The issues—the numerous, distracting, annoying issues—with Prime Video’s new Spider-Man series Spider-Noir are almost all helpfully contained within its posters. Beneath images of a masked vigilante in a trench coat and fedora, they each assert, with passion, if not necessarily good grammar, that “Nicolas Cage is Spider-Noir.” Some of the irritation is built into the title, which sets expectations for exactly what Spider-Noir delivers: An awkward attempt to smoosh together superhero quippyness with classic-Hollywood cosplay, forcing otherwise good actors to try to rattle off clunky lines about “superpowers” in their most adequate approximation of Humphrey Bogart. But the real problem, surprisingly enough, comes even earlier in the tagline—because this is a TV show with a profoundly bad case of “Nicolas Cage is.”
The living legend’s first starring TV gig sees him slip into the flat feet of retired superhero Ben Reilly, a.k.a. The Spider—who, Prime’s marketing people would like to remind you, is a separate and legally distinct entity from any other Spider-Men based off of 2009 comic series Spider-Man: Noir that you might have previously seen or heard Cage play. A down-on-his-luck private investigator living in a New York constructed almost entirely out of clichés, Reilly comes with a full complement of his own: A sassy secretary (Karen Rodriguez), a reporter buddy (Lamorne Morris, maybe the only performer who comes out of this thing fully unscathed), and a backstory that comes helpfully pre-Gwen Stacy’d for all your instant “mournful superhero” needs.
Into this pile of comic book and private eye stock types barges Cage, giving a performance of such manifest strangeness that the show has to work in an explanation for it almost halfway through its eight-episode run. That caveat—that Reilly is so spider-brained by his imported arachnid genes that he’s essentially had to cobble together a human being impression out of old movie dialogue—could be interesting in a darker show. Here, though, it mostly just gives Cage license to completely give himself over to his most indulgent tendencies. In a career that’s seen the actor wrestle with any number of odd mannerisms, it’s quasi-tragic to see a few finally manage to pin him; the result is so twitchy that you’d be forgiven for thinking Reilly hadn’t been bitten by a spider so much as a rampaging collection of tics.


