According
to the copyright lawyers. Carol Danvers is the one legally recognized Captain
Marvel, so who am I to argue?
As
usual, I’m going to start with an idea based on stand-up comedy.
In
Bob Newhart’s famous “Abe Lincoln Vs. Madison Avenue” he references The Hidden Persuaders. The point of the
sketch was: if there were modern press agents and advertising during the Civil War,
and there was no Abraham Lincoln, they would have had to create one.
Similarly,
the Marvel Cinematic Universe decided that they needed a high powered, patriotic
garbed, female, focal point hero in their pantheon, with connections to the
Avengers, outer space, and the Infinity Stones so they created one out of the character
ingredients they had handy.
Ignoring
the whole Shazam fiasco, there have been a string of various “Captain Marvel”s
at Marvel Comics of varying race, gender and planet of origin.
Carol
Danvers has existed in the Marvel universe since way back in 1967, as an air
force officer who knew the (male, Kree) Captain Marvel. Since then she’s been Ms. Marvel, Binary,
Warbird, and only for about the last seven years Captain Marvel. (We've been reading her newest series, because my daughter learned how to "follow the writer" in comics at a much younger age than I did, and Kelly Thompson is awesome.)
For
much of that time, she varied between “supporting character” and “Avenger or
other team member without a solo book.”
Notice neither of these are “premier female super hero of the franchise
in patriotic looking gear.”
And
frankly, that doesn’t matter at all.
Comic
books have lived by ret-cons for most of their existence, rewriting universes
and their history to better fit within the storytelling needs of the time of
their release. Similarly, the Marvel
Cinematic Universe picks and chooses elements from the entire history of Marvel
Comics to tell exciting and fun tales that appeal to all viewers, not just
comic book geeks like me.
Captain Marvel is yet another
fantastically successful storytelling endeavor, and fun movie.
I’ve
read reviews pointing out the only down side is the slow opening. This shows how jaded we’ve become as an
audience for these things. The opening
exposition included the reveal of yet another entirely new alien world
including the sights, sounds, culture and military operations. But Marvel’s given us a whole swath of those already;
therefore it’s become business as usual.
The
de-aging CGI is staggering, young Nick Fury and Phil Coulson don’t stand out at
all compared to the rest of the cast.
Young actors may be in big trouble now that studios can easily combine
youthful looks with the experience and skill that comes with age.
Like
the really good retcons in the comic book medium these films come from, the
connections to what has gone before in terms of artifacts, alien races and
characters are seamless. But there are
enough twists and turns toward and away from the expectations of previous
movies, and comic book stories to keep the story exciting and unexpected as it
flies along.
Speaking
of flying along, Brie Larson joins an elite group. Her discovery of flight moment carried the
same enthusiastic realism and believability that I’ve only seen twice before.
The Christopher Reeve Superman and Robert Downey Jr. in the original Iron Man.
That’s some seriously high level superhero company there. She wears the mantle well and I’m greatly looking
forward to seeing her in crossover films and solo adventures.
Captain
Marvel will fit in amazingly well with any of the other Marvel characters, and
hold her own. She’s tough and serious
when needed, and can be downright terrifying. But she can also snark and smirk
with the best of them. (Nick Fury being one of the “best of them” including my
favorite moment, his musical reason that Marvel sounds cooler.) More importantly, for a superhero, she was
shown bonding strongly to and acting as a fantastic role model for kids.
The
connection to her awesome friend Maria Rambeau, contained elements of all of
those things, along with a hint of characters to come. (Check the call sign, members of FOOM.)
It
gets harder and harder to review the Marvel Franchise, because it’s all so
good. We cheered, we laughed, and we
gasped. I don’t want to spoil anything,
which means all I can say about the Kree and the Skrulls were, they were scary
and sympathetic, and sweet and terrifying. In summary, much happened that was
unexpected. I may have yelled out an expletive
or two involving some of the larger surprises concerning household pets and
traditional stand offs.
Captain
Marvel is another fantastic piece of the ever growing puzzle Marvel is building.
It
was set in the past, giving us more explanations for the universe we know. And it gets some amazing bonus points for
having excellent music that was still true to the 1990’s period it was set in.
However,
it also set us up for the future, both by making Carol Danvers a character whose
powers and personality can lead the Avengers or whatever comes next, and by
leaving threads of other stories and characters to come.
One
thing comic books don’t have to deal with is the effect of the real passage of
time on its characters, only its readers.
By bringing in new talent of this caliber and retooling their vast array
of available characters, the Marvel Cinematic Universe can continue forward
without having to reboot or recast every couple of years, and still focus on
the audience’s needs.
One
final note from this Silver/ Bronze Age DC comics fan. After Ryan Reynolds
basically playing Kyle Rayner, it was very cool to get what was a classic era,
honest and fearless test pilot, becoming the best of the best of an energy
powered space police force, right down the brown bomber jacket.
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