Showing posts with label Captain Marvel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Captain Marvel. Show all posts

Friday, August 15, 2025

Movie Reviews: MCU Catch-up

Marvel Cinematic Underperformers

I finally made myself catch up on some of the Marvel movies that did not perform well at the box office, were critical bombs, were audience bombs, or some combination of the three. Here goes!

The Marvels (2023) co-written and directed by Nia DaCosta

Kamala Khan, aka Ms. Marvel (Iman Vellani), is a Captain Marvel, aka Carol Danvers (Brie Larson), fangirl. Kamala is also the hero of Jersey City, using her special light-solidifying powers to fight bad guys. What she really wants is to team up with her idol. Meanwhile, Monica Rambeau (Teyona Parris) works with Nick Fury (Samuel Jackson) on an orbital platform that is monitoring intergalactic travel and protecting the Earth. Captain Marvel is investigating a wormhole. All three heroes' powers are used at the same time and become quantum entangled, resulting in them swapping places with each other. Captain Marvel starts by fighting some Kree then she keeps flipping with Monica at the space station and Kamala at her home in New Jersey. The plot spins out from there as a representative from the Kree home world seeks to save their planet by stealing resources from other planets, especially planets that Captain Marvel holds dear, since she was the one to damage the Kree home world in the first place. 

The plot of the movie is a little convoluted as each main character works on some of her own flaws. The trio visits a variety of planets, some of which strain at the edge of plausibility considering they are in the same universe. The movie has a fun and light-hearted tone with Kamala, who has that innocent wonder and excitement as a young superhero. Danvers is mostly serious and dark-hearted, dealing with what she has done (the Kree call her "The Annihilator" which she does not like at all, though probably deserves). Bridging the gap between the characters is tricky and more or less fails. The tonal shifts are huge swings that don't hang together, much like the planet where everyone sings and dances doesn't jive with the near-dead Kree home world. 

I can see why the film did not perform well, though it is not as bad as I thought it would be. That being said, it is still a hot mess with unequal amounts of good and bad parts.

Barely recommended--Only for Marvel completists or Kamala Khan fans.

Madame Web (2024) directed by S. J. Clarkson

In 1973, Constance Webb (Kerry Bishe) is in Peruvian Amazonia searching for a legendary spider. She hopes it will cure all sorts of illnesses and ignores all the legends about a race of spider-enhanced locals who can jump through the trees and have super-strength. She treks through the jungle with some local helpers and Ezekiel (Tahar Rahim). She finally makes the find and Ezekiel turns traitor, shooting her even though she is 8 months pregnant. He takes the spider for himself, presumably to profit from it back in the United States. After Ezekiel leaves, the spider-natives show up and keep Constance alive long enough to deliver the baby. 

The story then jumps ahead thirty years to the life of Constance's daughter, Cassie Webb (Dakota Johnson), a paramedic who is sarcastic and lacks interpersonal skills. Her ambulance partner is Ben Parker (Adam Scott), who does a bit of wisecracking to help balance out their team and bring some levity to the movie. They go to a bridge accident where they have to cut a guy out of his car. Ben drags the guy from the car but it falls with Cassie inside. She has a near-death experience that unlocks a power that lets her see future events. She sees another accident scene where a co-worker dies and tries to stop it from happening. That doesn't work and she's given a week of leave to deal with her new visions of the future (assumed to be some mental health problem). Ben recommends she come to the funeral, which puts her in the path of three young girls who have been targeted by Ezekiel because he has had nightmares of them killing him every night. 

The story has a lot of promise, bringing a new character in whose only superpower is seeing the future. She can't crawl up walls or use super-strength, just a knowledge of future events that she could change. The first examples of her visions are confusing and disorienting for Cassie (and for viewers). They never get more coherent or easier to follow. Johnson's performance lacks luster and the writing isn't that great either, leaving Cassie as a less likable character than she should be. Viewers see the three teenage girls in the bad guy's dreams as cool spider-style fighters but they never get to be those characters other than in the dreams. As an origin story for them, this movie is disappointing. The young girls don't seem that heroic either even though they grow into it more by the end. So they are unsatisfying too.

