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‘Batman v Superman’: The Best Alternate Versions

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We now live in a post ‘Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice’ world. Thanks to director Zack Snyder and the DC Extended Universe we’ve now been granted two new versions of the classic characters. Let’s take a look at some of the best alternate versions of the both Batman and Superman.

Batman Flashpoint

Flashpoint Batman

In the Flashpoint alternate timeline created by Flash’s arch-enemy; Zoom, Batman is a different person altogether. In this timeline, Bruce Wayne died that night outside the theatre and his parents in turn survived. This saw Thomas Wayne become the Batman, a much more violent version who saw nothing wrong with murdering criminals. However what makes this take of the Caped Crusader so interesting is that it was Martha Wayne, Thomas’s wife and Bruce’s mother who went on to become the nefarious Joker.

 
Batman Beyond

Batman Beyond

After the end of the hugely successful Timm/Dini Batman animated series of the 90s, the same team created a completely new take on Batman, a teenage Batman set in the near-future. This Batman was Terry McGinnis, commonly known as Batman Beyond. He was later added to DC comics through various different runs due to the popularity of the show. This version of Batman sported a more technological suit and benefited from having Bruce Wayne himself in a mentor (or Alfred) type role and was regularly in the ear of this new Batman.

 

Batman Frank Miller

Frank Miller’s Batman

Frank Miller’s Batman or more commonly known at the Dark Knight Returns Batman was an older and initially retired Batman who is forced back in the cowl and cape to clean up Gotham City once again. A much more violent, grizzled and angry Batman who benefited from a whole career of fighting crime before coming back. Frank Miller’s take on Batman brought the dark back to the character and is often referred to as the definitive portrayal of the character. This alternate version went on to influence the mainstream DC continuity as well as every film performance since 1989.

 

Superman Red Son

Red Son Superman

In the Mark Millar scribed, Red Son, the infant Superman’s ship crashes in the Soviet Union rather the wholesome, Smallville, USA. Raised to champion communism rather than truth, justice and the American way, Red Son Superman becomes a ruler who leads by force. Red Son also provides a fascinating rebooted and modern look at Superman’s origin in the climax of the story.

 
Ultraman

Ultraman

A resident of Earth-3 and the leader of the Crime Syndicate, Ultraman is an exact mirror copy of the traditional Superman we all know. In this universe all the familiar heroes are in fact the villains and where Lex Luthor is the leader of the Justice League. Ultraman is such a compelling version of Superman as in every way that Superman is good, Ultraman is downright evil to the point that he is even a cold-blooded killer.

 

Kingdom Come Superman

Kingdom Come Superman

Taking place in a future DC universe, Superman has retired due to the murder of Lois Lane at the hands of the Joker. Joker is later murdered himself by a new hero and Superman is disgusted at how he has been championed by humanity. In the years since his retirement he has grown darker and depressed yet even more powerful and greatly more resistant to the affects of Kryptonite. Superman is of course forced to return and reform his Justice League due to the acts of these new and radical heroes. 

 

What are your favourite versions of both Batman and Superman?

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‘Game of Thrones’ Showrunners Do Not Understand Spoiler Culture

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Showrunners of ‘Game of Thrones’ Question Fan’s Need For Spoilers

Spoilers are so prevalent nowadays. Every fan from every fandom wants to know everything that will happen. You see it heavily with  ‘Walking Dead‘ and now you see it with ‘Game of Thrones‘. The men in charge of HBO’s hit show ‘Game of Thrones‘ discuss how they feel about fan’s obsession with spoilers. With Season 6 being the biggest departure from the novels to date, the showrunners are facing new territory.

Speaking with Entertainment Weekly, showrunners discuss their confusion of why people read spoilers. “Any sane person would admit that knowing this stuff in advance lessens the experience of watching it, and yet people are really hungry to find out things that will make something they presumably like worse for them,” Dan Weiss said. “It’s crazy enough to be the person crawling through the bushes in Northern Ireland with a telescopic lens taking pictures – there are crazy people out there,” David Benioff said.

These statements express exactly my misunderstandings with fans. Why would you dig for details about a show before it comes out instead of just enjoying it organically?

