Review: ‘Shazam: Fury of the Gods’ is DC’s Newest Godlike Blunder

The DCEU, since its inception with Zack Snyder’s Man of Steel, has been criticized for a multitude of things. Bad casting, bad directing, bad writing, bad storytelling all around, just to name a few. Trying to create an MCU-like universe for the DC heroes seems simple enough, yet DC’s try at it has been lacking in nearly every way. Some hope for a return to Snyder, let him finish his universe, most are sighing with relief that James Gunn has been brought in to just not do this anymore. My biggest gripe with the franchise so far has been the fact that its stories are at odds with the themes. They come out of nowhere, or aren’t developed, and these lackluster and underdeveloped themes create bad characters, bad story cohesion, and ineffective world building. Shazam: Fury of the Gods is the latest in the DCEU lineup, and you know what, I was pleasantly surprised with how much worse it was than I expected. 

Continue reading “Review: ‘Shazam: Fury of the Gods’ is DC’s Newest Godlike Blunder”

Review: ‘The Batman’ is a Perfect Batman Film

I am a big superhero fan. I have been since I was young, due to my father loving all things sci-fi and comic book related and passing that onto me. Like most other people, Batman has always been my go-to. All forms of Batman are unique, with different directors, different men under the cowl, different villains, and varying messages and themes. Every Batman iteration is different even Batman from the same iteration but separate films are different from each other. I could go on for a while about the original live-action film with Adam West, or how Tim Burton’s Batman series was screwed up after he was dropped as director, or Christopher Nolan’s near-perfect trilogy that, while amazing, ignored a lot of what made Batman truly himself in place of better villainy and theming. 

Continue reading “Review: ‘The Batman’ is a Perfect Batman Film”

Retrospective: ‘Batman: Assault on Arkham’ is One of Many Overlooked DC Animated Films

With cinemas still closed and all the major films delayed indefinitely, 2020 is not an ideal year for cinephiles. However, it is especially bad for comic book-movie fans since Black Widow, Wonder Woman 1984, and Venom 2 have all been delayed to 2021. Continue reading “Retrospective: ‘Batman: Assault on Arkham’ is One of Many Overlooked DC Animated Films”

Review: ‘Birds of Prey’ is the John Wick of DC

The month of February is best known for movies that probably are a hit or miss depending on how good they delivered during the end of the winter season. Well, this year started out with the Birds of Prey (and the Fantabulous Emancipation of Harley Quinn). Cathy Yen’s Birds of Prey might prove to be Harley Quinn’s redemption from her recent portrayal in the disastrous Suicide Squad. Birds of Prey is directed by Cathy Yen and stars Margot Robbie, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Rosie Perez, and Ewan McGregor. The plot centers around Harley Quinn (Robbie), who after splitting up with the Joker, must bring a priceless diamond to Roman Sionis (McGregor) from a thieving little girl, Cassandra Cain (Ella Jay Basco). Her attempt to bring the diamond back involves a lethal assassin, a singer/driver, and a detective as they clash in their attempts to collect the fortune.

Though everyone in this film had stellar character performances, Margot Robbie goes above and beyond. Harley Quinn’s character as a crazed but deadly protagonist never misses a beat as she pulls a combination of comedy and storytelling throughout the film. Even though that Harley Quinn’s character is limited in Suicide Squad, this film took almost four years to perfect the character of Harley Quinn, from everything including the way her dialogue switches between first and third-person perspective to her interactions with every other character on screen.

The most satisfying part of this film is its action choreography. Harley Quinn’s weapon tactics and maneuvers are on par with other action films from this past decade, like the John Wick movies. Each action scene is unique with alternating slow-motion and rapid-fire sequences that leave the audience in amusement and excitement. Each scene features a face-to-face confrontation that reveals a perfectly timed and well-executed action scene filled with dialogue and great cinematography.

However, this film has one major issue that keeps it from being a great DC film: the main antagonist, Roman Sionis (aka Black Mask). His character introduction is too rushed, especially considering that he’s supposed to be the main threat to Harley Quinn. His Black Mask persona doesn’t have any defining personality traits besides getting what he wants and kidnapping the Cassandra Cain (Ella Jay Basco). In contrast, when compared to his other appearances in Batman: Under the Red Hood, Batman: Bad Blood, and Suicide Squad: Hell to Pay, the character of Black Mask is a ruthless crime lord in Gotham City whose character is well developed.

Overall, Cathy Yen does a good job of directing Birds of Prey, since DC films are typically poorly received. The directing and writing are on par with films like John Wick and Deadpool. The multiple genres are pulled off surprisingly well and are well balanced. The actors deliver superior performances and all in all, and as a whole, this film definitely tops David Ayer’s Suicide Squad.

3/5 STARS

Review: ‘Shazam!’ Is the Lighthearted Flick the DCEU Needed

In 2016, the massive success of Marvel Cinematic Universe loomed over Warner Brothers and pressured them to catch up. In a retaliatory act, they began the DC Extended Universe which came with a bevy of bad decisions, poor marketing, and most importantly, terrible movies. Shazam! is the latest installment in this franchise which, after the commercial successes of Wonder Woman and Aquaman, seems to be gaining some footing. The blockbuster features Asher Angel as DC Superhero Billy Batson, a 15-year-old foster child who is imbued with the incredible power to transform into an adult superhero after uttering “Shazam.” Starring in the film is Zachary Levi as the titular character, rising star Jack Dylan as Billy’s friend, and Mark Strong as the movie’s antagonist.