The villain was the most interesting character. He has the strength and wall-crawling of Spider-man but obviously does not have the heroic self-sacrifice. He's obsessed avoiding the three girls killing her, so much so that he kills and blackmails others to get what he needs. The movie hints that he might be the cause of his own problems when it is implied that they girls get their power from contact with him. But maybe that was an unintentional hint since that very interesting possibility goes nowhere (though that was what I was most interested in).

Not recommended--this wasn't a total turkey but there are so many other average-to-better superhero films that this winds up close to the bottom of the stack. Maybe they were hoping for sequels with a team led by Cassie, but that did not pan out. 

Kraven the Hunter (2024) directed by J. C. Chandor

Aaron Taylor-Johnson plays Sergei Kravinoff, the titular Kraven the Hunter. His father Nikolai (Russell Crowe) is a Russian crime boss who is raising his sons (there's also Dimitri (Fred Hechinger)) to be part of the business. Dimitri is not very manly, even as a young boy, whereas his older brother Sergei shows signs of what their father thinks is greatness. After their mother dies, Nikolai takes them on an African hunt. Sergei is attacked by a legendary lion, who carries him off. The nearly dead Sergei is discovered by Calypso, granddaughter of a local woman, who gives him a special magical drink from her grandma to restore his strength (and a Tarot card, which enables them to reconnect years later). Sergei is evacuated by helicopter, dies in a hospital, but then comes back to life with a strange glow in his eyes. Brought back home, he decides to leave, so Dimitri bears the burden of their father's ambition. As adults, Sergei is a secret assassin known as "The Hunter" who has a long list of targets and a blood-soaked method of killing them. He comes back to London for his brother's birthday and gets pulled into a mafia war between Nikolai and The Rhino (Alessandro Nivola), an ambitious crime lord who wants to take over as much business as he can.

The movie has a lot of exciting action sequences. Taylor-Johnson does a good job in the lead, portraying a sympathetic yet morally-compromised character. He lives for the hunt and for his own very narrow sense of justice. He's much better at being an antihero than Venom in his films. Calypso is little more than a plot device to move Kraven's agenda forward, which was a little disappointing. The Rhino character is more interesting as a mafia don than at the end when he turns into the comic book version of the character, which was unconvincing even if it did provide a big fight scene at the end. The ending after that fight dragged out a lot longer than it needed to. While this isn't a bad movie, it is definitely a B-movie in the superhero genre which is already chock full of better stuff. It failed at the box office due to viewer burnout with the genre and the obscurity of the character.

Barely recommended--this is more for completists or R-rated action fans.

Monday, November 1, 2021

Book Review: The Death of Captain Marvel by Jim Starlin

The Death of Captain Marvel written and illustrated by Jim Starlin

The original Captain Marvel was a Kree warrior named Mar-Vell who was scouting out the Earth as a possible conquest for the Kree empire. He became enamored with Earth (what alien in Marvel Comics doesn't?) and turned against the Kree. He adopted the name "Captain Marvel" and fought with many of Earth's heroes. He even joined the Avengers for a while. This book tells his final tale, the battle he has with an unbeatable enemy: cancer. He'd been exposed to toxic radiation years before but ignored the signs that he was getting sick. And it turns out that cancer is the one illness that no race in the universe has cured. Mar-Vell returns to his home on Titan (Saturn's moon) where he records a final testament for the Avengers. Many of Earth's most brilliant heroes come to Titan to work on a cure; the scientists of Titan also get in touch with the other species in the universe, looking for some way to preserve Mar-Vell's life.  As the title of the book suggests, things do not turn out well.

The book is surprisingly somber. Mar-Vell reviews his life, hitting the highlights of his partnerships, his loves, and his enemies. Thanos was a recurring enemy. As someone in love with death, Thanos (as a ghost or memory) becomes a key sounding board for Mar-Vell's internal monologues. Mar-Vell struggles between fighting his illness and accepting his fate, i.e. his mortality. He also wants to help his friends, especially Elysius the woman he loves, through this dark time. Even though he doesn't die in battle, he dies with his friends around him. The story is surprisingly moving and honest.

Highly recommended.