“But the idea that people want to go to sites and find out those spoilers… it’s like if there was a website called Last Pages of Great Books, would you read that?” – David Benioff

How do you feel about spoilers? Are you the type of fan to look for leaked information or do you enjoy watching something with no knowledge?

Game of Thrones‘ returns Sunday, April 24.

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Review: The 100 ‘Nevermore’ – The Masque of the Red A.L.I.E.

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In the best episode of The 100 since ‘Ye Who Enter Here’, ‘Nevermore’ collects most of its characters into one deliciously claustrophobic situation and tightens the noose around each of their throats.

It isn’t coincidence that the two episodes mentioned above are two of the best of the season; both being a course correction against an overreaching and over-plotted series of episodes that roots the show back within the confines of the characters we care for. They were both written by Kim Shumway. Shumway has proven to exhibit a taste for what makes each character tick. She goes to the well of who these people are at that very moment and simply follows them to the next logical place. A master of tension and surprise, Shumway is able to…

SPOILERS NOW OK???

… make us feel bad for a killing that we wished would come all along in Monty’s mom. This isn’t easy stuff and I’m happy Shumway made another appearance at the exact right point in a season that has been too sprawling and piecemeal.

The entirety of ‘Nevermore’ revolves around Clarke, Bellamy, Octavia, Jasper, Monty, Sinclair and the welcomely returned Niylah exorcising the demon A.L.I.E. from Raven (get it… ‘Nevermore’??? Raven??? I love it.). This directness of point gives the show a ticking clock and, against common sense, more room to breathe. We aren’t beholden to the wide open world of moving twenty characters into place so that they can arbitrarily interact with one another, forcing an execution or something. When Clarke and company take Raven to a corner of Niylah’s hut because A.L.I.E. can’t be allowed to gather her surroundings so she can relay info to the initiated at Arkadia, it opens up a playground of emotions for which our characters can come to terms (or not) with their previous actions.

Lindsey Morgan does excellent work here as Raven, going between extreme distress and swift manipulation a la The Exorcist. She turns each character against the other and against Raven herself as A.L.I.E. pulls out every stop so she can recover the 2.0 version of her AI from Clarke. Each raw nerve is exposed from Jasper’s still-mourning of Maya, Clarke’s remorse for the Mt. Weather genocide and Bellamy’s jealousy due to lack of credit for the Mt. Weather genocide.

‘Nevermore’ returned to the series important and surprising moments that truly shape the course for things to come. When Monty is forced to kill his mom (although he probably could’ve tried to tackle her off of Octavia first– plus, Octavia should’ve never been overpowered by Monty’s mom, A.L.I.E-controlled or not), the direction by Ed Fraiman clearly shows us that it is necessary while also pushing Monty to an emotional breaking point. It’s simply and clearly compelling filmmaking. As I said before, Monty’s mom has never been an interesting character and was a person that I wanted gone due to sheer boredom. Shumway and Fraiman made it all work.

In another interesting turn of character, ‘Nevermore’ sets up a showdown between Clarke and Jasper over the Maya’s death at Mt. Weather where Jasper can immediately return the favor for Clarke’s actions. Jasper has the chance to destroy A.L.I.E. 2.0 for good but stops when Clarke tells him that Lexa is still inside the program. This seems initially like a weak character beat because Jasper so easily surmounts his anger so that Clarke wouldn’t have to feel the same loss. Like the entire deftly crafted, hope-restoring, tense and tasty episode preceding it, this feeling gives way to a truer, more complex event when Jasper says:

“I couldn’t do what you did.”

He isn’t over it and it makes complete sense. How about we let Kim Shumway write each episode from now on? ‘Nevermore’ is The 100 at its finest.

Check out my reviews of previous episodes of ‘The 100’ here:

Fallen

Stealing Fire

Terms and Conditions

Thirteen

Bitter Harvest

Hakeldama

Watch The Thrones

Ye Who Enter Here

Wanheda Part 2

Wanheda Part 1

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World’s Finest – An Alternative to ‘Batman v Superman’

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In light of recent disapprovals of ‘Batman v Superman’ from both critics and fans, there is an earlier version of DC’s two biggest titans meeting for the first time.

