Is 'Spider Noir' a Part of the MCU? What’s the Future Like for the Great Depression Spider-Man

Published 05/30/2026, 2:09 PM EDT

Credits: Spider-Noir/@Marvel and @spidernoirprime via Instagram

The landscape of digital television is bracing for an absolute cultural shift as a highly stylized, monochrome comic book adaptation captures the intense fascination of global streaming audiences. The popular project, Spider-Noir, features a legendary Academy Award-winning actor slipping into a rain-soaked trench coat to navigate an alternate, crime-ridden metropolitan timeline. Fans are deeply divided over whether this distinct narrative officially links to the Marvel Cinematic Universe or not.

The intricate structural boundaries separate this specific period piece from mainstream superhero projects.

The universe Spider-Noir belongs to

ADVERTISEMENT

Article continues below this ad

The buzzy live-action series Spider-Noir, starring Academy Award winner Nicolas Cage as an aging private investigator, is officially not connected to the Marvel Cinematic Universe. The television series features no creative collaboration or structural oversight from Marvel Studios, meaning it exists entirely separately from the events of Earth-616.

Originally conceived as a direct spin-off of the animated films, the live-action series was intentionally detached during its first creative meeting to allow for a completely fresh, standalone narrative start. The live-action character does not belong to or share continuity with the specific version of Spider-Man Noir featured in the animated Spider-Verse films, allowing the show to pursue a more mature, independent character arc.

The character acts as the anchor of the specialized Marvel Noir universe, a distinct publishing branch heavily inspired by hard-boiled 1930s film noir and gritty pulp fiction. This specific version separates itself cleanly from both the original 2009 comic book source material and the animated cinematic variant. This dual-version project functions as an exclusive joint venture between Sony Pictures Television and Amazon MGM Studios

Operating entirely outside established franchises grants the series rare creative freedom to pioneer a unique 1930s pulp aesthetic without conforming to massive corporate continuity. This standalone status secures its future.

Nicolas Cage Introduces Gen Z to the Golden Age of Film Noir While Talking 'Spider-Noir'

The fascinating expansion of this historical crime aesthetic opens up an incredible array of possibilities for parallel Noirs.

The world of Marvel Noir universe

The most deserving characters for their own standalone movies or series include Wolverine Noir, a hard-boiled limited series, which will be a good idea for tracking Jim Logan as a 1937 Bowery private detective navigating the criminal underworld utilizing only custom hunting knives and raw street smarts rather than mutant healing factors.

The second option is X-Men Noir, an ensemble period drama can take place where the X-Men are not superhuman heroes but rather a society of outcast delinquents and mobsters. Third is Daredevil Noir, a dark, cinematic origin story charting the violent rise of a blind street kid from Hell's Kitchen who utilizes brass knuckles and pure determination to dismantle local mob enforcers.

ADVERTISEMENT

Article continues below this ad

Credits: Aaron Epstein/Prime

At last, Luke Cage Noir can be a gritty historical thriller following Carl Lucas across the vibrant backdrop of the Harlem Renaissance as he utilizes an urban legend of having b*****-proof skin to clear his family name. This incredible shift toward localized, standalone period storytelling proves that the modern superhero genre can successfully thrive without relying on exhausting multi-verse crossovers.

'Spider-Noir’ in Color or Black-And-White?: Differences Explained for Fans to Choose

ADVERTISEMENT

Article continues below this ad

What do you think about the Spider-Noir and the other possible series? Let us know in the comments.

SHARE THIS ARTICLE :

ADVERTISEMENT

Soma Mitra

1366 articles

Soma is a journalist at Netflix Junkie. With a postgraduate degree in Mass Communication, she brings production experience from documentary films like Chandua: Stories on Fabric. Covering the true crime and docu-drama beat, she turns psychological thrillers into sharp, audience-aware storytelling.

Edited By: Hriddhi Maitra

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

EDITORS' PICK