Friday, April 26, 2019

Captain Marvel (2019)

Captain Marvel (2019) co-written and co-directed by Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck


Vers (Brie Larson) is a Kree warrior in training who has very strong powers (in addition to super-strength and endurance, she can shoot power beams from her hands). She's about to go on her first mission, the rescue of a Kree spy from a world on the Kree-Skrull border. The Skrulls have been at war with the Kree for countless years. They are green shapeshifters who are nothing but trouble. The rescue goes south and Vers is captured by the Skrulls. The Skrulls try to get secrets out of her brain but all the mental regressions show them bizarre, non-Kree memories. Vers has no memories before six years prior; these memories show there's a lot more to her story. She manages to escape, only to wind up on Earth circa 1995. She teams up with Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson), who helps her investigate her past and why both the Kree and the Skrulls are interested in a failed US Air Force/NASA project.

Marvel is brilliant at telling stories about people, inserting humor and drama in just the right amounts to make entertaining films. This one is no exception, though it's not as great as others. The movie flirts with a theme about reconnecting families and loved ones, though that's very secondary and underdeveloped (unlike the theme of importance of family in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 or Black Panther). Vers eventually transforms into Captain Marvel after she discovers her Earth life as Carol Danvers. Her character is a bit all over the place, though much could be chalked up to her amnesia. The non-romantic chemistry between her and Fury is strained at points. The big plot twist about the Kree-Skrull war is also not entirely convincing. Really, the script is to be blamed for most of the problems. Even with its flaws, the film is entertaining and a good warm up for the next Marvel film.

Recommended.

Saturday, March 30, 2019

Book Review: The Life of Captain Marvel by M. Stohl et al.

The Life of Captain Marvel written by Margaret Stohl with art by Carlos Pacheco, Rafael Fonteriz, Marcio Menyz, and Marguerite Sauvage


Carol Danvers (a.k.a. Captain Marvel) has some anger issues and heads back home to small-town Maine to deal with it. She had an abusive father who is long since dead. Her mom and her brother still live in Harpswell Sound. Bringing up family ghosts only causes more problems for Carol, her mom, and her brother. Physical, psychological, and extra-terrestrial problems may be more than Carol is ready to deal with when it comes to her family.

The main story leads naturally into some backstory for Danvers. The writer adds a bit to her origin that is logical but also (for me) disappointing. Carol's angry/angsty characterization takes a lot of the fun out of her, almost as if she's someone very different from the Carol Danvers of all the other stories. Going in that direct is one way to tell a new story but I was not appreciative.

Not recommended.


Friday, October 12, 2018

Book Review: The Mighty Captain Marvel Vol. 3 by M. Stohl et al.

The Mighty Captain Marvel Volume 3: Dark Origins written by Margaret Stohl and art by Michele Bandini


Captain Marvel searches for her lost Kree friend Bean only to get sucked into an alternate universe. This new universe is your standard mirror-universe. Here, Captain Marvel is the most wanted outlaw in the galaxy (with the Guardians of the Galaxy running a close second). She has to pretend to be bad and figure out the interpersonal dynamics of everyone's mirror-self in order to get back, let alone find Bean.

The story was a bit too "paint by numbers" for me. I've read and seen lots of mirror-universe stories and this is totally standard stuff. Changing Groot into Root (he's a giant walking carrot instead of a tree) was funny, but that was the rare shining moment in a lot of dullness.

Not recommended.


Saturday, March 25, 2017

Book Review: Captain Marvel: Earth's Mightiest Superhero Vol. 2 by K. S. DeConnick et al.

Captain Marvel: Earth's Mightiest Superhero Volume 2 written by Kelly Sue DeConnick with art by Scott Hepburn, Pat Olliffe, Matteo Buffagni, Filipe Andrade, Barry Hitson, et al.


Captain Marvel's brain lesion gets worse and worse (see the start of this story here), forcing her either to adapt her style or to sacrifice herself in order to continue being a hero. As she faces lots of old foes, the enemy causing the problem is finally discovered, along with his nefarious plan to destroy Captain Marvel and New York City. The story plays out at a good pace and has a very satisfying conclusion.

