Mashable 07月23日 00:13
‘The Fantastic Four: First Steps’ review: One of the best MCU films in years
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

《神奇四侠:初露锋芒》是一部令人愉悦的漫威电影,它巧妙地将家庭情感剧与复古冒险故事融为一体。影片细节丰富,充满对斯坦·李和杰克·科比漫画原著的深情致敬,是MCU系列中少有的令人印象深刻的作品。故事设定在一个独立于主宇宙的平行世界,聚焦于漫威“第一家庭”的家庭动态,即使在仓促的叙事和突如其来的风格转变中,角色关系依旧是核心。影片成功地将角色驱动的叙事与经典的科幻情节相结合,用真挚的情感和精彩的动作场面,营造出既有宏大场面又不失温馨的观影体验,堪比皮克斯的《超人总动员》。

🌟 **角色驱动的家庭温情**:影片将重点放在神奇四侠家庭成员之间的个人关系和情感互动上,通过瑞德(Reed Richards)和苏(Sue Storm)的夫妻关系、约翰尼(Johnny Storm)的兄弟情谊以及本(Ben Grimm)的友情,展现了一个充满爱、争吵与扶持的家庭画像。即使在面对宇宙危机时,角色的情感羁绊也始终是故事的核心。

🌠 **复古科幻与太空竞赛的融合**:电影采用了1960年代的视觉风格和科幻元素,呼应了当时乐观的太空竞赛精神。从复古的未来主义设计到对宇宙探索的描绘,影片成功地营造了一种怀旧而又充满希望的氛围,让观众仿佛置身于那个充满无限可能的时代。

🌌 **经典反派与哲学困境的呈现**:影片引入了标志性的反派“吞星者”盖勒塔斯(Galactus)及其信使“银影侠”(Silver Surfer),并围绕着地球存亡与拯救苏未出生的孩子之间的两难选择,提出了深刻的哲学困境。这迫使神奇四侠不仅要作为救世主,还要面对道德抉择和公众的质疑。

💖 **演员的出色演绎**:影片的演员阵容表现出色,佩德罗·帕斯卡(Pedro Pascal)饰演的瑞德展现了科学家的严谨与父爱的挣扎;凡妮莎·柯比(Vanessa Kirby)饰演的苏则赋予了隐形女侠力量与母性的光辉;约瑟夫·奎因(Joseph Quinn)饰演的约翰尼和艾邦·摩斯-巴克瑞奇(Ebon Moss-Bachrach)饰演的本也贡献了精彩的表演,共同塑造了一个立体而有魅力的家庭形象。

It’s been ages since a Marvel movie has succeeded like The Fantastic Four: First Steps, a delightful throwback adventure nestling a family soap opera. In many ways, no entry in the MCU has felt as detailed or inspired, let alone shown as much adoration for Stan Lee and Jack Kirby's comic book source material. You know what they say: the thirty-seventh time's the charm.

Set in a separate universe from its more grounded peers — the original Iron Man all the way through the recent Thunderbolts* First Steps drops us smack-dab in the middle of ongoing adventures starring Marvel's "First Family." The film swiftly establishes their personal dynamics and keeps these relationships central throughout hurried moments and sudden tonal shifts, ensuring that Marvel Studios' now-signature slapdash CGI is no match for a heart of gold.

First Steps functions both as an adaptation of a thus-far hard to translate roster (it's the fourth go-around for these characters since 1994), while also working on its own terms. While the plot is straightforward and unfolds with sincerity, the film has no dearth of raucous humor or whizbang action moments reminiscent of classic sci-fi serials. Its sense of scale is born not only out of danger and destruction, but palpable emotional stakes, yielding one of the most inspired four-quadrant Hollywood blockbusters since — quite fittingly for a Disney-owned film — Pixar's own take on the concept, The Incredibles.

What is The Fantastic Four: First Steps about?

Pedro Pascal as Reed Richards and Vanessa Kirby as Sue Storm. Credit: Marvel Studios / 20th Century Studios

Novelty title cards plucked from the 1960s welcome us into the home of married couple Sue Storm (Vanessa Kirby) and Reed Richards (Pedro Pascal), in a surprising opening scene that replaces the genre's usual first act fireworks with quaint domesticity. Sue has just taken a pregnancy test and waits to share the good news. In the meantime, Reed obsessively fixates on a task, as he often does in the comics. But this is no spaceship we find our protagonists in, as expected. Within this regular Earthly house, Reed is working on something much more mundane: rustling through every drawer for an everyday item.

