The Marvels (2023)

The Marvels (2023)
3 / 10

The Marvels is the Captain Marvel sequel that team-ups Brie Larson with two female MCU successors. Nia DaCosta directed. Megan McDonnell, Elissa Karasik, and DaCosta wrote. Larson returns as Carol Danvers. Iman Vellani plays Kamala Khan, the Pakistani-American teenage Ms. Marvel introduced in her Disney+ series. Teyonah Parris plays Monica Rambeau, the adult version of the character introduced in WandaVision and now light-powered after her S.W.O.R.D. exposure. Zawe Ashton plays Dar-Benn, a Kree revolutionary whose stolen Quantum Band entangles the three heroes so they switch positions whenever they use their powers. Samuel L. Jackson returns as Nick Fury. The plot follows the three heroes learning to coordinate while pursuing Dar-Benn.

The film made approximately two hundred and six million dollars worldwide on a two hundred and twenty million dollar budget. The commercial performance was the worst opening in MCU history. The film lost money for Disney after marketing costs. The Marvels’s failure is widely cited as the moment Marvel Studios acknowledged its post-Endgame strategy had broken. The 2024 layoffs at Marvel Studios and the strategic pivot announced at San Diego Comic-Con followed this film’s reception.

What Made It a Woke Disaster

The film exists because Marvel Studios committed to female-led ensemble work as a strategic priority regardless of audience demand for the individual characters involved. Captain Marvel (2019) had performed well commercially but generated significant audience hostility toward Brie Larson’s public statements about diversity and her performance. Monica Rambeau was a supporting character in WandaVision. Kamala Khan was the lead of a Disney+ series that had not built mass audience awareness. The decision to team these three was not driven by character demand. The decision was driven by the studio’s commitment to a particular kind of representation.

The Dar-Benn antagonist is the film’s clearest ideological tell. Dar-Benn is a Kree revolutionary whose grievance is that Carol Danvers destroyed the Supreme Intelligence and damaged Kree civilization. The character is positioned as a colonized people striking back at her colonizer. The film treats this framing as legitimate moral footing. Carol is asked to acknowledge that her actions in Captain Marvel had consequences for the Kree, that she has been treating them as obstacles rather than as a people, and that her superhero status implicates her in their suffering. The framing is anti-colonial critique applied to a superhero film about flying lightspeed-punching alien fighter pilots.

The Kamala Khan family humor undercuts every dramatic beat. The film cuts repeatedly to Kamala’s parents and brother for comic relief. The family is charming. The family is also in every scene that could otherwise build tension. The script will not let the audience feel the threat of Dar-Benn because every other sequence cuts back to the Khans being cute. The structural commitment to keeping the tone light enough for the Kamala Khan demographic limits the threat the film can credibly stage. The Marvels is a superhero film that cannot risk being a superhero film.

For Writers

A team-up film built from characters the audience has not embraced individually will not generate audience embrace through assembly. The Marvels stacked three protagonists with different demographic profiles and assumed the diversity would compensate for the limited individual character demand. The lesson is that audience investment in characters is built one character at a time. Assembly cannot manufacture investment. If the audience does not want any of the three characters carrying their own film, the team-up film will not solve the problem. Build the individual characters first.

The Quantum Band Mechanic

The film’s central plot device is that the three heroes’ powers are entangled. When any of them uses powers, they swap positions. The mechanic is the kind of high-concept structural device that could anchor a strong action film. The choreography of the swap sequences is the film’s most accomplished individual work. The team learning to use the entanglement deliberately produces the third act’s strongest action beats.

The mechanic also exposes the film’s larger structural problem. The three protagonists have to be physically swapping to make the action sequences read. Without the swap, the three heroes have no reason to be in the same movie. Carol can fly through space and punch at lightspeed. Monica can phase through dimensions. Kamala can stretch. The three power sets do not naturally combine. The film invented the swap mechanic to give them a reason to fight as a team. The invention works in individual sequences and exposes the larger problem in retrospect. These three characters did not belong in the same film.

For Writers

A clever mechanic invented to force together characters who would not naturally combine signals a script that started from casting rather than from story. The Marvels’s Quantum Band entanglement is a writing solution to a casting decision. The lesson is that structural inventions to justify pre-decided teams tend to read as inventions. The audience can feel the seams. Build teams whose members have organic reasons to be together. If the casting is fixed first, build the story around relationships the characters could plausibly have.

The Iman Vellani Problem

Iman Vellani is the film’s most genuinely successful element. The young actress plays Kamala Khan as a specific person with specific enthusiasms. Her Carol Danvers fan-girling sequences are the film’s most committed character work. Vellani is performing at a different energy level than the rest of the cast. The result is a Kamala Khan character who feels like a real person in a film where the other two leads feel like brand-management exercises.

The Vellani performance also exposes the Larson performance by contrast. Brie Larson is a capable dramatic actress who has not yet found Carol Danvers as a character. Across three appearances (Captain Marvel, Endgame, The Marvels), Larson’s Carol has remained inscrutable. The performance is muted, cool, and emotionally distant. Vellani standing next to Larson is the moment the audience can see what character work looks like in the same scene as what brand work looks like. The contrast is unflattering to the film’s nominal lead.

For Writers

A supporting performance that outshines the lead exposes a casting problem the script cannot fix. The Marvels has Iman Vellani doing more committed character work than Brie Larson in their shared scenes. The audience reads the comparison. The lesson is that strong supporting performances reveal weaknesses in the leads they support. If the lead cannot match the supporting work, either the lead needs to elevate or the supporting work needs to be moderated. Audiences see contrasts even when scripts do not.

Craft Note

The Aladna musical sequence is the film’s most distinctive individual passage and the closest the production comes to having a singular creative voice. Carol arrives on a planet where the population communicates through song. The sequence runs about eight minutes and is genuinely strange. It is also walled off from the rest of the film. The Aladna passage suggests what The Marvels could have been if Nia DaCosta had been given license to make a stranger, weirder Carol Danvers film instead of a brand-management ensemble. The sequence is the production’s vestigial evidence that a more interesting film almost existed.

The Verdict

3/10. The lowest-grossing MCU film and the moment Marvel Studios acknowledged its post-Endgame strategy had broken. Iman Vellani is excellent. The Aladna sequence is the film’s strangest and best moment. The script’s commitment to Brie Larson as Carol, to the Dar-Benn anti-colonial framing, and to the family-comedy interruptions limits what the production could be. Watch it only if you are completing the MCU. As entertainment on its own terms, no.


FAQ

How bad was the opening weekend?

The lowest in MCU history. Forty-six million dollars domestic. Subsequent weeks did not recover.

Is Iman Vellani really the best part?

Yes. Her Kamala Khan is the film’s only genuinely engaged performance. The Ms. Marvel Disney+ series is also worth watching for her work.

What about Brie Larson?

Committed in the role she has chosen to play. The Carol Danvers character remains emotionally distant across three films. Whether this is performance choice or casting limitation has been debated for six years.

Did Marvel Studios change strategy after this?

Yes. The 2024 layoffs and the Comic-Con strategic pivot were direct responses to The Marvels and the broader Phase Four reception.

How is Nia DaCosta?

Talented director (Candyman 2021, Little Woods 2018) given a production whose constraints did not serve her strengths. The Aladna sequence suggests what she could have made with creative freedom.

Will the three characters appear together again?

Unclear. The James Gunn DC restructuring and Marvel’s strategic pivot have made future MCU casting unpredictable.

Should I watch this?

If you are MCU-completionist, yes. Otherwise, no.

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