The Marvels

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The Marvels
File:The Marvels poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed byNia DaCosta
Written by
Based onMarvel Comics
Produced byKevin Feige
Starring
CinematographySean Bobbitt
Edited by
  • Catrin Hedström
  • Evan Schiff
Music byLaura Karpman
Production
company
Distributed byWalt Disney Studios
Motion Pictures
Release dates
  • November 7, 2023 (2023-11-07) (Las Vegas)
  • November 10, 2023 (2023-11-10) (United States)
Running time
105 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget
  • $274.8 million (gross)
  • $219.8 million (net)[2]
Box office$161.5 million[3][4]

The Marvels is a 2023 American superhero film based on Marvel Comics. Produced by Marvel Studios and distributed by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures, it is the sequel to the film Captain Marvel (2019), a continuation of the television miniseries Ms. Marvel (2022), and the 33rd film in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU). The film was directed by Nia DaCosta, who co-wrote the screenplay with Megan McDonnell and Elissa Karasik. Featuring the characters Carol Danvers / Captain Marvel, Monica Rambeau, and Kamala Khan / Ms. Marvel, it stars Brie Larson as Danvers, Teyonah Parris as Rambeau, and Iman Vellani as Khan, alongside Zawe Ashton, Gary Lewis, Park Seo-joon, Zenobia Shroff, Mohan Kapur, Saagar Shaikh, and Samuel L. Jackson. In the film, Danvers, Rambeau, and Khan team up after they begin swapping places with each other every time they use their powers.

Marvel Studios confirmed plans to make a sequel to Captain Marvel in July 2019. Development began in January 2020 with McDonnell hired after working on the television miniseries WandaVision (2021). Larson was set to return from the first film as Danvers, and DaCosta was hired to direct that August. In December, Parris was revealed to be reprising her role as Rambeau from WandaVision alongside Vellani returning as Kamala from Ms. Marvel. Second unit filming began in mid-April 2021 in New Jersey, and the title—referring to the three characters and their similar abilities—was revealed in early May. Principal photography began in July 2021 and concluded by mid-May 2022, taking place at Pinewood Studios in Buckinghamshire and Longcross Studios in Surrey, England, as well as in Los Angeles and Tropea, Italy. Karasik's involvement was revealed during post-production.

The Marvels premiered in Las Vegas on November 7, 2023, and was released in the United States on November 10, as part of Phase Five of the MCU. It received mixed reviews from critics, with praise towards the chemistry between the three leads, but criticism towards its plot and tonal shifts. The Marvels has grossed $161 million worldwide against a production budget of at least $220 million, leading to some publications labeling it as a box-office bomb.

Plot

Carol Danvers defies the influence of the Supreme Intelligence[a] and destroys it, which leads to a Kree civil war and the desolation of their home world, Hala. The conflict renders the planet barren as it loses its air, water, and sunlight.

Dar-Benn, the new leader of the Kree, retrieves one of the Quantum Bands, of which Kamala Khan has the other half. Dar-Benn harnesses the power of the Band to tear open a jump point in space. The resulting anomaly is discovered by S.W.O.R.D.

Meanwhile, Nick Fury, now residing at the S.A.B.E.R. space station,[b] hosts peace talks between the Kree and the Skrulls. Monica Rambeau investigates the jump point anomaly near S.A.B.E.R. while Danvers investigates the source, where Dar-Benn found the Quantum Band. When Rambeau touches the anomaly, she, Danvers, and Kamala switch places through teleportation.[c] The switching causes the three to fight each others' Kree enemies, leaving the Khan family home destroyed in their wake.

After the three women return to their original places, Fury and Rambeau visit Kamala on Earth. As Kamala eagerly demonstrates her powers, she switches places with Danvers. When Danvers flies away, she switches places with Kamala in mid-air. The group surmises that their light-based powers are linked through quantum entanglement, and that they switch places when any of the three use their powers simultaneously.

