San Antonio Express-News

Delightful­ly bad movie embraces the camp

- By Katie Walsh

Once upon a time, comic book movies used to be camp, riding the line of silliness and sincerity that would suit the cinematic adaptation of a slim illustrate­d volume about superheroe­s and their exploits.

But then, more than 20 years ago or so, the superhero industrial complex rejected camp, becoming dark and gritty, then sarcastic and flip, then cycling back to wholesomel­y earnest again for a time.

However, in these days of waning superhero enthusiasm with fatigue setting in, it seems there’s an opening for comic book movies to be stupid — stupidly fun — again, especially if “Madame Web” can tell their fortunes.

To get a little pretentiou­s about the latest ultra-silly Sony Marvel movie — Susan Sontag, you would have loved “Madame Web.”

Or maybe writer and critic Sontag would have found it offensive. Either way, it perfectly fits the rubric she lays out in her famed essay “Notes on ‘Camp,’ ” because, to borrow the phrase, “Madame Web” is a comic book movie “in quotation marks.”

It is also the purest form of camp in that it is unintentio­nally so; certainly director and cowriter S.J. Clarkson, the director of dozens of television episodes, including the Marvel series “Jessica Jones” and “The Defenders,” didn’t intend for “Madame Web” to be as silly as it is.

The writers, Matt Sazama and Burk Sharpless, who wrote the last baffling Sony Marvel movie, “Morbius,” which was meme’d into infamy last spring, are also responsibl­e for the film’s campiness, in that the dialogue is laughably cumbersome and unnatural.

But the most important element of the camp on display in “Madame Web” is the madame herself, Dakota Johnson, who has a preternatu­ral ability to apply the aforementi­oned “quotation marks” to a line reading with the combinatio­n of her guileless blue eyes and a smirk on her lips, a skill she deploys to viral fame during almost every press appearance.

It is a performanc­e akin to Michelle Williams in “Venom” (yet another silly fun Sony Marvel flick) in which the actress is in on the joke, but she is also taking her role very seriously.

Is “Madame Web” a good movie? No. Is it hilariousl­y delightful? Often yes.

The film follows an obscure Marvel character who has the ability to see the future because she was bit by a poisonous spider in utero while her mom was researchin­g spiders in the Amazon. The year is 2003, for some reason probably having to do with the age of a future Peter Parker, the other kid famously bit by a spider.

Johnson plays Cassie Web, a paramedic in Queens, whose main personalit­y trait is “mean to children.” Her social awkwardnes­s is pinned on the fact that she grew up in foster care, after being born in a mystical grotto in Peru while her mother, Constance (Kerry Bishé), died in childbirth.

Constance was, of course, researchin­g spiders in the Amazon, as one does, before her security guard, Ezekiel (Tahar Rahim) turns on her, shooting the team of researcher­s and stealing the spider and its magical peptides.

Heavily pregnant Constance is rescued by a team of indigenous Peruvian “spider men” known as “Arañas,” but they can only save baby Cassie.

Ezekiel hoards the spider peptides for himself, and 30 years later, he’s now a sort of cursed dark Spider-man, tormented by nightmares of being killed by a trio of spunky Spider-women. He attempts to track down these future assassins using surveillan­ce tech pilfered from the NSA, which is piloted, hilariousl­y, by Zosia Mamet of “Girls.”

Cassie is also having her own terrible, horrible, no good, very bad week. First, she plummets into a river while saving a passenger from a car wreck, triggering a hallucinat­ory neardeath experience. Then she starts having terrifying visions and harrowing déjà vu, which leads to her inadverten­tly abducting three teenage girls from a Metro-north train in order to save them from dark Spiderman.

To evade Ezekiel, she’ll have to harness the previously unknown powers of her spider peptide-enhanced mind.

As Cassie, Johnson is so compelling­ly weird that you can’t take your eyes off her. She delivers every clunker of a line with her full chest and a twinkle in her eye.

The three other gals — Sydney Sweeney, Celeste O’connor and Isabela Merced — well, they were clearly cast for their potential future stand-alone film, which has to be DOA at this point. They’re all a bit awkward and forced, and none are working on the galaxy-brain levels of Johnson.

Sontag wrote that to talk about camp is to betray it, and it’s impossible to accurately describe the bad-good charms of “Madame Web,” an appreciati­on of which requires the kind of sensibilit­y that celebrates the unnatural, the artificial, the exaggerate­dly “off.”

Johnson gets it, and for those who also do, it’s kind of a thrill to get tangled in her web.

Running time: 116 minutes. Rating: PG-13 (for violence/ action and language)

 ?? Jessica Kourkounis/sony Pictures Entertainm­ent ?? Dakota Johnson, second from left, is in on the joke — and she’s spot on as a Marvel character who can see the future. Isabela Merced, Sydney Sweeney and Celeste O’connor are less compelling.
Jessica Kourkounis/sony Pictures Entertainm­ent Dakota Johnson, second from left, is in on the joke — and she’s spot on as a Marvel character who can see the future. Isabela Merced, Sydney Sweeney and Celeste O’connor are less compelling.

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