But wait, there's more! Captain Marvel fights alongside the Avengers and a coalition of aliens (Kree, Skrull, etc.) to stop the Builders, an ancient alien race that seems intent on wiping out the Earth. Interestingly, the book covers the same action twice, once from Captain Marvel's point of view, then from Spider-Woman's point of view. The differences are enough to make it interesting though I was surprised to see the same stuff twice. Unfortunately, the war doesn't really finish in this book which I found frustrating.

The book also has a Captain Marvel/Spider-man adventure in Boston with a young woman who isn't all she seems. The woman passes herself off as a superhero but doesn't know her own name (Spider-man makes some unhelpful but comic suggestions). The story is fun and does wrap up.

Overall, recommended.


Saturday, August 27, 2016

Book Review: Captain Marvel: Rise of Alpha Flight by M. Fazekas et al.

Captain Marvel: Rise of Alpha Flight written by Michelle Fazekas and Tara Butters, art by Kris Anka and Felipe Smith


In a sort of reboot of the Carol Danvers/Captain Marvel recent story (i.e. not her origin story), she accepts the assignment from the Avengers to guard the Earth from extra terrestrial threats. Instead of being a loner like last time, this time she is the head of Alpha Flight, a space station with a handful of heroes (Sasquatch, Puck, and Aurora, all reincarnations of the Canadian superhero team where Wolverine had a stint back in the 1980s). She takes on the duty willingly but is concerned about being stuck behind a desk. The station is threatened by a a freak meteor and a saboteur, so she has plenty of action to keep her on her feet (or flying through space). Also she has a semi-insubordinate second-in-command to spice things up.

The story has some tension between being a leader/administrator and being an action hero. Carol is naturally drawn to the action side (and let's face it, action is mostly what people read superhero comics for). She acts more as the heavy hitter for the team, a natural and fun role for her. The story is fun and action packed.

Wednesday, August 17, 2016

Book Review: Captain Marvel: Stay Fly by K. S. DeConnick et al.

Captain Marvel: Stay Fly written by Kelly Sue DeConnick, art by Marcio Takara and David Lopez


Captain Marvel (a.k.a. Carol Danvers) continues here previous space adventures (see here) with Rocket Raccoon (who claims he's not a raccoon) and her cat Chewie. Rocket claims Chewie is not a cat but a Flerken. Flerken are extremely valuable alien cat-like creatures and lay eggs. Rocket's been shopping around and an alien space craft latches onto their ship in hopes of taking Chewie and the cargo hold full of eggs (turns out Chewie is a Flerken).

Once that situation is solved, an intergalactic pop-star shows up and asks Captain Marvel to help break an arranged marriage to a prince. Later, Carol returns to Earth to thwart an enemy whose trying to destroy everything Carol loves.

The stories are a mixed bag. All of them are fun but some are more engaging than others. The last story has some glaring inconsistencies in the narrative. I found it too distracting to enjoy the story. The art is good throughout the book.

Overall, a fairly average set of superhero adventures.


Saturday, July 2, 2016

Book Review: Captain Marvel: Higher, Further, Faster, More by K. S. DeKonnick et al.

Captain Marvel: Higher, Further, Faster, More written by Kelly Sue DeKonnick, art by David Lopez et al.


Captain Marvel (Carol Danvers) is selected by Tony Stark to represent the Avengers in outer space. She accepts the position, mostly to give her some perspective on life and a challenge. The first challenge she comes across is the plight of the Nowlanians. Their home planet was destroyed by the Builders. They were relocated to the planet Torfa. The Nowlanians have another problem--their new planet is a poison planet: the previous population died out from a plague. The Nowlanians are dying out right now, so there is a faction that wants relocation while another faction wants to find a cure. If that wasn't enough trouble, the Galactic Alliance (which is led by a very questionable character) wants to force them off the planet before they can figure out if they want to go. Plenty of fighting and intrigue follow from all these complications.

The story has a nice level of complication and Carol's go-get-'em attitude makes things move along at a great pace. She makes mistakes but she works to fix the situation as best she can. The Guardians of the Galaxy show up for a bit, which probably happened because their film was so popular (this story originally appeared in individual issues in 2014). Still, they aren't just shoe-horned in but actually contribute to moving the plot forward.

