The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Marvel is not dead

- Tinashe Kusema

ORDINARILY, I prefer to stay away from social media debate. However, the backlash “The Marvels” has been receiving of late has prompted me to give my take on the discourse. Is “The Marvels” a good movie? Well, the answer is yes and no.

By Marvel standards, this is not what we have come to expect from the esteemed production company

In fact, it carries over the recent trend in which the Disney subsidiary seems to be prioritisi­ng quantity over quality on the big and small screens.

Both movies and television shows have not been that inspiring but when they are good, they are great, and vice versa.

“The Marvels” is somewhere in the middle. It could have been a lot better, but it certainly cannot be part of discussion­s involving movies like “Ant-man and the Wasp: Quantumani­a”, “The Eternals”, “Thor: The Dark World”, as some TikTok and X users would like you to believe.

The film, though flawed, is still worth watching.

“The Marvels” is a sequel to Brie Larson’s 2019 release “Captain Marvel” and sees our superpower­ed heroine Carol Denvers come face to face with a vengeful Kree leader DarBenn (Zawe Ashton), who blames her for the destructio­n of her home planet, and a civil war that broke out among her people.

Instead of going it alone, like she usually does, Denvers finds new allies in the form of fangirl Kamala Khan, aka Ms Marvel (Iman Vellani), and the daughter of her now-deceased best friend Monica Rambeau (Teyonah Parris).

The trio have light-based superpower­s. A mission in space goes wrong, which then entangles their powers.

Quantum entangleme­nt is the scientific term, I think.

A huge part of the film focuses on the three getting acquainted, sorting out their personal issues and, in the end, learning how to work together as a team.

The chemistry and character dynamics among the three women — Larson, Parris and Vellani — and their characters are the heart and soul of the film.

Vellani is the breakout star of the entire movie as she comes off as authentic, funny and a true star.

Sadly, the same cannot be said about the visuals, which come off clumsy and half-baked at times, and the movie’s one-note protagonis­t Dar-Benn.

The writers do not really invest enough time into the character’s origins and story.

After 10 or so days of release, “The Marvels” had raked in US$161 million at the box office.

One of the biggest reasons for the movie’s poor performanc­e at the box office has been the cruel and sometimes unwarrante­d negative reviews it has received from bloggers, self-appointed critics and anyone who has a TikTok or X account.

The negative reviews started way before the actual movie was released.

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