The three join up at a Skrull refugee colony on the planet Tarnax, where talks of resettlement have dissolved. Dar-Benn rips open another jump point, which siphons the atmosphere of Tarnax into Hala and restores its air. After a hasty effort to evacuate the colony, Danvers, Rambeau, and Kamala form a team informally referred to by Kamala as "the Marvels". Danvers informs the others of the legend that the Quantum Bands had been used to create the jump point transportation network; the three became entangled due to their mutual contact with its energy when Dar-Benn disrupted it. Dar-Benn's repeated rupturing of jump points is causing instability to the network and endangering the entire universe.

Dar-Benn reaches the water planet Aladna, where she tears open a jump point to draw the ocean water into Hala. Her final plan is to usurp Earth's sun to restore that of Hala. The Marvels fight and subdue Dar-Benn, but she steals Kamala's Band and uses both bangles to tear open another hole in space. The act destroys Dar-Benn and leaves behind a rupture into the multiverse. After Kamala reclaims the Bands, she and Danvers use their combined powers to energize Rambeau, allowing her to close the hole from the other side, stranding her in the process. Danvers flies into Hala's sun and uses her power to restore it.

The short-lived team-up inspires Kamala to seek out other heroes and form a new group, starting with Kate Bishop. In a mid-credits scene, Rambeau awakes in a parallel universe where she is greeted by an alternate version of her mother, Maria, and the mutant scientist Hank McCoy.

Cast

Tessa Thompson reprises her role from previous MCU films as Valkyrie,[23] and Lashana Lynch reprises her role as Monica's mother Maria Rambeau from Captain Marvel, while also portraying an alternate version of Maria who has the mantle of Binary in the mid-credits scene.[24][25][26] Leila Farzad and Abraham Popoola portray S.A.B.E.R. workers Talia and Dag,[17] while Daniel Ings portrays Ty-Rone, a Kree scientist.[27] Hailee Steinfeld reprises her role as Kate Bishop from the Disney+ miniseries Hawkeye (2021) in a cameo appearance,[25][26] while Kelsey Grammer appears in the mid-credits scene as Dr. Hank McCoy / Beast, reprising the role from 20th Century Studios' X-Men films X-Men: The Last Stand (2006) and X-Men: Days of Future Past (2014).[25][26] Goose, Carol's pet Flerken who resembles a cat, is played by cats Nemo and Tango, replacing previous actors Reggie, Archie, Rizzo, and Gonzo from the first film.[6]

Production

Development

Ahead of the release of Captain Marvel (2019), star Brie Larson expressed interest in a sequel featuring the character Kamala Khan / Ms. Marvel.[28] Producer Kevin Feige previously said there were plans to introduce Kamala in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) following the release of Captain Marvel because Kamala is inspired by Carol Danvers / Captain Marvel;[29] Iman Vellani was later cast as Kamala for the Disney+ television miniseries Ms. Marvel (2022).[30] In March 2019, Feige said Marvel Studios had some "pretty amazing" ideas for a sequel,[31] which could either be set in the 1990s like the first film, or the present day.[32] Lashana Lynch expressed interest in reprising her role of Maria Rambeau in a sequel, even if it was set in the present.[33] At the 2019 San Diego Comic-Con in July, Feige confirmed plans for a sequel.[34]

