The Musings of Jaime David
The Musings of Jaime David
@jaimedavid.blog@jaimedavid.blog

The writings of some random dude on the internet

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Tag: mcu

  • I Wasn’t Entirely Wrong: Reacting to the Spider-Man: Brand New Day Trailer and Revisiting My Predictions

    I Wasn’t Entirely Wrong: Reacting to the Spider-Man: Brand New Day Trailer and Revisiting My Predictions

    When I sat down in early August of 2025 to write about Spider-Man: Brand New Day, the film had just entered production, and the internet was already doing what it does best, spiraling into a frenzy of rumors, casting whispers, and multiverse-fueled speculation. Names were being thrown around like confetti. Daredevil. Punisher. Black Cat. Mr. Negative. Tobey Maguire. Andrew Garfield. It felt like we were heading straight back into the chaos of Spider-Man: No Way Home, just bigger, louder, and somehow even more crowded. But I remember pausing and asking a different question. What if Marvel wasn’t trying to outdo itself in scale? What if it was trying to outdo itself in depth.

    Now, months later, with the first trailer for Spider-Man: Brand New Day finally out in the world, I can say this much with confidence. That instinct, that hesitation I had about the multiverse noise, that feeling that something quieter and more grounded was coming, that wasn’t me reaching. That was me reading the direction correctly. Not perfectly, not completely, but correctly enough that revisiting that prediction now feels less like guesswork and more like a rough blueprint that the trailer has begun to trace over in darker ink.

    The trailer does not explode with spectacle. It doesn’t open portals. It doesn’t immediately try to one-up No Way Home. Instead, it does something far more uncomfortable. It sits with Peter Parker. Alone. Truly alone. And that loneliness is not aesthetic. It’s not a temporary narrative device. It is the consequence of a choice that we already watched him make. The world has moved on from him, and the trailer makes it clear that this is not something that is going to be undone easily, if at all. That alone validates one of the central ideas I pushed in my original post, that this film would not be about escalation, but about consequence.

    Back then, I framed it as a kind of inversion of Homecoming. A mirror image. A structural reversal. In Homecoming, Peter Parker was surrounded by people who knew him. Tony Stark mentored him. Ned supported him. His personal life and his superhero life were deeply entangled, sometimes messily so. My theory was that Brand New Day would flip that dynamic. That Peter would now exist in a world where no one knew him, but that he might still find himself orbiting around others who knew Spider-Man, not Peter Parker. Watching the trailer, I don’t think that idea was off. In fact, I think it might be one of the most accurate frameworks for understanding what this movie is trying to do.

    The footage we see reinforces that Peter’s isolation is not just emotional, it’s structural. He is cut off from the identity that grounded him. He is no longer able to be Peter Parker in any meaningful relational sense. And yet, as Spider-Man, he still exists in the world. He still interacts with it. He still intervenes. That creates a very specific kind of tension, one that I tried to articulate back in August. The idea that he could fight alongside people, speak to people, even build something resembling trust, but only behind the mask. That duality, that split between self and symbol, is not just present in the trailer. It feels like the core of it.

    Where I start to see partial confirmation rather than full confirmation is in the specific characters I speculated about. I mentioned Daredevil, Punisher, Black Cat, and even Mr. Negative as potential players in this new ecosystem. The trailer gives us one of those definitively. The Punisher is there, and not as a background cameo or a blink-and-you-miss-it easter egg. He is framed as a force, as a presence, as someone who occupies the same space as Spider-Man but operates on a fundamentally different moral axis. That alone is fascinating, because it reinforces the idea that Peter is no longer being shaped by mentors who guide him gently. He is now encountering figures who challenge him directly, who may not agree with him, who may even oppose him.

    That is where one of my predictions lands in a way I didn’t fully anticipate. I thought these characters might function as a kind of support network, even if indirectly. But the trailer suggests something more complicated. These are not allies in the traditional sense. They are reflections, distortions, counterpoints. The Punisher, especially, feels less like backup and more like a test. A question. What does Spider-Man stand for in a world where someone like Frank Castle is also delivering his version of justice.

