Top Tens – Film: Top 10 Comics Films (3) Spiderman: Into the Spiderverse

 

 

(3) SPIDERMAN: INTO THE SPIDERVERSE

(2018-2023: SPIDERVERSE 1-2. And yes – I’m waiting for the upcoming third film)

 

Alright, let’s start at the beginning one last time.

One might have expected me to rank Spider-Man into the Spider-Verse in my Top 10 Animated Films, given it deservedly won the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature in 2018, but I regard this computer-animated superhero film as a comic book film first and foremost (although it would absolutely rank in my Top 10 Animated Films). After all, the animation was intended to make the viewer feel like “you walked inside a comic book” – in some of the most stunning animation I’ve seen on screen.

The film also introduced audiences to Miles Morales and the concept of the Spider-Verse, essentially a multiverse of different, ah, Spider-Men (using that term somewhat loosely to include a cartoon pig and an anime schoolgirl). Miles and the other uncanny Spider-Men must save New York City, probably the world and possibly the multiverse itself from the villain Kingpin’s Super-Collider – which has caused different realities – and their Spider-Men – to bleed together, as it were.

The film is best encapsulated by its signature scene, the The Leap of Faith scene with its stunning visuals, fantastic music, great choreography, and the cathartic narrative moment of Miles finally becoming Spider-Man – “The entire movie was literally built around this scene, with the animators being shown a rough version of it to get an idea of what the directors wanted, almost all of which made it into the final version intact”.

In addition to the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature (as well as numerous awards), it won critical praise for its animation, characters, story, voice acting, humor and soundtrack – the critical consensus was “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse matches bold storytelling with striking animation for a purely enjoyable adventure with heart, humor, and plenty of superhero action”. Although my favorite critical statement was that the “the greatest triumph and biggest surprise of the film is that it is an LSD freak-out on par with 2001: A Space Odyssey” (but a lot more exciting than that film).

 

“This literally cannot get any weirder”

“It CAN get weirder”

 

And it got even bigger with the sequel film Across the Spiderverse in 2023, which ended on a cliffhanger awaiting the upcoming third film Beyond the Spiderverse in 2027.

 

FANTASY OR SF

 

I’m going with the SF genre – the concept of a multiverse tends to be identified with the SF genre and alternative histories or timelines, although there’s nothing stopping it being used for fantasy as well and it often crosses over into it, both in general and in these films.

 

COMEDY

 

Well, it wouldn’t be Spiderman without some wisecracking comedy, but it has more serious emotional depth to it than other entries in my top ten.

 

 

RATING: 5 STARS*****

S-TIER (GOD TIER – OR IS THAT SPIDER TIER?)

Top Tens – Mythology: Top 10 Mythologies (Special Mention: Revised) (15) Atlantis

 

Cover art by Keith Parkinson for the role-playing game Rifts World Book 2: Atlantis

 

(15) ATLANTIS

 

“The time when the oceans drank Atlantis”

Atlantis – myth, allegory, Egyptian priestly gossip…?

Similarly to my special mention for legendary creatures (and A Dictionary of Fabulous Beasts, this special mention originates from the same source as my special mention in mythology books for The Dictionary of Imaginary Places – Atlantis earns special mention not just for its own mythos but as representative of all imaginary places or mythic lost or sunken continents, lands, and kingdoms, including phantom islands and even hollow earth or subterranean realms.

All of which could readily round out their own top ten – Lemuria or Mu, Hyperborea or Thule, Ys or Lyonesse, Agartha, Avalon or Tir Nan Og, Eldorado, Hy-Brasil, Shambhala or Shangri-La.

And they’re just the big names, although the biggest name of all in lost lands is course Atlantis itself, thanks to Plato. Ironically, Plato used Atlantis as a minor allegory (and counterpoint to Athens), set 9000 years or so before his time, one which concludes with “Atlantis falling out of favor with the deities and submerging into the Atlantic Ocean”, but it subsequently assumed a mythic significance after him.

“Atlantis has become a byword for any and all supposed advanced prehistoric lost civilizations and continues to inspire contemporary fiction”. To its mythic archetype of lost continent or land, one might also add its fantasy role as sunken, submerged or submarine kingdom – with the Atlanteans adapting to their new marine habitat.

Foremost in Atlantean mythology, at least as my personal favorites, are the so-called “location hypotheses” – the historical (or pseudohistorical) speculations as to the location of Atlantis, if only as possible sources of inspiration for Plato’s allegory.

Although not as wild as they used to be – with modern understanding of continental drift and plate tectonics putting paid to any actual lost continent (foremost among them Ignatius Donelly’s nineteenth century revival of the Atlantis myth) – there are still some wild theories proposed for America or even Antarctica as Atlantis.

Personally, I’d like to see more speculation for the United States as Atlantis – not as an allegory by Plato but a premonition (or both, the United States kinda fits the Atlantis allegory as well). Not to mention the Atlantean cold war against Lemuria-Mu.

Seriously, however, I lean more towards Plato creating a mostly fictional account, from more plausible sources of inspiration from the Mediterranean – my favorite being the volcanic eruption on Thera and the fall of Minoan civilization on Crete, although close runner-up is more contemporary (and personal) events to Plato in Sicily.

And then there are the more literary influences or interpretations – from utopias (or dystopias), including the definitive Utopia of Thomas More, to the lost land of Atlantis as metaphor for something no longer obtainable

Or again, personally I’d like to see more speculation for Atlantis as premonition by Plato, not to the future but as deep atavistic memory to the distant prehistoric past, when we were all happy little trilobites in Pangaea, or Gondawana, or whatever prehistoric supercontinent it was back then.

 

 

RATING:

A-TIER (TOP TIER)

Top Tens – Tropes & Other: Top 10 Ape Theories & Theses of Human Evolution (Special Mention) 11-15

Ape skeletons – public domain image in Wikipedia “Human Evolution”

 

 

(11) NEOTENOUS APE (ETERNAL CHILD)

 

Neoteny “is the retention of juvenile traits into adulthood” – and it is argued to be a distinctive feature of humans compared to non-human primates, both for physical and behavioral traits, while the evolutionary origins and reasons for that distinctive feature are also the subject of argument

The neoteny thesis is argued by various proponents of it but none perhaps encapsulated it best as Clive Bromhall with the title of his book The Eternal Child. (Bromhall also points out the same neoteny applies to the animal longest domesticated by humans – dogs).

 

(12) APE OUT OF AFRICA

 

Yes – it’s my ape title for the Out of Africa or OOA theory, “the most widely accepted paleo-anthropological model of the geographic origin and early migration of anatomically modern humans (Homo sapiens)”.

 

(13) GRANDMOTHER APE

 

“The grandmother hypothesis is a hypothesis to explain the existence of menopause in human life history by identifying the adaptive value of extended kin networking”

In other words, leaving the kids with grandma is good evolutionary ‘strategy’.

 

(14) PATRIARCHAL APE

 

An alternative to the grandmother hypothesis, which adds in the “male benefits of continued spermatogenesis and their roles in assistance”

In other words, silverbacking it with a younger model while leaving the kids with grandma.

 

(15) BEHAVIOURALLY MODERN APE

 

Just my ape title for the “suite of behavioral and cognitive traits believed to distinguish current Homo sapiens from other anatomically modern humans, hominins, and primates”.

Heh – suite. Good evening, will you be staying in our behaviorally modern suite?