Madame Web is not the dud that
critics have been making it out to be, it’s a perfectly enjoyable and sometimes
tense thriller that can be enjoyed even if like me you don’t know the
intricacies of Spiderverse lore. It is true to say though that the premise
would be more suited to the nuances of a TV series and can come across as
sluggish in this format. That said, when the film does ramp up it does include a couple of stand out action sequences.
We start in Peru in
1973 where pregnant Constance Webb is looking for rare spiders but doesn’t
realise her fellow explorer Ezekiel Sims is actually on his own quest. I
suppose alarm bells should have rung when she looked at his first name! Though
she dies, her daughter is born courtesy of a mysterious race of spider people
and we meet her again in 2003 where she works as a paramedic in New York. After
an accident she starts to experience what at first seem like nightmares but
actually turn out to be visions of traumatic events about to happen. Still
struggling to cope with this, she is thrown into a scenario with three seemingly
random girls who actually have a connection to her and are being targeted by
none other than Ezekial. He, too, has these visions and believe the trio will,
with spider related powers, kill him so he aims to dispose of them first. The
rest of the film sees Cassie and the girls trying to escape and outwit their pursuer.
The results have a distinct
Terminator vibe not least because of Ezekiel’s relentless, unstoppable
drive. He is dressed in a familiar but all dark Spiderman costume and , crawls,
leaps and doggedly pursues them whatever is thrown in his way. The threat is
very visceral, and it does make a refreshing change not to have characters
firing energy beams aplenty; instead both sides have to utilise what is around
them. So it plays more like a thriller
than a comic book film. The action is well assembled including two excellent
sequences. The initially frenzied encounter between Cassandra and the girls as
they first realise the menace on the train becomes an extended chase packed
with incident and clever use of the locations. Later on the movie climaxes with
a terrific confrontation in, around and on top of old dockside buildings. This
is director SJ Clarkson’s first big screen feature having had a career on some
superb UK tv shows and she rises to the occasion with sharp action.
A director and cast are
only as strong as the story they have to tell and it is the case that Madame
Web takes a long time to kick off properly. While Ezekiel is an effective
antagonist in the action sequences, as a character his motivations are less
distinct. It never occurs to him that the danger to his life is because of what
he himself may do yet its not clear what he really does except hire someone
(who is she?) to hack into all the security cameras in the city. Cassandra is
played with a snarky air by Dakota Johnson, an interesting choice which I
rather like but which seems to be one of the aspects of the film that irked the
critics. Yet despite her outward appearance she is a caring person and cannot abandon
the girls even though she might wish.
The trio she has to
look after- played by Celeste O’Connor, Sydney Sweeney and Isabela Merced - are
just about able to define their characters in the running time. They successfully
avoid the cliched teenage mode with a minimum of faux street talk though there
is slight repetition when they each reveal their difficult backgrounds. They
are all outsiders and perhaps that does lean into cliché. Can happy individuals
ever become superheroes? It does feel
like we are being set up for sequels as the girls don’t assume their spider
identities here so presumably another film (unlikely to happen after this
film’s reception) would show us that?
Something that perhaps
overexcited fans is the connection with Spiderman which isn’t overplayed except
for the fact that the Peruvian spider people sport skins very similar to that
of our friendly neighbourhood hero a coincidence that jars with various
Spiderman origin films showing Peter Parker making his first costumes.
There’s been a lot of
talk of superhero fatigue and I think there is some truth in that but Madame
Web is actually an example that offers a different slant on the genre and
it rarely looks like the generic superhero film we’ve grown used to. In some of
the reviews and comments I’ve read there’s also an air of misogyny in the
response to the very idea that a big movie can be carried by a quartet of
female characters and it may be that in the superhero world that is too much
for the target audience. That says more about the public than it does about any
particular film. I’ve never seen a film written off so quickly not just by
critics and audiences but also by the studios who are already distancing
themselves from it. It could just be
that this is the wrong time for Madame Web and that in years to come it
will become more appreciated for what it is rather than what people want it to
be. Why not go see it and make up your own mind?
Dumb Money is the derogatory term
given by Wall Street to public investors and Craig Gillespie’s film dramatizes
the true story of how an online investor spooked the market in 2021. Keith
Gill- known by his streaming handle Roaring Kitty- believed that the shares of Gamestop,
a video game company were being artificially undervalued (sold short) so he
started buying them. As he broadcast this ad the prices began to rise so more
of his followers also bought shares sending the price soaring and causing considerable
alarm. This is a David and Goliath tale of the little man taking on the corporate
giants and potentially losing them billions despite their efforts to fight
back.
You wouldn’t necessarily
imagine the story would make an engaging film however Gillespie’s approach is
to cast his net wide encompassing the stories of several other investors who
bought shares and what happened to them. There are winners and losers and it
adds a human dimension to what would otherwise be a drama full of people
staring at screens or talking on the phone. There is a real tension that
develops as people weigh up whether to sell or not especially when their
profits start to rack up. On the other side of the fence we see the initial
dismissive complacency of the professional slowly being replaced by concern and
then panic as bankruptcy looms. Brokerage services halt the sale of the shares which
leads to values falling again potentially losing all the monies people have
made. So; do they sell or not?
The film underlines
what has always seemed to me a bizarre way to run economic matters based as
much on the `mood` of the market which is artificially created by the
machinations of a small but hugely influential coterie of very rich people
rather than anything more practical.
Visually being set in
2021 seems to help the mood and you could imagine that something like this
would not have had the effect it did had everyone not been so glued to their
screens during the pandemic. The face masks and references to Covid remind us
of just what a strange time that was.
Most of the characters
we see never meet on screen and because of the period when it’s set even the
later investigation takes place remotely. To make the movie as authentic as
possible Gillespie also uses real news footage of the time and, when it comes to
the government hearing, actual film of questions being asked which is then
answered verbatim by the actors. The film makes no attempt to portray Gill as
either good or bad, he is as surprised as anyone when his actions create an
economic juggernaut. We even see that online he streamed with his actual
balance sheets on screen in the background as transparency. Played by the ever
versatile Paul Dano he is someone we can
admire for making a stand. A great cast ensure this is always more than a drama
documentary with especially good performances from Shailene Woodley as Keith’s
wife and Pete Davidson as his wayward brother. A different and absorbing tale
well told.
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