In his mixed review of Batman Returns, Roger Ebert declared that costumed crime-fighters and films like Double Indemnity could never work intertwined. "No matter how hard you try,” Ebert explained, “Superheroes and film noir don’t go together; the very essence of noir is that there are no more heroes.” Showrunners Oren Uziel and Steve Lightfoot clearly didn't get that memo before embarking on the new TV show Spider-Noir. This entire show is a noir pastiche right down to explicit homages to The Lady in Shanghai and Gilda. It also stars a guy in a Spider-Man suit fighting crime.
Ebert was
right to an extent. Superheroes and noir storytelling make for odd bedfellows. Spider-Noir
(based on the comics character co-created by David Hine and Fabrice
Sapolsky) is a janky creation often struggling to cohesively fuse its disparate
creative influences. Sometimes, the proceedings can’t shake off feeling like a
fan-film. However, there are distinctive charms here you couldn’t just get from
rewatching The Big Sleep.
Taking
place in early 1930s New York, with both the Great Depression and prohibition
taking their toll on everyone, private investigator Ben Reilly (Nicolas Cage)
is looking out for number one. This super-powered guy used to fight crime under the
costumed alias The Spider. However, after he failed to save his wife's life, he
hung up that mantle and caring about anyone. Now he just takes whatever paying
gigs and booze he can get his hands on. Who cares if crime boss Silvermane
(Brendan Gleeson) is tearing the city apart?
However,
the emergence of super-powered individuals like Flint Marko (Jack Huston) and
the alluring spell of nightclub singer Cat Hardy (Li Jun Li) turn Reilly’s
world upside down. With the aid of reporter Robbie Robertson (Lamorne Morris)
and another investigator, Janet (Karen Rodriguez), Reilly reluctantly begins
putting the fedora and mask on again once more. If this was a CBS procedural
from 2006, these events would kickstart Reilly investigating a new crime each
week. He’d be like Columbo or Charlie from Poker Face, except he shoots
webs and crawls up walls.
Unfortunately,
Uziel, Lightfoot, and the other writers frustratingly adhere to the modern
streaming approach of treating eight-episode-long seasons as lengthy movies. Other
comic book shows (like Watchmen or WandaVision) cleverly differentiated
one episode from another, like focusing on just one character or unique sitcom
aesthetics per outing. Here, episodes blur together and Reilly’s central
character arc gets padded out. When will the madness of not letting television
function like television end?
Across
these eight 40-45-minute-long episodes, though, there are plenty of showcases
for Nicolas Cage’s immense acting talents. I presume the Spider-Noir
team convinced him to headline a TV show for the first time simply by
assuring him he could do Peter Lorre and Edward G. Robinson impressions at
different intervals throughout the season. Those delightful digressions
epitomize how Spider-Noir constantly lets Nicolas Cage take the sort of
quintessentially big acting swings only he can do. A sixth episode bit focused
on his jagged and bizarre body movements, he even flings himself to a wall
briefly) especially captures this Wild at Heart leading man’s gift for
unforgettable physicality.
Spider-Noir works spotlighting Cage echoing
old-school movie stars. Unexpectedly, the more conventional superhero fight
scenes are also entertaining highlights. A fourth episode skirmish between the
titular lead and electricity-spewing Dirk Leydon/Megawatt (Andrew Lewis
Caldell), for instance, features creative action beats specific to their
respective superpowers (like Megawatt making use of a phone booth). Directors
like Nzingha Stewart realize these showdowns with solidly cohesive camerawork
and editing, especially compared to the choppy filmmaking in, say, Iron Fist.
How does Spider-Noir
balance super-powered beings fighting in New York’s streets with an aesthetic
harkening back to Raymond Chandler? Messily! But, to the show’s credit, Uziel,
Lightfoot, and company also imbue Spider-Noir with other pre-1960
cultural influences like EC Comics and vintage monster movies. There are tons of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde or Frankenstein anytime
Flint Marko/Sandman (Jack Huston) laments about how he’s “a monster.” These
eight episodes are a smorgasbord of vintage genre story influences, which
inevitably leaves the proceedings feeling scattered.
It does,
however, ensure Spider-Noir consistently keeps your attention and,
unlike other comic book TV shows, demonstrates a willingness to get weird.
While the Inhumans program stripped the titular leads of all their
heightened qualities, this show has no problem featuring beasties chomping on
Ben Reilly’s arm or making sure the titular lead dons his costume
long before the final episode rolls around. That confidence is admirable, ditto the willingness
to mimic staples of silent cinema like an iris transition. Even at its
messiest, Spider-Noir has creative chutzpah.
It doesn’t
hurt that the supporting cast channels Cage’s enthusiasm for this vintage
material. Li Jun Li, though underserved by some messy writing, absorbingly
embodies the classic femme fatale archetype. Meanwhile, Lamorne Morris is
terrific basically headlining his own show depicting Robbie Robertson
navigating New York for stories that could get him his Daily Bugle job back.
Arguably the show's breakout star is Karen Rodriguez, who compellingly goes toe-to-toe
with Reilly at the drop of a hat. She's got moxie evoking classic leading
ladies while still injecting Janet with plenty of fresh idiosyncrasies.
Unfortunately,
despite getting some talented actors to play them, Spider-Noir’s
villains are its weakest part. Not even a legend like Brendan Gleeson can make
Silvermane anything more than just Temu Wilson Fisk. There’s shockingly little
specificity to this character, a far cry from classic noir baddies played by
Charles Laughton or Lionel Barrymore, who were just dripping with personality.
Silvermane, meanwhile, just delivers interchangeable monologues about violence
driving the world while inhabiting equally indistinguishable lavish locales.
Even after eight lengthy episodes, Silvermane remains a generic, shrug-worthy
mobster baddie.
Flint
Marko is also underwhelming as a complicated foe. Part of that comes from
Huston’s miscalculated performance. Unlike Cage, he can’t sell externalized
anguish well. It doesn’t help that the writing wringing sad monologues out of
Sandman always comes across as unintentionally humorous. Thankfully, Andrew
Lewis Caldwell is a delight as Megawatt, an aspiring stage actor turned
villain. He's having such a pronounced ball in the role and radiates energy
whenever he’s on-screen. Unfortunately, his entertaining maximalism only
highlights how other Spider-Noir foes, like Silvermane, are a slog.
The
erratically successful villain epitomizes Spider-Noir as a show engaging
in constant, sometimes frustrating, tug-of-war. It’s a noir homage also paying
tribute to a barrage of other pre-1960 genre storytelling influences. The
scripts yearn to get audiences invested in its characters yet struggle to flesh
out many of these players beyond classic nori archetypes. Then there’s the
innate problem with having a show where Not Phillip Marlowe also engages in big
superhero movie-friendly fight scenes. Like Ebert said, noirs and superhero
fare are odd bedfellows.
Still, all
those colliding creative instincts combined with unapologetically goofy
(complimentary) comic book material does yield some fleetingly entertaining
fruit. Having Nicolas Cage around anchoring the proceedings certainly doesn’t
hurt. While other superhero TV shows attempt to tone down the weirdness of
their source material (hello Arrow and Iron Fist!), Cage embraces
the material’s innate absurdity with gusto. That’s not enough to fully erase
either Spider-Noir’s disjointed nature or its frustrating pacing. This
leading man’s commitment, though, ensures Spider-Noir, even in its
weakest moments, always goes down swinging.









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