Brave New World is
the fourth Captain America film
for the MCU, and the first to see Anthony Mackie step up as the lead
after playing second fiddle to Chris Evans for so long. It's also the
35th
movie in the MCU as a whole, and deep into Phase 5 of the
increasingly convoluted franchise. This perhaps explains some of the
film's messiness and the mixed reviews it's been getting. It's
inarguable that Brave New World tries
to juggle too much of the franchise's unwieldy backstory, leaving us
with a messy script. Yet, for all that, I found Brave New
World to be a highly
entertaining movie, one of the stronger Marvel movies of recent
years, and a great showcase for Mackie's classy new Cap.
Still,
it's an odd beast. It's challenging enough for the wider audience
that this follows from The Falcon and the Winter Soldier,
a TV series that was released three years ago, and which many
watching in cinemas would not have seen. Yet the Marvel masterminds
have decided not to make this the true next step in the Captain
America story (not for the first
time, in fairness: film three, Captain America: Civil War,
was an Avengers film
in all but name). No, this is a follow-up to The Incredible
Hulk, a middling film that came
out over sixteen years ago. This is one way to get round the
seemingly intractable distribution dispute between Disney and
Universal, which has prevented a Hulk-led sequel from being produced.
Add to this the involvement of “Celestial Island,” a vast
leftover from the equally middling Eternals,
and it's impossible to escape the conclusion that Marvel has made
this film just to tie up some loose ends. It's also no secret that
this film has experienced significant rewrites and reshoots, even
more than Marvel usually subjects its films to.
Still,
messy as it is, the film works. This is largely down to some
excellent star performances. Mackie was popular as the Falcon, but
has his work cut out for him taking over from Evans as Captain
America, the figurehead not just of a nation but a global franchise.
Fortunately, his quietly commanding, resolute performance makes
Wilson's Cap easily the equal of Steve Rogers. Still displaying an
infectious sense of humour, this is a more serious, more focused
Wilson than we saw in earlier films, shouldering an enormous
responsibility. Both Wilson and Mackie himself are representing Black
people, and more specifically African Americans, something the film
comments on and brings to the forefront without ever becoming preachy
or overbearing. Wilson may wear a vibranium-laced suit of armour, but
he lacks the physical enhancements that Rogers enjoyed. He suffers in
his fights, his refusal to back down against overwhelming opponents a
potent parallel to the fact that, as a man of colour, he has to be
twice as good and work twice as hard to get to the same place.
Harrison
Ford is the second star of the film, putting in a more committed
performance than I would have expected. It's a shame for William
Hurt, who was reportedly keen to play the next stage of Ross's story,
but Ford makes an excellent replacement and brings some solid
gravitas to the role. In spite of some critics likening President
Ross to Trump, he's really not that like him beyond being old and
arrogant – for one thing, he advocates coming together as a
country, which is pretty much the opposite of the First Felon. Plus,
if he'd been meant as a Trump analogue, they'd have made his Hulk
orange, surely. Ross's transformation into the Red Hulk was heavily
trailered, so there was no surprise in its revelation; rather, a
gradual build-up to its inevitable creation. The Red Hulk is a
remarkably realistic creation, given how absurd a creature he is.
Making it a transformation against Ross's will is far more potent
than the deliberate “upgrade” of the comics, with more of a
parallel to the original Hulk.
However,
the best performance in the film is from Carl Lumbly, who, as usual,
is pure class. Lumbly has form playing superheroes, of course, but as
in Falcon he shows he's at his best when playing wounded
characters carrying the weight of the world. Isaiah Bradley is a
lesser known Marvel character, one who is unlikely to be recognised
by those who aren't up on the comics or haven't seen Falcon,
which is the bulk of the audience. Bradley's story, though, is so
straightforwardly tragic and infuriating that anyone coming in can
understand how this man was wronged and why he's so important to the
story of Captain America. Less essential is the inclusion of Joaquin
Torres, the new Falcon, but Danny Ramirez makes him hugely likeable
and it would be a poorer movie without him.
As
for the villains, the surprise inclusion (well, surprising when the
news broke months ago) of Samuel Sterns works fairly well. The
beginnings of Sterns's mutation into the Leader, way back in The
Incredible Hulk, left the MCU with one of its biggest unresolved
story hooks. Now we finally see the fully enhanced Sterns, he looks
just right; recognisably like his comicbook counterpart, but
distorted and deformed, how someone haphazardly mutated by radiation
and chemicals surely should look. With his towering intellect, the
Leader can provide a complex plot in which he pulls the strings of
our heroes... unfortunately, there isn't really time for all that, so
it remains largely sketched in and frustratingly easily resolved.
This is one area to which a TV series is more suited than a film; had
this been season two of Falcon, say, Sterns's plan could have
been made as Machiavellian as it deserves. It's also hard to deny
that, while Tim Blake Nelson gives a decent turn as the Leader, he's
thoroughly outdone in the villain stakes by Giancarlo Esposito as
Seth Voelker. Esposito has a sinister presence that Nelson simply
lacks, and his relegation to an impressive but minor adversary is a
misstep.
The
elephant in the room is the inclusion of Ruth Bat-Seraph, one of the
most controversial Marvel characters. As a member of Mossad and an
originally highly Islamophobic, Palestine-vilifying character, her
inclusion was going to be contentious even before Israel's
nightmarish final push began. Disney/Marvel hedged their bets and
rewrote the character into an ex-Black Widow, who while Israeli has
no overt ties to that regime. I'm all in favour of reinventing
problematic characters from earlier times, but it still rankles,
particularly due to the casting of Shira Haas in the role. She gives
a strong performance, and there's a certain joy in seeing a tiny,
disabled actor playing a deadly warrior, but given Haas's historic
support of the IDF her casting is bound to cause anger. There's not
an easy way round this, and it's not as if Israeli actors shouldn't
be cast in major films, but it adds an unsavoury political
controversy to the film.
On
a far less weighty note, there was one genuine surprise appearance in
the film. Not Sebastian Stan as Bucky Barnes – it would have been
more of a shock if he hadn't turned up – but Liv Tyler reprising
her Incredible Hulk role as Betty Ross. After trolling the
audience by using a perfunctory voice performance which could just as
easily have been a soundalike, Tyler appears in the flesh in the
film's closing act. We are assured that it is indeed her, and she was
present on set with Ford and Mackie, although given the amount of
Botox she's clearly had they could have saved a few quid and used
generative AI.
The
really baffling thing, though, is the act of making this an
in-all-but-name sequel to The Incredible Hulk, and not include
the actual Hulk. Who knows, perhaps that would have tipped it over
into being a Hulk film and invoked the wrath of Universal. Still,
it's one of many odd decisions in a film that baffles as much as it
entertains. Nonetheless, it does entertain, and should Mackie lead
the Avengers in the MCU's next phase he can certainly shoulder the
burden. Let's hope Marvel holds its nerve.