A (Black) Gat in the Hand: Marvel Goes Noir. And NAILS It!!!
“You’re the second guy I’ve met within hours who seems to think a gat in the hand means a world by the tail.”
– Raymond Chandler
Spider-Noir is the best thing to happen to Marvel streaming since…well, Daredevil: Born Again. So yeah, not that long ago. I’ve only watched the first three – of eight – episodes so far. Because this is too good to binge. It should be savored. It may not be everybody’s cup of tea, but I LOVE that it’s an homage to hardboiled Pulp and Noir. Which you might know I blog about once in awhile…
No spoilers here (if I can help it). I just wanna talk about the Noir vibe a bit. I’ll do a full blown post after I watch it all (and when some spoilers will be okay). These folks absolutely know their source material. And I’m talking about Pulp, not Marvel.
A little Spider-Man Noir history first. The character appeared in a short comic book run in 2009, which I had certainly never heard of. But I’m not a comic book guy.
Then, back in 2018, the first of the animated Spider-Verse movies came out, with Miles Morales as the main Spider-Man. In the same scene with Spider-Ham (he still cracks me up), Peter and Miles meet a Nicholas Cage-voiced Spider-Man Noir. He has a few scenes after that.
I knew nothing about that mysterious character, but I was immediately intrigued by the obviously hardboiled private eye iteration. Flash forward to 2026, and Spider-Noir is the coolest new thing from the Marvel-verse in years. Cage is back in a live-action version, and his Spider-Man Noir is played differently than in the animated movie. But that’s fine. You should look at the ‘Verse version as just a starting point to introduce the character.
Spider-Noir is an eight episode series streaming on Prime (Screw MGM+ and yet another money-grab by Amazon). Cage is Ben Reilly, a nineteen-thirties private eye in a Spider-Verse New York City. He was the only superhero in the city, and a tragedy in his past has led him to forsake his powers (though his Spidey-sense still goes off). This Spider-Man hero is known as The Spider, which was an in-house name for the character. The Spider was a Pulp hero, whom Stan Lee cited as an inspiration for creating Spider-Man. I’m not ready to delve into that influence, yett.
Okay. Go watch the first episode if you want more.









