Writers: Anna Boden, Ryan Fleck & Geneva Robertson-Dworet (Screenplay) Anna
Boden, Ryan Fleck, Geneva
Robertson-Dworet, Nicole Pearlman Meg LaFauve (Story)
Directors: Anna Boden & Ryan Fleck
Much of the press leading up to the latest film in the MCU has been
centered upon the gender of the titular Captain Marvel. This is understandable considering
that after 21 films, while there have been female characters fundamental to the
Marvel Universe, Brie Larson’s Marvel is the first female fronted (and perhaps
more importantly, first female director) superhero film Marvel have produced.
Given we are 11 years into the Marvel franchise, that is deplorable, and this
has given way to a multitude of think pieces from The Guardian to The
Hollywood Reporter and has also given rise to a series of negative review
bombing campaigns, adding further proof that the well of obnoxious toxicity
that fuels the internet seems infinite.
The problem with the focus on Captain Marvel’s gender is two-fold;
firstly, if the film is rubbish it is used by sexist fans, simple critics and
idiotic studio-execs that the reason is because it was female fronted, and we
get treated to headlines such as; ‘WOMEN ARE TERRIBLE AND RUIN ALL PHYSICAL
SPACE.’[1] And
this will make studios even more reluctant to back female fronted or directed
films. This criticism does not work the other way; when The Expendables is
released and it is a worse affront to humanity than the Partition of India, the
reason is not due to the gender of the cast. Secondly, the focus on gender and
its importance in terms of glass ceilings (which is indisputable) allow for
films to seem revolutionary when they are not necessarily (see: Wonder Woman).
Ultimately, something is either good or isn’t and this focus on gender, both
justified and abusive, makes watching the film more political that it perhaps
should be.
Anyway, Captain Marvel is, mostly, awesome. Directed by Mississippi Grind’s Anna Boden and Ryan
Fleck, Captain Marvel is the story of
Brie Larson’s Vers, a warrior from the planet Kree, who are in a seemingly
perpetual war with the Skrulls. The Skrulls are shape shifting lizard-like
aliens who engage in endless terrorist attacks against the Kree. Vers is under
the tutelage of Jude Law’s Yon-Rogg, a military veteran and leader of Vers’s
command. Vers is an extremely powerful fighter, who has the ability shoot
deadly magnetic energy from her clenched fists, but according to Yon-Rogg, Vers
has no control over her emotions and is therefore a flawed fighter.
Like many Marvel films, especially the origin stories, the first act
is laborious. This is partly due to the Memento-like
fact that Vers is missing a lot of memories, and is unsure of her past identity.
But it is mainly down to the fact we start on an alien planet, which has some
kind of AI overlord called the Supreme Intelligence (who manifests as Annette
Benning for Vers) but the script does not work well enough for us to understand
the planet with any depth. In particular, given the vast array of colours and
body-types the aliens that occupy The
Guardians of the Galaxy have, why are the Kree so boringly humanoid and
white?
While on a mission, Vers’s Kree ship is attacked by some Skrulls and she ends plunging towards a planet called C-53. This is Earth to me and you and Badgertopia to your weird cousin who worships badgers. Vers crash lands into a Blockbuster video store (ask your parents), an extremely funny way establishing the 90s time period. From here the film begins to fly and Vers comes into contact with S.H.I.E.L.D agent Nick Fury, played by a de-aged Samuel L. Jackson. The Skrulls, led by the excellent Ben Mendhelsohn as Talos, are set on infiltrating Earth and it is up to Fury and Vers to stop them. This sets up the film’s central relationship and the buddy cop chemistry of Larson and Jackson is charming and often hilarious. It’s nice to see Jackson and Fury’s character given some depth and nuance, and for perhaps the first time in a Marvel film, Jackson actually gets to properly act and not just walk into rooms telling Iron Man to calm down.
As the mystery surrounding Vers’s identity unravels, the film becomes
more and more confident. Larson is excellent as Vers, she is not just tough but
has a genuine humour and non-stereotypical sass to her. When she initially
lands on Earth, she regards the whole place with a bemused superiority, which
is actually funny rather than annoying like Tony Stark’s endless capacity for
arrogance. As Vers discovers her identity and the truth about the wars between
the Kree and the Skrulls, Captain Marvel’s
feminist core is codified. It is not simply the fact that Vers shoots an engine
that contains hyper-speed stuff that explodes which she absorbs that causes her
to become the most powerful figure in the universe. Rather, her acceptance of
her true identity, her ability to see the truth of the Kree is fundamental to
her gaining real agency over her life. She can only truly access her powers once
she gains agency and fully expresses her emotions, rather than repress them.
This is a deeply emotional moment and Larson’s performance as she becomes Carol
Danvers and then Captain Marvel is stunning. The deft mixture of confidence and
vulnerability is played to perfection and is proof that Boden and Fleck have
created a real person, and not a punching meme.
Captain Marvel is certainly one
of the best films from the MCU. It’s a period piece certainly, there are not
many mega-blockbuster’s that contain a fighting sequence set to ‘Just a Girl’.
Larson and Jackson are excellent together, and the VFX for the de-ageing
process is staggering. Boden and Fleck, despite the flawed first third, do well
to create both alien worlds and a fully realized 90s time period. But most
importantly, and perhaps also most stupidly given it needs saying, it has fully
destroyed the idea the female superheroes are not captivating enough to hold
their own feature. Captain Marvel is
fun, propulsive and an excellent feminist hero for the girls and boys who need
her.
8/10
[1] Actual Daily Mail headline.
Honestly.