    Daredevil, interestingly, is absent from the trailer. That doesn’t mean he isn’t in the film, but it does mean that my assumption about his presence being a central pillar might have been premature. The same goes for Black Cat. If she is in this movie, the trailer is deliberately hiding her. And that’s important, because it reminds me that while reading patterns can get you close, it can’t account for everything. There are always going to be elements that remain deliberately obscured until the film itself unfolds.

    On the villain side, I suggested that we might see a shift from the small-scale crew dynamic of Homecoming to a larger, more singular threat, potentially someone like Mr. Negative who would require multiple heroes to take down. The trailer complicates that idea. What we see instead is something more fragmented. Scorpion is present, finally paying off a thread that has been hanging since Homecoming. There are hints of organized crime, possibly even something like the Hand. It feels less like one towering antagonist and more like a city teeming with threats. A system rather than a singular enemy.

    In a strange way, that still aligns with the spirit of what I was getting at, even if the specifics are different. I was arguing that Spider-Man would not be able to handle everything alone anymore. That the scale of the problem would exceed the capacity of a single hero. The trailer seems to agree with that, but instead of expressing it through one dominant villain, it expresses it through multiplicity. Through pressure from all sides. Through a city that doesn’t stop throwing problems at him.

    Where I was most definitively right, and I don’t say that lightly, is in pushing back against the assumption that this would be another multiverse-heavy spectacle. There is nothing in this trailer that suggests we are revisiting that territory in any major way. No alternate Spider-Men. No reality-breaking events. No immediate escalation beyond what No Way Home already did. If anything, the film seems almost allergic to that scale, choosing instead to narrow its focus and dig into the aftermath. That doesn’t mean there won’t be surprises. Marvel loves its surprises. But the tone, the framing, the emphasis, all of it points away from multiverse chaos and toward grounded storytelling.

    One area where I was completely off, or at least where I didn’t even think to look, is the idea that something might be wrong with Peter himself on a physical level. The trailer hints at instability, at strain, at the possibility that his powers are changing or becoming harder to control. The presence of Bruce Banner suggests that this is not just emotional or psychological. There is something happening to Peter’s body, something that may require scientific understanding as much as moral resolve. That was not on my radar at all, and it adds a layer to the story that I think could push it into even more uncomfortable territory. Because now it’s not just about being alone. It’s about not even being stable within your own skin.

    And yet, even with that addition, the emotional core that I described in my original post remains intact. I ended that piece by suggesting that Brand New Day might be the story of a man learning how to be a hero when no one remembers his name. Watching the trailer, that line feels less like a poetic flourish and more like a mission statement. There are moments where Peter observes the world from a distance, where he sees people he once loved living lives that no longer include him, where he hesitates to reach out because he knows, on some level, that doing so would only reopen wounds that he chose to close. That kind of restraint, that kind of quiet suffering, is not something the MCU has always leaned into. But here, it feels central, unavoidable, almost oppressive in its weight.

    If there is one thing I would adjust about my original theory, it’s this. I framed the potential new characters as a kind of replacement network, a new web of relationships that would form around Spider-Man even as Peter Parker remained isolated. The trailer suggests something harsher. These are not replacements. They are not there to fill the void. They exist in parallel, not in substitution. Peter’s loneliness is not being softened. It is being contrasted. Sharpened. Made more apparent by the presence of others who cannot truly reach him.

    That distinction matters, because it changes the emotional trajectory of the film. It suggests that this is not a story about rebuilding what was lost in a new form. It is a story about living with the loss. About continuing forward without the comfort of restoration. That is a much more difficult story to tell, and a much more interesting one to watch.

    Looking back at my August post now, I don’t see it as something that was right or wrong in a binary sense. I see it as something that caught the outline, the silhouette of what this film is shaping up to be. I missed details. I filled in gaps with assumptions that may not fully materialize. But the core idea, that Marvel would pivot inward rather than outward, that it would focus on consequence rather than escalation, that it would explore what it actually means for Peter Parker to be forgotten, that idea holds. And in some ways, the trailer pushes it even further than I expected.

    There is a version of this film that could have played it safe. That could have undone the ending of No Way Home within the first act. That could have brought everyone back together, restored the status quo, and moved forward as if the sacrifice had been temporary. The trailer makes it clear that this is not that version. This is a film that is willing to sit in the aftermath, to let it breathe, to let it hurt. And that, more than anything else, is what excites me.