During the heyday of Bruce Timm’s tenure over the Batman and Superman animated series, the two heroes finally had their proper introductions during Superman’s second season in a three-episode arc titled “World’s Finest.” Many of the points touched on in BvS are here: the initial distrust of the other, physical and verbal crossing of swords, the eventual working together, and a scheme by one Lex Luthor.

world's finest
Credit: DC Comics

However, what the episodes lack in state of the art CGI fight scenes, a Hans Zimmer score and three years of super social media driven hype, it makes up for in a solid story, excellent acting, and a sense of humor desperately missing in Snyder’s work.

The story revolved around a plan by the Joker and Lex Luthor to get rid of Superman. Joker’s involvement is to pocket a clean billion dollars after his operations are all busted by Gotham’s Dark Knight, and Lex simply wants Superman gone. Plain, simple and to the point.

world's finest
Credit: DC Comics

Because of the Joker’s involvement in the plot the Batman decides it’s time to pay Metropolis a visit and see what the Mad Clown Prince of Crime is up to. What I like about this over the BvS is there is no effort to impress or wow the audience with flashy fight scenes or flashy computer graphics.

The focus is on World’s Finest’s story, and it works perfectly. The themes of overcoming differences and prejudices for a common goal fit the story and serve to help both Superman and Batman grow as characters. Added with the subplot of the love triangle between Bruce, Lois Lane, and Clark, it helps add to the initial tension and eventual cooperation between the two superheroes.

And the best part, the entire story of World’s Finest is half the time of BvS, and feels like the length of a motion picture. If you haven’t seen any of the DC series from the 90’s this is a good place to get started, and possibly get rid of the recent Hollywood taste out of their mouths. Though I’d like to imagine what Hans Zimmer might’ve done if he was working on the music.

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Episode 70: ‘Doctor Strange,’ ‘Jungle Book,’ and ‘Fear the Walking Dead’

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Marvel Studios had a big week with the premiere of ‘Captain America: Civil War’ and the release of the ‘Doctor Strange’ trailer, AMC kept the zombie genre alive with the season two premiere of ‘Fear the Walking Dead,’ and Jon Favreau looks to remind you why you love him with ‘Jungle Book.’

EJ Moreno and Matt Sardo have different opinions on all the subjects above; the duo tries to figure out how the casual movie goer will interpret the Marvel’s ‘Doctor Strange.’

Articles mentioned in the podcast:
First Doctor Strange Trailer Debuts On Kimmel
Jungle Book Review: Is This What A PG ‘Revenant’ Would Look Like?
‘Spider-Man: Homecoming’ Is A Terrible, Terrible Title

Do you have a question that you would like answered during the show?
Email your questions to matt@popaxiom.com.

If you are looking to sponsor the podcast email matt@popaxiom.com as well.

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Never heard of Matt Sardo?

For starters, he made the Kessel Run in less than 11 parsecs. Prior to that, he gave Doc Brown the idea for the flux capacitor and led the Resistance to victory over SkyNet – all while sipping a finely crafted IPA. As a radio host, he’s interviewed celebrities, athletes and everyone in between. He’s covered everything from the Super Bowl to Comic-Con.

Who is EJ Moreno?

Is he a trained physician? No. Is a he a former Miss Universe contestant? Possibly. But what we know for sure is he’s a writer, filmmaker, and pop culture enthusiast. Since film school, EJ has written & directed several short films. He’s used his passion of filmmaking to become a movie critic for MonkeysFightingRobots.com.

Places you can find the show:
iTunes
Stitcher

Reviews are greatly appreciated – How to Rate and Review a Podcast in iTunes

Thank you for listening!

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‘Everybody Wants Some!!’ Review: Richard Linklater Lets the Good Times Roll

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Everybody Wants Some!! finds Richard Linklater working in his comfortable zone. His follow-up to the 12-years-in-the-making coming-of-age epic Boyhood, it’s dubbed the “spiritual sequel” to his 1993 cult classic Dazed and Confused, and for damn good reason. This first weekend of college ’80s time-capsule of a movie shares the same DNA as the day-in-the-life high school ensemble piece, spit and all, and it proves the filmmaker hasn’t lost his touch throughout these past two decades. The latest from the Texas-based writer/director is just as boisterous, attentive and fun-loving as his claim-to-fame, if not more so. And it proves, without a shadow of a doubt, that Linklater is truly a one-of-a-kind at his easygoing, meditative craft. While never without its faults, producing superstar Megan Ellison’s newest effort is also never short on positive energy and fast-loving entertainment, and everyone should find something to enjoy this hangout session on film — especially if, like our lead gang of hormonal young athletic stallions, they want nothing more than some good old fashion fun.

