This would have been the post-credits scene from Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse, not included in the new Marvel animated film.
Image/Sony Pictures |
The makers of Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse - the new chapter of the animated franchise that hit theaters at the beginning of June - had thought of giving the fans a few more minutes, adding the classic post-credits scene to the finale that fans of the MCU have learned to wait with trepidation, but in the end, the scene did not survive the final cut of the film.
The film's writers Phil Lord and Chris Miller found themselves in a tight spot for the post-credits scene of Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse. This sequel to Sony's animated Spider-Verse ends with a high-voltage scene, and sadly, we won't find out how it ends until 2024, when the second part (and last part), Spider-Man: Beyond the Spider-Man, is released. Verse.
In the film's finale (spoiler alert!) Miles ended up on Earth-42, where another version of Miles is the villain known as the Prowler. Also, there is no Spider-Man on the planet, and Miles' father Jefferson Morales is dead, while his uncle Aaron is still alive here and an accomplice of Prowler. Regardless of how the story ends, in this sequel, we met a new villain, the one who crosses the multiverses known as the Blur, and who has amassed enough power to prove himself a true multiversal threat and a worthy adversary of Spider-Man. This character is covered in large moles which are "holes", i.e. interdimensional portals that make up his body after an accident with the Alchemax collider, and because of this, he has become a serious danger to every universe.
And it is precisely to him that the creators of the film would have dedicated the final scene of the film. “In an unfinished scene of the film, Spot – Spot in the original version – goes unnoticed in a hangout for supervillains, specifically a bar. There the character steals a drink, gulps it down and the liquid comes out of the holes,” Phil Lord revealed to IndieWire. In the post-credits scene, the character goes to the bar where he was fired, only this time Patch uses his newfound powers to easily defeat the bad guys. “It was one of my favorite things, watching this guy get roughed up only to come back and, with a single whisper, demolish every single person that came close to him,” said character animation director Alan Hawkins. “But you have to have both sequences for it to work.” It was not made clear what other villains would appear in the scene.
Finally, this second and long-awaited part of the Spider-Verse (here you can read our review) has decided to debut without a final scene. In return, it offered fans a nice cliffhanger (some were disappointed, though). As previously announced, Miles Morales will return with Spider-Man: Beyond the Spider-Verse on March 29, 2024.