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Spider-Noir review: Nicolas Cage plays Spider-Man with Batman jadedness, Wolverine trauma
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The Indian Express
MAY 29, 2026, 12:32 PM
3 min read
Spider-Noir review: Nicolas Cage plays Spider-Man with Batman jadedness, Wolverine trauma

Since New York City of the 1930s is the only dimension he knows, Cage’s ageing and jaded Ben Reilly doesn’t go about trying to erase the whole world’s collective memory to conceal his identity as Spider-Man. Because the only mind that he wants to wipe the Spider out of is himself. “With no power, comes no responsibility,” Ben Reilly maintains, a rather cynical spin on his namesake Ben Parker’s golden words.

He would ideally love where Tom Holland’s Peter Parker is at in the upcoming Spider-Man: Brand New Day. He doesn’t want even his closest confidants to remind him of his alter ego. Why? Like Andrew Garfield’s Peter Parker in Spider-Man: No Way Home, he feels terribly guilty about not being able to save his love interest. But unlike his counterpart from that dimension, Ben Reilly doesn’t cry at the drop of a hat. Instead, he shields his aching eyes with a detective hat and his guilty conscience with a sleuth’s day job.

That part of his identity lends the best to the show’s noir setting. Cage nails that Humphrey Bogart drawl along with that vintage stance and stealthy body language. Spider-Noir is available in both the coloured and the black-and-white versions on Prime Video, but I’d recommend the latter only for a more visually compelling experience. The play with shadows and light, bleached to perfection, serves as an avid hat-tip to the monochromatic era. Between transporting us to that era with his retro histrionics, Cage also slides in a few moments of piercing honesty, especially when he confesses to fellow heartbroken lover Cat Hardy (Li Jun Li) that he feels very “alone”.

Of course, he plays an ageing Spider-Man with the jadedness of Batman, but the cynicism isn’t as cold-blooded or steely as the Caped Crusader. Despite his monochromatic world, there’s enough light in Reilly’s life that he retreats to a bat cave. Like Bruce Wayne, he also wants to erase his past and the gnawing pain of losing a loved one, but he hasn’t turned himself into a superhero by his own volition. Like most Spider-Men, he got his superhero powers through an accidental bite, but unlike Batman, the steeliness of a reluctant superhero is more of a self-defence mechanism than a grave consequence of his traumatic past.

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Spider-Noir review: Nicolas Cage plays Spider-Man with Batman jadedness, Wolverine trauma | Antigravity News