Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Entertainment
  3. News

Andrew Garfield says he had to work very hard to get people to ask less about Spider-Man

Add as a preferred source on Google
Andrew Garfield poses as Spider-Man with his hands crossed.
Sony

Over the past decade, Andrew Garfield has worked hard to prove that he’s more than just his Spider-Man character. Even so, Garfield admitted during a press conference at the Marrakesh Film Festival that he’s still “had to work very hard to have less people ask questions about Spider-Man.

“I’m still working on it, obviously. It’s an imperfect process,” he added. Garfield is currently sitting on a jury at the festival alongside Luca Guadagnino and Jacob Elordi. Garfield added that, in spite of his reticence to continue answering questions about that role, he was “grateful” for it because “it allowed [him] to maybe have an easier shot at working with people like Martin Scorsese straight after.”

All Three Spideys Learn About Each Other | Spider Man: No Way Home | With Captions

Garfield added that his Spider-Man clout may have indirectly helped Scorsese get financing for his 2016 film Silence. “I think Marty probably was able to get a passion project made with a guy who played Spider-Man in the lead to play a Jesuit priest in the 1600s of Japan. The fact that that film got made with the help of Spider-Man is a beautiful thing,” he explained.

Recommended Videos

Guadagnino added that he found the superhero to be a “fascinating” character.

“I remember when Sam Raimi directed his first one, and I was 28 or 29, I had these dreams because I’m kind of a megalomaniac, and I wished I had been asked to do one. So I wish I had directed you in Spider-Man,” he told Garfield.

Garfield starred in The Amazing Spider-Man and The Amazing Spider-Man 2 in 2014. His franchise was then cut short, but he reprised the role in 2021’s Spider-Man: No Way Home.

Joe Allen
Joe Allen is a freelance writer at Digital Trends, where he covers Movies and TV. He frequently writes streaming…
Apple TV is now home to CrunchyRoll anime
You now watch Crunchyroll anime through the Apple TV app
apple-tv-crunchroll-anime-channel

If you watch anime, Apple just made things a bit more convenient. Crunchyroll is now available as a channel inside the Apple TV app, where you can subscribe and watch directly without switching apps. The rollout is live in the U.S., UK, Canada, and Australia, and it comes just in time for the spring anime season.

Here's what you get with Crunchyroll inside the Apple TV app

Read more
Apple announces new sci-fi film Liminal and I can’t wait for it
A strong cast and graphic novel roots make this new Apple film hard to ignore.
Logo, Cross, Symbol

Apple just revealed Liminal, and it already looks like a serious contender for its next big sci-fi movie. With a clear sci-fi hook and recognizable names attached, this is the kind of announcement that’s easy to get invested in early.

The project comes from Apple Original Films and pairs Vanessa Kirby with Yahya Abdul-Mateen II in leading roles. It’s directed by Louis Leterrier, who’s known for keeping stories fast and visually sharp, which already hints at a more kinetic kind of sci-fi than Apple usually leans into.

Read more
Your Apple TV can now recommend shows and movies based on your viewing habits
Apple levels up your living room with tvOS 26.4, packing content discovery, audio fixes, and subtitle controls into one tidy update.
Apple TV 4K device with remote.

With the public release of iOS 26.4, Apple has also pushed out tvOS 26.4, a quiet yet meaningful upgrade for Apple TV users. The update brings smarter content discovery, cleaner audio, and most importantly, it gets rid of iTunes. 

What’s actually new in tvOS 26.4?

Read more