Director:
Nia DaCostaGuión:
Megan McDonnellCámara:
Sean BobbittMúsica:
Laura KarpmanReparto:
Brie Larson, Iman Vellani, Teyonah Parris, Samuel L. Jackson, Zawe Ashton, Lashana Lynch, Mohan Kapur, Zenobia Shroff, Seo-joon Park, Reggie, Saagar Shaikh (más)Streaming (3)
Sinopsis(1)
Carol Danvers, o lo que es lo mismo, la Capitana Marvel, ha recuperado la identidad que le arrebataron los tiránicos kree y se ha cobrado su venganza contra la Inteligencia Suprema. Pero una serie de consecuencias imprevistas la obligan a cargar con el peso de un universo desestabilizado. Cuando el deber la lleva hasta un anómalo agujero de gusano vinculado a una revolucionaria kree, sus poderes se conectan con los de su superfán de Nueva Jersey Kamala Khan, también conocida como Ms. Marvel, y con los de su distanciada sobrina, ahora astronauta en S.A.B.E.R., la capitana Monica Rambeau. Juntas, las integrantes de este insólito trío tendrán que unir fuerzas y aprender a trabajar en equipo como “The Marvels” para salvar el universo. (Disney España)
(más)Videos (51)
Reseñas (9)
Who would have thought that Marvel will go against the trends and serve us a movie under two hours for the fourth time in 2 years. The question is if it's not just out of necessity, as Marvels has only the main three heroines, which I didn't mind by themselves, but otherwise a completely mediocre plot with a completely lackluster and absolutely uninteresting antagonist (I don't want to remember the actress's name and I hope I never see her again) and unfortunately, the usual humor for kids, which annoyed me from the beginning to the end, and I never laughed once. Especially Kamalina's family annoyed me extremely and it's absurd how Disney tries to give minorities space and in the series turns them into silly national caricatures. Well, not even Fury saved it. Surprisingly, I quite liked the first installment despite the hate back then; I was in the cinema several times, but here the third star was saved only and exclusively by the end credits scene. ()
Better than Quantumania and I do believe Nia DaCosta is a talented director. The problem is that she said she wanted to make a film that her young daughter would enjoy watching. And that's it. The target audience for this mess is somewhere between the ages of five and early adolescence, and the rest of us are probably going to have a hard time digesting this over-the-top girl-power manifesto, and with a female villain who is the biggest casting blunder in the entire Marvel franchise. Yes, it's got one funny idea (the scene to the music of A.L. Webber), but watching the rest of it is only entertaining in its reassurance of how Marvel is in a downhill and doesn't know which way to go. ()
I am terribly sorry that genre viewer fatigue, fandom toxicity (who says there isn't any here, let them browse any discussion forum), and unfortunate timing collided here of all places. Of course, I can respect the fact that many people get lost in the universe and that this is the intersection that demonstrates most clearly that escaping from such a labyrinth is not easy. It's not just about connecting two film series; here you have to immediately check out multiple TV series, where Ms. Marvel and WandaVision are an absolute must if the experience is going to make any sense. Also refresh your memory/rewatch Captain Marvel and Avengers: Endgame, arrange an approximate timeline, remember all the features that this shuffled universe includes, will include, or could include. It's an endless task; and just because I enjoy it, it doesn't mean everyone else does too, and honestly, going to the cinema to unwind yet not being able to relax completely is a completely understandable objection. Unfortunately, I feel that the audience here has refused even to meet the film halfway, and of course that will inevitably harm the result. And when they're down, why not kick them again. Marvels shines with unparalleled light for me. I don't know exactly how they did it, because the script is a bit messy in terms of genre, connecting the main Marvels with Monica could have ended up as a forced digression, but just the opposite. The power of friendship, that ordinary driving force of many adventure blockbusters, is in first place here, with a classic smaller team in second, and fighting an understandable villain in strange new worlds in third. It recalls classic adventure movies, where there is humor, likable actors, beautiful actresses, and super heroes the viewer wants to see over and over again. All of that is here, on a silver platter. Don't let this feast disgust you, one day we will miss it. ()
A below-average and obviously mismanaged Marvel film, which impresses with unexpectedly decent action scenes and some chemistry between the central trio. Apart from that, it can only offer a not very interesting story, boring visuals and really very poor attempts to work with the characters and their psychology. And some really really idiotic ideas. It's not a complete blunder like, say, the latest Thor, but it's not a good movie either. ()
On paper, it meets the quota. A girly Marvel movie with an unlikeable and downright repulsive villain packed with visual effects. There's no shortage of environmental overtones, even saving the sun at the end. The script connects series characters, but simply to somehow link them to what's happening on the silver screen. The biggest WTF is the Planet of the Songs, which is probably the thing my four-year-old daughter will like best. The secret invasion doesn't make sense after that (I guess it took place in another reality), and the cats save the day. Somehow. Pretty pointless episode defying physics, logic, but it goes by pretty quickly. Zawe Ashton is disgusting. Brie Larson is awfully nice, especially in a sports bra. Too bad she's not getting better scripts. ()
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