Sony's 'Spider-Noir' TV series with Nicolas Cage gets premiere date

Cast member Nicolas Cage at the midnight screening of the film "The Surfer" at the 77th Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, France, May 18, 2024. Cage will star in Sony's "Spider-Noir" TV series, to premiere in May on Prime Video.

Cast member Nicolas Cage at the midnight screening of the film "The Surfer" at the 77th Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, France, May 18, 2024. Cage will star in Sony's "Spider-Noir" TV series, to premiere in May on Prime Video. (Sarah Meyssonnier, Reuters)


1 photo
Save Story

Estimated read time: 1-2 minutes

LOS ANGELES — Nicolas Cage will appear in his ​first leading role in a TV series when "Spider-Noir" premieres in May, according to Sony and Prime Video.

The ‌series is a reinterpretation of the superhero Spider-Man set in New York ⁠City during the Great Depression, ​and will premiere on May ⁠27.

In the teaser trailer released Thursday, Cage is seen ‌using his web-slinging ‌skills while playing Ben Reilly, a private investigator who ⁠confronts his past after ⁠a personal tragedy.

Other cast members include Lamorne Morris from the show "New Girl," and Li Jun Li from the Oscar-nominated film "Sinners."

Viewers will be able to watch "Spider-Noir" in two ways, in "authentic black and white" and "true hue full color" depending on their ‌preference.

Sony previously introduced an animated iteration ​of the Spider-Noir character, which Cage provided the voice for, in the 2018 Oscar-winning film "Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse," which explores numerous Spider-people from different universes.

"Spider-Noir" is the first live-action series from the Spider-Verse and gives Amazon its own piece of the Marvel pie.

In a January deal, ​Netflix and Sony Pictures Entertainment reached a new agreement ‌that would bring films ‌such ⁠as "Spider-Man: Beyond the Spider-Verse" to the streaming giant's customers worldwide after they play in cinemas.

Under the multiyear agreement, Netflix becomes the exclusive streaming destination of Sony Pictures' films following ‌their theatrical runs and video-on-demand ​releases for the first 18 ‌months, after which they ⁠will go ​to Disney.

Contributing: Rollo Ross

Photos

Most recent Entertainment stories

Related topics

Danielle Broadway
    KSL.com Beyond Business
    KSL.com Beyond Series

    KSL Weather Forecast

    KSL Weather Forecast
    Play button