The Commercial Appeal

‘Shazam!’: Zachary Levi’s plucky man-child sparks kid-friendly sequel

- Brian Truitt

The DC superhero movie universe is going through an existentia­l crisis under new management, with Henry Cavill’s Superman gone and Dwayne Johnson’s Black Adam in limbo. The sequel “Shazam! Fury of the Gods” proves Zachary Levi’s young-at-heart do-gooder needs to stick around for a while.

A fun, kid-friendly follow-up to director David F. Sandberg’s 2019 charmer, the “Shazam” sequel () continues the story of teenage foster kid Billy Batson (Asher Angel) – who’s given otherworld­ly abilities by a wizard (Djimon Hounsou) and turned into a buff adult (Levi) – and his Philadelph­ia family when they’re threatened by a trio of powerful Greek goddesses (Lucy Liu, Helen Mirren and Rachel Zegler).

“Fury” piles on the mythos, monsters and magic, a smidge too heavily at times, but stays grounded, thanks to its earnestly goofy main man.

The first “Shazam” ends with Billy sharing his power with his five foster brothers and sisters, so everyone transforms into a “swole” version of themselves when they yell, “Shazam!” Some years have passed, and the sequel finds the youngsters doing their best to help the city but navigating as many failures as successes. (The media even labels them the “Philly Fiascoes.”)

Compoundin­g the pressures on Billy is the fact that he’s turning 18 in a few months when he’ll technicall­y age out of the foster system. That, plus his siblings’ interests in things other than superheroi­ng, lead Billy to worry about being on his own again.

Also not helping matters: the arrival of the Daughters of Atlas. In the climactic battle of the 2019 film, Billy snapped a magical staff in two, which broke a barrier between worlds and now allows Hespera (Mirren) and Kalypso (Liu) to come to Earth. They fix the weapon, aim to take the heroes’ powers and want to rule mankind, yet their sister Anthea (Zegler) isn’t as imperious – and takes a liking to Billy’s bro Freddy (played by Jack Dylan Grazer as a teen and by Adam Brody in hero mode).

“Fury of the Gods” goes bigger in set pieces, with an impressive man cave straight out of the “Harry Potter” movies and a fearsome dragon made of wood that screams “Game of Thrones.” The Daughters’ invasion of Philadelph­ia tears up Citizens Bank Park and other places with computer-generated creatures and underwhelm­ing villains running amok. But it’s the feel-good family stuff that continues to be the “Shazam” hallmark.

After the original movie leaned into the wish-fulfillmen­t fantasy, its sequel delves into problems people can’t fight with super-strength and impressive speed.

So let’s keep the Shazamily, shall we? Until DC figures out its next Superman, Levi’s plucky man-child should do the trick.

 ?? WARNER BROS. PICTURES ?? Kalypse (Lucy Liu, left) and Hespera (Helen Mirren) have nothing good planned for mankind in “Shazam! Fury of the Gods.”
WARNER BROS. PICTURES Kalypse (Lucy Liu, left) and Hespera (Helen Mirren) have nothing good planned for mankind in “Shazam! Fury of the Gods.”
 ?? WARNER BROS. PICTURES ?? Billy (Zachary Levi, center) leads a family of superheroe­s in “Shazam! Fury of the Gods.”
WARNER BROS. PICTURES Billy (Zachary Levi, center) leads a family of superheroe­s in “Shazam! Fury of the Gods.”
 ?? WARNER BROS. PICTURES ?? Freddy (Jack Dylan Grazer) meets the new girl in school, Anthea (Rachel Zegler), in “Shazam! Fury of the Gods.”
WARNER BROS. PICTURES Freddy (Jack Dylan Grazer) meets the new girl in school, Anthea (Rachel Zegler), in “Shazam! Fury of the Gods.”

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