On paper, this all seems unremarkable. But in performance and character blocking, it's the perfect distillation of Reed and Sue, aka Mister Fantastic and Invisible Woman, and it informs the heightened drama between them throughout First Steps. The prospect of having a baby both scares and excites the celebrity couple, with Sue elated and Reed prepared to infant-proof the world if he has to. As they share the news with Sue's immature brother, Johnny (Joseph Quinn), and the couple's best and oldest friend, gentle rock-giant Ben Grimm (Ebon Moss-Bachrach), a passionate family portrait emerges, of trepidatious parents and bickering surrogate siblings, each preparing to add one more to the pack.


Featured Video For You
Marvel's 'Agatha All Along' and SNL star Sasheer Zamata plays 'Slash or Pass: Witches Edition'

Apart from Ben's appearance, an unfamiliar viewer might not realize there's anything out of the ordinary about the family at first (eventually, Sue wields invisibility and force fields, Johnny spontaneously combusts, and Reed stretches like taffy). The film is intent on this character-first approach, so it reduces the family's well-worn origin story — being hit by cosmic rays during a space mission — to an energetic montage, alongside ripped-from-the-comics highlights from their first few years as crimefighters. The retro-futuristic designs and the family's diligent robot helper H.E.R.B.I.E. make the movie feel like an update to The Jetsons, emphasized all the more by flying cars in the distance and sleek, curved public screens on which a TV host (Mark Gatiss) gets viewers up to speed.

Amidst the congenial hubbub and brotherly banter, danger arises. Mysterious space transmissions intercepted on Earth by the family mean the unforeseen arrival of an otherworldly envoy. The melancholy, metallic Silver Surfer (Julia Garner) lights up the New York sky in flames, announcing the impending apocalypse courtesy of her master, known as Galactus (Ralph Ineson). Faced with this intergalactic threat, the team returns to outer space for the first time in years in order to track down the ancient villain — a skyscraper-sized, biomechanical demigod driven only by hunger — in the far corners of the cosmos. However, their plan to negotiate goes south when Galactus senses something special about Sue's unborn son and will only spare Earth in exchange for the boy.

Thus begins the central philosophical dilemma of First Steps, one that forces the family to confront their roles as humanity's saviors — and the people of Earth don't take kindly to having their lives put at stake. As is the nature of classic superheroes, the Fantastic Four become tasked with solving an impossible conundrum.

The Fantastic Four: First Steps is pure comic book adventure

Joseph Quinn as Johnny Storm. Credit: Marvel Studios / 20th Century Studios

The MCU has long featured the famous ethical dilemma known as the trolley problem, but here, Reed, Sue, Johnny, and Ben are hell-bent on finding a solution. This imbues them with the same good-natured soul as this summer's Superman — another summer blockbuster that takes after comics' 1960s "Silver Age," when many of the medium's kookiest concepts were born. It was also when Lee and Kirby first published The Fantastic Four, but First Steps' adherence to the decade is more than just about paying tribute.

The film's era-appropriate designs are eye-popping — there are times you’ll wish director Matt Shakman lingered on each splendid detail for twice as long — but where the movie especially succeeds is in its echoes of the era's Space Race optimism. The United States was, of course, engulfed in the Cold War (and in real wars), and the Civil Rights movement was hitting its peak. But the more utopian, integrated '60s of First Steps has its eyes affixed to the stars, as people treat its space-faring scientists (and educators) as Earth's ultimate heroes. Hints of grainy, archival film footage flash back to the team's fateful venture past the stratosphere — they are this world’s first astronauts, hence the title — brief scenes in which the characters’ fear and excitement (and that of the world at large) radiate off the screen. 

Ebon Moss-Bachrach as Ben Grimm. Credit: Marvel Studios / 20th Century Studios

First Steps is a throwback not only to Marvel's newly beloved mid-century décor and retro superheroes, but to an old-fashioned sense of adventure, told through broad emotional strokes and accompanied by composer Michael Giacchino's bubbly, operatic score. And yet, First Steps is also distinctly futuristic and scientific, using more widely understood corners of the cosmos to create dazzling action moments. The gravity of a wormhole bends space lasers helter-skelter. The time dilation of a neutron star becomes a key part of an escape plan. And among all this cosmic chaos, Shakman centers trust and intimacy, as characters floating in zero gravity share vital moments of transformation.

