Review of the latest releases
BLACK WIDOW (12A, 133 mins) Action/Fantasy/Adventure/Comedy/Romance. Scarlett Johansson, Florence Pugh, David Harbour, Rachel Weisz, Ray Winstone, O-T Fagbenle, William Hurt. Director: Cate Shortland.
The opening theatrical salvo of phase four of Marvel’s cinematic universe unveils a mechanised mercenary called Taskmaster, which perfectly mimics the fighting style of any adversary. Imitation doesn’t end with this armoured antagonist. Director Cate Shortland’s hugely entertaining spy thriller nods reverentially to Mission: Impossible, the Bourne franchise and James Bond (an excerpt from Moonraker plays on a TV screen) as well as earlier chapters in the Avengers saga that jive sweetly between explosive action set pieces and heart-tugging emotion.
Admittedly, Shortland’s vertiginous denouement falls victim to the same CGI overload as other MCU strands but there’s a clear focus on characters in peril in the eye of a digitally rendered storm that breaks the film’s fall.
Set in the tumultuous period between Captain America: Civil War and Avengers: Infinity War, Black Widow is a fitting send-off for Scarlett Johansson’s former KGB spy with satisfying dramatic reveals and multiple (ab)uses of the word ‘family’ in Eric Pearson’s script.
The darkest elements of the character’s past – child trafficking, mind control, an involuntary hysterectomy – warrant lip service rather than deep discourse to avoid a certificate 15 classification that would impact box office takings.
Bone-crunching, balletic fight sequences are beautifully choreographed as a pas de deux with slick special effects that push Johansson and Oxford-born costar Florence Pugh to their physical limits.
Frenetic early fisticuffs between the two actors establish the brisk tempo of Shortland’s propulsive direction and pass the baton to the next generation of selfassured, courageous and morally complex female heroes, who can wise-crack as confidently as they bruise knuckles.
A pulse-quickening prelude in 1995 Ohio distils Natasha’s formative years as one quarter of a Russian sleeper cell with fake parents (David Harbour, Rachel Weisz) and a younger sister.
They flee the suburban Midwest under the cover of darkness to the haunting melody of Think Up Anger’s cover of Smells Like Teen Spirit.
Twenty-one years later, Natasha is an enemy of the state.
She has violated the newly ratified Sokovia Accords, which controversially surrenders command of the Avengers to the United Nations, and is on the run from US Secretary of State Thaddeus Ross (William Hurt).
Hawkeye, Falcon, Ant-Man and Wanda Maximoff have been captured and are imprisoned in the maximumsecurity Raft. Captain America and Natasha remain at large. She goes off-grid and resurfaces in Norway, aided by smitten private contractor Rick Mason (O-T Fagbenle).
Natasha’s past gate-crashes the Scandinavian serenity and she reunites with ‘sister’ Yelena (Pugh) at a Budapest safehouse to learn the shocking truth about chemically subjugated Black Widows controlled by
General Dreykov (Ray Winstone).
To assassinate the sadistic puppet master and destroy his secret facility, the Red Room, Natasha and Yelena must orchestrate an awkward family reunion with Alexei Shostakov aka Red Guardian (Harbour), the Soviet Union’s super soldier equivalent of Captain America, and scientist Melina Vostokoff (Weisz).
Black Widow returns the MCU to the big screen with several ground-shaking bangs and thunderous blasts of Scottish composer Lorne Balfe’s score.
Johansson, also an executive producer, is given space and time to rub salt into her character’s psychological wounds and add gravitas to Natasha’s sacrifices later in the franchise. Pearson’s script mines a rich vein of humour. Yelena mercilessly pokes fun at Natasha’s attentionseeking crouch pose and Alexei’s choices of words are hilariously inappropriate like when he congratulates his ‘daughters’ on their impressive kill lists.
“Your ledgers must be gushing, dripping wet!” he whoops.
An elegiac post-end credits sequence teases conflict with a “cutie” Avenger and lays the groundwork for a Disney+ TV series later in the year.
THE TRUFFLE HUNTERS (12A, 84 mins)
In 2017, a bidder from Hong Kong at the annual Alba White Truffle World Auction paid an eye-watering 75,000 euros for one tuberous specimen weighing 850 grams.
The prized delicacy grows deep in the forests of Piedmont, Italy, for a few months of the year and has stubbornly resisted modern science’s efforts at cultivation.
Demand for white truffles increases year on year but supply decreases, impacted in part by climate change and deforestation.
Documentary filmmakers Michael Dweck and Gregory Kershaw meet a group of men, 70 to 80 years young, who call upon training passed down through generations to hunt the rare white Alba truffle with their dogs.
They jealously guard the secrets of this practice, shunning the trappings of modern life to exist in harmony with the land and their vibrant local community.
OCCUPATION RAINFALL (Certificate TBC, 128 mins)
Visual effects artists who worked on Star Wars: Episode VIII – The Last Jedi and Blade Runner 2049 flex their digital muscles in a sci-fi action adventure directed by Luke Sparke, which is a sequel to his 2018 film Occupation.
Otherworldly beings orchestrate a devastating intergalactic invasion of Earth, determined to make the third rock from the sun their new home.
Two years after the invasion, human survivors in Australia have formed a fragile resistance with renegade aliens to fight back against the extra-terrestrial threat in a desperate and bloodthirsty ground war.
These brave soldiers from all walks of life uncover a terrifying plot that could signal the end of mankind forever.