Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Superhero movies offer variety for kids

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IT IS shaping up to be a season of heroes. Remember last year’s Wonder Woman and Captain Underpants? This season is packed with heroes of the real-life, animated and even animal-like varieties. It would be easy to get hero overload. So we’ve chosen half-a-dozen movies that let you enjoy the hero’s journey at a regular kid’s pace.

Solo: A Star Wars Story (Opened May 25, PG-13)

Perhaps the most beloved

Star Wars character, played by Harrison Ford in four movies, gets his own film. The story explores how a young Han Solo (Alden Ehrenreich) teams up with furry sidekick Chewbacca and earns his reputation as a smuggler and pilot who thinks highly of himself.

Trailers promise plenty of highspeed chases and blaster battles.

The gamble is whether fans want a second actor for a Solo.

Incredible­s 2

(June 15, PG)

The Parr family hasn’t changed a bit since moviegoers left them 14 years ago. Mr Incredible, Elastigirl, Violet, Dash and Jack-Jack are trying to lead a normal life, but are eager to return to crime-fighting.

When Elastigirl gets the chance to fight to bring back the outlawed superheroe­s, Mr Incredible must up his dad game, including calming explosive baby Jack-Jack and wrestling with maths problems.

Ant-Man and the Wasp

(July 6, not yet rated)

Bigger isn’t always better in the Marvel universe. A techno-suit allows Scott Lang (Paul Rudd) to shrink to the size of an insect, but with superhuman powers.

This sequel finds Ant-Man unable to defeat a villain named Ghost without the help of the Wasp (Evangeline Lilly). She’s no sidekick, her supersuit also allows her to fly, and she isn’t about to let Ant-Man forget it.

Teen Titans Go! to the Movies (July 27, PG)

Robin is desperate for his team of junior heroes to star in a movie. Hollywood, however, isn’t interested. To impress movie makers, the Teen Titans look to defeat Slade, the new bad guy aiming for world domination.

But even Slade doesn’t take them seriously and hurls childish insults in their direction.

Christophe­r Robin (August 3) The boy from Winnie the Pooh was no superhero, but the man he has become in this live- action movie has a quiet heroism.

Ewan McGregor plays a weary businessma­n who sends his family on vacation without him because of a crisis at work. When his spirits are low, old friend Pooh appears to remind him of the powers of imaginatio­n.

A.X.L.

(August 24, PG)

This is a boy-and-his-dog story with a tech twist. Teenage Miles stumbles upon a robotic dog named A.X.L., which has advanced artificial intelligen­ce, but the emotional capabiliti­es of a real canine. The military scientists who created A.X.L. are desperate to get him back. But Miles bonds with the dog and risks his life to protect his new best friend.

 ?? PICTURE: GLOBAL ROAD ENTERTAINM­ENT ?? A teen makes friends with robot dog A.X.L.
PICTURE: GLOBAL ROAD ENTERTAINM­ENT A teen makes friends with robot dog A.X.L.

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