The most remarkable quality about Linklater’s latest is how inviting it is from the very start. From the minute it begins, and we follow our scrappy young hunky freshman lead Jake (Blake Jenner) ride into his first weekend of college with nothing more than some tattered clothes and a box of records in the backseat — all while The Knack’s “My Sharona” blares loud and proud out of the stereos — we’re instantly whisked into this time and place. It’s August 1980. The first classes of the semester don’t start for another 72 hours. The sun is beaming. Hot young girls are seemingly everywhere. Lone Star beer might as well be flowing from water foundations or sold on the street. Everything is positively glorious for a hot young 19-year-old like Jake as he strolls into this small Texas university during the final dog days of summer.

As soon as Jake drives his 442 muscle car up to his new lodging, a baseball team fraternity house just a smidge off-campus, it doesn’t take long before he buddies up with the rest of the team. There’s Finnegan (Glenn Howell), the smoothest ladies man of the group; McReynolds (Tyler Hoechlin), a cocky, thick-mustached heavy-hitter; Willoughby (Wyatt Russell), a philosophical hippie stoner and well-respected pitcher; Dale (J. Quinton Johnson), a smooth talker and the team’s only black player; Plummer (Temple Baker), a kinda-slow fellow freshman; and that’s only naming a few. There’s also Roper (Ryan Guzman), a fellow upperclassman ladies man; Billy Autry (Will Brittain), Jake’s no-fun roommate; Jay Niles (Juston Street), a hot-headed, loose-cannon outliner among his peers; and I hope I’m not forgetting anyone. It’s a scampering of hot-shot, sex-crazed, fun-loving men, a couple guys who want little more than to chug a few brews, bed a few women and live the night to the fullest. They’re young, dumb and full of cum, and in a matter of two hours, I felt like I gained nine new friends out of this experience.

Beyond my age and gender, I probably couldn’t be farther removed from these baseball studs. These confident-to-the-nines, prone-to-arrogance jocks with nothing but women and baseball on the mind are pretty much the exact opposite of the type of guys I’d hang out with during these formative years. They couldn’t give one lick about their grades, and they view ladies as little more than a challenge or obstacle to overcome — like everything in the early lives. But under Linklater’s gentle eye, that doesn’t matter. It’s evident the writer/director holds a clear love, a deep affection and a brotherly love for these party-hardy characters, and he makes their optimism shine, their cocksure attitudes endearing and their fun infectious in a completely organic manner. everybody-wants-some-movietw Linklater does a wonderful job of letting us join their friendship in the moment, and making us believe we’re right there with them as they hop from one bar to the next, or work their way from one house party to another, throughout these hormone-heavy nights of debauchery. You can practically smell the aroma of sweat, beer and weed sweeping through the air, and it’s absolutely intoxicating. Everybody Wants Some!! runs for less than two hours, but by the end of the night, I feel like I spend the whole weekend by their side — and I mean that in the best, sincerest way possible. Like Jake, we come to adore and admire each of these hard-headed numbskulls long before the film calls it quits.

Linklater does a wonderful job of letting us feel as though we’re watching these guys in real time. His direction, as patient and open-minded as ever, invites a remarkably palpable sense of place and time. Like the Before series or the aforementioned Dazed and Confused, Everybody Wants Some!! feels breathed-in and wholehearted present. It’s fertile with charm and good vibrations, and it wants nothing more than for everyone to enjoy themselves for the ride. The film’s never afraid to let these guys spring to life on their own terms. And as their actions grow lewder and their behavior more brash, Linklater somehow makes them seem even more sweet and charming than they did initially.

