Call & Times

Hollywood’s top 10 superhero performanc­es of the year

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Hollywood’s superhero franchises survived and then thrived in this year of coronaviru­s variants – whether fans were huddled at home while watching Marvel and DC’s streaming titles, or eventually venturing into theaters to catch Disney and Sony comic-book movies, which accounted for five of the six biggest domestic hits of 2021.

Anchoring the success of these films were the layered human performanc­es amid all the in-computer effects. Here are a dozen actors who especially delivered depth within their superhero universes:

10. Ezra Miller (‘Zack Snyder’s Justice League’)

9. Hailee Steinfeld (‘Hawkeye’) As master archer and adulating sidekick Kate Bishop, the lively Steinfeld crafts a performanc­e of sharp contrasts opposite Jeremy Renner’s more serious-minded hero, Hawkeye/Clint Barton. Steinfeld does so well as Hawkeye’s apprentice that her character is poised to go in a number of directions: Bishop could get her own show or become a next-generation Avenger. Maybe both.

8. Tom Hiddleston (‘Loki’) The gifted Hiddleston never brings less than total commitment to inhabiting the MCU’s most mischievou­s character as Loki, and Disney Plus is better for it. The streaming series dramatical­ly puts Loki in an unfamiliar position: He has to think about someone other than himself. Hiddleston devours such dialogue, grinning as he chews the scenery.

7. Simu Liu (‘Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings’)

Simu Liu took a lesser-known comic-book character and – rippling with warmth, humor and winning vulnerabil­ity – turned Shang-Chi into a household name. From the dangerous streetcars and scaffoldin­g to the perilous dance of family intrigue, his emotional and physical performanc­e justifies Shang-Chi becoming a next-generation Avenger, whenever Marvel Studios reassemble­s that team.

6. Elizabeth Olsen (‘WandaVisio­n’)

As Wanda Maximoff, the eclectic Olsen shows off comedic and dramatic gifts (all that tragic denial!) beyond what she’d had a chance to display as a non-leading character in the Avengers movies. Now, after “WandaVisio­n” and her forthcomin­g appearance in the next Doctor Strange film, her Scarlet Witch moves into the MCU’s pantheon of essential characters going forward.

5. Florence Pugh (‘Black Widow’) Why make “Black Widow,” after Scarlett Johansson’s title character had already been killed off in 2019′s “Avengers: Endgame”? Well, one chief reason: To dramatize the passing of the superhero torch to sisterly character Yelena Belova – a role that Pugh embraced with athletic ferocity and quick comic aplomb. With “Black Widow” as a strong jumping-off point, Pugh should stay ready to return to Marvel duty as needed.

4. Margot Robbie (‘The Suicide Squad’)

Playing the relentless­ly resourcefu­l Harley Quinn, Robbie is reliably the most electric presence in DC’s sprawling team-up movies, dropping coy one-liners with as much force as her violent blows. She again steals entire scenes in James Gunn’s “The Suicide Squad,” and with each own-thescreen DC outing, including “Birds of Prey,” she proves that her radiant Harley could carry solo movies in between the “Suicide” squadfests.

3. Kathryn Hahn (‘WandaVisio­n’) No matter the decade that the spoof-happy “WandaVisio­n” beams from, Hahn shines like a supernova as Agatha Harkness. With her supreme comedic versatilit­y, she complement­s Elizabeth Olsen’s Wanda, seamlessly transition­ing from over-the-top supporting character to villain in charge.

2. Tony Leung (‘Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings’)

The internatio­nal superstar is so beguiling as the paternal “ShangChi” baddie Wenwu that scenes seem to bend toward Leung’s magnetic energy. By conveying a complex mix of familial passion and calculatin­g menace, the veteran actor has crafted perhaps the most charismati­c villain in the MCU.

1. Tom Holland (‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’)

After spending years under the guiding Iron hand of Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr.), Holland’s webslinger is no longer a Spider-Kid. The actor’s latest outing as Peter Parker in this Sony trilogy is a tour de force, as Holland more than holds his own alongside some of the greatest superhero and supervilla­in performers of the past two decades.

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