Official development began in January 2020, when Megan McDonnell entered negotiations to write the script— after serving as a staff writer on Marvel Studios' Disney+ miniseries WandaVision (2021).[35] Larson was confirmed to return as Danvers,[5] but Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck were not expected to return after directing and co-writing the first film. The studio hoped to hire a female director to replace them. The film was expected to be set in the present day, and was aiming for a 2022 release.[35] In April 2020, Disney scheduled the film for release on July 8, 2022, filling the July 2022 date that the studio had previously reserved for an untitled Marvel film.[36] Nia DaCosta was hired to direct the film that August. Deadline Hollywood's Justin Kroll called this another sign of Marvel Studios adding diversity to its films due to DaCosta being the first Black woman hired as a director by the studio, adding that the film would likely break the record for the biggest-budgeted film directed by a Black woman.[37] The studio had also considered Olivia Wilde and Jamie Babbit as directors for the film,[38] but DaCosta was said to have been the frontrunner for some time.[37] DaCosta, a self-professed comic book nerd, developed the film with WandaVision producer Mary Livanos, who she said gave her "creative latitude" so the film would not "be a puppet on a string".[39][40] Larson said DaCosta was the "best person for the job" and said her presentation to pitch the film was incredible, and also noted her confidence in her work.[41] Richard Newby of The Hollywood Reporter said DaCosta's hiring could bring new energy to the MCU and Captain Marvel franchise, saying she "enjoys challenging preconceived notions about the relationship between characters and the lore behind stories". Newby also felt the film could explore Danvers's story from the perspective of Maria Rambeau's daughter Monica, a Black woman in present-day America.[42] DaCosta's original pitch included Adam Warlock and time travel in its plot, but was told that Warlock would be appearing in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 (2023) and that the Disney+ series Loki already dealt with several time travel stories.[43] DaCosta also cited Final Fantasy VII: Advent Children (2005) in her pitch, calling it an "amazing movie".[44]

Feige announced Captain Marvel 2 in December 2020, with a new release date of November 11, 2022. He confirmed DaCosta's involvement, and revealed that Teyonah Parris would reprise her role as Monica Rambeau from WandaVision and Vellani would reprise her role as Kamala.[10] Parris was excited to work with DaCosta again after Candyman (2021), and to further explore Monica's relationship with Danvers teased in WandaVision.[45] Larson felt it "made sense" narratively to have Kamala and Rambeau introduced to the MCU in other projects before the three of them meet in this film, something she had discussed with Feige "from the beginning".[6]

Pre-production

Pre-production work on the film was starting by February 2021, when Zawe Ashton was cast as the film's villain.[46] By that time, all of the scripts for Ms. Marvel had been written, so The Marvels creative team was able to read those to know what happened to Kamala in that series,[47] with Larson also having a cameo appearance in that series' last episode "No Normal".[48] Principal photography was expected to begin at the end of May,[49] though some second unit filming began on April 9 in Jersey City, New Jersey,[50][51] under the working title Goat Rodeo,[50][52] to capture aerial footage, establishing shots, and green screen plates.[50][53] In May, Marvel Studios revealed that the sequel would be titled The Marvels.[54] Ethan Anderton of /Film noted that this title refers to both Captain Marvel and Ms. Marvel, since the film's logo includes the same stylized "S" from the Ms. Marvel series' logo.[55] Graeme McMillian at The Hollywood Reporter acknowledged this explanation, but also wondered if there was a connection to the 1994 comics series Marvels—which tells various Marvel Universe events from the perspective of a photographer—or a project of the same name announced in 2020. He also wondered if "The Marvels" referred to a family of heroes, much like DC Comics' Marvel Family (now known as the Shazam Family).[56] Later that month, pre-production work was starting in the United Kingdom.[57]

Park Seo-joon was cast in an undisclosed role in mid-June, and was set to join the production after completing work on the film Concrete Utopia (2023).[58] His role was reported as Prince Yan of the planet Aladna.[15][19] Larson and Parris began preparing for filming the next month.[59][60] DaCosta said The Marvels would deal with "specific, personal, [and] sometimes sad things",[61] such as how people deal with pain and trauma,[62] but would have a lighter story than her films Little Woods (2018) and Candyman. She felt that she had more creative freedom on The Marvels than on her prior films.[61] Feige said that the dynamic between Danvers, Kamala, and Rambeau was the center of the film and likened their team-up to the formation of the Avengers in The Avengers (2012). He revealed that The Marvels would have "fun cosmic elements", including some from Roy Thomas' 1971 "Kree–Skrull War" comic book storyline, with the story directly picking up from the ending of Captain Marvel. He described the film as being tonally different from the MCU miniseries Secret Invasion (2023),[14] which is another Captain Marvel follow-up;[14] it was believed to tie in with the film,[6] but The Marvels largely ignores the events of Secret Invasion. Matt Webb Mitovich at TVLine speculated that it likely was intended for The Marvels to be set before Secret Invasion, given that film had numerous previous releases dates prior to Secret Invasion's June 2023 premiere, though if so, that assumption "still leaves continuity issues all over the place".[63]

