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The Marvel Cinematic Universe has produced no shortage of memorable quotes over the years, yet nearly a decade after Spider-Man: Homecoming arrived in theaters, one line still stands above almost everything else the franchise has produced because of how perfectly it captures the essence of heroism. The quote comes during one of the movie’s most important scenes. After Peter Parker (Tom Holland) recklessly endangers countless lives while trying to stop Adrian Toomes (Michael Keaton), Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr.) finally loses patience and takes back the high-tech Spider-Man suit he provided.
Peter protests that without the suit, he is nothing. Tony’s response remains one of the best pieces of advice ever delivered in a superhero movie:
“If you’re nothing without this suit, then you shouldn’t have it.”
Nine years later, that lesson has only become more relevant. In fact, the ending of The Boys may have accidentally provided the perfect example of why Tony Stark was completely right.
Tony Stark Was Never Really Talking About the Suit
At first glance, the quote sounds like a lecture about responsibility, but in reality, it goes much deeper than that. Throughout Homecoming, Peter becomes increasingly convinced that the Stark suit is what makes him special. The advanced technology gives him access to hundreds of functions, instant reconnaissance, enhanced combat options, and an artificial intelligence capable of helping him through almost any situation. Peter begins treating the suit like a shortcut to becoming an Avenger, and (to his credit) Tony recognizes the danger immediately. The problem is not that Peter lacks courage or good intentions: the problem is that he is starting to believe heroism comes from what he wears rather than who he is. That is why Tony takes everything away.
The brilliance of Homecoming is that the movie immediately proves Tony’s point. Peter spends the movie’s final act operating without any of Stark’s technology, and all he has left is a homemade costume and his own determination. Yet those are the moments when Peter feels most like Spider-Man. He still rushes into danger. He still risks his life to save people. He still chooses responsibility over his own comfort and safety. He chooses to be a hero. That idea has always been at the core of Spider-Man as a character. Long before the MCU existed, Peter Parker’s defining quality was his willingness to do the right thing even when it made his life harder. The powers matter, but they are secondary to the person using them. This quote works because it identifies a truth that applies far beyond Spider-Man: power reveals character, it does not create it.
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You won’t want to escape this hero’s web.
Homelander Proves Exactly Why Tony Stark Was Right
That is what makes the ending of The Boys such an interesting companion piece to Homecoming following the series’ shocking and comics-deviant finale. Where Peter Parker learns that he can still be Spider-Man without the suit, Homelander (Antony Starr) discovers that he has no idea who he is without his powers. Throughout The Boys, Homelander defines himself entirely through superiority. He sees himself as a god because he is stronger, faster, and more durable than everyone around him. His identity is built on the assumption that nobody can challenge him and nobody can stop him, and his powers are the foundation of his entire self-image. The moment that foundation disappears, everything else begins collapsing with it.
Unlike Peter Parker, Homelander never developed a moral framework independent of his abilities. He never learned how to define himself through compassion, sacrifice, responsibility, or service to others. Strength became his personality because strength was always enough to get whatever he wanted. Once that advantage disappears, there is very little left underneath. That contrast is what makes Tony Stark’s quote feel so timeless. Peter Parker loses the suit and remains a hero. Homelander loses his powers and struggles to remain himself. One character understands that power is something he uses, while the other believes power is what he is. The difference is enormous.
Tony Stark’s Quote Defines What Makes a Hero
Many superhero stories focus on what happens when ordinary people gain extraordinary abilities. It is a compelling fantasy because everyone likes imagining how they would use incredible power. Spider-Man: Homecoming asks a more difficult question: who are you when the power is gone? That question matters because it strips away everything external. It removes the gadgets, the costumes, the abilities, and the spectacle. What remains is character. Peter Parker’s answer is simple: he keeps helping people. That remains true whether he is wearing Stark technology, a homemade costume, or no costume at all.
Homelander’s answer is much darker. Once the thing that made him feel superior disappears, he discovers he never built an identity capable of surviving without it. That is why Tony Stark’s line continues to resonate nine years later. It is not just a lesson for Peter Parker, it is a lesson for virtually every superhero story ever told. Real heroism is not measured by the power someone possesses, it is measured by who they choose to be when that power is taken away. Few characters embody that truth better than Spider-Man, and few movie quotes have ever explained it more clearly.
- Release Date
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July 7, 2017
- Runtime
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133 minutes
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Hannah Hunt
Almontather Rassoul





