The official screenplay for Spider-Man: No Way Home is now available for fans to read in full.

Screenwriters Chris McKenna and Erik Sommers shared the full script for No Way Home with Deadline as part of the outlet's new Read the Screenplay series.

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The "Revised Final Version" screenplay, which features the working title "Serenity Now," consists of 182 pages and appears to stay pretty true to what fans saw on the big screen. The script opens with the scene depicting the return of journalist J. Jonah Jameson (J.K. Simmons) as he recaps the big reveal from the post-credits scene in Far From Home: Peter Parker is Spider-Man and he's Public Enemy #1 after allegedly killing Quentin Beck/Mysterio.

The script also features the dialogue for a number of other key moments in No Way Home, including the scene explaining that Peter (Tom Holland), M.J. (Zendaya) and Ned (Jacob Batalon) were all rejected from MIT due to their association with Spider-Man and the scene in which Peter went to Doctor Strange (Benedict Cumberbatch) and asked him to cast a spell that would make everyone forget he's Spider-Man.

Additionally, fans have the chance to review the written cues for one of the biggest reveals in the film: the return of Andrew Garfield and Tobey Maguire as the versions of Peter Parker/Spider-Man they portrayed in Marc Webb's The Amazing Spider-Man films and Sam Raimi's Spider-Man trilogy, respectively.

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The screenplay was notably shared online about two weeks after McKenna opened up about the process of writing No Way Home, when he admitted that he and Sommers wanted to write a screenplay that could serve as both a final collaboration between Marvel and Sony or a continuation of Holland's Spider-Man story.

"This should be a satisfying story unto itself," he said at the time. "If you look backward and go, 'This was an origin story that took place over three stories to get this Peter Parker to this place where he's stripped-down, anonymous, has no billionaire benefactor, has been through the sacrifice of what it really means to have this power and what that responsibility that goes along with that is, and is now having to look for how to pay rent.' I think that would be really satisfying."

For what it's worth, McKenna and Sommers' plan to keep the story open for interpretation apparently worked, as No Way Home was named 2021's Best Reviewed Film by Rotten Tomatoes. Rotten Tomatoes revealed that the film topped a list of 30 films released in 2021 in early January, tweeting, "#SpiderManNoWayHome wins the #GoldenTomato Award for Best-Reviewed Movie of 2021."

Spider-Man: No Way Home is now in theaters.

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Source: Deadline 1, 2