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ReviewSpider-Man: Far from Home film review – Marvel takes a fun European holiday after Avengers: Endgame

  • Still mourning the death of his mentor, Iron Man, Spider-Man’s teen alter-ego Peter Parker takes a much-needed school trip to Europe
  • Unfortunately, Nick Fury has other plans for Spider-Man after the arrival of a superhero from an alternate-reality

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Tom Holland plays the titular hero in Spider-Man: Far from Home (category IIA), directed by Jon Watts. It also stars Zendaya, Jake Gyllenhaal and Samuel L. Jackson.
James Mottram

4/5 stars

Spider-Man: Far from Home’s storyline directly follows on from Avengers: Endgame . So if you haven’t seen that, stop reading here.

Set eight months on, like the rest of the world, our friendly neighbourhood Spider-Man (Tom Holland) is still mourning the demise of his mentor Iron Man, aka Tony Stark. He needs to step back. Thankfully, his teenage alter-ego Peter Parker has a “plan” for the summer. Travel with his classmates to Europe for the school trip and tell MJ (Zendaya) how he feels.

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Unfortunately, Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson) has other plans after the arrival of a superhero, soon to be dubbed Mysterio (Jake Gyllenhaal), from an alternate-reality.

Billowing out clouds of green smoke, he’s come to fight with four destructive monsters made from the elements – earth, wind, water and fire. And it just so happens that the water creature will be rearing its head in Venice, where Peter and his friends are heading.

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Fury wants Spider-Man on the team, even giving him a pair of glasses bequeathed by Stark (titled EDITH – Even Dead I’m The Hero) that allow him control of billions of dollars worth of tech. But Parker, still just a boy at heart, is really the reluctant hero in this second Holland-led solo outing for the Stan Lee-created superhero.

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