NEW YORK -- Hollywood closed out 2021 with more fireworks at the box office for “Spider-Man: No Way Home,” which topped all films for the third straight week and already charts among the highest grossing films ever.
14.12.2021 - 18:16 / theplaylist.net
The multiverse is having a moment in movies and TV right now, mainly due to the MCU juggernaut and upcoming films like “Spider-Man: No Way Home.” However, that doesn’t mean other filmmakers can’t utilize the concept in different, arguably more exciting ways, as it has before… READ MORE: SXSW: The Daniels’ ‘Everything Everywhere All At Once’ With Michelle Yeoh Will Play Opening Night Case in point: “Everything Everywhere All At Once,” the latest film from Daniel Kwan & Daniel Scheinert, otherwise
.NEW YORK -- Hollywood closed out 2021 with more fireworks at the box office for “Spider-Man: No Way Home,” which topped all films for the third straight week and already charts among the highest grossing films ever.
Refresh for latest…: Happy New Year!, Peter Parker. Sony/Marvel’s Spider-Man: No Way Home has lifted its global cume to $1.37B, becoming the 12th highest-grossing film of all time worldwide. Slinging up another $78.3M in 61 international box office markets in its third weekend, No Way Home now has an offshore cume of $759M. The current overseas frame reps a drop of just 35% from last session.
SATURDAY AM UPDATE: The first weekend of 2022 for all movies is looking at $100.6M, an amount that’s 700% ahead of New Year’s weekend 2021 when most theaters where closed due to Covid, but behind 29% two years ago in 2020 when Covid didn’t seem to be a threat stateside.
Spider-Man: No Way Home is breaking box office records, even with COVID-19 holding back some audiences from going to the movies.
Tom Holland is on top of the world right now. Last weekend, his most recent superhero film, “Spider-Man: No Way Home,” not only broke seemingly every pandemic-era box office record, but the film went on to have the second biggest worldwide opening weekend of all time, behind only “Avengers: Endgame.” And it would appear that ‘No Way Home’ is going to be the first film to break the $1 billion mark since 2019.
Any true Marvel fan knows that once the movie credits begin, so does the fun.
Marvel sequel Doctor Strange In The Multiverse Of Madness has been released.The preview was first shown as a post-credits sequence for Spider-Man: No Way Home, and has now been made publicly available.The film is directed by Sam Raimi, and will see Benedict Cumberbatch’s Stephen Strange venture further into the ever looming multiverse and undo the damage that was caused in the latest Spider-Man film.The trailer also sees Strange pay a visit to Elizabeth Olsen as Wanda Maximoff following the
Jordan Moreau After footage was first shown as the post-credits scene of “Spider-Man: No Way Home,” the official trailer for “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” is here.The next adventure in the Marvel Cinematic Universe sees Doctor Strange and Wanda Maximoff team up as monsters and villains from the multiverse spill over into our world. After the events of “No Way Home,” “Loki” and “WandaVision,” the structural integrity of the multiverse has taken a beating.
The first trailer for “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” has arrived, and indeed, it certainly looks to be madness.Fans first got a look of what’s to come in the “Doctor Strange” sequel in the post-credits scene of “Spider-Man: No Way Home” — which was effectively a trailer in and of itself. Where typical post-credits scenes are, well, scenes, and part of a story, this one was choppier than most.
That means that Spidey has webbed up the record for the biggest December opening in box office history and now sits third on the all-time opening list. If the film continues to beat industry estimates on Sunday, it will pass the $257 million opening of “Avengers: Infinity War” for the No.
Spider-Man: No Way Home” press tour.But producer Amy Pascal recently revealed that she attempted to steer Holland and Zendaya away from any future dating shortly after they were cast.“I took Tom and Zendaya aside, separately, when we first cast them and gave them a lecture,” Pascal in an interview with the New York Times published Friday. “Don’t go there — just don’t.
Buzzfeed on December 17, Zendaya called her “sweetheart” while they played the publication's Spider-Man: No Way Home quiz with their fellow costar Jacob Batalon. Towards the end of the five-minute video, the group catches a bit of the giggles, which only gets worse when Holland decides he'd like to play a few more “quizzies.”“Quizzies? Quizzes,” Zendaya corrects with a laugh, laying her head on his shoulder.
Major Spoilers for “Spider-Man: No Way Home” ahead.If you’ve seen “Spider-Man: No Way Home” or just watched the trailers, then you already know the film is bringing back some iconic characters from past iterations of the franchise into the fold.The story picks up immediately where 2019’s “Spider-Man: Far From Home” left off, with Tom Holland’s Peter Parker now outed to the world as Spider-Man.
Zendaya is showing off her new ‘do!
National CineMedia, the nations’ biggest in-theater advertising firm, had a tough 2020 but is unspooling a reimagined Noovie Preshow this weekend timed to the record eyeballs awaiting Spider-Man: No Way Home.
In Spider-Man’s last film installment, and replayed at the top of high-spirited sequel Spider-Man: No Way Home (★★★★☆), the teen superhero’s ally-turned-enemy Mysterio (Jack Gyllenhaal) took to social media to let the biggest spoiler in the MCU out of the bag. As his last villainous act before dying, Mercurio revealed Spidey’s secret identity as New York City high schooler Peter Parker (Tom Holland).Instantly, and thanks to online troll J.
Peter Debruge Chief Film CriticSPOILER ALERT: The following review contains spoilers.What do you call the opposite of a reboot? The “system overload” of Spider-Man movies, Sony’s ninth (and almost certainly not last) feature-length riff on the friendly neighborhood superhero, “Spider-Man: No Way Home” seeks to connect Tom Holland’s spin on the web-slinger with the previous live-action versions of the character by first reassembling a rogue’s gallery of all the villains Peter Parker has
Peter Debruge Chief Film CriticSPOILER ALERT: The following review contains spoilers.What do you call the opposite of a reboot? The “system overload” of Spider-Man movies, Sony’s ninth (and almost certainly not last) feature-length riff on the friendly neighborhood superhero, “Spider-Man: No Way Home” seeks to connect Tom Holland’s spin on the web-slinger with the previous live-action versions of the character by first reassembling a rogue’s gallery of all the villains Peter Parker has
praised it as “tons of fun” and a film that “even as reality spins out in multiple directions… never strays too far from its characters’ innate humanity,” while also containing “genuine emotion.”Deadline’s Pete Hammond meanwhile celebrated “Spider-Man: No Way Home” as “a holiday gift not only to moviegoers, but also to exhibitors, because if EVER there was a film poised to save the movie business — just like Spidey always saves the day — it is this splendidly-crafted endgame.”John Devore of The