Filming

Principal photography was expected to begin on May 31, 2021,[49] and began on July 26, 2021,[18] at Pinewood Studios in Buckinghamshire,[18][49][61] and at Longcross Studios in Longcross, Surrey, England.[18][64] Sean Bobbitt served as cinematographer.[65] Larson confirmed she started filming on August 10,[66] and shortly after, Samuel L. Jackson revealed that he would reprise his MCU role as Nick Fury in the film,[21] working on it in London at the same time as he was preparing to film Secret Invasion.[67] Filming for The Marvels took place in Tropea, Italy, beginning on August 27, including on the coast of the Tyrrhenian Sea.[68][69] On September 3, Park left for Los Angeles to begin filming.[70] Shortly after, Saagar Shaikh, Zenobia Shroff, and Mohan Kapur were revealed to be reprising their respective roles as Kamala's older brother Aamir, mother Muneeba, and father Yusuf, from Ms. Marvel.[20][8] In October 2021, the film's release was delayed to February 17, 2023.[71] Park shot his scenes for two months, and completed filming in England by November 2.[72] Production designer Cara Brower said the scale and scope of the film were massive, contrasting her work with DaCosta on Candyman.[73] For the sets at Pinewood and Longcross Studios, the production created 54 sets for five different planets (including Aladna) and spaceships, the S.A.B.E.R. space station, Maria Rambeau's and the Khan family's houses. DaCosta wanted each planet "to feel distinct" with their production design.[18] In April 2022, the film's release was moved to July 28, 2023, swapping places with Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania given that film was further along in production than The Marvels,[74] which still had some filming left to occur.[75] Filming had wrapped by the middle of the following month.[76]

Post-production

Jackson revealed in mid-June 2022 that he would return to London in August to work on reshoots for The Marvels, before doing the same for Secret Invasion,[77] and Marvel was preparing for those reshoots by the end of July.[78] Filming occurred in early August in Battery Park in New York City to capture visual effects plates.[79] DaCosta was revealed in January 2023 to have also worked on the film's script alongside Elissa Karasik and Zeb Wells, who had respectively served as a writer on Marvel Studios' Loki (2021–present) and She-Hulk: Attorney at Law (2022),[80] though only DaCosta, McDonnell, and Karasik were credited.[81] In February 2023, the film's release was delayed to November 10, 2023, as Disney and Marvel Studios were re-evaluating their content output and costs.[82] This allowed more time for post-production.[83][84] Joanna Robinson of The Ringer reported in April that the film was undergoing a "massive overhaul" and reshoots,[85] which took place for four weeks to reportedly make the storyline coherent.[84] With the release of the first trailer, Ashton's role was revealed to be Dar-Benn, while Daniel Ings joined the cast as Ty-Rone.[15][27] Lynch was reported to be reprising her role as Maria Rambeau, alongside Cobie Smulders and Randall Park in their respective MCU roles as Maria Hill and Jimmy Woo,[24] although Smulders denied her involvement in June,[86] when Gary Lewis was revealed to have joined the cast,[87] portraying Emperor Dro'ge.[17] Also in June, Marvel Studios held an "uncharacteristic" public test screening in Texas which was reportedly met with mixed responses.[84] Tessa Thompson was confirmed to appear in the film in her MCU role of Valkyrie with the release of the final trailer in early November 2023.[23]

Visual effects for the film were created by Industrial Light & Magic, Rise FX, Rising Sun Pictures, Sony Pictures Imageworks, Trixter, Wētā FX, and Wylie Co., while Tara DeMarco serves as the visual effects supervisor.[88] Catrin Hedström serves as an editor of the film, after working with DaCosta on Candyman,[89] alongside Evan Schiff.[18]

