Black Adam
Black Adam is an American superhero film released in 2022, based on the DC Comics character of the same name. Produced by New Line Cinema, DC Films, Seven Bucks Productions and Flynn Picture, this is a spin-off film of Shazam! (2019), and is the 11th film in the DC Extended Universe (DCEU). Directed by Jaume Collet-Serra and written by Adam Sztykiel, Rory Haines and Sohrab Noshirvani, the film stars Dwayne Johnson as the title character alongside Aldis Hodge, Noah Centineo, Sarah Shahi, Marwan Kenzari , Quintessa Swindell, Bodhi Sabongui and Pierce Brosnan.
While Black Adam isn’t a groundbreaking top-tier superhero film, it is an entertaining superhero movie that makes it up with the charm from star Dwayne Johnson as an anti-hero and guilty pleasures including non-stop action, irreverent humor and a high kill count.
Dwayne Johnson carves out his own superhero niche with his anti-hero, a concept which the film wholeheartedly commits to. People die in this movie. My mouth dropped at Black Adam’s kill count. As the numbers increased, the movie set itself in a tonal sweet spot that Marvel won’t go near and Sony hasn’t quite achieved with its Spider-Man villain films. What Black Adam does is downright wrong, but it’s entertaining as heck to watch it play out.
The current culture has become so comic book literate where the story can just introduce a superhero team, the Justice Society of America, without any introduction. You get to know this team in the midst of the action, wondering about their origin stories or how they got their powers. It works, despite being overly stuffed.
Pierce Brosnan as Doctor Fate is quite the scene-stealer, providing gravitas that grounds the conflict at hand and adds another level of seriousness. He’s a fascinating character. I hope for a Doctor Fate solo movie with Pierce Brosnan.
Aldis Hodge’s Hawkman is a great straight man to Dwayne’s Black Adam. The heart of the movie comes from the moral argument between them. One character wholeheartedly believes in killing and the other is completely opposed to it. To quote the Dark Knight, this battle of wills is an unstoppable force meeting an unmovable object.
In essence, Hawkman sets up for Dwayne Johnson to be Black Adam. The character doesn’t want to back one step from his principles and just doesn’t give a rats. It’s the best part of the film and often hilarious.
The villain was not memorable and was just a big baddie for The Rock to fight in the climax. That said, this villain is no worse than the standard Marvel villain in an origin story.
In conclusion, Black Adam is a fun movie for a one-time watch. I enjoyed it with my inner Simpsons Comic Book Guy turned off and had a good time.
I suspect I won’t have the first time experience on a second watch. The seams would crack. I would see that the young JSA members were cast to appeal to the teen demographic and a boy was placed at the center of the story to appeal to children, and the fact that the same boy does a voice-over in the opening credits is odd. On a second watch, I would realize it was all a bit silly.
Views: 250
Genre: Action, Adventure, Science Fiction
Director: Anna Rane, Arielle DePace, Brian Avery Galligan, Carley Armstrong, Dea Cantu, Greg Rementer, Jason Suhrke, Jaume Collet-Serra, Josy Capkun, Megan Schmidt, Nick Chambers, Nick Satriano, Philip Banks, Robert Ratner, Ryan J. Pezdirc, Ryan Robert Howard, Spencer R. Williams, Zack Annesty
Actors: Aldis Hodge, Bodhi Sabongui, Dwayne Johnson, James Cusati-Moyer, Marwan Kenzari, Mo Amer, Noah Centineo, Pierce Brosnan, Quintessa Swindell, Sarah Shahi