Shazam! takes a more comedic and lighthearted approach to the genre than other DCEU films, and it’s here where the movie truly excels. When the film leans into its funnier moments, the jokes consistently land. Obviously sense of humor is subjective, but for myself, there were several stretches with back-to-back laugh out loud moments. In such scenes, Zachary Levi truly shines with his enthusiasm for the role being clear and evident throughout.

However, the biggest lull in Shazam! comes from moments outside its comedic and lighthearted core. In fact, there are a couple scenes that are distinctly and tonally jarring, so much so as to interrupt the flow of the film. One scene in particular is indicative of director David Sandberg trying to show off this horror chops instead of making something interesting and compelling to the story at hand. In other moments, it appears the screenwriters tried a bit too hard at crafting a brutal, emotional confrontation, and the result ends up being nothing more than a depressing detour. While Shazam! fails to stay on track at times, the moments where it maintains its consistency are enjoyable.

Costume design is another area where Shazam! can be hit or miss. On the one hand, Shazam’s design is delightfully over-the-top with bright colors hearkening back to the golden age of comic books from which he hails. On the other hand, we have the design of the villainous Seven Sins. [Minor Spoilers Ahead] Early on in the plot, Mark Strong’s villain, Dr. Sivana, releases the personifications of the seven deadly sins. Each of these seven characters, if you can even call them that, are perhaps the worst offenders of the bland, dark CGI villain trope that seemingly dominates tent-pole films. It’s a travesty that the seven sins, each of which have so much potential, are given designs which are indistinguishable from each other. Their inclusion is unnecessary and feed into the several tonally jarring moments mentioned before.

Shazam!’s plot is one of the more unremarkable aspects of the film; it’s neither engrossing nor an overall detriment. It bogs itself down with excessive exposition, however, it does a pretty good job of maintaining strong, clearly motivated characters. Aiding our main characters is a supporting cast of likable figures who aren’t the most unique, but stand out just enough to be memorable. In the end, Shazam! has a sweet, albeit clichéd, message about found families and delivers a movie-going experience that is above all else fun.

Review: ‘Aquaman’ is a Hot, Wet Mess

I never had high hopes for Aquaman. The very first trailers revealed the movie to be the eye-rollingly corny mess it ended up being. Though their choice of Jason Momoa to play Arthur, the titular superhero, was a good one — he was certainly one of the best parts of the movie — in almost every other respect, the movie let its viewers down. It is an unfocused, unfunny, uninventive superhero flick, and it is not worth seeing in theaters (or possibly at all).

Despite the massive critical and box office success of Wonder Woman last year, DC did not seem to take to heart the idea that superhero movies should be more than just spectacle. As a consequence, Aquaman is two hours of fights and explosions (literally five discrete times a scene is interrupted by an explosion coming through a wall) with a trite “chosen one” storyline and a massive underwater war that ultimately don’t add up to an engaging plot to string the fight sequences together. One of the antagonists, Black Manta (Yahya Abdul-Mateen II), is laughably campy and completely irrelevant, and the other, Arthur’s half-brother King Orm (Patrick Wilson), is so under-developed that the emotional conflict that supposedly drives his every action seems completely unbelievable.

Jason Momoa and Patrick Wilson in Aquaman (2018)

In fact, that is one of the movie’s central sins: underdevelopment of both characters and plot. The movie seems to assume that the audience has some familiarity with Aquaman already, whether from 2017’s Justice League or perhaps just from the comics, and so Arthur, too, is already seemingly familiar with his Atlantean heritage and powers. Skipping out on an origin story for someone like Spider-Man, as in Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, is understandable — we all know how that story goes. But when it’s omitted from the story of a less familiar superhero like Aquaman, you lose out on that incredible magic of discovery that can provide for a story that endears the hero to the audience while also developing his character. As it is, the only real personality Arthur has is the charisma Momoa brings to the role. He, along with characters like Mera (Amber Heard), Vulko (Willem Dafoe), and Atlanna (Nicole Kidman) — who was completely wasted on this movie — are criminally underdeveloped, and their relationships, too, are cheesy and forced.

The plot, meanwhile, goes much too big too fast. It tries to incorporate too many elements — King Orm’s war, Atlanna’s storyline, Black Manta’s quest for revenge, Arthur and Mera’s quest for the lost trident of Atlan, their romance, and the conflict between King Orm and Arthur, among others. As a result, each storyline is not given enough attention and all of them feel vague and inconsequential. The romance between Arthur and Mera is particularly egregious.

Related image

The movie’s not all bad. Its visuals are stunning at times, especially the scene where Arthur and Mera use flares to ward off the Trench with a red flare. The underwater combat is admittedly pretty sick, especially when big sea creatures are involved. And Momoa is charming and occasionally funny when the overall poor writing permits. They even managed to make him look cool in his silly green and gold outfit. But these elements are not enough to save the movie.

Ultimately, though this will undoubtedly be another box office hit for DC if the opening weekend numbers are anything to go by, it is another creative stumble. With Disney’s Marvel films still going strong and Sony’s recent successes with Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse and Venom, DC is still struggling to find a successful formula for superhero movies that are both spectacular visually and engaging narratively. And Aquaman is certainly not the solution. Better luck next time with Shazam, DC.

Score: 2/5