    Because if Homecoming was about a kid trying to prove himself in a world that already believed in him, then Brand New Day looks like it’s about a man trying to hold onto his principles in a world that doesn’t even know he exists. And that is not just a continuation of Peter Parker’s story. It is a transformation of it, a shift from validation to invisibility, from mentorship to isolation, from being seen to being forgotten. It is, in many ways, the most honest place this character could go after everything he has already lost.

    So no, I wasn’t entirely right. But I also wasn’t entirely wrong. And in a landscape where speculation often swings wildly between extremes, I’ll take that middle ground. Not as a victory, but as a reminder that sometimes, if you pay attention to the story beneath the noise, you can hear where it’s trying to go before it gets there.

  • Peter Parker, You Have Wi-Fi: Why “No Way Home” Acted Like Online College Didn’t Exist

    Peter Parker, You Have Wi-Fi: Why “No Way Home” Acted Like Online College Didn’t Exist

    Let’s talk about Spider-Man: No Way Home, and let’s be honest—the whole “we didn’t get into MIT, so the world is over” meltdown? It was a lot. Yes, Peter, MJ, and Ned getting denied from college felt devastating, but this is 2024, not 1984. Why did everyone act like the only options were “go to MIT” or “suffer forever”? You’re telling me three teenagers who just survived a multiverse-level event, helped save the fabric of reality, and one of them is literally Spider-Man, had no backup plan? Like, not even an application to SUNY?

    Let’s start with the obvious: online college is a thing. You don’t even need magic to Google “accredited universities that accept late applications.” Peter Parker could have enrolled in ASU Online while swinging through Queens and taking notes on his phone between fights. MJ could have studied psychology, Ned could have gone into tech. Heck, Peter’s already used to working from rooftops and alleyways—distance learning was made for him.

    But okay, let’s say traditional college isn’t the vibe anymore. What about trade school? Imagine Spider-Man becoming an electrician, webbing things together while rewiring the city. He already fixed Stark Tech in like five minutes—he’d be a god at HVAC repair. Or MJ, who’s an artist and writer? Art school. She could’ve done graphic novels or film. Ned? Culinary school. I just feel like Ned gives big “surprise you with the best homemade ramen you’ve ever had” energy. But none of this even got mentioned.

    And look—they had the internet. They could’ve researched schools in other countries, other states, or ones that weren’t scared off by the whole “Spider-Man is a vigilante menace maybe??” thing. Are you telling me there wasn’t a single progressive liberal arts college in Oregon that would’ve been thrilled to admit Peter Parker just for the viral potential?

    And here’s another thing: in the real world, we have apps and websites dedicated to tracking corporate and institutional stances on controversial issues. Want to know if a fast food chain donated to anti-LGBTQ campaigns? There’s an app for that. Curious if a brand supported Black Lives Matter or banned union talk? There’s a dozen Reddit threads, rating lists, and activist toolkits. So you’re telling me that in the Marvel Cinematic Universe—the same world with Wakandan tech, nanobots, intergalactic travel, and sentient AI—they don’t have an app that tracks which businesses or colleges support Spider-Man?

    Please. There’d be an entire “SpideyScore” app. Five stars if your business is Spider-friendly, one star if your CEO once called him a “masked menace.” There would be restaurants with “Spider-Man Eats Free” signs. Coffee shops with themed drinks like “Webbed White Mocha.” Colleges with entire departments dedicated to superhero studies (Peter could’ve been a guest lecturer!). And we’re supposed to believe that he couldn’t find one school that looked at the situation and said, “Yeah, we’ll take a superhero who risked his life to fix a multiversal rupture and is also, by the way, extremely smart?”

    MJ and Ned could’ve used that app to filter schools by “superhero-friendly,” “non-J. Jonah Jameson influenced,” and “accepts unconventional applicants with chaotic lives and good intentions.” Even Reddit would’ve had a thread like: “What schools support Spider-Man?” complete with insider tips, screenshots, and a spreadsheet. The idea that they were all just…sitting around devastated instead of googling “schools that don’t hate Spider-Man” is kinda wild.