The greatest feather in its cap, however, comes from exceptional ensemble, along with their honest chemistry together. While Linklater’s writing is always on-point, with more golden one-liners than one can count showered throughout, the cast ultimately makes-or-breaks this one. And, thankfully, they never let the veteran Austin filmmaker down for a second. It’s clear everyone on-screen is having an absolute blast, and that flows directly into the viewing experience. There are no weak links in this bunch, but Powell, Russell, Baker and Zoey Deutch, as Jake’s theater-major love interest Beverly, are the standouts. Powell wields a swagger and maturity well beyond his years, while Russell inherits and fits into the scene-stealing charisma of his father, Kurt Russell, like a glove. I think they’re both going places after this. Baker’s deadpan delivery never fails to sell a hard laugh, and Deutch plays a much-needed female presence in these proceedings — posing an affability and wit that makes her easy to like and quick to love.

Any sense of conflict is completely absent here, and the plot is practically non-existent. But you don’t care for a second. The mood is never less than agreeable and the fun times are shared by all. And have I mentioned the killer soundtrack yet? More than merely a nostalgic well-fulfillment time trip or a collection of greatest cinematic hits for the dialogue-heavy filmmaker, Everybody Wants Some!! is Linklater working entirely in his element. It finds the filmmaker completely mastering the art of his Zen, combining all the best aspects of his work into one righteous alive, completely attentive masterwork that’s completely comfortable in its own skin and never afraid to become itself. It’s practically destined to be among the cinema’s most well-tuned, vigorously passionate contributions, and I can’t say enough positive things about it.

There are more than a few shortcomings I’m neglecting to mention here. The watchful male gaze of its fifty-year-old director on these scantly-clad women half his age grows a little too creepy for its own good, and some of the cast members, including our lead, are perhaps just a little too indistinguishable from one another at times. But it’s easy to shrug off these concerns because of how much it gets right. Everybody Wants Some!! is a beautiful return-to-form for Linklater and a graceful transition from his coming-of-age small-scale epic Boyhood. There’s a lot to love about this one, and if you’re willing to have a good time, it’ll only leave you wanting more.

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James Cameron is Not Doing Three ‘Avatar’ Sequels. He’s Doing Four…

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James Cameron has found his three sequels to Avatar a little too confining for his ultimate vision, so he’s decided to make four sequels.

Four!

And “no less than four,” he said when he dropped this news at CinemaCon. He also said Avatar is getting the theme park treatment, comics, spin-offs… basically, James Cameron has now staked the rest of his entire directorial career to the Avatar wagon. “It’s going to be a true epic saga that’s told in this rich and complex world,” Cameron told the audience.

Good luck getting any new original content from Cameron, who certainly seems to be losing his mind with this Avatar business. The dates for these sequels (aside from being as tentative as hell) are 2018, 2020, 2022, and 2023. Cameron turns 62 this year, and he will be 69 when the final Avatar hits theaters. Of course, that isn’t the end of the road for many directors, but churning out four sequels to a movie nobody is clamoring to see more of sure seems like a strange time to spend the twilight of your career.

And that’s the issue here. Who is eager to jump back into the world of the Na’vi? The only time these Avatar sequels find the news cycle is when Cameron announces he’s adding a sequel or delaying the FIRST SEQUEL again. It made all the money, it was great looking in 3D, but in between the 2009 release and today, the imitators diluted the 3D market. 3D is on its way out steadily, and I don’t personally know anyone who uses it voluntarily. Avatar’s gimmickry has already run its course in pop culture, so what we’re left with is a movie.

That movie beneath all the pomp and circumstance is middling to say the least. Without re-treading all the Dances With Wolves comparisons and stale arguments, let’s just say the demand for more of this doesn’t appear to match the intensity of Cameron’s dedication.

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Nicolas Winding Refn’s ‘The Neon Demon’ Now Has a Serious Trailer

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Nicolas Winding Refn’s The Neon Demon has an intense new trailer, and it looks as if Refn is slowly morphing into some New Wave combination of David Cronenberg and David Lynch.

Here is the trailer:

And the synopsis, as if that’ll do any good when it comes to actually watching The Neon Demon:

When aspiring model Jesse moves to Los Angeles, her youth and vitality are devoured by a group of beauty-obsessed women who will take any means necessary to get what she has.

