How Iconic Spider-Man Writer Dan Slott Completely Changed Across the Spider-Verse

Legendary Spider-Man writer Dan Slott altered the Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse.The Eisner Award-winning comic book creator recently revealed in an interview with Popverse how one of the notes he shared as a creative consultant for the Spider-Verse films changed the universe’s trajectory radically. In Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, Miles Morales is bitten by a spider with 42 inscribed on it. The spider glitches in the movie for no reason other than the visual appeal, but along came Slott to imbue that characteristic with multiverse-altering implications. “I gave them the beat that was the 42 spider,” the writer said.The plot of Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse hinges on the fact that Miles was never supposed to acquire spider powers, the groundwork for which is laid by Slott. “If you follow this further down the rabbit hole, that implies that’s a spider that shouldn’t have bit anyone from Earth-1610, which means that the Chris Pine Spider-Man was their one and only Spider-Man,” he explained. “Miles was never meant to get bit. When Miles got bit, he went back for the spider. If he hadn’t gone back, Chris Pine wouldn’t have had to stop to save him. He would have put the goober in the machine. He would have shut it down. There never would have been an explosion,” Slott added.

Legendary Spider-Man writer Dan Slott altered the Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse.

The Eisner Award-winning comic book creator recently revealed in an interview with Popverse how one of the notes he shared as a creative consultant for the Spider-Verse films changed the universe’s trajectory radically. In Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, Miles Morales is bitten by a spider with 42 inscribed on it. The spider glitches in the movie for no reason other than the visual appeal, but along came Slott to imbue that characteristic with multiverse-altering implications. “I gave them the beat that was the 42 spider,” the writer said.

The plot of Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse hinges on the fact that Miles was never supposed to acquire spider powers, the groundwork for which is laid by Slott. “If you follow this further down the rabbit hole, that implies that’s a spider that shouldn’t have bit anyone from Earth-1610, which means that the Chris Pine Spider-Man was their one and only Spider-Man,” he explained. “Miles was never meant to get bit. When Miles got bit, he went back for the spider. If he hadn’t gone back, Chris Pine wouldn’t have had to stop to save him. He would have put the goober in the machine. He would have shut it down. There never would have been an explosion,” Slott added.

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