In a different interview back in 2017, Pascal also mirrored Kevin Feige's comments, but also helps to clarify the timeline even more. Just to make things even more clear, we have another quote from Sony's Amy Pascal, who is one of the key producers on these Spider-Man standalone movies. How exactly that is accomplished is going to remain a giant question mark until after we see Avengers: Endgame, no doubt. It's always been highly expected that the remaining Avengers will figure out a way to bring back at least some of the dusted heroes from Infinity War, but now we know Spider-Man and Nick Fury, at the very least, are coming back somehow. That's pretty clear and doesn't leave a lot of wiggle room. And you can do it in a way that is tonally unique, and tonally different than, certainly, the two Avengers films that people are about to see."
It's fun to see that, because he can represent, you know, the world as a whole, as they try to move forward. "What is it like to try to go back to a normal life after what happens in this movie ? Not to mention what happens in the next movie. Here's what Marvel Studios President Kevin Feige had to say in an interview last year. Spider-Man: Far From Home absolutely takes place not only after Infinity War, but after Avengers: Endgame as well. Was Peter Parker coming home from his trip on the school bus in the beginning of the movie? As much as that theory would simplify things, that's not the case. That has led some to wonder if this movie actually takes place prior to the events of Infinity War. But chief amongst the things that the footage brought was confusion, because, as we saw at the end of Infinity War, Peter Parker, Nick Fury and others should be dead.
We got our first look at Mysterio in live-action, we know what Peter Parker looks like in Europe and plenty more. The first trailer for Spider-Man: Far from Home finally dropped online today and brought with it a great many things.