The Commercial Appeal

‘Morbius’ is a waste of talent and time

- Mark Kennedy

The latest hero from Marvel is hard to explain. He’s a man and yet also a bat. No, not Batman. Let me try again: He’s a daywalking vampire, but, no, not that cool cat Blade. This guy is good but also very bad. Look, he’s clearly got an identity crisis and his film is equally in trouble.

“Morbius” is a forgettabl­e, often laughable, entry in Sony’s attempt to fill its own Spider-man-adjacent cinematic universe, a poorly edited, derivative time suck – pun intended.

It wastes the considerab­le talents of Jared Leto, who is often left here looking like the snarling lead singer of a death metal band. So confused is the film’s execution that it more closely resembles a horror movie than a superhero flick.

Leto stars as Dr. Michael Morbius, a frail, brilliant and wealthy biochemist with a rare blood disease whose desperate search for a cure leads to a serum that makes him strong but also turns him into a vampire with a thirst for blood.

After a hit of serum, he goes from needing crutches to swinging midair on pipes like an Olympic athlete. “I don’t know what I’m capable of,” he says. One downside: He has to chug blood bags, so there’s that. He also seems to be able to turn into a bat and fly but why he hasn’t flapped his way out of this film is unfathomab­le.

The filmmakers – director Daniel Espinosa, hobbled by a meandering script from Matt Sazama and Burk Sharpless – simply do not know what to do with this creature once they’ve given us his backstory. They throw in a rivalry with his best friend (Matt Smith) and a love interest (Adria Arjona) hoping to reach something Shakespear­ian, but they’re treading water.

Instead of a seamless, tight visual style, we are given jiggly camerawork and a buffet of previous films – “The Matrix,” “American Psycho,” “The Usual Suspects” and “An American Werewolf in London.” Typical Marvel violence is unleashed, including so much

muscle that our hero smashes though New York City concrete streets to the subway system below. What’s astonishin­g is that despite a whole movie, we know very little about Morbius. He is so principled that he turns down a Nobel Prize but perfectly OK slaughteri­ng henchmen. He makes delicate origami animals for sick kids and, despite having oodles of cash from inventing artificial blood, wears a cheap Casio watch. At one point, Morbius loses focus as the main guy when Smith’s rival character hijacks the film entirely.

The special effects team work overtime to give Leto, unfortunat­ely wearing a messy manbun throughout the film, a sort of bat-ness – his pupils cloud and his ear hairs vibrate like he’s using sonar. His skin will suddenly stretch over bone and he snarls a lot, too. For some reason, whenever he leaps, he is enveloped by a viscous cloud. He can also slo-mo and duck bullets and the action sequences build to moments when everything is suddenly stylistica­lly still and quiet, like inside a hurricane’s eye.

There will be a lot of debate over where “Morbius” sits in the Marvel canon. There are clues that he has a future fighting Spider-man but maybe the best thing for our vampire anti-hero is just to ignore him or swat at him like a wayward bat.

 ?? COLUMBIA PICTURES ?? Jared Leto plays Dr. Michael Morbius in “Morbius.”
COLUMBIA PICTURES Jared Leto plays Dr. Michael Morbius in “Morbius.”

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