The cast includes Elle Fanning, Christina Hendricks, and Keanu Reeves, who I didn’t spot anywhere in the trailer. Interesting. Reeves has top billing as a character named Hank, so I imagine his role is something pretty threatening.

The Neon Demon is being produced by Amazon Studios and will hit theaters this June.

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‘Star Wars: The Force Awakens’ Aftermath: What Species is Maz Kanata?

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Maz Kanata. She’s run a Mos Eisley cantina-like “watering hole” for a thousand years. She can tell a lot from your eyes. She’s force-sensitive but is not a Jedi or a Sith. She fills the role in The Force Awakens that (younger character?) Yoda did in the original trilogy, that of wisdom and imparting Force knowledge. She has a crush on Chewbacca. And she reminds you of every older woman you’ve ever known who wore thick glasses, be it teacher or grandmother.

Like Yoda, not much is known about her race. Or is there? Look at her face closely again. Is there a race in the Star Wars universe that she might be a member of? Maybe one that was briefly nodded to in an Easter Egg from The Phantom Menace? One that was originally introduced in a 1982 Spielberg movie?

star-wars-et-003-03252014

You’re probably thinking about all of the differences between Maz and Elliot’s best buddy E.T. Maz doesn’t have the same body frame. She doesn’t waddle in the same way that E.T. (and all the others on his rescue ship) did. Her neck doesn’t extend. She wouldn’t need the Force if she had a natural ability to heal people with her elongated, glowing finger.

Well, maybe the elongated neck and other features of E.T. are something that only males have (like an Adam’s apple for humans). And, maybe only males are allowed to get involved in politics, which is why there were only waddling E.T.’s in the Galactic Senate Chamber in TPM. Maybe Maz is so much older that she had either evolved to adapt to her environment or maybe all of the aliens that you see in the E.T. movie are kids from that planet. Maybe they become more humanoid like Maz when they get older. And maybe E.T. could heal people because he already had some knowledge of the Force like Maz does. Or maybe Maz is from a sister planet, which is why her face is so similar to everyone’s favorite Reese’s loving/Jesus metaphor alien bike flyer. Not so far-fetched, considering this review from Time magazine, in which Maz Kanata is described as looking like “the love child of E.T. and Lena Horne”.

What do you think? Since we don’t know that much about E.T.’s race except that they are in the Star Wars universe, could Maz Kanata be related to E.T.? Comment below.

"Grandma!"
“Grandma!”
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‘Captain America: Civil War’ Could Be The Best Marvel Movie

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With less than a month before release, Captain America: Civil War is shaping up to be the best Marvel movie. Anthony and Joe Russo have a tough act to follow after their last effort, Captain America: The Winter Soldier. So far, critics have given the flick high marks and positive feedback.

[embedyt] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QIarl7GHbnI[/embedyt]

The heart of the film focuses on Steve Rogers/Cap and Tony Stark/Iron Man’s opposing views. While not directly adapting the comic, the plot does give each man valid reasons for his actions, so their motives are not in black and white. In fact, actors Chris Evans and Robert Downey Jr have fans supporting #teamcap and #teamStark on Twitter. Needless to say, theatregoers will feel conflict over who to root for.

Tom Holland’s portrayal of Spider-Man is one of the movie’s big scene stealers. Eric Eisenberg chose Spider-Man, Paul Rudd’s Ant-Man, and Chadwick Boseman’s Black Panther as major highlights. He also praised the dynamic of the Vision and Scarlet Witch.

Critics are having a field day with Civil War

Civil War‘s action is a major source of praise. Germain Lussier said it was “a complex mystery posing as a big, fun superhero film.” He cited the airport scene as “the best superhero action scene ever”. Others have focused on how each of the characters is given a moment to stand out on their own, similar to Joss Whedon’s approach for 2012’s The Avengers.

This deft balance is in stark contrast to past MCU flicks. Iron Man 2, Thor: The Dark World and Age of Ultron struggled with characters and the right tone. Yet Civil War appears to balance its characters with the story. Since there are several MCU players, it looks like this flick just might avoid the trap of past films.

The Russo Brothers manage to handle plot, characters and action.

Captain America: Civil War opens on May 6.

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