Sony Pictures Animation is finally pulling back the curtain on Spider-Man: Beyond the Spider-Verse, offering fans their first official look at the highly anticipated trilogy capper — and if the newly released images are any indication, Miles Morales’ final chapter is shaping up to be the most emotional yet.
Unveiled during CinemaCon, the first-look images don’t just continue the story — they heighten the stakes in a way that has fans already bracing themselves.
Picking up from the cliffhanger ending of Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse, the images spotlight Miles Morales as he navigates an increasingly fractured multiverse. One of the most striking visuals shows Miles sharing a quiet, heartfelt moment with his father, Jefferson Davis, against a warm, golden-hour backdrop — a scene that hints at the emotional core driving the story forward.

That emotional weight is only intensified by glimpses of the past. Flashback imagery featuring a younger Uncle Aaron, voiced by Mahershala Ali, alongside Jefferson, suggests the film may dig deeper into family history and legacy — themes that have always anchored Miles’ journey.

But it’s not just introspection. The images also tease looming danger. Miguel O’Hara appears more menacing than ever, seemingly closing in on Miles with a glitching, aggressive presence that signals a major confrontation ahead. Meanwhile, Hobie Brown — voiced by Daniel Kaluuya — looks poised to play a key role in the fight to protect Miles’ father, raising questions about how far the Spider-Society will go to enforce the multiverse’s so-called “canon events.”

Notably absent from the images is Miles’ Earth-42 counterpart — the Prowler version of himself — leaving fans speculating about just how central that conflict will be when the film arrives.
The visual tone remains as bold and inventive as ever, continuing the franchise’s reputation for pushing animation boundaries. Even in still form, the imagery carries the same layered, stylized aesthetic that helped Into the Spider-Verse redefine what animated storytelling could look like.
Directed by Bob Persichetti and Justin K. Thompson, and written by Phil Lord, Christopher Miller, and Dave Callaham, the film has been described as the “final chapter” of Miles Morales’ story — one that promises to bring his journey full circle.
After multiple delays, Sony has officially set Spider-Man: Beyond the Spider-Verse to hit theaters on June 18, 2027, nearly a decade after Into the Spider-Verse first changed the animation game.
If these first-look images are anything to go by, the wait might just be worth it.
