The bloom definitely has worn off the Marvel Cinematic Universe rose.
More than most, this new Captain America outing relies too heavily on details from previous MCU entries. Keeping a score card isn’t enough; nothing short of an annotated spread sheet would suffice.
The result here is something of a mess, with one engaging sub-plot overwhelmed by a far too complicated set of fresh crises. But that’s to be expected from a film with five (!) credited scripters, who seem to have competed with each other, in a contest to resurrect the most obscure MCU nugget.
That said, Anthony Mackie deserves ample credit for navigating the herculean task of holding this mess together as well as possible, and for capably replacing Chris Evans’ Steve Rogers as the new red, white and blue Captain America. Mackie’s Sam Wilson isn’t quite the same shield-slinger, though; he’s more a Cap 2.0.
Lacking Rogers’ super soldier serum-enhanced strength and agility, Sam has compensated with a set of vibranium and gadget-laden wings that would be the envy of Iron Man. Sam also has a fresh-faced partner: Joaquin Torres (Danny Ramirez, as playful as a puppy), a “Falcon-in-training,” last seen in 2021’s The Falcon and the Winter Soldier TV miniseries.
As this overcooked saga begins, former military hawk Thaddeus Ross (Harrison Ford) has just been elected President of the United States. Elsewhere, Sam and Joaquin are tasked with retrieving a cannister of the metal alloy adamantium, stolen by the mercenary Sidewinder (Giancarlo Esposito) from Japanese scientists who’ve extracted it from the massive “Celestial Island.”
(This “island” actually is the dead body of a celestial named Tiamut, now floating in the Indian Ocean, who was defeated by the Eternals in their eponymous 2021 film, which many of today’s viewers won’t know, because that film was a notorious flop.)
Cap and Falcon are successful, although Sidewinder survives to fight another day. Sam also gets an unexpected “attaboy” from the newly installed President Ross, who has long held a love/hate relationship with superheroes. At this moment, though, Ross insists that his views have changed, and he even floats the notion of re-establishing The Avengers.
(In the MCU, Ross’ behavior dates back to 2008’s The Incredible Hulk, when — then played by William Hurt — he oversaw a project with his daughter Betty’s boyfriend, scientist Bruce Banner, which went awry and transformed him into the not-so-jolly green giant. Ross went on a vengeful tear that ultimately disbanded and divided the Avengers in 2016’s Captain America: Civil War, which left Earth more vulnerable when Thanos subsequently wreaked havoc in Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: Endgame. And, much to Ross’ dismay, drove Betty into estrangement from her father.)
Sam isn’t convinced that Ross has changed for the better. But as a gesture of good faith, the president agrees to let Sam extend a White House invitation to Isaiah Bradley (the always regal Carl Lumbly), a Korean war veteran and sole survivor of the many African Americans unwillingly subjected to super soldier serum experiments during the 1950s (also introduced in The Falcon and the Winter Soldier).
Worse yet, Isaiah subsequently spent three years in prison, during which time he was further experimented upon.
This sidebar story resonates strongly, since it deliberately echoes the heinous Tuskegee Experiment’s 40-year syphilis study on unknowing African American participants.
Isaiah, although similarly dubious, joins Sam and Joaquin at a fancy function highlighted by President Ross’ announcement of a multi-national agreement to share adamantium research and development throughout the world. Alas, the celebratory moment is cut short when Isaiah tries to assassinate Ross ... but later remembers nothing about it.
Worse yet, Japanese Prime Minister Ozaki (Takehiro Hira) suddenly presents damning evidence that Ross hatched the plot to steal the adamantium, covertly pinning the blame on Sidewinder. The result: American and Japanese battleships mobilize around Celestial Island, weapons bristling.
Can Cap and Falcon prevent a war?
Director Julius Onah and his five writers keep us guessing for awhile. Ross clearly has anger management issues, and still doesn’t trust “supers”; Ford’s seething hostility is quite convincing. At the same time, it’s equally clear that some clandestine figure is manipulating events behind the scenes.
That would be Samuel Sterns, aka The Leader (also not seen since 2008’s The Incredible Hulk).
A few words about this guy:
Even with pale skin and a body disfigured by radiation scars and blobs, Tim Blake Nelson’s portrayal of this character isn’t such a much. He looks about as dangerous as a sneeze, and — frankly — his role here as “Master Villain” is laughable. His dialogue is beyond corny and stilted, and his several confrontations with Cap are just silly.
Shira Haas is far more intriguing, as Ruth Bat-Seraph, President Ross’ security advisor ... and, it turns out, an Israeli-born, ex-Black Widow operative who trained in the notorious Soviet-Russian Red Room, from which Scarlett Johansson’s Natasha Romanoff and Florence Pugh’s Yelena Belova also emerged. (see 2021’s Black Widow.) The diminutive Haas makes Ruth a spunky and capably intelligent agent, and she’s apparently being positioned for Avengers: Doomsday, due in May 2026.
Perhaps recognizing that neither The Leader nor Sidewinder qualify as suitable adversaries, this complex saga’s third act also introduces Red Hulk — much larger than Banner’s olive-hued version — about whom, I’ll say no more.
As usual, the numerous skirmishes once again defy the laws of physics and the frail limitations of the human body. We could forgive Steve Rogers’ near-invulnerability, thanks to the super soldier serum, but Sam and Joaquin are just regular guys ... and yet, improbably, both keep on ticking despite punishment that should have reduced them to smears on the pavement.
The quieter moments, particularly those involving Sam’s effort to prove Isaiah innocent, have far more dramatic heft; Mackie and Lumbly josh, bicker and spar persuasively, while making it obvious that each man respects the other.
I also miss the underlying humor, which has made most MCU films more entertaining than their DC Universe cousins (Superman, Batman, etc.) Aside from fleeting bits of banter between Sam and Joaquin, this film’s atmosphere remains rather grim.