Directors:
Writers:
Anna Boden (screenplay by), Ryan Fleck (screenplay by)| 6 more credits »
Stars:
CAPTAIN MARVEL turns out to be more a franchise moneymaker in the Marvel Comics Universe than a film. At the end, the audience reads that CAPTAIN MARVEL will next be seen in the AVENGERS: ENDGAME film while a sequel is likely already in the process (the film ends with the Kree promising: we will return for the woman). Exiting the theatre and immediate in sight are a row of empty ready to use buckets of popcorn with the Captain Marvel imprinted around its sides that tells it all.
The film opens with Carol Danvars, an ex-U.S. Air Force fighter pilot and member of an elite Kree military unit called Starforce. Her DNA was fused with that of a Kree during an accident, imbuing her with superhuman strength, energy projection. Danvers is a believer in truth and justice and a “bridge between Earth and space, who must balance her “unemotional” Kree side that is an “amazing fighter” with her “flawed” human half that is the thing that she ends up leading by. This is tested by her mentor played by Judd Law, all buffed up and looking good for this role.
Danvars cannot remember her past but it is revealed later on in the film that everything she had believed in is a lie. Even those she thought were the villains were not. As such, the film suffers the lack of a true evil villain.
Though the film has a very weak storyline, the film puts emphasis on the relationship between Danvars and other characters – like her and her mentor and her and her best friend, Maria Ramveau (Lashana Lynch) in the airforce. Unfortunately, the result is still quite un-engaging.
The film benefits from it its leading stars – Brie Lawson (from ROOM) and Samuel L. Jackson. Larson took judo and wrestling classes before taking on the role. Jackson lifts the spirit of the film with his comic and somewhat over-the-top portrayal of Nick Fury, the future leader of S.H.I.E.L.D. He is seen here without his eye patch before he lost his eye. Watch out for that part, which makes the film’s most hilarious moment. This is where Jackson gets to utter his signature ‘motherf*****’ phrase. (Jackson utters this phrase in almost every movie he is in.)
The big question then is whether the film is any good. CAPTAIN MARVEL has a very thin plot and a story that really does not mean anything despite saving the earth and Universe in some form or other. The special effects and CGI take over, and the film establishes the woman CAPTAIN MARVEL as yet another action super hero – and a strong one at that. So, the film achieves its aim of establishing CAPTAIN MARVEL in the Marvel Universe while making lots of money, but the answer to whether it is really any good is debatable. But the film should bring 2019’s box-office, currently in the doldrums up several notches after the film debuts the first two weeks. And audiences will flock to see these action hero films, even when they are plain awful like BATMAN V. SUPERMAN or AQUAMAN.
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z1BCujX3pw8
Reblogged this on WILDsound Festival.
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Reblogged this on WILDsound Festival.
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