‘Captain Marvel’ Review
Girl Power! Not only does this serve as an origin story for Carol Danvers/Captain Marvel, but Anna Boden becomes the first female director of a Marvel movie (she co-directed with Ryan Fleck; they previously collaborated on It’s Kind of a Funny Story, Sugar, and Half Nelson). It’s Marvel’s first solo female superhero movie. It’s actually a prequel to what we’ve previously seen in the MCU.
Oscar winner Brie Larson (Room) stars as Carol Danvers/Captain Marvel and the film opens with her as Vers, a human-Kree hybrid and a soldier of Starforce being trained by Yon-Rogg (Jude Law) for a role in the Kree-Skrulls War. Part of the training includes regular reminders to keep her emotions under control. Not only is Vers a woman but she also shoots sonic blasts from her fists. The filmmakers have not presented her story in chronological order, but have instead utilized flashbacks and memories to let us (and Carol) in on how she obtained her immense powers.
In Marvel tradition, the film uses much humor as it progresses. Proving that the action takes place in the 1990s, the roof literally comes down on a Blockbuster video store (foreshadowing future financial events), as Vers crashes to earth. Soon she has met young agents Fury and Coulson, played by digitally de-aged Samuel L. Jackson and Clark Gregg, respectively. This is, of course, pre-eye patch Fury, although we do get that origin story a bit later in the film. As Vers peruses the Blockbuster shelves, we get a tip of the cap to The Right Stuff and True Lies, and soon thereafter, a nod to Radio Shack, pay phones, pinball machines, pagers, and 90s era Internet speed. The retro bits may be a bit overdone, but the millennial target audience will surely enjoy.
The always interesting Ben Mendelsohn plays Talos, the leader of the shape-shifting Krulls – who also sport the best make-up as they transform from pointy-eared green aliens into exact replicas of humans. Lee Pace returns as Ronan the Accuser, while Djimon Hounsou is Korath and Gemma Chan is Minn-Erva, both part of Starforce. Annette Bening plays the AI Supreme Intelligence, while Mckenna Grace appears as young Carol in flashbacks.
The glimpses of Carol Danvers as a US Air Force fighter pilot lead to the best dramatic scenes of the film – her reuniting with fellow pilot Maria Rambeau (Lashana Lynch) and Maria’s daughter Monica (Akira Akbar). At first, I was taken aback that Marvel dared cast a black actress in the role of stereotypical supportive sidekick, but then Ms. Lynch got her own impressive action chase sequence (similar to Star Wars) and kicked some serious alien tail. Those familiar with the comics know that Maria Rambeau is the mother of Photon, a character likely to appear deeper in the universe.
The co-directors also co-wrote the script with Geneva Robertson-Dworet, and Nicole Perlman and Meg LeFauve contributed to the story. The strong female presence is impressive both on camera and off, as Pinar Toprak’s score complemented the heavy 1990’s rock music soundtrack. Again, nostalgia seems ever-present, as does the humor (Goose the cat/flerken) and good fun that existed in Thor: Ragnarok and Ant-Man and the Wasp. Carol Danvers and her backstory also seem a bit more relatable than that of Wonder Woman.
Marvel offered up a nice tribute to the late Stan Lee by providing a new opening featuring his many cameos over the years. And yes, he was able to film his cameo for this one prior to his death in November 2018. So we have an origin story not just of Captain Marvel, but also of the Fury eye patch, the Avengers Initiative, and a prequel to all Marvel movies we’ve seen in the past few years. Two post-film stingers are included: one expected and necessary, while the other is good for a laugh. It’s an inspiring story of a young girl who repeatedly fell down and got up and brushed herself off every time – even before her fists and eyeballs could shoot energy streams. It’s fitting and about time that young girls now have their own superhero to emulate.