Spider Man No Way Home, starring Tom Holland, arrives in India on December 16. The anticipation is huge from Spiderman fans in India, and the international reviews of the much-hyped Marvel film are a mixed bag. The film has mostly received positive reviews, but some have suggested that the plot is a little “confusing.”
It is quite understandable, and hard to manage aspirations for arguably the most anticipated film in cinema history… but one believes you shouldn’t have to with Spider-Man: No Way Home. The trailer has set the right tone ahead of its release globally, and in India as well.
Tom Holland is fantastic in his new role as Spider-Man and Peter Parker. With expectations for a Marvel project at an all-time high and his off-screen romance with co-star Zendaya (“MJ”) in the spotlight, the 25-year-old actor delivered the performance of his young but illustrious career.
Spider-Man: No Way Home, features Zendaya, Benedict Cumberbatch, Willem Dafoe, Jamie Foxx, Alfred Molina, and Marissa Tomei, picks up after the events of Spider-Man: Far From Home, in which Jake Gyllenhaal’s Mysterio revealed Peter Parker’s identity to the world.
Spider Man No Way Home : Here are some of the International Reviews

“Spider-Man: No Way Home hits all the right notes as the MCU’s latest entry. Its impact on the universe as a whole, as well as the overall emotional beats, all feel earned. Stellar performances meet what feels like a Saturday morning cartoon rife with all the devastating punches we’ve come to expect from this sneaky universe. Though it struggles with some tired superhero tropes, everything else about it will leave fans grinning ear-to-ear,” writes Amelia Emberwing of IGN.
Benjamin Lee of the Guardian writes, “It’s flawed for sure but still moves with more deftness than most (arriving after Eternals is a blessing for any Marvel film) and there’s an ending that suggests an awareness of its roots (post-credits scene aside), hinting at a promising way forward rather than back. Consider the curse of sorts sort of broken.”
“The movie can be ungainly at times, and it’s much too committed to setting up even more craziness to play out in upcoming Marvel product (these aren’t standalone films so much as overloaded episodes, after all), but it provides enough resolution for the past two decades of Spider-Man adventures that audiences who’ve tuned out along the way will be rewarded for giving this one a shot,” writes Peter Debruge.
Holland is emotionally brilliant in portraying Peter as being driven and inspired by his love for his family and friends, and using that love as the eventual launching point for his pain and suffering.
