Spider-Man: No Way Home: Difference between revisions

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* [[Awesomeness By Analysis]]: When Peter and Dr Strange fight, Peter is able to determine that Dr Strange is turning the Mirror Dimension into an Archimedean spiral and use his math skills to overcome it.
* [[Big Bad Ensemble]]: The Sinister Six. {{spoiler|Technically Five, as Tom Hardy's Eddie Brock doesn't show up until [[The Stinger]] and doesn't manage to do much before he's sent back to his own universe.}}
* [[Bitch in Sheep's Clothing]]: Surprisingly absolutely no one, Norman tries to play the sheep to Peter before inevitably trying to kill him. And his loved ones. And his alternates when they appear.
* [[Bittersweet Ending]]: {{spoiler|The whole world has forgotten MCU!Peter, meaning he no longer has the support of his friends or access to Stark resources, and Aunt May is dead. He's all alone now and has also lost his chance to get into MIT. However, the villains were redeemed and most got depowered, giving them second chances. All three Spideys came to terms with their failures. MCU!Peter ultimately doesn't give up on himself, but continues going out in costume to fight the good fight, and while he chooses not to immediately try to rebuild his relationship with MJ and Ned, the possibility exists that it might happen in future.}}
* [[Canon Welding]]: The brief appearance of Charlie Cox as Peter's blind lawyer "Mr Murdock" adds further support to the recanonisation of ''[[Marvel's Daredevil]]'', mere days after Vincent D'Onoforio's Kingpin appeared in ''[[Hawkeye (series)|Hawkeye]]''.
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* [[Rouge Angles of Satin]]: The person who throws a brick into the Parkers' apartment has a good throwing arm. His spelling? Not so much.
* [[Sacrificial Lion]]: {{spoiler|Aunt May is fatally wounded by the Green Goblin about halfway through the film, establishing beyond reasonable doubt his menace and how bad things are getting.}}
* [[Sealed Good in a Can]]: Peter imprisons Strange on an alternate dimension to prevent him of sending the villains back to their deaths.
* [[Sequel Gap]]: As well as being a sequel to 2019's ''Far From Home'', the film also acts as a sequel to ''[[The Amazing Spider-Man 2]]'' (a seven year gap), and ''[[Spider-Man (film)|Spiderman 3]]'' (a fourteen year gap).
* [[A Tragedy of Impulsiveness]]: Stephen and Peter not working out the details of the spell before Strange activated results in a lot of carnage.
* [[Truer to the Text]]:
** While Electro is still [[Race Lift]]ed to be played by black [[Jamie Foxx]] like in ''[[The Amazing Spider-Man 2]]'', unlike that film, Electro now wears yellow and green like in the comics, and the flashing of his lightning over his face has a star shape similar to his classical mask.
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** Flash dyed his hair blonde offscreen at some point between the end of ''Far From Home'' and his first onscreen appearance here, now better resembling his comics self.
* [[Unperson]]: {{spoiler|With the artifact to contain the botched spell destroyed by the Green Goblin, the only way to close the rifts between universes before the multiversal invaders can come through is for the spell to be redone without any conditions, i.e. Peter will be completely forgotten even by those he had hoped to leave out of it.}}
* [[Unwitting Instigator of Doom]]: May Parker ends up causing the second act conflict by playing on Peter's guilt and make him want to cure the villains who died fighting their versions of Spider-Man.
* [[We Will Not Use Photoshop in the Future]]: The significant plurality of people who believe Mysterio's lies don't seem to consider the possibility that the video might have been doctored to defame Spidey.
* [[You Can't Fight Fate]]: Dr Strange believes that the villains are fated to die. Peter's refusal to believe that drives their conflict.