![]() Scooby-Doo and his friends spent years proving that there was no actual ghost, but then they went and did stories where they actually met ghosts. If you hint at the impossible, then the impossible will exist. ![]() The thing about sci-fi/fantasy worlds like this is that it’s hard to be purely cynical. Using Mysterio’s back story about another universe is a cute misdirection in itself, what with Spider-Man’s last starring role being in a movie about a multiversal team-up. We’re used to Marvel taking liberties with their villains, much like what we got with the Mandarin in Iron Man 3 and sympathetic Skrulls in Captain Marvel. That Mysterio was almost exactly like his comic self was the real twist. He was a villain and likely the one who created the monsters to begin with. Mysterio was no superhero fighting monsters. ![]() The moment Mysterio was revealed in the Far From Home trailer, it was the most obvious plot twist to any comic fan. ![]() But let’s take a closer look at the Spider-Man: Far From Home ending… The MCU Multiverse is Fake (for now) Spider-Man beats the bad guy, gets the girl, the grizzled higher up gives him a pat on the back, and he gets to go back to happily swinging around the streets of New York. No, the initial ending is pretty straightforward at first. ![]()
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