The Asian Age

Justice League fails to do justice

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incoherent action and jaw- droppingly awful CGI. It is big, loud, awful to look at and oh- so- dumb.

With Superman ( Henry Cavill) dead, and the world facing yet another devastatin­g threat ( yawn) this time at the hands of some ancient creature named Steppen wolf ( Ciaran Hinds) and his army of giant alien mosquitoes, which look like Saturday morning Power Rangers villains, Batman/ Bruce Wayne ( Ben Affleck) and Wonder Woman/ Diana Prince ( Gal Gadot) go in search of some new recruits: Barry Allen/ The Flash ( Ezra Miller), a quippy "kid" who's excited to join the team; Arthur Curry/ Aquaman ( Jason Momoa) who talks like a surfer bro and looks like a Nordic bodybuilde­r with ombre locks and fishermen's knits; And Victor Stone/ Cyborg ( Ray Fisher), who is still in the sulky "why me" phase of his superhero career.

There are some good moments, thanks in large part to the addition of Miller, whose quick, self- deprecatin­g humor ( likely the result of Joss Whedon's script and reshoot work) and general liveliness steals scenes away from his brawnier and moodier counterpar­ts.

But everything else about "Justice League" feels labored, from a prepostero­us underwater battle that comes out of nowhere and the camaraderi­e between the superheroe­s that never clicks into place, to Batman's lumbering gait ( does the batsuit weigh 300 pounds?) and Superman's mouth which looks a little... off. It's likely because the production had to digitally remove Cavill's "Mission: Impossible 6" mustache for re- shoots. After experienci­ng this unnaturall­y altered face on the big screen, it seems like the worst possible compromise.

And never has it been so obvious that the character of Wonder Woman is now being presented through a man's eyes. Snyder chooses on multiple occasions to let the shot linger on Gadot's figure, whether panning up her legs unnecessar­ily to get to a normal scene of dialogue or making sure that the camera is there to capture the moment w h e n her skirt flies up in an action sequence. It is, quite frankly, gross and a wildly disappoint­ing departure from what Patty Jenkins was able to accomplish with the character earlier this year. There's even an attempt to humanize the potential destructio­n with a random impoverish­ed Eastern European family struggling to defend their homestead. The story focuses in on the family's young daughter, who, in braided pigtails picks up a can of bug spray as a defense. You'd think that this might come back and provide an opportunit­y for her to a) see and be inspired by Wonder Woman in action or b) at least get saved by her. It would be so obvious. But they don't even meet.

It's just a tiny example of how "Justice League" feels like a bunch of disconnect­ed moments with no governing theory behind it other than the fact that this movie has to come at this time to introduce audiences to characters whose stand- alone movies have already been promised to shareholde­rs.

It's not too late to re- think this whole thing and start over. Just keep Gadot around, please.

"Justice League," a Warner Bros. release, is rated PG- 13 by the Motion Picture Associatio­n of America for "sequences of sci- fi violence and action." Running time: 121 minutes. One and a half stars out of four. AP

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