This article, Spider-Man: Ends of the Earth (MCU MarvelousMarty), is property of MarvelousMarty. |
Spider-Man: Ends of the Earth is the third film in Phase Three of the Marvel Cinematic Universe by MarvelousMarty. The film is a sequel to Spider-Man: Web of Death, and is a predecessor to the following MCU film, Black Panther.
Synopsis[]
Throughout Peter Parker's decade of swings and crawls as the friendly neighborhood Spider-Man, never has he faced such great struggle and perplexity in his undying passion as the heroic web-slinger right until the moment reality strikes him in the form of his six greatest foes, who have suddenly joined forces with the vengeful goal to bring his head on a platter at any cost. Due to these groundbreaking events, Harry Osborn struggles to run Oscorp peacefully in his aim to revolutionize the world starting with New York, putting his leadership into question.
Cast[]
- Andrew Garfield as Spider-Man (Peter Parker)
- Holland Roden as Mary Jane Watson
- Sinister Six/Sinister Seven (Only Appearance) (Disbands)
- David Morrissey as Doctor Octopus (Otto Octavius) (First Appearance as Doctor Octopus)
- Gerard Butler as Kraven (Sergei Kravinoff)
- Bill Hader as Electro (Maxwell Dillon) (Death)
- John Malkovich as Vulture (Adrian Toomes)
- Danny Trejo as Scorpion (Max Gargan)
- Paul Giamatti as Rhino (Aleksei Sytsevich)
- Liam Mcintyre as Sandman (Flint Marko) (Apparent Death)
- Daniel Day-Lewis as Gustav Fiers (Death)
- Felicity Jones as Black Cat (Felicia Hardy)
- Jake Gyllenhaal as Quentin Beck (First Appearance)
- Dave Franco as Harry Osborn
- Sally Field as May Parker
- Donald Glover as Aaron Davis (Apparent Death)
- Isaiah Mustafa as Officer Jefferson Davis
- Daniel Sharman as Officer Flash Thompson
- Abraham Attah as Miles Morales (First Appearance)
- Roselyn Sánchez as Rio Morales (First Appearance)
- Rhys Ifans as Professor Curt Connors
- J.K. Simmons as J. Jonah Jameson
- Mary Elizabeth Winstead as Betty Brant
- Jay Baruchel as Ned Leeds
- Danny Glover as Robbie Robertson (First Appearance)
- Robert Downey, Jr. as Tony Stark (Cameo)
- Charlie Cox as Daredevil (Matthew Murdock) (Cameo)
- Hugh Jackman as Wolverine (Logan)
- Krysten Ritter as Jessica Jones (Cameo)
- Mike Colter as Luke Cage (Cameo)
- Finn Jones as Danny Rand (Cameo)
- Martin Sheen as Ben Parker (Appears in Flashback & Dream Sequence) (Cameo)
- Emma Stone as Gwen Stacy (Appears in Flashback & Dream Sequence) (Cameo)
- Chris Evan as Captain America (Steve Rogers) (Archive Footage)
- Campbell Scott as Richard Parker (Appears in Flashback & Dream Sequence) (Cameo)
- Embeth Davidtz as Mary Parker (Appears in Flashback & Dream Sequence) (Cameo)
- Bryan Cranston as Norman Osborn (Archive Footage)
- Paul Wight as Crusher Hogan (Cameo)
- Stan Lee as Motivational Civilian (Cameo)
Trivia[]
- In his his cinematic debut, Miles Morales (Abraham Attah) appears in the film as a supporting character.
- Throughout the film, the Daily Bugle among other news reports frequently question the legal status of Spider-Man in the eyes of the Superhuman Registration Act since he chose to side with Captain America in Marvel's Civil War (2016). It was later clarified that he and other superheroes were pardoned, according to an interview by Tony Stark (Robert Downey, Jr.).
- Quentin Beck (Jake Gyllenhaal) appeared in the beginning as a special effects designer who was hired by Gustav Fiers to wreak havoc. While his appearance in the film is a nod to him being a member of the Sinister Six in the comics, he was never part of it in the film.
- The film's story introduces the Sinister Six/Sinister Seven based on the Marvel Cinematic Universe's iteration of the "Ends of the Earth" comic book arc. While Otto Octavius isn't originally involved with the chaos and mayhem caused by the alliance of Spider-Man rogues in the first act, he was the mastermind behind its formation while he tries taking over Oscorp from Harry Osborn.
- Gustav Fiers (Daniel Day-Lewis) was thought by many to be the main antagonist since he was the one who was shown recruiting the Sinister Six, only to be unceremoniously killed by Otto Octavius (David Morrissey) as the criminally-insane Doctor Octopus later on the film.
- The film completely evolves and solidifies Peter Parker and Mary Jane's relationship as it went through thick and thin in the previous films, eventually pursuing their long-awaited romance in the ending.
- This film was originally meant to serve as the final film of the Spider-Man franchise in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, intending to change his direction into a television series. While he had previously appeared in episodes of other television franchises such as The Defenders and Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. and would later appear, this plan was later that it was changed due to popular demand to make at least a few more Spider-Man films before settling in a television series afterwards.
- It has since been cleared up that the first Spider-Man films now serves as the first act in Spider-Man's journey, informally dubbing it as the "Oscorp Arc." Marvel Studios plans to make at least six more Spider-Man films in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, with its return being Into the Spider-Verse, confidently developing to put Miles Morales at the spotlight as the successor to the Spider-Man mantle.
Sequels[]
Further information: List of Marvel Cinematic Universe (MarvelousMarty) films
- Marvel's Spider-Men (2018-2021)
- Marvel's Into the Spider-Verse (2023)
- Miles Morales: Ultimate Spider-Man (2026)
- Marvel's Spider-Verse (2036)