The New Zealand Herald

Covid made heroes put their capes away

Sorry, but it took a pandemic to put a brake on blockbuste­rs

- Karl Puschmann

This is bound to be an unpopular opinion but the enforced lockdown has been the best thing to happen to blockbuste­r franchises in a long time.

Big studio bean counters, cinema owners and the ultra-devoted fans will disagree, but I’ve really enjoyed the super-powered silence this year.

There’d just been too much of a good thing. The relentless pace with which superheroe­s and space heroes had been invading screens on an inescapabl­e train of noisy hype had left me exhausted and increasing­ly blase´ about the whole business.

I was not alone. The term ‘superhero fatigue’ was quickly coined to describe this malaise that many found themselves mired in. My interest levels just couldn’t sustain a manufactur­ed massive “event” every month or so. They stopped feeling special and exciting and went from “must see” to “probably see one day”.

It’s showing my age, but “event” cinema used to exist because huge budgeted franchise films were rare. When a massive movie came out it was a genuinely exciting time. Compare the bat-ballyhoo around the release of Tim Burton’s Batman in 1989 and 2017’s Batman-led

Justice League. Do you even remember the latter? Younger readers think back to the forceful frenzy that greeted

Star Wars: Episode 7: The Force Awakens in 2015. It’d been a decade since Star Wars had zoomed onto the big screen with

Star Wars: Episode III: Revenge of the Sith and, oh, boy were people thirsty for more adventurin­g in that galaxy far, far away. Or, at least we thought we did. After a drought there was a deluge. A frantic schedule saw a new Star

Wars flick every year for four years on the trot. Interest waned and the plan of bi-yearly spin-off films was put on ice, despite them being arguably more entertaini­ng than the main franchise films. People need time to miss things. It won’t of course but I genuinely hope the relaxed release pace continues because I’ve very much enjoyed the feeling of looking

He may be the hero of the show but the Mandaloria­n is an insignific­ant part of his galaxy. This is exactly the way it should be.

forward to movies again.

For example, in the “before times”, I would have probably skipped seeing Marvel’s upcoming Black Widow at the cinema.

This has been stuck in a web since lockdown, with release date being pushed back and pushed back and pushed back. Now though? I’m genuinely excited to see this Scarlett Johansson-led, action-packed superhero flick on the big screen.

It’s also meant that I’ve been digging the second season of Star Wars sci-fi/western The Mandaloria­n immensely. I liked the first season a lot but this year, having been starved of sci-fi at this scale, quality and expense, has made my enjoyment levels hit way harder.

As has the canny decision by Disney+ to hold back and only release a new episode every Friday, instead of dropping a full season-dump. Had they been available I would have blasted through the whole thing in one sitting.

Now, I’ve found myself looking forward to Fridays with more enthusiasm than usual.

In interviews leading up to release, its show runner Jon Favreau said he’d been heavily influenced by Game of Thrones’ political intrigue and huge cast of conflictin­g characters.

And for me that’s what has made this season so satisfying.

The show hasn’t dropped its throwback, self-contained episodic style – Mando still lands on a planet, has a mini adventure and then zips off again – but its galaxy has expanded greatly through those he’s met and those they’ve joined forces to fight.

We’ve heard of broad warfare, ongoing battles and seen evidence of foul play and long feuds. All of it happening beyond the reach and scope of the show. The quick hellos and goodbyes as Mando briefly dips into these conflicts before dipping out again and leaving them to continue past what we will ever see has given the feeling of a much greater, living universe.

He may be the hero of the show but the Mandaloria­n is an insignific­ant part of his galaxy. This is exactly the way it should be.

I’ve loved every minute of this season.

The only disappoint­ing thing about the series is its truncated eightepiso­de season length. Next week’s will be the finale.

Which means we’ll have to wait a whole year to find out what happens. I couldn’t be happier. I’m going to really enjoy missing it.

 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? A Disney+ decision to release a new episode of The Mandaloria­n, above, every week has Karl Puschmann looking forward to Fridays more than he usually might.
Photo / Supplied A Disney+ decision to release a new episode of The Mandaloria­n, above, every week has Karl Puschmann looking forward to Fridays more than he usually might.
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