Issa Rae will be playing Spider-Woman in the ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel
Issa Rae has been cast to portray Spider-Woman in the much-awaited sequel of Spider-Man: Into the Spiderverse. Phil and Chris Lord have co-written the script and are back as producers. Written By Issa Rae will be playing Spider-Woman in the ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel
Issa Rae is currently filming the fifth and final season of ‘Insecure’, which is a show she has helped in co-creating and has garnered three Emmy nominations, including the outstanding lead actress in a comedy series. According to a report in The Hollywood Reporter, Issa has been signed to voice the character of Spider-Woman in Sony Pictures Animation’s sequel to Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse. Plot details of the film are being kept under wrap for the moment but the original creators Phil and Chris Lord have co-written the script along with David Callaham (Shang-Chi and the Le
Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse sequel welcomes Issa Rae as Spider-Woman
June 4, 2021 by:
Sony Pictures Animation s
SPIDER-MAN: INTO THE SPIDER-VERSE sequel is moving forward and THR has reported that yet another Spider-person will be joining Shameik Moore (Miles Morales) and Hailee Steinfeld s (Spider-Gwen) latest adventure. The outlet revealed that Issa Rae (
Insecure) has joined the cast, and while nothing is official just yet, THR s sources say that she will be voicing Jessica Drew, aka Spider-Woman.
I wasn t sure exactly what to expect from
Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, but the film wound up becoming a huge success in all respects, even taking home the Best Animated Feature award at 2019 s Oscars ceremony. Production on the sequel officially kicked off last summer and it was announced in April that Joaquim Dos Santos (
Metacritic Says There Are Only 24 Near-Perfect Animated Movies
Metacritic Says There Are Only 24 Near-Perfect Animated Movies Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures
By Zoë Z. Dean/June 1, 2021 2:01 am EDT
Animation has such an incredibly wide range of possibilities. Over the decades, it has taken some time for folks to appreciate that it isn t just childish drawings. Once, graphic novels had the same problem, but eventually got the wider culture to take them seriously. But that doesn t help the fact that no animated film has ever won a Best Picture Oscar which is amazing when you think of all the classics that have come and gone.
It was probably sometime in 2002 when I received a Shrek VHS tape in the mail from a relative, with a Post-It Note recommending my parents pop the tape in the VCR for me. I remember watching it with my family and laughing. But I probably soon returned to playing something on the Gamecube. Remember VHS? Remember Gamecube? Congrats, you re retro now.
We re all dealing with how old we feel, and you come into Shrek s house, on his
birthday, and call him unfunny? Someone s got to stick up for Shrek, or simply point out all the ways that Shrek has lingered on the web, and in my brain, for two decades.