We watch several movies a week. Every Friday, we'll talk a little about some of the movies we watched that we felt were Worth Mentioning.
Cody marvels at a hero's farewell, watches a questionable sequel, and celebrates Friday the 13th (the movie franchise, not the date).
BLACK WIDOW (2021)
Nine years ago, there were lines in The Avengers that teased the potential of a movie that would either center solely on Scarlett Johansson's character Natasha Romanov / Black Widow or at least be a team-up between her and her pal Hawkeye, played by Jeremy Renner. In the midst of the film's climactic alien invasion, Natasha said the situation was "just like Budapest", to which Hawkeye disagreed. Fans were left wondering, what exactly happened in Budapest? And would we ever see it play out in a movie? There was another scene in which the villainous Loki taunted Natasha with references to her past: "Dreykov's daughter", "Sao Paulo", "the hospital fire". Would we ever know more about those things? Well, now we know about some of them. Even though Natasha died in Avengers: Endgame, she has gotten her own movie - one that is, of course, a prequel. It doesn't go back as far as most fans would have guessed, though. Many assumed a Black Widow prequel would be set during her time in Budapest before The Avengers, but instead it's set between the events of Captain America: Civil War and Avengers: Infinity War. Actually, it's kind of set in between the last couple scenes of Civil War.
So in this film, directed by Cate Shortland from a screenplay by Eric Pearson (Ned Benson and WandaVision head writer Jac Schaeffer get story credit), Natasha is on the run from U.S. Secretary of State Thaddeus Ross (William Hurt), who wants to arrest her for violating the Sokovia Accords, the paperwork that was at the center of the superhero Civil War. But before we get there, we flashback to Natasha's childhood. 1995. A time when she was living in an unexpected place: Ohio. I have to assume that's a nod to the directors of Captain America: The Winter Soldier, Captain America: Civil War, Avengers: Infinity War, and Avengers: Endgame, Cleveland's own Joe and Anthony Russo.
In '95, Natasha (played as a child by Milla Jovovich's daughter Ever Anderson) was living in Ohio with her parents Alexei (David Harbour) and Melina (Rachel Weisz), and her younger sister Yelena (Violet McGraw). We catch up to them on their last night of living as a family, as it's revealed that Alexei and Melina are Russian spies and the family set-up has been a way for them to go undercover and infiltrate a place called the North Institute. Having achieved their objective, Alexei and Melina take their kids - who aren't really their kids - on the run and escape from Ohio with S.H.I.E.L.D. close on their heels. They report to their commander Dreykov (Ray Winstone) in Cuba, and then they're split apart. From that point on, life becomes quite hellish for most of them.
There's a meme that says the moment when young Natasha cries "I want to stay in Ohio" proves that the film is set in a fictional universe because no one has ever said that. But I'm an Ohio native who loves my home state, and I've also had to reluctantly leave it behind for various reasons, so I feel the line "I want to stay in Ohio" very strongly in my heart and soul.
After the fake family was split up, Natasha wasn't the only one forced to become a "Black Widow" spy. Yelena was, too. And it's a mission an adult Yelena (played by Florence Pugh) is sent on in 2016 that sets the story of this film in motion. Her generation of Black Widows are under the chemical mind control of Dreykov, but at the end of this mission Yelena finds herself in possession of vials containing a chemical gas that can break that control. So she seeks the help of her long-lost fake sister, thinking she'll have the support of the Avengers behind her. But the Avengers aren't around anymore, so Natasha and Yelena have to find support elsewhere: from their fake parents. Natasha thought she killed Dreykov and brought down the Black Widow operation years ago. She and Hawkeye set off bombs in Budapest that they believed killed not only Dreykov but also his young daughter, had to battle the Hungarian Special Forces, then spent ten days in hiding before they could escape the city. But things didn't work out the way they thought they did, so Natasha has to have a family reunion to finish the job.
This may be Black Widow's solo film, and Johansson is great in the role as always, but her "family members" get a lot of attention, especially Yelena. There's no doubt that this movie is meant to establish Yelena as Natasha's replacement in the MCU, but that's fine with me because Pugh makes her a lot of fun to watch. She's likeable, she's amusing. Pugh does an awesome job delivering her lines.
Melina is somewhat questionable because she's still associated with Dreykov, so we're meant to have some doubts about her. But Alexei was betrayed by Dreykov and dropped into a prison, so it seems more likely that we can trust him. Like Pugh, Harbour is very entertaining in his role. We come to find out that Alexei was a costumed super soldier called the Red Guardian before his time undercover; he's basically Russia's version of Captain America, and somehow seems convinced that he had a fight with Captain America back in a time when that character was frozen.
Our heroes have to fight not only the mind-controlled Black Widows, but also Dreykov's secret weapon: a mysterious masked character called Taskmaster, who studies videos of the Avengers and mimics their fighting abilities. Taskmaster has a shield like Captain America, a bow and arrows like Hawkeye, claws like Black Panther, can swing like Spider-Man, fights like Natasha. Taskmaster is cool, but doesn't quite live up to such a character's potential - and the person beneath that mask is very different from the person Taskmaster is in the comic book source material (and previous adaptations like cartoons). So a lot of Taskmaster fans were disappointed in this, and understandably. I don't have any familiarity with Taskmaster, so the identity reveal didn't mean anything to me, I had just hoped to see the character do more cool stuff than they were given to do.
Once the film gets to Dreykov, he does prove to be quite a sleaze, but he's not what I would consider to be a great villain. The heroes in the movie are terrific. The villains, not so much.
Black Widow is a good way to spend some time, but it's not even close to being my favorite entry in the MCU. I would rank it somewhere around the middle, or leaning toward the low end of the list. There's some nice spy movie action, but while watching these action sequences with their CGI elements I couldn't help but think how they paled in comparison to the practical action sequences in other spy movies - there's a chase through the streets of Budapest where Natasha and Yelena are being pursued by Taskmaster, who is in a tank, and it just made me think of how much better chase scenes were in movies like Mission: Impossible - Fallout and GoldenEye. So I found Black Widow to be a bit lacking, but still fun.
I still want to know what happened in Sao Paulo.
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