The two Spider-Man actors, Tobey Maguire and Andrew Garfield, attended a screening of Everything Everywhere All at Once together.

Scott Feinberg, who attended the same screening of Everything Everywhere All at Once, recently tweeted a picture in which Andrew Garfield and Tobey Maguire can be seen next to each other before the movie started.

The two actor’s friendship seems to be one that is here to stay, as the two have hit it off ever since working together on Spider-Man: No Way Home. Garfield and Maguire attended a screening of their Spidey film together as well, wearing masks and baseball caps to go incognito.

“Fun CAA screening of EVERYTHING EVERYWHERE ALL AT ONCE intro’d by Daniels/Jamie Lee Curtis, with Andrew Garfield/Patton Oswalt on hand. Rarely have I seen a movie packed with so many ideas. Not everything works, but a lot does, especially Michelle Yeoh and MAISEL’s Stephanie Hsu!

https://twitter.com/scottfeinberg/status/1514847125858783234?s=21&t=w_GyHPBqBootaRzCRESwRA

Here is a video that provides a clearer look at the two together:

The Amazing Spider-Man actor revealed also revealed how he would get stoned before practicing lines for Spider-Man. Andrew Garfield had always looked up to Maguire, viewing the actor as “his Spider-Man,” referring to the portrayal that was most attached to his idea of the character.

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In a clip from the graham norton show, Garfield explains that while he was in drama school he would stand in front of a mirror and practice the lines he saw Tobey Maguire performing in Spider-Man while going into further detail that, “I was very high at the time,” he said before getting a hearty chuckle in with the rest of the panel.

Garfield says that his friend Terry Mcginnis would crack up before looking at him and saying, “Yeah, you’ll never play Spider-Man Andy.” Andrew Garfield smiled before following this up with a, “and now here we are.”

Garfield continued on about how he and Tobey Maguire, who he looked up to as Spider-Man while growing up, became friends and snuck into a theater for the opening night of Spider-Man: No Way Home as, “two middle-aged white guys in baseball hats and masks.”

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