Spider Noir
7/10
Nicolas Cage is Spiderman who is also a private investigator in the 1930s, but it's all just an excuse to do film noir pastiche/satire. I am a fan of Cage which was enough for me to watch it, and this show is getting a lot of positive reception.
My reaction will be that of a cinema snob and a lover of actual noir. I have watched Double Indemnity repeatedly as comfort food the way more gen-Xers and millennials watched the Matrix.
It's... fine? Real fluff, just surface visual candy. It goes through all the noir tropes (down on his luck PI, femme fatale, controlling gangster villain, plucky secondary characters) in a perfunctory way. Since those tropes are inherently fun, it makes it more appealing at first than some other genre's repeated tropes but it all comes off like a first year improv kid's casual attempt to jokingly pull them off. Or like when Bugs Bunny would do Edward G Robinson impressions (I mean there is literally a scene in this show where Cage is watching a James Cagney movie and mouthing along to all his lines).
It's the definition of a show where my summary is: "well, it's only 8 episodes, why not?"