Lord and Miller already were on Twitter stroking their virtual beards about it.
Fandango: Let's get to the most important question: Does Far From Home introduce the Multiverse to the MCU?
Jon Watts: Well, I mean, yeah. We had to look at it in terms of the scope of what happened at the end of Endgame. Seeing all the crazy things that they did and all the questions that raises. So we're definitely trying to answer one of the big ones -- alternate timelines. So many possibilities opened up at the end of Endgame, and Peter Parker is one of the few people on the ground dealing with them.
Fandango: Are you able to explain the rules of this multiverse in terms of how it differs from the Spider-Verse that we were introduced to in Into The Spider-Verse?
Jon Watts: I wouldn't dare! I'll let Nick Fury do that.
If the X-Men and the Fantastic Four are set in another universe, I hope we see a crossover movie with them before they visit the universe of the Avengers.Jon Watts seemingly confirms that Far From Home introduces the Multi-Verse into the MCU.
Exclusive Interview: 'Spider-Man: Far From Home' Director Jon Watts Breaks Down That Wild New Trailer
Years of fans griping, some literally every day that it's a shame that the FF and the X-men are walled off in a separate cinematic continuity unable to interact with the rest of the MCU... And now one trailer later what's all the rage on the Hype?
"Wouldn't it be great if now that Marvel Studios has the FF and X-Men back that what they did was wall them off from the rest of the MCU into their own separate cinematic continuity?"
Same franchise, just set in a different universe.
Where the MCU was different was that the characters shared a same world, with a crossover from a different world at anytime a sorcerer showed up you are in danger of literally sharing just a costume colorExactly why is this so hard to get? Nothing will be stopping a crossover whenever they need or want to no funny business with rights its just another universe to add something unique to an ever growing cinematic universe.
The reason why the TV heroes never showed up in the movies is because they are in a multiverse. It's a kind of brilliant.
That's what makes the mutant concept being introduced into the MCU proper so much more interesting. How does a post-Avengers world deal with the emergence of these beings?
I wouldn't love that idea considering that's basically Days of Future Past except it's the status quo always. And why would anybody care about what's happening in an alternative universe where mutants exist? You have none of the history and investment that people have with the MCU proper. How mutants affect/change the world that billions have grown to love over the past 11 years is what will matter to people.
There's also the issue of evolution. Mutants will replace humans. This does not apply to the normal MCU universe because mutants are not natural. They don't belong, they are an anatoly. Magneto, Apocalypse, Sinister etc all of their ideologies no longer make sense. Why would anyone be afraid of mutants at that point