Empire (UK)

MADAME WEB

IN THE END, HER WEB DIDN’T QUITE CONNECT US ALL

- CATHERINE BRAY

★★

OUT NOW / CERT 12A / 116 MINS

DIRECTOR S.J. Clarkson

CAST Dakota Johnson, Sydney Sweeney, Isabela Merced, Adam Scott, Zosia Mamet, Celeste O’connor

PLOT Cassie Web (Johnson) is just an ordinary ambulance driver — until one day, a near-death experience awakens dormant psychic powers.

EARLY ON IN Madame Web — the latest superhero film to be based on a Spider-manadjacen­t comic series — Dakota Johnson’s Cassie Web rejects a thank-you gift from the child of a woman whose life she just saved. From this, you can probably surmise that firstly, she’s awkward around kids, and secondly, she will eventually end up having to protect some kids. Like many heavily telegraphe­d moments in this film, you won’t need psychic powers to figure that one out — even if Cassie herself does, in fact, shortly develop such powers.

But if you did have psychic powers, you might have wanted to use them to gently warn the cast away from this film, which manages to be both over-written and underwritt­en at the same time. Most of the actors here are wonderfull­y talented, but there’s only so much they can do with the material. A Prophet’s Tahar Rahim, so often a blistering presence, is left to thankless grumpy-villain duties here; Adam Scott, fresh off his unimprovab­le turn in Severance, takes on a curious incarnatio­n of Spidey’s Uncle Ben; Sydney Sweeney, Isabela Merced and Celeste O’connor, as Spiderwome­n, have very little to do.

There is, perhaps, a bit less digital mulch sloshing around in Madame Web than in some recent superhero films. This is the result of a smaller and more self-contained story, involving the kind of nifty time-loop dilemmas familiar from small-screen sci-fi. But where the dialogue needed wit and spark, it has the kind of will-this-do? one-liners (“Hope the spiders were worth it, Mom!”) and tired backstorie­s you get when the characters are too flat to flesh out with rounded personalit­ies. (Some unconvinci­ng ADR smacks of a last-minute attempt to fix things in the edit.)

Like the last remnants of a lost civilisati­on poking through the wreckage of a postapocal­yptic wasteland, hints of classical storytelli­ng survive. The fateful legacy of a birthright inherited from a dead parent gives Cassie’s arc a Freudian motif, while the villain attempting to wipe out the next generation due to a premonitio­n that they will cause his own downfall is a more interestin­g and personal motivation — at least on the page — than another bad guy wanting to destroy the universe. And instead of Chekhov’s gun, we get a new twist on an old favourite in the form of ‘Chekhov’s CPR’. It’s not enough to offset the creeping sense that, when it comes to the franchise sometimes known as the Sony Pictures Universe of Marvel Characters (SPUMC), the word “Marvel” is synonymous less with a sense of awe than with a shrug.

VERDICT Madame Web isn’t much worse than the rest of the SPUMC, give or take, but it’s not really better, either. Its minimal saving grace is that it doesn’t require much familiarit­y with the wider universe.

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 ?? ?? Madame Web/cassie (Dakota Johnson, second left) with her spidey mates. Below: Supervilla­in Ezekiel Sims (Tahar Rahim).
Madame Web/cassie (Dakota Johnson, second left) with her spidey mates. Below: Supervilla­in Ezekiel Sims (Tahar Rahim).

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