Music

In January 2022, Laura Karpman was hired to compose the score for the film, after previously doing so for the first season of the MCU television series What If...? (2021) and Ms. Marvel.[90][91] The piece "The Marvels Suite" was performed at the Philadelphia Orchestra on June 3, 2023. It is a concise version of music that Karpman worked on before composing the score. Karpman explained that she wanted the suite to have "certain kinds of leaps" within the music to represent Danvers's flight, while also having "power", "drive", and "play in it" to represent Danvers, Rambeau and Khan coming together as a trio.[92] For Khan's theme, Karpman resolved to bring in some "fantastic" musicians from Pakistan and India to collaborate with her to make an important theme that could represent Khan's heritage most of the time, creating incredible sounds that "augment, blend and explode" a traditional Marvel superhero, opining that a character like Khan shouldn't be othered and that her "big grown superhero" theme is about her adolescence, considering how her background was important in her show. She also researched on what sound in space may be like for the cosmic adventure scenes.[93] The film's main theme, "Higher. Further. Faster. Together.", premiered at the Last Night of the BBC Proms on September 9, 2023.[94] John Ottman's themes from his scores from 20th Century Fox's X-Men films X2 (2003) and X-Men: Days of Future Past (2014) are featured in the film.[26]

All music is composed by Laura Karpman..

The Marvels (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
No.TitleLength
1."Higher. Further. Faster. Together."3:51
2."Dar-Benn"3:01
3."Tear in Spacetime"1:32
4."Surge"2:19
5."Stop Spinning"1:21
6."Arrival on Tarnax"1:32
7."Peace Negotiations"2:42
8."Entangled"1:48
9."Reunion"1:40
10."Free Fall"1:45
11."Evacuation"7:31
12."Connected"2:09
13."Hala"2:06
14."Arrival on Aladna"1:30
15."Voices of Aladna"6:37
16."War Preparations"1:13
17."Forces Arrive"3:48
18."Power"3:05
19."O Captain! My Captain!"2:33
20."Chosen Family"1:51
21."On Fire"2:50
22."Final Fight"1:06
23."Dar-Benn's Destiny"2:47
24."Greater Purpose"5:29
25."Restoration"2:20
26."Captain Rambeau"2:08
27."Home"2:20
28."The Marvels"2:47
Total length:1:15:00

Marketing

Larson, Parris, and Vellani appeared at the 2022 D23 Expo to promote the film and show exclusive footage.[95] A teaser trailer, which featured "Intergalactic" by Beastie Boys, premiered on Good Morning America on April 11, 2023.[96] Edidiong Mboho of Collider felt the teaser "delivers on the charm and action the MCU is known for".[97] Charles Pulliam-Moore at The Verge said the trailer "leaves little question" that Danvers, Rambeau, and Kamala "are going to end up making quite the team and [the film] might just have one of the MCU's more inventive "place-switching" fight scenes".[9] Jackson's appearance in the teaser was believed to be a spoiler for the end of Secret Invasion, indicating that Fury survived the series following speculation ahead of that series' premiere that it was possible that the character would die by the end of it.[98][99] Marvel Studios and Bic partnered to create limited-edition pens inspired by the film, as well as the "Write with Might" sweepstakes that offered a chance to win a trip to the film's Hollywood, Los Angeles, premiere.[100] Pita Pit was also partnered with Marvel Studios and Walt Disney Pictures to launched the brand new limited edition smoothie "Banana Chai" to promote the film.[101] Following the end of the 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike, Larson appeared on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon alongside Tom Hiddleston on November 10 to promote the film as well as the second season finale of Loki.[102]

