Friday, 12 April 2019

Shazam! (2019) - Review

Review:

*Originally written April 12th, 2019*

What a pleasant surprise this turned out to be. I had pretty much lost all faith in DC's films after the atrocious Justice League and thoroughly boring Aquaman and I was ready to absolutely hate this after the lame, cringe-inducing trailers that had more ready to kill myself than actually go see this. Somehow this not only managed to be great, but is by far the best of DC's offerings so far (which isn't hard, but I gotta give them credit!)

What really put me off from the trailers was the utterly embarrassing tone this looked to deliver. After failing to make darker comic-book films that connected with anyone, it seemed they were trying to change things up by copying Marvel's problem of throwing cringe-inducing, easy and painful jokes into the mix rather than take anything seriously and make you care. As much as I like to rag on Marvel's painful humour aimed at 6 year olds, the trailer for this stooped to the extreme low with Zachary Levi briefly doing a Fortnite dance. Marvel might suffer from tonal whiplash, but hell, they've never gone that far to please the crowd they insult as they clearly believe they can't concentrate on a serious scene without a jokey-joke thrown in the middle. 

Thankfully, I those trailers turned out to be a very misleading idea of what to expect. This is definitely a more light-hearted adventure for DC, but it actually has heart and a story that I actually cared about for once with these films, mirroring a tone more in line with the Christopher Reeve's Superman films and that's a good thing. It's not perfect, but this is still a very sweet and worthy film.

Shazam! follows a young orphan Billy, who goes from foster home to foster home trying to figure out where his mother is after getting separated from her as a very small child. Along the way he ends up receiving powers that allow him to turn into an electricity wielding superpower with the body of an adult and ends up getting hunted by a power hungry villain who wants his powers in order to take over the world.

Yikes, on paper that does not sounds good, new or interesting, but it somehow works! What struck me early on is how little action or CGI there is to Shazam!, there's a bit of that towards the end, but for the most part, this is a very character focused journey following Billy as he tries to find his place in the world. It's helped by just how good Asher Angel is as Billy, a very likeable and compelling lead that slowly changes over the course of the film as he learns he can use his powers for a better purpose and make the world a better place for the world around him. It's a genuinely sweet and hopeful arc that has been very missing from these DC films.


Zachary Levi also does an excellent job as the adult Billy in the form of Shazam (or Captain Sparkles). Levi is an actor I don't think I've seen this Chuck, which is a massively underrated show that will definitely be your thing if you like geeky/nerd culture TV shows. Levi brings so much charm to a role that could have been annoying, he perfectly embodies a teenager coming to terms with an extraordinary event, but also using that to his advantage to do things like get into strip clubs and buy alcohol. 

This does suffer from some of the usual super-hero trappings though. Sadly, the finale is a bit of a CGI mess of not very interesting things happening. I loved the idea of a finale at a packed carnival fair, but they do very little with this, it's just bits of CGI hitting each other and the designs of the monsters leave a lot to be desired. It's says a lot that the film is at its most boring when action actually happens. It might have helped if this had been trimmed to a more lenient run-time as these feels about 20 minutes too long as it is.

Then Mark Strong is pretty wasted as a forgettable villain with very little to make him stand out. He's power-hungry villain with CGI demons who do most his work for him. Completely uninteresting and a complete waste of a talented actor who seems to have slipped back into a role he stopped being typecast as nearly a decade ago. 

With DC's restructuring, I'm glad they've ditched this whole shared universe thing to tell shared stories. Shazam! stands completely on its own, but at the same time does take place in the same universe as the Justice League, there are nice nods to Batman and Superman, plus an odd cameo, but it really does feel like its own thing. I'm very interested to see what happens with these characters and future films. Especially if they focus more on stand-alone stories rather than trying to rush and get everyone together for an event film.


Shazam! is a HUGE step in the right direction for DC and their strongest work yet, which is something I never would have thought of saying after those abysmal trailers. It suffers from an underwhelming finale, but strong character work, two excellent lead performances and a genuine heart beneath all this makes this stand out from most of the other superhero films out there at the moment.

8/10 Dans

Shazam! is out now in cinemas in the UK
Watch the trailer below:

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