The Morning Call

Revisit best movies of Marvel universe

- By Chris Hewitt

It has been more than 15 months since the last entry in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, “Spider-Man: Far From Home,” and it could be much longer for the next.

That’s the biggest gap between Marvel Studios movies since the 23 months between “The Incredible Hulk” in 2008 and “Iron Man 2” in 2010. With the recent announceme­nt that the already-delayed Nov. 6 release of “Black Widow,” starring Scarlett Johansson, has been pushed back to May 2021, we’re looking at another nearly two-year wait for the movies in which superheroe­s bicker and save the planet from maniacs.

“Black Widow” will be a rare movie that centers on a female superhero, something Disneyowne­d Marvel Studios also did with “Captain Marvel” and has been laying the groundwork for since Johansson’s Black Widow debuted in “Iron Man 2.” Her popularity undoubtedl­y fueled rival Warner Bros.’ decision to give Wonder Woman two of her own films, the latest of which, “1984,” was postponed to Christmas.

The Marvel series has also been fairly inclusive, with juicy roles for Samuel L. Jackson, Don Cheadle, Tessa Thompson and others. “Black Panther,” with its cast of top-notch talents, made the late Chadwick Boseman a star and gave an entire community the heroes it had deserved for decades, while also providing Ryan Coogler a big stage on which to direct.

The MCU has lagged on behind-the-scenes women. So far, a co-credit for Anna Boden on “Captain Marvel” is the only sign that women also make movies. But that will change with the next two projects, Cate Shortland’s “Black Widow” and “Eternals,” which stars Salma Hayek, Kumail Nanjiani, Gemma Chan and Brian Tyree Henry and was directed by Chloe Zhao. Zhao is known as the director of “The Rider,” a beautiful drama that killed on the festival circuit.

That may point to the best thing about the Marvel movies. Producer Kevin Feige has taken chances on directors whose records give no indication they’ll be good at staging explosions in space, with one bunch of special-effect characters battling another. In addition to Zhao, Coogler (“Fruitvale Station”), Boden and Ryan Fleck (“It’s Kind of a Funny Story”), and Destin Daniel Cretton (“Short Term 12”) have gone from making movies about three people chatting on a porch to movies where the world might end.

The MCU has released 23 movies in 12 years, and many are worth another look.

‘Guardians of the Galaxy’ (2014)

A sense of fun has not always been evident in Marvel movies, but it’s all over my favorite, powered by the wide-eyed charisma of Chris Pratt as StarLord, the I-get-no-respect Rodney Dangerfiel­d of heroes. It’s the loosest MCU movie, the funniest and arguably the one that is least concerned with how it fits with the others. “Guardians” characters have been integrated into the other films, but they’re at their best in this entry.

‘Iron Man’ (2008)

How long ago did the MCU launch? So long ago that the trailer actually mentions Myspace as if it were a cool thing. Robert Downey Jr. genuinely is a cool thing as the title character, giving the no-contest best performanc­e in any of these movies. Glib, sly and brainy, his Tony Stark is a millionair­e jerk whom Downey makes endearing.

‘Black Panther’ (2018)

We don’t even know yet how many movie careers were launched or given a boost by Coogler’s swift empowermen­t adventure. Letitia Wright and Winston Duke have snagged big parts as a result of it, and Michael B. Jordan, Danai Gurira and Lupita Nyong’o have moved into different realms.

‘Thor: Ragnarok’ (2017)

A case could be made that Taika Waititi, an Oscar winner this year for writing the comedy-drama “Jojo Rabbit,” is the best thing to happen to the MCU. Another director plucked from the world of low-budget movies (“Hunt for the Wilderpeop­le”), Waititi didn’t worry much about the previous movies in the “Thor” series, choosing to turn the third one into a speedy, funny romp that has some of the energy of the Indiana Jones franchise. Waititi is writing and directing the next “Thor” too.

‘Ant-Man’ (2015)

Paul Rudd has been in many movies that rely on his charm to bail out a dumb script, but the “Ant-Man” films show how he can exponentia­lly improve an already sharp one. He’s wry and winning as the title character, whose superpower (getting tiny) is sort of embarrassi­ng. And Rudd isn’t even the most delightful person in the movie. That would be screw-up sidekick Michael Pena.

‘Captain America: Civil War’ (2017)

This let’s-get-all-the-heroes-together adventure benefited from coming on the heels of DC’s horrendous “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice.” The “Captain America” entries feel unique because of the Norman Rockwelles­que quality of Chris Evans’ character, but he’s balanced here by Downey’s ironic sensibilit­y and by the addition of a brand-new SpiderMan: Tom Holland. Whom Iron Man insists on calling “Underoos.”

‘Captain Marvel’ (2019)

This one’s all about an accidental superhero (Brie Larson) who spends the movie discoverin­g who she is and in what ways she is powerful. I hope they come up with a worthy villain for the next “Captain Marvel,” but this one succeeds by exploring something few caped-crusader movies care about: its protagonis­t’s humanity.

 ?? MARVEL ?? The 2014 Marvel movie “Guardians of the Galaxy” stars Zoe Saldana as Gamora, from left, Vin Diesel as the voice of Groot, Dave Bautista as Drax the Destroyer and Chris Pratt as Peter Quill/Star-Lord.
MARVEL The 2014 Marvel movie “Guardians of the Galaxy” stars Zoe Saldana as Gamora, from left, Vin Diesel as the voice of Groot, Dave Bautista as Drax the Destroyer and Chris Pratt as Peter Quill/Star-Lord.
 ?? ZADE ROSENTHAL/PARAMOUNT PICTURES ?? Robert Downey Jr. stars as billionair­e industrial­ist Tony Stark in the 2008 Marvel movie “Iron Man.”
ZADE ROSENTHAL/PARAMOUNT PICTURES Robert Downey Jr. stars as billionair­e industrial­ist Tony Stark in the 2008 Marvel movie “Iron Man.”

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