

“Early on it was a male version… he was probably one of the least developed characters in the first draft of the script. He went on to explain the origin of the idea, claiming that early drafts had a more recognizable version of Doc Ock: There’s so much good in there, and she brings so much interesting performance to the table.” And that sequence at Alchemax, I think it shockingly became a lot of people’s favorite sequence. are tasked to round up a crew of MCU-debuting villains from Tobey Maguire's and Andrew Garfield’s “Spider-Man” eras: Doc Ock (Alfred Molina), Green Goblin (Willem Dafoe), Electro ( Jamie Foxx), Sandman (Thomas Haden Church) and the Lizard (Rhys Ifans).“We pitched it, and they were like, ‘No.’ I will say, it was the one moment where I was like, ‘Why are you saying no?’… This is the one time where it took a long time to get certain people to come around, and go, ‘Okay, it can be a female’…I think in the end everybody was very happy with what it turned out to be. People who know this bit of superhero information arrive from across the multiverse, and Peter and Co.

After having his secret identity as Spider-Man revealed – and with his college hopes as well as those of girlfriend MJ ( Zendaya) and best pal Ned (Jacob Batalon) at stake – Peter works with Doctor Strange ( Benedict Cumberbatch) on a spell to make people forget the revelation that ends up going awry. “No Way Home” closed out this chapter of Peter Parker’s life in epic fashion. With “ Spider-Man: No Way Home,” the Marvel Cinematic Universe went full on into the Spider-Verse, pulling in beloved heroes and villains while also leaving Tom Holland’s teenage do-gooder with an uncertain yet hopeful future. Spoiler alert! The following post details important plot points and the ending of "Spider-Man: No Way Home," so beware if you haven't seen it yet.

Watch Video: Tom Holland says he's 'leaned on' Zendaya to navigate celebrity
