Spider-Man movie leaks onto Amazon Prime early: viewers spot surprise pre-release streams

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By: Jessica Morrison

Amazon Prime is giving US subscribers a chance to see Spider-Man: Brand New Day before its worldwide premiere — an advance screening is set for July 29, two days ahead of the film’s general release on July 31. The move pairs early access with a new wave of Marvel merchandise timed to land before this year’s Prime Day.

What Details
Advance screening Spider-Man: Brand New Day — July 29 (US-only)
General release Worldwide on July 31
Who can attend Amazon Prime members based in the United States
How to sign up Go to the film’s Amazon page and choose the “notify me” option; Amazon will prompt you to sign in
Tickets and partner Screening arranged in partnership with Fandango

The registration process is straightforward: visit the film’s page on Amazon, click the notification prompt and follow the sign-in steps. If you’re signed out of your account the site will require you to log in before accepting the request to be notified about ticket sales.

Because the event is operated through a Fandango partnership, only Prime members in the US are eligible. That restriction echoes earlier Amazon screenings, which have typically remained domestic rather than global.

Merch and timing

Scrolling down the film page will also reveal an array of Spider-Man and Marvel products available to buy ahead of Prime Day, which starts on June 23. For Amazon, early screenings and exclusive merchandise are part of a larger promotional push designed to turn a single film release into multiple moments of engagement.

For fans outside the US, that means this particular early access opportunity is unlikely to be available — at least for now. Amazon has occasionally extended similar promotions to other markets, but those rollouts are rare and typically announced separately.

What to watch on Prime before the screening

If you want to warm up for the movie, Prime Video is hosting a few Spider-Man titles worth checking out:

  • Spider-Noir — A live-action, period-styled take starring Nicolas Cage; the eight-episode series is available in both color and a black-and-white presentation.
  • Spider-Man: The New Animated Series (2003) — A 13-episode run that picks up stylistically from the 2002 Sam Raimi film but contains story beats that don’t align with later sequels.
  • Other options — Amazon also offers buy-or-rent access to the Tom Holland-era films and Into the Spider-Verse, so you can revisit prior entries before the new release.

The two streaming options above give very different tones: Spider-Noir leans into stylistic reinvention and atmosphere, while the 2003 animated series aims to bridge earlier theatrical work and television continuity.

For readers who follow release strategies, this is notable: early screenings tied to a retailer’s subscription service both reward loyal customers and help build momentum for a title. At the same time, the US-only limitation is a reminder that promotional windows still vary by territory, driven by distribution partners and local ticketing arrangements.

If you want a shot at tickets, sign up on the film’s Amazon page and enable notifications. Even if you’re outside the US, the page is worth watching: additional announcements or wider rollouts sometimes follow initial domestic events.


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