2/2 Animation: The animation isn't the best, as it's rather blocky. The theme song is very catchy and a nice change of pace from other Disney Junior theme songs. 2/2 Music: I love Fall Out Boy and was pleasantly surprised with Patrick Stump contributing to the soundtrack. Doc Ock would be far more sinister in any other production, but here she hams it up as a mere schoolyard bully with state of the art technology and I love it. The villains are pretty entertaining because of how cheesy they are. But they're each unique in their own way, and these differences and flaws contribute to their success. And I do have to commend the writers for not putting Peter's backstory for the billonth time 1/2 Characters: Peter, Miles, and Gwen are now young children, and naturally they do childish things because of that - like argue over which ice cream flavor is the best. Props for creativity with the setting though. I'm not expecting Oscar-level writing, but at least do something different. Kids aren't going to take away lessons from the show, they're just gonna ask their parents to buy toys. While it's good for kids to learn these things, these lessons are becoming overused on Disney Junior. Writing: The series has the child characters learning lessons like friendship and teamwork. It features Peter Parker, Miles Morales, and Gwen Stacy. So let's swing into this review Summary: Spidey and His Amazing Friends is Spider-Man for the preschool market, which is Disney Junior realizing how profitable Spider-Man and the other lower-deck Marvel characters are. If they all get 2 points, the show gets 10 stars. Each show has 5 elements - writing, characters, music, animation, and voice acting. Starting with this review, I have a new points system.
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