Black Widow promises a highly demanded espionage solo film, but delivers a bland half-servicing Avengers formula six years too late.
Director: Cate Shortland
Notable Cast: Scarlett Johansson, Florence Pugh, Rachel
Weisz, David Harbour, Ray Winstone
Over ten years and dozens of films later, the MCU (Marvel
Cinematic Universe) has finally unleashed its Black Widow film,
un-enticingly titled Black Widow, for the masses. Scarlett Johansson’s
Natasha Romanoff, the titular Black Widow, was introduced back in Iron Man 2
(only the second film in the MCU for those counting) and fans have been
clamoring for her solo film since. Yet, time and time again Marvel/Disney has
negated the fans and stumbled over their excuses of why they couldn’t crack the
film. Most of which sounded like tripe. However, the scientists and algorithms
have finally done it and the film is now out in theaters, it’s thrilling fans,
and it’s raking in the cash in the box office and over on Disney+.
It’s too bad that Disney and Marvel seem intent on
continually following the same patterns with the character because, once again,
Black Widow is a mishandled “could have been great” experience. One
where the character takes a back seat to her own story and Feige and company
are terrified to deviate too far from the established formula to have anything
unique to say about anything related to the character.