First 'Spider-Noir' Image Released By Amazon; Trailer Makes Rounds Too
Spider-Man Noir does whatever a spider can at upfronts again. Series premieres in 2026
There’s going to be quite a bit of superhero TV next year, whether it’s the rest of Wonder Man (probably), the Vision series, more Daredevil: Born Again and X-Men ‘97, or the Punisher special presentation (or more!) from Marvel Studios, or Lanterns (and probably more!) from DC Studios, there’s probably going to be plenty. But what might end up on the fringe of the conversation is Spider-Noir from Sony Pictures Television for MGM+ and Prime Video. It was at last year’s upfronts that the series order was announced, and now its 2026 premiere has been confirmed, for the authentic black and white noir experience and in color. You know, for the cowards.
Posting his version of the announcement on Twitter with the first officially released photo, executive producer Christopher Miller confirmed the 1930s setting, and wrote “Nicolas Cage is a delight, as is the rest of the cast. The show is really special. Can’t wait for you all to see.” The photo features Spider-Noir in his expected comic-accurate costume, the fedora, white goggles, black webbed mask and trench coat, it’s all there. As for that trailer, it sure made its way around Twitter but doesn’t seem to have an official release. Nobody even bothered to say where exactly they got it from. Anyway, the city’s a mess and could use a hero. Cage’s character responds that he hopes they find someone, intercut with Spider-Man Noir vigilantism.
Prime Video, MGM+ Order Spider-Man Noir Series 'Noir', Nicolas Cage To Star
It's time to drink egg creams and punch Nazis. Nicolas Cage is officially set to star in Noir, the live-action Spider-Man Noir series that Prime Video and MGM+ announced they ordered at their upfront Tuesday.
Cage’s character? Well, again, Spider-Noir stars Cage as a Spider-Man Noir different from the one he voiced in Sony’s Spider-Verse films, so far that this one is not a Peter Parker variant, at least as has previously been said, and even this whole year later has not been reconfirmed. So we still don’t know his name. This Noir is described as an aging and down-on-his-luck private investigator in 1930s New York forced to grapple with his past life as the city’s one and only superhero. The series also stars Lamorne Morris as Robbie Robertson, the only known character with a name, and it’s a comics character too. Brendan Gleeson, Jack Huston, Abraham Popoola and Li Jun Li, play a villain, bodyguard with a currently-unrevealed assignment, World War I veteran looking for an opportunity to get ahead and nightclub singer characters respectively. Karen Rodriguez is also a series regular but her character doesn’t even have a job description. The other recurring cast includes Andrew Lewis Caldwell, Lukas Haas, Cameron Britton, Cary Christopher, Michael Kostroff, Scott MacArthur, Joe Massingill, Whitney Rice, Amanda Schull, Andrew Robinson and Amy Aquino. Kai Caster will appear as a guest star, with a character tied to another.
Oren Uziel and Steve Lightfoot are Spider-Noir’s executive producers/co-showrunners, and developers of the series with Miller and his creative partner Phil Lord via their banner Lord Miller, under their overall deal and Amy Pascal via Pascal Pictures. Aditya Sood and Dan Shear also executive produce as part of Lord Miller. Harry Bradbeer will executive produce as well and direct the first two episodes. The series will premiere domestically on MGM+’s linear channel, then globally on Prime Video in more than 240 countries and territories, though it’s unclear whether that includes the United States. However this information has been updated to clarify that the rollout on Prime Video is next day. Variety’s headline does call it a Prime Video series so that’s at least something. Hopefully.
'Spider-Man: Beyond The Spider-Verse' Finally Spins A 2027 Release Date Out Of CinemaCon
On June 2, 2023, Sony Pictures Animation released Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse, the sequel to 2018’s Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, unleashing it on a $690 million box office run. It’s a month into the Writers Guild of America strike but its sequel,
Source: Variety