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As a Spider-Man, the young boy Miles Morales has many responsibilities to keep the city safe from any danger and to study at his high-school too. He believes that he is the only one who has this superpower. Things change when he discovers many Spider-Men inside the Spider-Verse. Then, Miles knows that those are his counterparts from other dimensions. All of them have to cooperate and work together to face an upcoming danger that may put the whole world at stake.
A pop-art roller coaster ride with soul, it can dazzle even a sick-of-superheroes doubter with two hours of thoroughgoing delight. Take the kids. Better yet, take the kid in yourself.
It would seem like an impossible feat, but somehow, directors Bob Persichetti, Peter Ramsey, and Rodney Rothman have breathed thrilling new life into the comic book movie.
Its trippy animated visuals is truly a comic book come to life, capturing the spirit and aesthetics of its source material better than any film before it.
The move is a blast and, by using a plot device that causes a rift between different dimensions/universes, Into the Spider-Verse has been given an incredible amount of latitude in terms of characters and style.
It's hard to fully explain just how glorious this is. In one fell swoop, this film sets a whole new standard for how you tell an animated story. There's nothing else like it.