Spider-Man: Far From Home is the second movie following the newest Peter Parker, played by Tom Holland. The film follows Parker as he tries to ditch his secret life and enjoy a vacation with his classmates abroad. Itās also the first movie in the Marvel Cinematic Universe set after Avengers: Endgame, giving us a peek at the state of the world post-Thanos. Finally, itās a movie where Jake Gyllenaal wears a giant fishbowl helmet, which weāve all been waiting years to see.
Is it too much? Just enough? Joshua Rivera and Paul Tamayo sat down to talk about the latest adventure from Queensā most famous superhero.
Joshua Rivera: Alright, time to get this started:
Guess what movie I saw, Paul.
Paul Tamayo: Was it the superhero flick? You know the one.
Joshua: With the guy. Night Monkey?
Paul: Ah yes. The friendly neighborhood Night Monkey.
OK, letās cut to the chase. I loved it. What did you think?
Joshua: I had a great time, but it kind of bummed me out a little bit. Before we get to that though, letās start at the top: How did you like the Spidey EuroTrip setup?
Paul: I think thatās kind of what I appreciated most about Far From Home. It sets up a pretty dumb excuse to get Peter out of New York, and like most first-time-out-of-the-country trips for a lot of people, lets him do a lot of growing up. I mean, minus the falling ferris wheels and drone strikes. It felt like a wacky cartoon special, which is something Iāve been missing from these MCU movies. It reminded me of Thor: Ragnarok or even DCās latest Shazam! What about you?
Joshua: Yeah, I loved everything about the kids-on-a-field-trip vibe, especially because the movie really takes all those big teen feelings the first movie nailed so well and uses the new setting to amp them up in fun ways. Youāre out of the country! Your crush is there! But so is your bully! It is both the most thrilling thing you can imagine at 16 but also full of potential mishaps that will make you want to fake your death and never come back.
Paul: It reminded me of those orchestra trips out of state or the first time building up the nerve to talk to your crush. The way the movie nails Peterās life both behind the mask and when heās trying to plan the perfect way to reveal his feelings to MJ is so heartwarming. Itās a coming-of-age flick about a kid trying to deal with the responsibility of being Spider-Man but also wanting a regular teenage life. Itās everything I love about that character. And this movie does a good job of grappling with the consequences of Endgame, but lets him be free to do his own thing.
Joshua: This is the thing that bummed me out most about this movie. Itās so good at the coming-of-age stuff that I really, really resent how much MCU is in it. Some of it is fine: Tony Stark meant a lot to Peter, so it makes sense that heād be really feeling that loss and a bit adrift as a superhero. But there are loads of other ties to the wider MCU here, and while some are kind of genius, others just really started to add up and drag for me. Letās start with one that I liked: What did you think of Mysterio? Did you know his deal from comic books?

Paul: I get why Peter would be devastated after the events of Endgame, but Iām so over that phase of the MCU that I want to move on already. I do appreciate how they leapfrog over things by conveniently giving him the keys to the kingdom and even that post-credits scene, but yeah I didnāt need Mysterio to be connected to Stark Industries. Iām not as familiar with the comics though, so if thatās canon or whatever, then sure. But it is a little too convenient, even for my Fast & Furious-loving level of suspension of disbelief.
Iām sure they could have given Mysterio a bit of an original origin that didnāt involve clever cut-aways or d-level characters that they call back to. Remember that one dude Jeff Bridges yelled at? HEāS BACK, BABY.
Joshua: Yeah, that was a little too cute, even as someone who also loves all things Fast & Furious
Comic book Mysterio is a disgruntled special effects guru who worked in movies and also has a story where he uses his mastery of illusion to paint himself as a hero, before heās outed as a fraud by Spider-Man. Making him a Stark guy is a smart rework, but the movie makes everything about him waaaayyy too complicated. Lying about alternate Earths? Making up entire mythological creatures? Staging giant fights using an army of drone projectors? Too much!
Jakey G, though? Heās perfect.
Paul: Jake smashed it. I thought he did a great job of being that doofy friend but also maniac tech bro. Itās very much his lane.
What did you think of the action?
Joshua: Itās way better this time around! Every sequence was fun as hell, although itās a little bit of a bummer that the last fight is just ādrones.ā But we should talk about that big illusion fight in the middle of the movie.

Paul: I didnāt think a Spider-Man movie could deliver after the absolute delicious spectacle that was Into the Spider-Verse, but that gave me hope again. Those Stranger Things-style voids where Peter has to overcome his own inner demons and self doubt by using that good old Peter Tingleā¢. My eyes were tearing up from the pure joy of seeing it all or because I straight up didnāt blink for that entire scene.
Joshua: It was perfect. Genuinely creepy and colorful comic book stuff that you canāt look away from, but also deeply rooted in Peterās feelings. I wanted to see Peter dealing with this kind of stuff throughout the movie, but unfortunately all those MCU ties kept getting in the way.
One more thing before we jump to talking about the end: I hate those damn glasses. Like not how they look (theyāre ridiculous) but everything else about them. Why are they there? Why did Tony Stark give the keys to the Death Star to a kid? Why does Tony Stark HAVE a Death Star??
Paul: Weāre just going to gloss over the fact that Tony Stark created the WILD invasion of privacy Death Star. That just canāt be legal, fam. But yeah, it was a real silly way to embody the idea of Peterās need to find a new mentor. Also, he could just rock them again and say āOk, Iām backā??? What kind of security is this, Stark?
Joshua: That was way too easy! But the movie makes up for it with this wild, ridiculously fun ending thatā¦doesnāt actually happen until mid-credits! I get it, this is how these movies work, but really itās kind of insane they just have J.K. Simmons return as J. Jonah Jameson and completely out Peter as Spider-Man after some credits.
Paul: I love that J.K. Simmons is back reprising that role. Again, I just love how they seem to be zooming through story arcs here. Like yup, MJ knows, now everybody knows. Letās get on with it. This injected new life into my interest in these movies, and I honestly didnāt see that coming, which is why Spider-Man is the perfect character to ground the new āphaseā around, in my opinion.

We have that earned father-figure loss this time around, but we also have this newfound confidence of a teenager securing his footing and still finding huge battles ahead. Itās great.
Joshua: Definitely. Itās a hell of a mic drop that throws Peterās world upside down just as soon as heās starting to figure out his place in it, one thatās bound to be extremely entertaining (and different!) given how good and fun his supporting cast is. Ned and Betty! Flash and MJ! Aunt May andā¦.Happy, I guess. Heās fine. Oh! And Martin Starr and JB Smoove! Heroes, each of them.
Man, Iām so jazzed for another Spidey movie.
Paul: Itās nice to finally see Spidey in a new and exciting light. Not that excited to start another 80-movie phase though, but if Spideyās in it, Iām contractually obligated as a fellow Queens native.
Also, I canāt wait for Miles in the MCU. In due time.
Joshua: Letās hear it for Queens!