Me personally, I’m tired of seeing teen heroes, and teenage Spider-Man is done to death at this point. There have been eight Spider-Man movies, and at least twelve Spider-Man cartoons, and Spider-Man has only been an adult in two of them. That’s Spider-Man: The Animated Series and Spider-Man: The New Animated Series.
In the 1994 Spider-Man show, he was 22 because he’d been attending ESU for a while, and that’s at the start of the show. Then, in season five, he’s already married to Mary Jane. In Spider-Man: The New Animated Series that aired on MTV, he was again 21–23. And then he’s 23 in Spider-Man PS4. But that’s it.
The thing is, Peter graduated high school in Issue #28 and then graduated college in Issue #185. There are over 700 issues of The Amazing Spider-Man, and most of his iconic stories—the ones fans actually like—are when he’s either in college, graduated college, or still in college in his mid-20s getting his doctorate or something, because that’s how damn smart he is.
But for some reason, Hollywood keeps putting him in high school. And I also blame Ultimate Spider-Man for this too.
Personally, I’m tired of reboots that show Ben dying, Krypton exploding and the crime alley shooting. We all know what happened but please Hollywood, waste half the movie rehashing.
In No Way Home we did see Peter as an adult - Tobey Maquire - and it was refreshing to see Peter with wrinkles.