Call & Times

‘Justice League’: The gloom continues

- By MICHAEL O’SULLIVAN

If "Batman v Superman" heralded, as the subtitle of that exercise in doom and gloom stated, the "dawn of justice," then the 2016 movie's sequel, "Justice League," suggests that it's still not quite morning in America.

To be sure, the latest film from DC Entertainm­ent, the parent company of Batman and Superman's home, DC Comics, is measurably brighter and more fun than the last outing. That's due in no small part to the ray of sunshine brought to the franchise by Gal Gadot's Wonder Woman, an incandesce­nt character featured only sparingly in "BvS" but who appeared in her own standalone hit this summer.

Yet at the same time, "Justice League" suffers from the apparent determinat­ion by DC Entertainm­ent to double down on the darkness, ceding the battle to weaponize action and humor to its rival in the superhero trade, Marvel. Fans of the tongue-in-cheek tone set by Marvel's recent "Thor: Ragnarok" — which seems to get the root meaning of the term "comic book" — will find little to laugh at, let alone love deeply, in "Justice League," which, like many a political speech, is long, loud, self-important and overly expository.

Picking up where "BvS" left off, "Justice League" opens with an extended series of short, scene-setting vignettes, starting with a snippet of a video podcast interview, made by kids, with Superman (Henry Cavill), who, as fans will remember, met an unhappy end at the conclusion of last year's film. This flashback prologue to one of DC's marquee superheroe­s — one known for his sunny attitude, until he snapped the neck of an enemy two movies ago — is followed, in rapid succession, by several grim and confusing scenes: a rooftop encounter between Batman (Ben Affleck) and a winged, insectlike alien; a battle between Wonder Woman and bomb-toting terrorists; and, later, a visit by Batman's now-bearded alter ego, Bruce Wayne, to a fishing village in Iceland, where Bruce tries to recruit a long-haired, tattooed recluse called Arthur Curry (Jason Momoa) for an as-yetunnamed alliance of vigilantes.

A world without Superman, it seems, is desperatel­y in need of replacemen­ts.

Arthur, who is soon revealed to be the amphibious Aquaman from the lost underwater world of Atlantis, has been delivering fish to the starving Icelandic villagers in an act of altruism that seems, in hindsight, somewhat heartless, given that he can communicat­e with marine life. Would you eat something you can have a conversati­on with?

"I hear you can talk to fish," Bruce says, casting a quizzical look at Arthur, in one of the few instances where it's OK to chuckle at the dialogue. Later, explaining nothing, Aquaman states that it is the water, not him, that speaks to the fishies.

Other prospectiv­e members of the crime-fighting unit - which at this point consists only of Batman and Wonder Woman, who, despite a couple moments of goo-goo eyes, have zero chemistry — include the super-speedy slacker Barry Allen, aka the Flash (Ezra Miller), and the cybernetic­ally enhanced brooding loner Victor Stone, aka Cyborg (Ray Fisher).

Did I say crime-fighting unit? The protracted formation of the movie's titular league may be the engine that drives the plot, but the foe that Batman, Wonder Woman and company are up against this time is no mere criminal mastermind, as Jesse Eisenberg's Lex Luthor was last time. Here, like Thor, he is the literal God Steppenwol­f from the planet Apokolips. Voiced by Ciarán Hinds, Steppenwol­f is a pure CGI creation: an ax-wielding giant in a helmet who has managed to assemble three alien "mother boxes" that will give him the power to destroy Earth, for reasons that remain murky.

What is a mother box? Unclear. But it has something to do with the ability to replicate, on Earth, "the primordial hellscape of Steppenwol­f's birth-world," as Wonder Woman puts it.

You can thank screenwrit­er Chris Terrio, who also worked on "BvS," for that turgid dialogue gem. There are also some funny zingers in the script every now and again, but I suspect that they come mostly courtesy of Terrio's co-screenwrit­er Joss Whedon. The writer-director of "Avengers: Age of Ultron" was brought on to put the finishing touches to "Justice League" when its director, Zack Snyder, left during post-production after his daughter's death.

There's a bit of a steep learning curve to the resulting narrative, at least for viewers who don't bring an encycloped­ic knowledge of DC Comics lore to the film. References to such characters as the villain Darkseid — Steppenwol­f's nephew, who doesn't even appear in "Justice League," although his name gets dropped — are likely to fly over most people's heads, while tantalizin­g DC Comic die-hards about sequels to come.

Two stars. Rated PG-13. Area theaters. Contains sci-fi violence and some coarse language. 119 minutes.

 ?? Warner Bros. Pictures/Warner Bros. Pictures — DC Comics ?? The members of the Justice League assemble, from left to right: Jason Momoa as Aquaman, Gal Gadot as Wonder Woman, Ezra Miller as the Flash and Ray Fisher as Cyborg.
Warner Bros. Pictures/Warner Bros. Pictures — DC Comics The members of the Justice League assemble, from left to right: Jason Momoa as Aquaman, Gal Gadot as Wonder Woman, Ezra Miller as the Flash and Ray Fisher as Cyborg.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States