Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man begins with a swinging classic refrain before the rap and hip-hop infused beats of “Neighbor Like Me” adrenalizes the comic-styled credits. This change sets the tone for a revisionist origin story that will likely ruffle snowflake feathers. I loathe to bring this topic up again in a Disney/Marvel review, but the animated series does focus on diverse and inclusive characters in an urban setting. Those who foam at the mouth at the sight of a Black Norman and Harry Osborne should probably steer clear. Everyone else will enjoy the refreshing old school animation, serialized plot, and a whopper finale that’s far more clever than expected.
An Alternate Timeline Origin Story
Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man
Release Date
January 29, 2025
Network
Disney+
Writers
Jeff Trammell
Pros & Cons
- An inclusive narrative with diverse characters for a new audience.
- Great 2D animation and action scenes.
- A whopper finale answers lingering questions.
- May offend the anti DEI crowd.
- Individual episodes are simplistic.
Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man is told in 10 episodes that run about 25 minutes each. The premiere episodes, “Amazing Fantasy” and “The Parker Luck,” establish an alternate MCU timeline for the multicultural narrative. Hudson Thames voices Peter Parker, a 15-year-old, glasses-wearing geek who’s about to attend his first day at the prestigious Midtown High School. Aunt May (Kari Wahlgren) beams with pride as they remember their beloved Uncle Ben.
The hugs end when a cosmic interloper crashes the inauguration. A familiar MCU ally changes Peter’s fate after a courageous display of heroism. Some time later, Peter is already a crime fighter with homemade gear and a new school. He’s perennially late busting baddies before class. Peter’s playfully mocked for his tardiness by his new bestie, the purple-haired, anti-establishment rebel, Nico Minoru (Grace Song). She also ribs Peter about his obvious crush on the older Pearl (Cathy Ang), who’s already dating the school’s most popular kid, the hunky and intelligent Lonnie Lincoln (Eugene Byrd).
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Peter’s heart aches for Pearl, but he can’t fault her for liking Lonnie. He’s no dumb jock and earns Peter’s respect as his lab partner. The first week of school comes to an unexpected conclusion when Peter comes home to a surprise visitor. Norman Osborne (Colman Domingo), the billionaire CEO of Oscorp, has recognized Peter’s unique gifts. He offers Peter an inclusive internship with other genius youths to explore their limitless potential.
All Will Be Revealed in This Diverse Neighborhood
The rub is that Norman Osborne becomes Peter’s mentor, not Tony Stark. This is obviously the long-term seed placed for the overarching villain, as Peter doesn’t know Norman’s true intentions. Showrunner and primary writer Jeff Trammell (Craig of the Creek) skips Peter’s formative discovery of his powers and leaps headfirst into the storyline. We see him go from nerd to superhero within minutes of the open. I found this puzzling. Why aren’t there any exposition scenes of Peter learning to be Spider-Man and creating his web shooters? Trammell answers this question later on. Just hang in there and everything will be revealed as the show progresses.
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Norman, Nico, Harry, and Lonnie have significant subplots that shape Peter and the series. Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man explores wealth disparity, economic insecurity, and the pressures underprivileged teens face in trying to compete with their well-to-do classmates. Lonnie struggles with poverty and dangerous influences. He’s too embarrassed to admit his situation, and that leads to poor decisions.
These themes are consequential and handled honestly, but they’re admittedly outside the traditional Spider-Man purview and play into the Disney haters’ belief of a corporate agenda. That argument will be divisive. Your opinion on these matters will dictate whether the supporting characters are worthwhile.
Vibrant Animation for Simple Narratives
Peter battles badass villains that become more lethal as his skills grow. This evolution follows the Stark timeline of getting advanced equipment and not leaping from buildings in a sweater and ski mask. Domingo’s “Norman” isn’t outwardly sinister as a super villain lurking in the shadows. He recognizes Peter’s greatness but has ulterior motives as an unabashed capitalist. This runs afoul of Nico, who grounds Peter as his conscience and a trustworthy friend who demands nothing in return. Her value system, and the fact that she’s not MJ or Gwen Stacy, also adds to the list of updates sure to arouse lame ire.
Marvel Studios Animation does a banner job bringing a comic book look to life. Panels and split-screen editing are used to make montages more interesting. Supervising director
Mel Zwyer, a staple for years at DreamWorks Animation (Flushed Away, Kung Fu Panda, How to Train Your Dragon), gives the series a great 2D, hand-drawn vibrancy that gloriously blends old school methods with just the right amount of CGI. Spider-Man swooping through streets and over vehicles will definitely get your pulse racing. There’s no lack of action as greater villains emerge to challenge Spidey, and he becomes a detective of sorts to figure out their mysterious benefactor.
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The series hits its target audience like a bullseye. Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man aims for tweens and teens. This means pop music, social media apps, soap opera romance, and general adolescent uncertainty that drives the characters. Peter and his pals aren’t adults. They’re responsible but don’t act older than their age. Trammell and Zwyler also include fun Easter Eggs and other notable MCU characters. I would have preferred more complex and dramatic episodes, but this is a thoroughly modern Spider-Man for the next generation of fandom. So anyone disgruntled needs to take a chill pill and enjoy the show for its merits. Two additional seasons have already been ordered, so the series and Spider-Man have time to positively grow.
Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man is a production of Marvel Studios Animation. The first two episodes premiere January 29th exclusively on Disney+. You can watch them through the link below:
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