In a cinematic universe of grounded villains with politically muddled motives, Ineson's horned Galactus stands out as a truly Kirby-esque horror (by way of children's building blocks). A being whose objective is to consume in order to survive, he's elemental; a force of nature with no conscience. On the flip side of this equation is the morally earnest Fantastic Four, characters who strive to foster global cooperation in the vein of Ridley Scott's feel-good space saga The Martian. Like in the aforementioned Superman reboot, the cast and characters of First Steps are an utter delight.

The Fantastic Four: First Steps cast is exceptional

Vanessa Kirby as Sue Storm. Credit: Marvel Studios / 20th Century Studios

You could pick any interaction between Fantastic Four members and it would tell you all you need to know about their history. And yet, First Steps doesn't simply coast on these comic-inspired details. Rather, it builds plot through each character's response to danger, between Johnny's hotshot eagerness, Ben's steadfast balance of kindness and no-nonsense enthusiasm, Reed's pedantic consideration of every possible solution, and, perhaps most vitally, Sue's fierce love, externalized as protective energy shields.

It's been unfortunately characteristic for Sue, known as the Invisible Woman, to fade into the background of Fantastic Four stories or play second fiddle to her ambitious husband. However, Kirby — despite her ostentatious pantomime when using Sue's powers — exudes vigilance and radiance, which becomes a major part of the story. Lofty speeches in superhero films are a dime a dozen, but it's rare to see one that not only comes from a place of understanding but of uncertainty — during a vulnerable moment, Sue appeals to people's better angels, as the public tears down her family.

Equally understanding, but in a much quieter way, is Moss-Bachrach's Ben, the glue holding the family together in tough moments. Rather than cartoonish affectations, The Bear star opts to find the measured humanity within Ben through his voice performance. However, he also reserves an inner childishness for the character, revealing this in the moments Ben roughhouses with his more chaotic foil. Out to prove himself as more than just a dopey playboy, Quinn's Johnny is mostly seen trying to live up to the examples set by his three elders, whether in his Ben-like assumption of responsibility, his Sue-like protectiveness, or his Reed-like problem solving, when deciphering messages from outer space — captured on golden records no less, à la the optimism of Voyager 1.

The whole family's here. Credit: Marvel Studios / 20th Century Studios

But the movie's biggest strength — and arguably the defining ingredient of any great Fantastic Four story — is Reed. Pascal shapes Mr. Fantastic with obsessive cautiousness and a drive for logical altruism. The latter can verge on self-defeating, given how much of his probabilistic logic involves considering the most inhumane options (if only to later counter them). He's a walking paradox, driven by his need to protect his loved ones but in a way that leaves his soul vulnerable — especially as the world debates sacrificing his own son. Reed is cursed with having to consider all aspects of this terrible philosophical dilemma, nuances projected not just through dialogue, but by letting capable actors (and real, old-fashioned movie stars) have fun with dramatic material.

The Reed-Sue dynamic sings as well, counter-balancing the film's sense of worldwide camaraderie with interpersonal domestic drama that gets to the heart of both characters, and their respective drives of logic and love. As a couple, they are each other's North Stars, so they're never unattuned to each other's perspectives, but the rising tensions during the plot are rooted in how they might meet in the middle. The film finds a magnificently moving answer by way of the quirks of language. Reed repeatedly uses a famous quote by Archimedes that denotes his scientific drive: "Give me a lever long enough and a fulcrum on which to place it, and I shall move the world." Meanwhile, Sue speaks similarly of "moving heaven and Earth" to protect those she loves. Where these two ideas collide — in their plot function, in the ferocity with which each character believes them, and in the actors' conviction — is the kind of smart and incandescent crossroads of character, story, and theme that so few Hollywood studio products have strived for of late.

When First Steps inevitably reaches its noisy climax, occasionally losing its geographical compass while less-than-stellar effects take hold, what remains firmly affixed is its character-centric core and sense of wide-eyed adventure. The Fantastic Four will inevitably end up in a more drab version of their reality, when they're forced to cross paths with the larger MCU, but for the moment, their self-contained relaunch is one of those rare miracles of superhero cinema that ensures both fidelity to enduring characters and the demands of big-screen spectacle for new audiences. The film strikes this balance without ever sacrificing the flawed humanity and the uncompromising heart that have long made Reed, Sue, Johnny, and Ben some of the most lovable fixtures in all-ages American fiction. First Steps is, in a word, fantastic.

The Fantastic Four: First Steps opens in theaters July 24.

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

神奇四侠 漫威电影 复古科幻 家庭情感 超级英雄
相关文章