Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Not the real thing definitely

Marvel’s new film could have used more nuanced storytelli­ng

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One must, at the outset, acknowledg­e that Marvel’s latest movie is not like the 20 others that have come before it. It is an authentic, dyed-in-the-wool superhero movie, with a woman lead. But beyond that, the film is rather an ordinary take on a wellworn theme. A solo superhero film with a female lead could have done a lot more for the way that women characters are written and played in popular culture. That left many of us disappoint­ed with Captain Marvel.

One of the best things about the film is the lack of a romantic arc for the central character. This was a welcome surprise. At one point, one wondered if Marvel would allow for a romantic arc between the main white woman superhero and her black, single mother best friend. But that was always going to be too much to ask of something as mainstream as the Marvel Cinematic Universe. The standard issue superhero suit is also an improvemen­t on the Wonder Woman style corset, allowing Brie Larson to be more than a mere sex symbol. Her postures, the lack of provocativ­e, sexualised shots, and general swagger are excellent template changes for female characters in the genre. But in terms of depth of character or motivation, there isn’t much to celebrate. The idea of a superhero as physically powerful and who doesn’t think twice about breaking things — while, of course, signalling the occupying of the moral high ground — remains. And patriarchy, it would seem, follows women across the universe. Even in Hala — capital planet of the Kree, a technologi­cally advanced alien race, ruled by a (presumably) genderless artificial intelligen­ce — men continue to be threatened by women. One would have thought that a warrior woman without a memory was a chance to allow the character to remain unencumber­ed by the things that have dragged earth women down for centuries. But sexism — of men telling a badass woman to control her powers and not scare the boys — is a trans-universal phenomenon.

Carol Danvers is basically just Tom Cruise’s Maverick from Top Gun. The need to fly at great speeds and ride very fast on bikes remains Carol Danvers’ most identifiab­le character trait. And in terms of plot and action, there is very little in the film that hasn’t been done before, the film feels like a forced interlude to the real thing that is coming next month: Avengers: Endgame. Marvel’s first full-fledged female superhero film could have used more nuanced storytelli­ng.

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