Release

The Marvels premiered in Las Vegas on November 7, 2023, with the film's cast unable to attend due to the 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike.[103][104] It was released in South Korea on November 8,[19] in Portugal on November 9[105] and in the United States and China on November 10,[82][106] in IMAX,[107] ScreenX, and 4DX.[108] The film was initially not expected to have an IMAX release, given Dune: Part Two was planned to be released on November 3, 2023, and would have had access to IMAX's screens for five to six weeks.[109] IMAX Corporation CEO Richard Gelfond noted that the company would pivot to showing The Marvels in IMAX should Dune: Part Two move its release date,[109] which was subsequently confirmed after it was delayed until March 2024.[107][110] The Marvels was previously scheduled for July 8, 2022,[36] November 11, 2022,[54] February 17, 2023,[71] and July 28, 2023.[74] It is part of Phase Five of the MCU.[111]

Reception

Box office

As of November 19, 2023, The Marvels has grossed $64.9 million in the United States and Canada, and $96.6 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $161.5 million.[4][3]

In the United States and Canada, The Marvels was released alongside Journey to Bethlehem, and was originally projected to gross around $60 million from 4,030 theaters in its opening weekend.[112] After making $21.3 million on its first day (including $6.6 million from Thursday night previews, down from the $20.7 million made by the first film in 2019), estimates were lowered to $47–52 million. It went on to debut to $46.1 million, topping the box office and marking the best opening figure for a black female director, but was the lowest opening weekend total ever for an MCU film.[113][114][115] In its second weekend the film made $10.2 million, finishing fourth behind newcomers The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes, Trolls Band Together and Thanksgiving. The 78% drop was the all-time largest for a Marvel film and the worst for any Hollywood superhero film in modern history.[116][117][118] Some publications labeled the film a box-office bomb.[119][120][121]

Critical response

The review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported an approval rating of 62% with an average score of 5.9/10, based on 318 reviews. The website's critical consensus reads, "Funny, refreshingly brief, and elevated by the chemistry of its three leads, The Marvels is easy to enjoy in the moment despite its cluttered story and jumbled tonal shifts."[122] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 50 out of 100 based on 56 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.[123] Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B" on A+ to F scale, tied with Eternals (2021) and Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania (2023) for the lowest score of the MCU, while those polled by PostTrak gave it a 73% positive score.[113]

Writing for The Hollywood Reporter, Lovia Gyarkye praised DaCosta's direction as "kinetic", and felt that the directing and the "intimate storytelling style" lets audiences see the main characters from "new and entertaining vantage points."[124] Abby Olcese, for Paste, rated the film an 8.5/10 and praised the film for playing with genre and pulling "aesthetics" from the Ms. Marvel streaming series; Olcese felt that "DaCosta's assured, efficient direction" was an example of what the MCU could have been if the franchise "hadn't gotten bogged down by gloopy effects and overblown lore".[125] In contrast, James Mottram of NME gave the film a 3/5 star rating and felt that the film "never musters the same level of engagement" as DaCosta's Candyman even with "a script that is chock full of good lines and a cast of willing participants".[126] Christy Lemire of RogerEbert.com gave the film a negative review with a 1.5 star rating, calling it "terrible" and opined that it is "the worst film yet in the Marvel Cinematic Universe" with only the musical moments as "an unexpected and much-needed delight".[127]

Despite mixed critical reception, the performances were met with praise. Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian described the lead trio as "an entertaining intergalactic ensemble".[128] Peter Travers of ABC News similarly commended that "If there is such a thing as chemistry, Larson, Parris and Vellani have it."[129] Vellani in particular received praise, with Amelia Emberwing of IGN declaring that she "predictably steals the show".[130] Helen O'Hara of Empire praised the humor and emotional depth of Vellani's Kamala with the "two older heroes".[131] Christian Holub of Entertainment Weekly gave a lukewarm review of the film and opined that it was "a mixed bag that tries to juggle too many different characters and plotlines", but praised Vellani as a "shining star".[132]

Notes

  1. ^ As depicted in Captain Marvel (2019)
  2. ^ As depicted in Spider-Man: Far From Home (2019) and the Secret Invasion episode "Home" (2023)
  3. ^ As depicted in the Ms. Marvel episode "No Normal" (2022)

References

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