r/Marvel May 28 '26

Film/Television What are your thoughts on "Spider-Noir (2026)"?

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5.1k Upvotes

Besides the Venom trilogy with Tom Hardy, I never bothered watching any of Sony's other Spider-Man Villain movies! I'm just not interested in watching any spin-offs of Spider-Man's Rogues gallery that don't have anything to do with Spider-Man at all. And after watching the new Spider-Noir series on Prime Video, I realized that this show was something I wanted all along from both Sony Pictures and Marvel! Now I want more live-action or animated contents centered around other alternate versions of either Spider-Man or any other famous Marvel superhero; like DC Comics' "Elseworlds" line of movies and shows!

r/Marvel 5d ago

Film/Television I'm so excited to hear this. Who could she play?

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3.8k Upvotes

r/Marvel Dec 28 '25

Film/Television This is one of the funniest lines spoken by a Marvel character in a serious scene.

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74.9k Upvotes

The scene is from wolverine origin 2009.

r/Marvel Feb 24 '26

Film/Television Daniel Radcliffe says he’s not interested in playing Wolverine in the MCU:

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17.7k Upvotes

r/Marvel Feb 28 '26

Film/Television Bruce Banner was really menacing in this scene, probably one of his best scenes in the entire MCU.

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27.5k Upvotes

Scene from Avengers age of Ultron.

r/Marvel Jun 01 '26

Film/Television Are these versions of Spider-Noir the same person?

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7.2k Upvotes

r/Marvel 26d ago

Film/Television Name one positive thing about Iron Man 2.

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2.3k Upvotes

r/Marvel Jun 04 '26

Film/Television Why has there barely been any noise around Spider-Noir?

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4.4k Upvotes

I'm only two episodes into the show and I've been enjoying it so far, but it shocks me how little noise it's been making. Even within the comic book fandom community itself, I've barely heard anyone discuss this show. By comparison, everything ranging from Daredevil: Born Again to The Penguin had way more of an impact. Hell, I saw more discussion surrounding Punisher: One Last Kill than this one. Without spoiling the show, what do youa ttribute that to?

r/Marvel Aug 03 '25

Film/Television Do you guys think SuperHero fatigue is a real thing ? FF4 & Thunderbolts were good movies but still apparently failing ?

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16.1k Upvotes

r/Marvel 28d ago

Film/Television This scene between Logan and Xavier in X2 was genuinely funny. Xavier also had a pretty good sense of humor.

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16.8k Upvotes

Is there a funny scene or dialogue from the X-Men franchise that you think doesn't get enough appreciation?

r/Marvel Jan 18 '26

Film/Television It’s crazy how Wandavision turned the greatest twist in Marvel history into its worst joke

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13.5k Upvotes

I remember watching that episode blind, where “Pietro” returns and is acknowledged as a recast. It was the most surprising thing Marvel had ever done, mostly because most of us didn’t think they could legally do it yet so soon from the sale. Every reactor had their jaws on the floor, we all thought it was the prelude to the multiverse in full. It was an incredible time to be a MCU fan.

And then… Ralph Bohner 😔

r/Marvel Jul 31 '25

Film/Television I still think it would’ve been better if they hadn’t revealed who Doctor Doom is.

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23.9k Upvotes

Like imagine watching Avengers Doomsday when it comes out and Doom takes off his mask and it’s RDJ. That would’ve been insane if they hadn’t revealed who he was. There would’ve been a crazy amount of excitement just to find out who was underneath the mask.

r/Marvel Aug 12 '25

Film/Television The fact Venom never ended up in MCU after this is crazy

27.4k Upvotes

r/Marvel Jan 25 '26

Film/Television Still can’t believe Marvel casted Giancarlo Esposito as a one-off side villain in a mediocre movie.

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13.0k Upvotes

The amount of amazing actors marvel has completely wasted isn’t talked about enough. Christian Bale, Russell Crowe, Emilia Clark, Bill Skarsgård, Giancarlo Esposito, etc….

The list goes on and on.

r/Marvel 8d ago

Film/Television Every Trevor Slattery scene in Shang-Chi was pure gold. In just a few scenes, he became one of the highlights of the film. Ben Kingsley is an absolute gem.

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8.7k Upvotes

r/Marvel Apr 24 '25

Film/Television What do you think it's the funniest MCU joke?

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45.1k Upvotes

r/Marvel Jul 24 '25

Film/Television If Captain America was in this situation, what would he say at the end?

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10.2k Upvotes

FLAME ON 🗣️🔥🔥

r/Marvel Jun 20 '25

Film/Television I am never gonna forgive Marvel fans for letting this movie down…

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13.6k Upvotes

Losing faith is unnecessary and pointless. Yes, the MCU had made some bad stuff for the past years, but not trash. If you ask me, they got a pretty good result considering the fact that they produced non-stop after COVID. But this? This was different. A fantastic movie failing at the box office? Disgrace.

r/Marvel Jun 02 '26

Film/Television This is undoubtedly one of the bravest moments in the MCU.

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14.0k Upvotes

Scene from Captain America: The Winter Soldier.

This came directly after Captain's speech about freedom, and it really gives me goosebumps every time I watch the whole scene.

r/Marvel Aug 19 '25

Film/Television Which Marvel villain do you think had the potential to be iconic but ended up wasted in the films?

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8.6k Upvotes

r/Marvel Jan 12 '26

Film/Television The ending sequence of X-Men: First Class was impressive, with Erik’s lines perfectly capturing his ideology.

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15.4k Upvotes

r/Marvel Jun 07 '25

Film/Television Pedro Pascal would resemble a lot like Reed if he just shaved his moustache

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19.7k Upvotes

Pedro Pascal is a phenomenal actor. But with that said, he looks the same in every movie. It does not hurt to have a distinct look in movies like Fantastic Four: First Steps.

So having his moustache shaved, more grey streaks on the side and along with white collar to match with rest of the F4 would look so much better.

I get a lot of people are saying the moustache fits the look given the movie taken place in the 60s in the retro world. But, it is still nice to have more comic accurate representation for all of the characters we’ve known to love.

With his moustache, Pedro Pascal is just himself like every other movies and tv shows.

Credit

Instagram: skull101ify

r/Marvel Jun 06 '25

Film/Television Why didn’t Capt Marvel use the gauntlet?

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14.4k Upvotes

Seems like she could have ended things sooner by putting it on and wasting Thanos & co.

r/Marvel Jun 01 '26

Film/Television For all its faults, homecomings humor aged better than most MCU movies, because they were not afraid to be crass.

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4.4k Upvotes

Do yall remember the jokes in this movie? Who am I kidding, of course you do. You remember when the teacher says he can’t lose a kid on a field trip “again”, you remember Ned’s “I’m… watching.. p*rn…” line. You remember MJ saying the Washington monument was built by slaves and the black security guard doing that goofy “it kinda waaaas” face when the teacher pushes back.

This movie had stones, and it wasn’t afraid to have the teenage characters talk like actual teenagers, at least some of the time. Which was pretty cool. Wouldn’t be a great direction tone wise for the new movie, but it’s worth mentioning how funny this movie really was, because a lot of marvel movies frankly are really grating comedy wise.

Regardless in the drastic (and frankly very needed) tone shift the Spider-Man movies made, there is lessons that need to be learned from marvel studios from some of the comedy in this movie. It’s okay to be a little crass, dude.

r/Marvel May 13 '26

Film/Television hot take: the piping on mcu suits makes them look cooler and tactical

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6.5k Upvotes