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Student filmmaker weaves his dream Spider-Man film

Student filmmaker weaves his dream Spider-Man film

Student filmmaker weaves his dream Spider-Man film

Radio-television-film senior and crew of 60 release "The Ultimate Spider-Man" fan fiction

Xavier Ingram creates his ultimate fan fiction passion project, "The Ultimate Spider-Man." Photo by Lizzie Chen

Photo by Lizzie Chen

Radio-Television-Film senior Xavier Ingram spent the last year working with a crew of more than 60 people to create what he easily identifies as "his dream film," posting up in locations around town dressed head-to-toe in an iconic Spider-Man costume.

It's something he couldn't have imagined doing when he started at The University of Texas at Austin in 2020 — paying to rent high-end equipment, working 12-hour days to produce a film with stunning visual effects and a movie theater-quality.

“The Ultimate Spider-Man,” a passion project that was created by students completely outside of classes, premieres at 7 p.m. April 4 in the William C. Powers Jr. Student Activity Center Auditorium on the UT campus.

Clocking in at 25 minutes, the fan fiction film is an R-rated version of the iconic movies featuring the Marvel Comics superhero. It’s a mix of comedy, action and drama, with Spider-Man as Miles Morales, an Afro-Latino teen living in New York. Ingram, who wrote, directed and stars in the film, said it’s a mature story that tackles mature topics, but with a superhero who has the same sense of justice and responsibility that Spider-Man is known for.

A self-described Spider-Man enthusiast, Ingram has spent his four years in film school re-creating his favorite movies with his own twist, often bringing Black characters into the films he didn’t see himself in while growing up.

Photo courtesy of Xavier Ingram

Photo courtesy of Xavier Ingram

He said when he started the Spider-Man project last year, he knew it was ambitious. While in film school, it’s common for students to create more indie-type films, character dramas that don’t require big budgets and tons of special effects. When he told people what he wanted to do, he said, they looked at him a bit like he was crazy.

“If we pull it off, it’ll be one of the coolest projects,” he said. “It’s my senior year. I wanted to make my dream movie the best way I can.”

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Photo courtesy of Xavier Ingram

Photo courtesy of Xavier Ingram

Ingram’s film required a massive crew and a lot of money. Since the project wasn’t for a class, students weren't allowed to use any UT equipment. The team spent six months alone fundraising, acquiring $10,000 from family, friends and sponsors to finance the movie.

Ingram brought on fellow RTF students Marlon Rubio Smith and Avery Gann as co-producers and hired a cinematographer, stunt coordinator, camera operators, a sound team, a casting director and actors, among others. They spent two full weekends in November and February shooting before sending the film to their post-production team for editing, sound design, sound editing, color correction, scoring and visual effects.

"It was really exciting to watch the whole team come together to make something that we all care about and grew up with," Gann said. "There was an energy on set that was unlike any other short film I've worked on where we all knew what we wanted the end result to be, and we were going to do our best to achieve it."

Photo by Leticia Rincon

Photo by Leticia Rincon

The film is still being fine-tuned, Rubio Smith said, and probably will be up until the last moment before screening. That’s more common in the industry than one would think, he said. Often, the movies we see in theaters are being finalized right up until premiere day.

Rubio Smith said, at times, the process has felt exhausting, and there were many days he wanted to give up. But the work has paid off.

“Once I started looking at some of the footage, it was like a breath of fresh air,” he said. “First, I had the realization that this was actually happening, and second, that it looks really good. The work we were putting into it was showing, and for me, that was a really big motivator. It filled me with the desire to keep working on it.”

The film's trailer released last week, giving a sneak peek at the impressive visual effects and powerful character drama that is striking to watch.

“It’s very representative of the dream that is film school,” Ingram said. “You come here, you don’t know anyone, and within three years, you are going to meet people who can help you make your dream film, and that’s all anyone can hope for.”

For Ingram, releasing the film is a culmination of a wish he’s had since he was a kid watching Marvel moves on Blu-ray on road trips.

Ingram wrote his first feature length script in fifth grade and later had a popular YouTube channel in middle school. He made his first official short film in high school.

“I never want people to think I got here myself. I would not be here without the people who helped me along the way, family, friends, cast and crew who worked their butts off to make this movie with me. It’s been a blessing. And it’s good for underclassmen to see what is possible here if they really push themselves. It truly is amazing.”

Xavier Ingram
Radio-Television-Film

Photo by Lizzie Chen

Photo by Lizzie Chen

Ingram graduates in May, so he’s feeling very reflective. He said he still has his Spider-Man suit and web shooters in his backpack. He has yet to take the costume out after all his filming months ago. It’ll soon go in his closet, mixed with his regular clothes.

“It really feels like a full circle moment,” he said. “I got into filmmaking because I didn’t see myself represented in stories. I would be in middle school writing myself into a movie that already existed. I realized then, I can do this as a career. I started making videos in high school, came to film school here, and now I’m using all the knowledge I’ve learned over this decade basically healing my inner child.”

He said he’s thrilled to sit in the audience and watch the movie on the big screen with his co-creators and the Moody College faculty who have supported him through film school.

“I never want people to think I got here myself,” Ingram said. “I would not be here without the people who helped me along the way, family, friends, cast and crew who worked their butts off to make this movie with me. It’s been a blessing. And it’s good for underclassmen to see what is possible here if they really push themselves. It truly is amazing.”

"The work we were putting into it was showing, and for me, that was a really big motivator. It filled me with the desire to keep working on it."

Marlon Rubio Smith
Radio-Television-Film

Photo by Leticia Rincon

Photo by Leticia Rincon

Disclaimer: "The Ultimate Spider-Man" is an external student project and not associated with the Department of Radio-Television-Film, Moody College of Communication or The University of Texas at Austin.

Radio-television-film senior and crew of 60 release "The Ultimate Spider-Man" fan fiction
Mary Huber
Communications Coordinator