the anarchist Spider-Man makes a wry remark about a collapsing building serving as a metaphor for capitalism"
This is the left not getting that it's parodying itself. Anarchists are against *government*, not capitalism.
Reminds me of the last episode of Rick and Morty Season 5, where Rick says: “It’s a metaphor for capitalism, don’t think about it.” But that was parodying the left, whereas I don’t know what this movie’s making fun of. Then again, I shouldn’t judge a movie I haven’t watched yet.
Anarchists actually come in a variety of flavors. Socialist anarchists are a thing, even if I personally think the term is an oxymoron.
Would an all day streaming of Spiderman movies be a webathon?
I like my movies white, like my bread.
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"Each one of these characters represents a type, a culture, an ethnicity, or an ancestral region—and yet each one is also a distinctive individual, a specific character with unique habits and quirks and ideas about the world. "
Translation from the Sudermanese:
Each one of these characters is the sum of his collective identities but possesses a few quirky "individual" characteristics of no known origin.
Thanks, Peter. Now I know not to waste my money on the Spiderverse.
Not sure if you're hopelessly ignorant, or just deliberately misreading that. I hardly think it's illogical, unrealistic or ahistorical to suggest that just as there are many different cultural, racial and ethnic identities around the world, there is always at least some degree of difference and diversity within each of those categories.
Reason; the place to come to read reviews of cartoons.
One nice thing in the new Spider-Verse movie is that the pre-credit sequence is not about Miles Morales, but a story in the universe of Gwen Stacy (one of the many Spider-Women) showing her having to deal with her father who thinks that Spider-Woman is a menace. Really good segment, and a good introduction to the film.
Oh, and she has to face off against a Vulture, so apparently there is a Vulture-Verse as well. (And a Lizard-Verse, too?)