First Quote Added
April 10, 2026
Latest Quote Added
"Alright, people. Let’s start at the beginning one last time. My name is Gwen Stacy. I was bitten by a radioactive spider, and for the last 2 years, I've been the one and only Spider-Woman. You guys know the rest. I joined a band, saved my dad. I couldn't save my best friend, Peter Parker, so now I save everyone else. And I don't do friends anymore, just to avoid any distractions. And one day this weird thing happened. And I mean, like, really weird. I was blown into last week literally. I landed in New York, but not my New York. My Spider-Sense told me to head to Visions Academy. [to Miles] Wasn't sure why until I met you. [Miles: [nervously] I like your haircut.] [deadpan] You don't get to like my haircut."
"He figured it out."
"Wherever I go, the wind follows, and the wind– smells like rain."
"My name is (also) Peter Parker. I was bitten by a radioactive spider. In my universe, it's 1933, and I’m a private eye. I like to drink egg creams, and I like to fight Nazis a lot. Sometimes, I let matches burn down to my fingertips just to feel something, anything."
"Can you close off your feelings so you don't get crippled by the moral ambiguity of your violent actions?"
"It can't be that easy. [cut to them with bowties walking around the party as "staff"] It's that easy."
"[after Aunt May tells them to take the impending fight outside] We don't pick the ballroom, we just dance."
"[while fighting Tombstone] You gonna fight or are you just flappin' gums? Ya hard-boiled turtle slapper!"
"[last words before returning to his universe] I love you all. I'm taking this cube thing with me. I don't understand it. But I will."
"Hi, guys! Konichiwa! Hajimemashite yoroshiku!"
"My name is Peni Parker. I was bitten by a radioactive spider. I'm from New York in the year 3145. I have a psychic link with a spider who lives inside my father's robot, and we're best friends forever."
"Can you rewire a mainframe while being shot at?"
"Kingpin has a private elevator entrance from his penthouse to the collider below."
"[last words before returning to her universe] Thank you, Miles, from both of us."
"[Peter B. Parker: This could literally not get any weirder.] It can get weirder. I just washed my hands, that’s why they’re wet. No other reason."
"My name is Peter Porker. I was bitten by a radioactive pig. I'm a photographer for the Daily Beagle. When I'm not pooching around, I'm working like a dog trying to sniff out the latest story. I frolic, and I dance, and I do this with my pants–"
"Can you float in the air at the smell of a delicious pie?"
"Miles, the hardest thing about this job is– you can't always save everybody."
"Do animals talk in this dimension? 'Cause I don't wanna freak him out."
"[against Scorpion] You got a problem with cartoons?"
"[last words to Miles before returning to his universe] I want you to have this. It'll fit in your pocket. That's all folks."
"Miles, it's your dad. Please open the door. Miles, I can see your shadow movin' around. Yeah, okay, I get it. I get it. You're still ignoring me. Look, can we talk for a minute? Something... Something happened to... Look, sometimes people drift apart, Miles. And I don't want that to happen to us, okay? I know I don't always do what you need me to do or say what you need me to say. I see this spark in you. It's amazing. It's why I push you. But it's yours. Whatever you choose to do with it, you'll be great. Look, call me when you can. Okay? I love you. You don't have to say it back, though."
"Peter knew how dangerous the job was. But he figured the only one who could stop this guy was Spider-Man."
"My husband, Peter Parker, was an ordinary person. He always said it could've been anyone behind the mask. He was just the kid who happened to get bit. He didn't ask for his powers, but he chose to be Spider-Man. My favorite thing about Peter is that he made us each feel powerful. We all have powers of one kind or another. But in our own way. We are all Spider-Man. And we're all counting on you."
"My friends actually call me Liv. My enemies call me Doc Ock."
