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Review

Guardians of the Galaxy: Volume 3 – the grittiest Marvel film yet

Luca Fontana
28.4.2023

If Guardians of the Galaxy: Volume 3 is anything, it’s a soulful, emotionally charged farewell to beloved characters. Sometimes funny, sometimes sad and often surprisingly dark, it’s a worthy send-off for the trilogy. Thank you, James Gunn!

Let me start off by saying that my review contains no spoilers. Any information stated here is featured in trailers that have already been released.


I still remember exactly what it was like to see the first Guardians of the Galaxy movie at the cinema. I didn’t yet have a clue who the characters were. A fox and a tree in space, or something along those lines. No wonder Marvel initially had doubts about whether the film would be a success. Back in 2014, the comic book giant was by no means considered the seemingly indomitable producer of box office hits it is today – issues aside.

Nearly nine years later, we’re heading toward the story’s inevitable conclusion; a conclusion surprisingly far removed from the series’ past light-heartedness. Guardians 3 is clearly more mature –

and darker.

What’s Guardians of the Galaxy: Volume 3 about?

If there’s one thing the High Evolutionary (Chukwudi Iwuji) despises, it’s imperfection. This fuels his desire to create the perfect society, populated by perfect beings. In reality, however, as Rocket (Bradley Cooper) puts it in the trailer, the truth is much simpler: he just hates things the way they are.

All of this leads the villain to set his deadliest creation yet – Adam Warlock (Will Poulter) – on Rocket. What the High Evolutionary hasn’t factored into the equation, however, are the remaining Guardians of the Galaxy.

James Gunn: saviour, messiah – and pariah

That is until 2018, when the internet took a trip down memory lane.

The end of an era.

It’s getting emotional up in here – seriously emotional

But Gunn has done the legwork to end «his» story in a manner worthy of that description. Not just because the film signals the finish line for himself and swathes of the original cast, but because the Guardians’ story is done and dusted – with all its consequences. Yes, that sounds cryptic, but I don’t want to risk giving you any spoilers by saying more.

Either way, Gunn skillfully deploys this rare freedom. After all, his work no longer needs to take the next phase of the never-ending MCU into account. Instead, for one last time, the director, who writes the screenplays for all his films himself, has given each character just the story they deserve after all this time. No-one is left behind. No character development falls short. And everybody gets their last big, meaningful moment.

Above all, Rocket.

After all, what Marvel does 99 per cent of the time when things get sad is ruin the moment with the most inappropriate humour imaginable. It’s absurd; as if the Marvel bosses don’t trust younger audiences to feel anything. I mean, God forbid we want some depth.

Even for me.

He’s a lousy dog, this villain

For a Marvel villain to evoke such strong feelings despite a lack of motive, something must have gone right with Gunn’s script – or Iwuji’s acting. Even though it’s often said that the best villains are ones with motives we understand. But in the end, the «why» probably isn’t as important as the «how». Either way, the High Evolutionary has well and truly earned my revulsion.

Conclusion: rather than family fun, there’s drama with real emotion

Well done, James Gunn.


Guardians of the Galaxy: Volume 3 hits theatres on 3 May 2023. Running time: 150 minutes. Age rating: 12.

Header image: Disney / Marvel Studios

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I write about technology as if it were cinema, and about films as if they were real life. Between bits and blockbusters, I’m after stories that move people, not just generate clicks. And yes – sometimes I listen to film scores louder than I probably should.


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