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Review

The Marvels: not as bad as everyone says

Luca Fontana
8.11.2023
Translation: Patrik Stainbrook

In truth, I was fearing the next big Marvel flop. But to my surprise, The Marvels isn’t only one of the better Marvel films in recent years – it’s also the shortest!

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.


So. The Marvels. I expected nothing. «And you were still let down». I hear you finishing the sentence – we all know the famous meme. After all, Marvel is rarely covering itself in glory these days. Especially [its movies], even if the comic juggernaut managed one of the most memorable Marvel films ever with Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 earlier this year.

But you know what? The Marvels isn’t bad at all. And certainly not the shitshow feared by fans. On the contrary.

What The Marvels is all about

Strange things are happening in the universe. For example, wormholes used for intergalactic space travel won’t close again. One of them right next to Earth. And when Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson) goes to investigate the phenomenon with S.A.B.E.R. astronaut Monica Rambeau, things get even crazier. Rambeau disappears, and in her place a young girl from New Jersey suddenly appears: Kamala Khan.

But that’s not all. When Carol Danvers aka Captain Marvel is sent to investigate the other end of the wormhole, she too is teleported away – to Kamala Khan’s bedroom! And where Danvers was before, Rambeau suddenly appears. It soon becomes clear that the three of them have unintentionally swapped places.

No one knows why. All they’re sure of is that a kind of bond has been made between their powers. And that the unsealed wormholes were created by a certain Dar-Benn (Zawe Ashton), the new leader of the Kree. She still has unfinished business with Captain Marvel. After all, the heroine destroyed the Kree Supreme Intelligence – and caused great damage to the once glorious Kree empire.

Fresh and lively production – my compliments, Marvel

I really didn’t expect anything, I’ve already said as much. But maybe that’s why The Marvels surprised me all the more. The movie is simply far too entertaining and neatly produced to trash. The action scenes in particular are some of the most refreshing Marvel has produced in recent times – and I was still worried after the first few trailers.

I mean, there’s the three heroines who switch places uncontrollably every time they use their powers. I was already predicting disastrously chaotic production, with incessant cuts back and forth between Danvers, Khan and Rambeau. Think Jason Bourne, wild and making my head spin as a viewer. Mentally, I was chomping at the bit to punish the movie with a devastating label of «tiring».

But director Nia DaCosta proves me wrong. Check out this 1-minute clip that somehow manages to honour the brilliant bus scene from Shang-Chi in its own way without just copying it:

Character work? Yeah, a little

With such varied staging, it’s difficult to get bored. This is also in part thanks to the run time. The movie only lasts 100 minutes – no Marvel superhero flick has ever been this short. In that time, it’s almost forced to be entertaining. Sometimes at the expense of characters, but not as badly as I feared.

Carol Danvers, for example, is much more likeable and approachable than she was in Captain Marvel. There, she presented herself as a flawless, hyper-confident heroine. A superhuman, too perfect and incorruptible to be believable. In The Marvels, this near-legendary status is broken up a bit. Only a bit. But enough so that I can identify with her better.

Verdict: The Marvels is better than I expected

Who’d have thought it? The Marvels actually isn’t the worst movie in Marvel history. There are other releases that deserve this title more, all from Phase 4 of the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

But before that, time flies by. And it doesn’t feel wasted, like I’ll never get it back. Not every Marvel movie has to be as earth-shaking as Guardians 3. A bit of fun in between that doesn’t take me for a fool also works.

I’m satisfied.


The Marvels will be in cinemas from 8 November 2023. Run time: 100 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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