Movie Review: Black Adam
What We Liked
What We Didn't Like
Following the success of Shazam! in 2019, Black Adam feels less like an attempt to thrust Dwayne Johnson into a superhero franchise than it does a concerted effort to erase the goodwill created by the Zachary Levi led action/comedy and bring the property more in line with the dark, foreboding, and often unentertaining DC Extended Universe.
The plot involves tracing Adam’s (Johnson) origin back 5,000 years when he was initially given the powers of the ancient gods, and then subsequently imprisoned for abusing them. Now, unleashed upon the modern world, he sets about enacting his own brand of justice.
Once in play in present day, Adam is intercepted by the Justice Society (Hawkman [Aldis Hodge], Atom Smasher [Al Rothstein], Cyclone [Maxine Hunkel], and Doctor Fate [Pierce Brosnan]) who initially attempt to subdue and capture him before anyone is hurt by his reckless behavior.
Although it begins with promise, the whole affair ultimately follows the same template enacted by previous entries to the DC Extended Universe and becomes an overlong, overwrought exercise in destruction and CGI mayhem that does little to make anything that Adam or the members of the Justice Society do seem overtly or even slightly heroic.
Director Jaume Collet-Serra brings all the subtlety he used on Jungle Cruise to move the story from explosion to explosion, and in that respect, the film delivers and never lets up. But there is little characterization involved here, apart from forced attempts to ensure that no one forgets that these are supposed to be heroes up on the screen and not simply villains in good guy costumes.
As a stand-alone super-hero story, Black Adam, perhaps fares just a bit better than it does when compared to the far more entertaining and seemingly retconned Shazam!
Mike Tyrkus
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