    And the fan support? Forget about it. There would be Spidey Support Forums, subreddits, Discord servers, fan zines, even underground clubs where people wear Spider-Man merch in solidarity. If people can build entire conspiracy communities over lizard people and the moon landing, they can absolutely organize to support a misunderstood teen superhero. And Peter could’ve tapped into that—not just emotionally, but logistically. Housing, job leads, safety nets, scholarships crowdfunded by the people.

    Now, let’s talk about Peter’s… career potential in a digital world. This man could’ve made millions with a Twitch stream. “Watch me fight Doc Ock in 4K.” He didn’t need Stark Industries—he needed a ring light and a donation link. Or hey, GofundMe. He literally saved the world multiple times. Start a campaign: “Spider-Man Needs Rent Money.” Boom. Viral in five seconds. TikTok would have his back. He could’ve even gotten sponsored by like…Red Bull and the New York Public Library. “Drink Red Bull. Fight crime. Read books.”

    But the biggest question: Where were his Avengers friends? Not a single one of them could write a recommendation letter? I’m not saying Thor needs to show up at the admissions office, but someone could’ve vouched for him. Happy? Sam Wilson? Doctor Strange?? Strange literally helped create the spell that erased Peter from existence. You’re telling me he couldn’t swing a call to MIT’s admissions office with, “Hey, he stopped a multiversal collapse and let me cast one of the most dangerous spells ever to save everyone. Maybe reconsider the rejection?”

    It’s wild that the entire plot hinges on this college rejection like it’s a Greek tragedy. Meanwhile, millions of real-world kids get rejected from their dream schools every year and somehow don’t break reality. Peter could’ve taken a gap year. Done community college. Gotten a job at Target while figuring it out. Or, you know—leaned on the many, many superheroes he knows who owe him their lives.

    Ultimately, “No Way Home” wanted us to feel Peter’s pain, and it worked. But it also ignored a very real-world truth: when the system fails people, communities often rise up to support them. Peter Parker didn’t need a spell—he needed a support app, an internet connection, and some well-placed community DMs.

  • My predictions for the rest of “Daredevil: Born Again”

    My predictions for the rest of “Daredevil: Born Again”

    After watching the first two episodes of “Daredevil: Born Again,” I am going to predict how the rest of the season will go. These predictions aren’t going to be in detail. They are just quick thoughts about how I think the show will go based on the first two episodes.

    Spoilers ahead for those who have not seen the first two episodes yet.

    My first prediction is that I think we will see more of Foggy in flashbacks. I believe we will see flashbacks about what Foggy was looking into before his death. I also think it will be revealed that Fisk was behind Foggy’s death. I don’t think it makes sense to only show Foggy in the first episode and not have him show up in the rest of the season. He is too pivotal of a character to only be relegated to one episode of the new season and that’s it. We need to see more, and I have a strong feeling we will see more of him in flashbacks. As Matt Murdock gets closer to the truth about Fisk, we will see more of Foggy’s perspective in the show before his death. Who was Benny? What were they talking about? How did Benny know what he knew? I think we will find out these answers as the season goes on.

    My second prediction is that Daredevil’s secret identity will be revealed. In the second episode, when Fisk gives a speech about stopping vigilantes, he mentions 3 characters in particular. Frank Castle (the Punisher), Spiderman, and Daredevil. Punisher’s identity was revealed to the public in the second season of Daredevil. Spiderman’s identity was revealed in No Way Home (but Dr. Strange wiped everyone’s memory of the event). Daredevil’s identity is the only one that has not been revealed yet. But I think that will change in Daredevil: Born Again. With Fisk in power as mayor, it will be hard for Matt Murdock to be Daredevil, even without the costume, and I think after the events of episode 2, Matt Murdock will be pursued by the law. I also think he will get caught somehow and it will be revealed that he is Daredevil.

    My third prediction is that we will see Spiderman in some way in the show. Maybe not a cameo, per se, but we may find out some new information about Spiderman’s whereabouts after the events of No Way Home. He was already referenced in Fisk’s speech in episode 2, so I think it will be the perfect opportunity to have Spiderman to pop up more frequently in the show, even if it’s just easter eggs and references. However, if Spiderman did make a cameo in the show, I think that would be cool. But if he does make an appearance, I feel that we will only see his Spiderman persona, and not Peter Parker.

