The first trailer for Spider-Man: No Way Home, delighting viewers with a glimpse of the Multiversal action to come. The trailer focuses on establishing the basic premise of the first act, with Peter Parker heading to Doctor Strange for help now his secret identity has become public knowledge - and proving unable to keep quiet long enough for Strange to weave a complex spell, resulting in some sort of interdimensional catastrophe.

The trailer confirmed Spider-Man will be facing a Multiversal Sinister Six, with classic villains from across the Multiverse drawn into the main MCU timeline and confronting Tom Holland's Spider-Man. It explicitly featured references to Alfred Molina's Doctor Octopus, Willem Dafoe's Green Goblin, Thomas Hayden Church's Sandman, and even a blink-and-you'll-miss-it shadowy glimpse of Rhys Ifans' Lizard. Jamie Foxx's Electro will also be returning, and there will presumably be an as-yet-unseen sixth member of the supervillain team. But one detail in the trailer has gone generally unnoticed - an ominous hint that Spider-Man: No Way Home may cost Peter Parker the life of someone he loves.

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Gwen Stacy was Spider-Man's greatest love in the comics, a character who was created by Stan Lee and based on his beloved wife Joan. Tragically, she was killed during a battle between Spider-Man and the Green Goblin; her death is one major reason Spider-Man is so determined to keep a secret identity, because he fears his loved ones could be targeted by his enemies just as Gwen was. She was killed when she fell from the George Washington Bridge, and ever since this has been an iconic location in Spider-Man lore, always standing for tragedy. For years Peter returned to the George Washington Bridge on the anniversary of Gwen's death to reflect on her ing, although he finally seems to have moved on from this in recent comics. So it's quite disturbing to note a number of scenes in the Spider-Man: No Way Home trailer show Spider-Man facing his enemies near the George Washington Bridge. Even the scene featuring Green Goblin's pumpkin bomb is at this bridge, a particularly ominous connection.

Green Goblin’s pumpkin bomb in Spider Man No Way Home

Spider-Man has lost his secret identity in the MCU, with Doctor Strange weaving a spell that attempts to fix the problem. It's impossible to say whether Peter Parker's unwitting interference in Doctor Strange's spell will mean that particular Pandora's Box has been closed - but even if the magic works, it clearly hasn't affected these Multiversal villains, because Doctor Octopus clearly still knows Peter Parker is Spider-Man. That means it would be quite easy for the of the Sinister Six to figure out who Peter's loved ones are, and hold one of them hostage in an attempt to manipulate the wall-crawler.

Marvel knows full well how important a location the George Washington Bridge is to Spider-Man lore. That means the glimpses of the bridge - particularly in connection to the Green Goblin - should be seen as an ominous hint Tom Holland's Spider-Man is about to experience some sort of tragedy. The burgeoning relationship between Peter and Zendaya's MJ has been a major part of the MCU's Spider-Man films, and the trailer for No Way Home opens by revealing they're still an item. Will the MCU's MJ share Gwen Stacy's comic book fate, killed because of the Green Goblin? Or will Spider-Man: No Way Home simply tease this tragedy, and then sidestep it somehow?

More: No Way Home: Why Doctor Strange Seems Off In The Spider-Man Trailer