"[to the tune of the Spider-Man theme] Doo-be do. Doo-be do. Yub-yub, doo-bee do, doo-bee-do. Watch out! Here comes the Spider-Man! You like my new toy? Cost me a fortune, but hey, can't take it with you, right? You came all this way. Watch the test. It's a hell of a freaking light show, you're gonna love this."
"This was never your city. It's mine."
"It's not always about the money, Spider-Man."
"The real Spider-Man couldn't beat me! You're nothing!"
"You're not stopping this! Not today!"
"You took my family, and now I’m gonna make sure you never see yours again. [crushes Miles with a single punch]"
"It's not up to me. Why won't you quit?"
"Enter a universe where more than one wears the mask."
"What makes you different is what makes you Spider-Man."
"Miles Morales / Spider-Man –"
"Peter Parker / Spider-Man: May and Ben's nephew, and M.J.'s husband"
"/ Spider-Gwen – Hailee Steinfeld"
"Aaron Davis / Prowler -"
"Jefferson "Jeff" Davis-Morales –"
"May Parker – Lily Tomlin"
"– Luna Lauren Velez"
"Mary Jane "M.J." Watson –"
"Spider-Ham –"
"Peni Parker –"
"Olivia "Liv" Octavius / Doctor "Doc Ock" Octopus –"
"[angered at why T'Chaka abandoned N'Jobu's son in the US] YOU WERE WRONG! ALL OF YOU WERE WRONG! To turn your backs on the rest of the world! We let the fear of our discovery stop us from doing what is right. No more! I cannot stay here with you. I cannot rest while he sits on the throne. He is a monster of our own making. I must take the mantle back. I must! I must right these wrongs."
"It was the honor of his career to bring King T’Challa to life in Black Panther.” Black Panther is one of the highest-grossing movies of all time, earning more than $1.3 billion around the world. It has been called a defining moment for black America, as the first superhero movie with a majority black cast and an African lead character."
"As a father, as a girl dad, the portrayal of women in Black Panther is almost certainly what I admired the most, from the chief technology officer to even the baddest person on the film, who to me was the general, who was my favorite character and certainly my wife’s favorite character. But then also, I just want to again emphasize that this is possible. We currently have a tech industry where women and particularly women of color are far and away underrepresented or imagine that it’s not their place or imagine that they don’t have the intellectual capacity. And these are all sexist and racist lies. And women, particularly women of color, can be the chief technology officer of the baddest place, I should say the most technologically advanced sort of companies or places on earth. That’s possible, if we can create that type of sort of society."
"I don’t even know if I can even—as you know, Amy, I don’t even know if it can even be described in words what Black Panther meant, what T’Challa meant, what many of those incredible characters meant, what Wakanda meant, what Wakanda still means to black people. And particularly those of us who are really striving to be antiracist, those of us who are knowledgeable about precolonial West African empires, those of us who know that the reason why there is so much poverty, for instance, in Africa is not because there’s something wrong with African people. That if not for colonialism, if not for the slave trade, there may be a Wakanda. And I think that black people I think in the United States and all over the world, for them to see themselves in greatness and in excellence, for them to see themselves affirmed, I think was just incredible... And like other black people who went to see the film and just as nonblack people, it gave me the ability to really step outside of myself, step outside of my world and imagine what’s possible. And there is nothing more radical and critical to transforming the world than a radical imagination. Of thinking about what is possible. I think Black Panther gave that to so many people."
"We are already limited in the sense that given that type of power, that type of stage that he had, and especially in that industry. You don’t see many black male and female actors being able to put on that stage. For him to be as transcendent as he was. But then you add on the fact that growing up as a black kid, you had superheroes that you looked up to, but they weren’t black. You had Batman, you had Superman, you had Spider Man, and so on and so on. And for Ryan Coogler and for that cast, and for him himself to be able to make Black Panther, even though we knew it was like a fictional story, it actually felt real. It actually felt like we finally had our Black superhero and nobody can touch us. (Speaking about Chadwick Boseman and Black Panther)"