    My fourth prediction for the show is that Fisk will win at the end. He may not get a complete victory. There may be something that costs him significantly. However, I think Fisk winning and being mayor of NYC will shake things up in the MCU and affect the status quo of the MCU’s NYC in a major way. It will make it harder for heroes to be heroes, and it may even lead to other cities in the MCU to crack down on heroes and vigilantes, because similar to real life, lots of cities get policy inspirations from each other. I also think Fisk winning could have major stakes in MCU movies, especially Spiderman. It would be interesting to see Spiderman fight against Fisk, like in the comics.

    The fifth prediction I will make about the show is that Fisk’s wife Vanessa will turn on him in some way. Their on-screen interactions in the first two episodes have been tense, to say the least. I think the tension will culminate with Vanessa turning on Fisk.

  • Daredevil: Born Again, Episode 2 First Thoughts and Review

    Daredevil: Born Again, Episode 2 First Thoughts and Review

    I had recently seen the first and second episodes of the new series “Daredevil: Born Again.”

    There will be spoilers ahead for episode 2. If you do not want to be spoiled, do not read until you have watched the episode.

    So, in this episode, it focuses on two plots: Fisk’s new life as mayor and a man who accidentally kills a cop.

    This episode hits close to home both on a national stage and a local stage in NYC. In the USA the past few years, there have been stories of vigilantes taking the lives of people and claim self defense. There was one recently in NYC a few years ago, Daniel Penny, who claimed self defense after choking a homeless man on the subway to death. This episode felt a lot like the Daniel Penny case. There have also been a lot of cops who were killed in NYC and around the country the past few years. There has also been a lot of crime on the subway in NYC these past few years, as well, and the problem of subway crime was highlighted in this episode. This episode also highlights how cops and law enforcement and New Yorkers are split about Fisk, similar to how in the real world, cops and law enforcement and New Yorkers are split about Trump. Some see him as a hero and some see right through him and see him as a criminal.

    Another aspect that was tackled in this episode was police brutality. It was revealed early on in the episode that when the man tries to stop what he thinks is a crime on the subway, what he actually witnessed was police brutality, because it was revealed shortly after that the man he killed was a cop. This episode hits hard with real life because there have been stories of police brutality and police killing people unjustly. There have also been instances where people have tried defending themselves against police attacking them. Another aspect that is similar to the real world is how victims in police brutality cases face an uphill battle to get justice.

    Fisk’s new life as mayor was also portrayed well, too. During his first few days as mayor, he has no regard for the rules as mayor. This is similar to how Trump has been in his first term and how he is so far in his second term. They both get things done regardless of the consequences of their actions.

  • Daredevil: Born Again, Episode 1 First Thoughts and Review

    Daredevil: Born Again, Episode 1 First Thoughts and Review

    I had just recently finished watching episodes 1 and 2 of the new show “Daredevil: Born Again.”

    There will be spoilers ahead for the first episode. Do not read any further until you watch the show if you don’t want to be spoiled.

    Admittedly, I was skeptical at first about the concept of the show. The way the third season ended, it made it really hard to imagine how Wilson Fisk, aka The Kingpin, was going to make a return in the show.

    However, after seeing the first episode, I was blown away. The way Fisk returned was believable, and it reflected real life in a way.

    The most noticeable thing about Fisk’s run for mayor is very similar to Trump’s bid for presidency.

    Fisk, like Trump, played on people’s fears and insecurities. Trump played on people’s fears of marginalized groups, while Fisk played on people’s fears of crime and vigilantes in NYC. Fisk’s campaign was also believable, as well, because in NYC, crime and vigilantes are a concern, and have been in the spotlight the past few years. Fisk was also portrayed as an outsider, similar to how Trump was portrayed. Both of them had no experience in politics during their first campaigns. They were seen as outsiders, as outcasts, and they weren’t taken seriously as candidates. In the end, though, they both won.

    Daredevil’s return, and him quitting being Daredevil to focus on being Matt Murdock, that was also portrayed very well, as well. It makes sense that Matt would give up being Daredevil after seeing his best friend Foggy die. He would feel like a failure and not want to hurt anyone else to keep them safe. It also makes sense why he would be avoidant about forming any close bonds with anyone else, and why he would stop communicating with Karen after Foggy’s death. She was there when Foggy died, and Matt would feel that he could have gotten her killed as well, so he would want to do whatever he can to keep her safe.