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Sources confirm the official runtime for Spider-Man: No Way Home, which will make the film the third-longest film in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
The final runtime for Spider-Man: No Way Home has been confirmed, making it the third-longest Marvel Cinematic Universe film yet.
According to Collider, Spider-Man: No Way Home will run for 150 minutes in total (including the credits) making the Spidey threequel a two-and-a-half-hour long film. Compared to other MCU films, No Way Home is the third-longest Marvel movie so far, behind Eternals, a two-hour and 37-minute stint, and Avengers: Endgame as the longest, boasting three hours and 2 minutes.
Besides coming in third to other MCU movies, No Way Home is also the longest Spider-Man movie so far, with films like Spider-Man 3 clocking in at two hours and 19 minutes, and Amazing Spider-Man running for two hours and 16 minutes in total. Compared to the other Tom Holland-led Spider-Man films, No Way Home also comes to 26 minutes longer than Homecoming, and nearly 30 minutes longer than Far From Home.
Along with the film’s extensive runtime, No Way Home is also projected to have an equally massive box office in its opening weekend. Currently, it has been predicted that Spider-Man: No Way Home could not only be the first pandemic-era film to make $100 million in its first weekend but might also be the first film to earn $200 million in its opening weekend since Avengers: Endgame in 2019. Demand for tickets to No Way Home even caused several online ticketing services to crash for the day, with ticket presales also comparing to those for Endgame.
While the film’s runtime has been confirmed, Marvel and Sony are keeping details about the film as tight to their chests as possible. According to recent reports, press screenings will only show reporters 40 minutes of the 150-minute movie, which is said to give journalists just enough information for press junkets and other events.
Both Holland and director Jon Watts teased the grand scale of Spider-Man: No Way Home in the past, with Watts comparing the film to Avengers: Endgame. “We’re definitely trying to be ambitious,” Watts said in a previous interview. “When I was first pitched the idea, I was like, ‘Wow, that would be awesome if we could pull it off… But there’s just no way it’s going to work,” Holland said in the same interview. “You’re just not going to be able to get everyone to do what they need to do. It’s just not going to happen.’ But it did happen. And it’s crazy.”
Spider-Man: No Way Home arrives in theaters Dec. 17.
Source: Collider
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