Fun and action-packed, this story is great summer reading with interesting characters dealing with personal and public problems.

Special Note: This book is not a follow-on from the last Captain Marvel book I read, so I am left in limbo about her brain lesion. Yikes!


Friday, June 3, 2016

Book Review: Captain Marvel Vol. 2: Down by K. S. DeConnick et al.

Captain Marvel Volume 2: Down written by Kelly Sue DeConnick and Christopher Sebela, art by Dexter Soy and Filipe Andrade et al.


This volume has two stories. In the first Captain Marvel (aka Carol Danvers) is helping out a retired superhero friend named Monica investigate some missing boats in the Gulf of Mexico. Ships sailing out of New Orleans have been vanishing. Monica has found the spot where they sank but doesn't want to get in the water. So Carol puts on a scuba tank and finds more than just boats--planes dating back to World War II also populate this sunken graveyard. Like many a superhero story, this ends with a big battle between the two friends and a huge enemy. The best part of the story is the repartee between Carol and Monica, providing both humor and some character depth.

The second story finds Carol with a medical issue. Carol's been having headaches (which she has blamed on calls from Tony Stark!) and has felt her power weakening. Her doctor tells Carol she has a lesion in her brain. So she can't fly, which is a hard thing for an ex-pilot who now has the Superman-like power to fly. Things get even harder when an old, air-born bad gal shows up to fight Captain Marvel. Sadly, the story isn't finished in this issue.

The second story is much more interesting than the first. I like the idea that a superhero would have an everyday doctor. Oddly enough, the art is better in the first story. Happily, Carol doesn't don some skimpy swimsuit when scubaing down to the wreckage, she's in her regular superhero jump suit. The second story does not get visually exploitative, the art is just less polished than in the first.

Saturday, March 12, 2016

Book Review: Captain Marvel Vol. 1: In Pursuit of Flight by Kelly Sue DeConnick et al.

Captain Marvel Volume 1: In Pursuit of Flight written by Kelly Sue DeConnick, art by Dexter Soy and Emma Rios with others


Earth's Mightiest Hero, Ms. Marvel (real name Carol Danvers), got her superpowers from a Kree device that makes wishes come true. At the time, Carol was a pilot in the United States Air Force (with the rank of colonel) who wanted to be an astronaut and have the powers of the alien who was attempting to save her, Captain Mar-Vell. When the machine exploded, she was granted Mar-Vell's near invulnerability and super-strength, which among other things let her fly into outer space unharmed. She fought alongside Mar-Vell on Earth and in the cosmos. He eventually died and in this issue, Captain America convinces her to accept Captain Marvel's legacy by taking his name (she's already wearing a new costume more like his). She's reluctant until he dares her, which pushes her into the decision.

Another of Carol's heroes, legendary pilot Helen Cobb, dies and leaves her plane to Carol with a mysterious note. Carol tries to replicate one of Helen's many altitude records in the plane but doing so sends her back to World War II. She battles alongside the Banshee Squadron (an all-female group of US Airforce pilots) against some Japanese soldiers who have Kree ships. She makes another time hop to 1960s Texas where a young Helen Cobb and some female friends are trying to become astronauts but NASA is reluctant to train women. Captain Marvel has plenty of opportunities to change history, but will she?

Time travel stories are a bit of a pet peeve for me. Often, they are incoherent, sometimes blatantly so. The more consistent ones are better (like the first Terminator film), though the best are stories that don't focus on the time travel so much as another interesting story (like Back to the Future films throwing Marty in with various generations of his family). This book falls in the later category. Carol discovers bits of the Kree device which made her superpowered and assumes they were scattered through time when the device exploded. As she's trying to undo that damage she has the chance to undo the accident that gave her powers, but does she really want to do that? The time travel is just there to provide an interesting existential crisis for Carol along with some fun adventures and an interesting puzzle to solve.

Carol Danvers is an interesting character. She has a gung-ho attitude and is able both to work together with other heroes (super or regular) and to go it alone if the situation requires it. She'll take the time to think out a problem but is decisive under time constraints. Her main interest is helping others and she isn't afraid to sacrifice herself in doing so. She makes a great role model.

She's a great character and this is a fun story, so I recommend it heartily.