Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Entertainment
  3. Reviews

Captain America: Civil War review

Captain America: Civil War is thrilling proof there's plenty of life left in superhero movies

Add as a preferred source on Google
weekend box office captain america civil war review mem feature
Image used with permission by copyright holder

“Why you can trust Digital Trends – We have a 20-year history of testing, reviewing, and rating products, services and apps to help you make a sound buying decision. Find out more about how we test and score products.“

Eight years ago, the arrival of Iron Man in theaters kick-started both Marvel Studios’ cinematic universe and four years of heated debate regarding the likelihood of Marvel — or any studio, for that matter — pulling off the sort of ambitious, interconnected movie plan the studio had envisioned for its films.

Recommended Videos

In the years (and films) that followed, Marvel not only proved skeptics wrong, but also managed to change the conversation around its films. These days, it’s no longer a question of whether Marvel can pull it off, but how long the studio can keep their wildly successful franchise rolling along.

If there’s an answer to be found in Captain America: Civil War, the latest film in the studio’s cinematic universe and the 13th movie overall, it’s that the Marvel movie train isn’t showing any signs of slowing down any time soon.

Civil War is an ensemble piece, jam-packed with just about every costumed character introduced in the studio’s universe.

Written by Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely and directed by brothers Joe and Anthony Russo (the same teams responsible for 2014’s Captain America: The Winter Soldier), Captain America: Civil War has Marvel’s superheroes dealing with the ramifications of their actions throughout all of the previous films and facing the deadly toll that their super-powered battles take on the innocent people around them. The Avengers soon find their loyalties fractured when the world demands that the team answer to government agencies, and the divide grows even greater when a terrorist attack implicates Captain America’s old friend, James “Bucky” Barnes — the former assassin known as The Winter Soldier.

It almost seems disingenuous to frame Civil War as part of the Captain America solo franchise. More so than any of the previous films in Marvel’s movie-verse, Civil War is an ensemble piece, jam-packed with just about every costumed character introduced in the studio’s universe so far (with the exception of Chris Hemsworth’s Thor and Mark Ruffalo’s Hulk) and masterfully balancing out their screen time so no one feels neglected. Sure, the philosophical war at the heart of Civil War is primarily waged between Chris Evans’ soldier-turned-superhero, Steve Rogers (a.k.a. Captain America), and Robert Downey Jr.’s playboy industrialist, Tony Stark (Iron Man), but nearly everyone seems to have their own, unique perspective on both what’s at stake and the best way to handle it.

To its credit, there’s actually a surprising amount of depth in the supporting characters of Civil War, and what could easily have been a film in which characters get smashed together under weak pretenses (a la Batman V. Superman: Dawn of Justice) ends up being a remarkably nuanced presentation of some complicated perspectives on personal accountability, collateral damage, and the balance between freedom and security. Both Evans and Downey articulate their  positions well — possibly even better than their characters did in the Civil War comic book series that inspired the film — and most of the supporting characters who ally themselves with one hero or the other offer up some convincing arguments for doing so.

That’s not to say there isn’t a lot of smashing characters together to be found in Civil War, though. There’s plenty of that, too.

Each of the primary “team-up” films in Marvel’s cinematic universe so far have raised the bar when it comes to ensemble action sequences, from the novelty of seeing them interact in The Avengers to the impressive coordination of their efforts in films like The Winter Soldier and last year’s Avengers: Age of Ultron. The same holds true for Civil War, which boasts some of the best, visually thrilling chase- and fight-sequences of any film produced by Marvel so far.

Where Age of Ultron upped the ante when it came to the scale of the ensemble sequences and how much cooperative choreography it asked of its hero characters, Civil War takes things to the next level by relying on scenes in which the characters battle each other instead of hordes of digitally created robot villains. Given the characters’ powers, those battles unfold in the air and on the ground (and occasionally at a miniature level), frequently shifting between both environments on the fly (pun totally intended) and transitioning certain match-ups from the background to the foreground as the characters trade off opponents.

Newcomers to the franchise more than live up to the hype.

The end result is a wildly entertaining celebration of both hyper-detailed fight choreography and the creative team’s deep understanding of the characters and the unique ways each character moves and acts.

Among the returning cast for the film are the aforementioned Evans and Downey, as well as much of the cast from both Age of Ultron and The Winter Soldier. Paul Rudd’s Ant-Man character, Scott Lang, is also thrown into the mix. While that’s all well and good (and Rudd is particularly good in the role he plays), it’s the newcomers to the franchise that have been generating the lion’s share of buzz leading up to the film’s release — and they more than live up to the hype.

In his debut as the new Spider-Man, actor Tom Holland hits all the right notes, and plays off Downey and the rest of the cast well. Tonally, he captures the best parts of former Spider-Man actor Andrew Garfield’s under-appreciated portrayal of the character, offering an endless commentary on everything happening around him and bringing a light-hearted tone to the scenes he appears in. The transition into Marvel’s cinematic universe appears to have been a smooth one for the famous webslinger, and his surprisingly ample amount of screen time should leave fans feeling good about his future at Marvel.

There’s also a lot to like about 42 actor Chadwick Boseman’s introduction as Black Panther, the popular African superhero, over the course of Civil War.

 

Although the title of the film suggests that it’s Captain America’s movie, Boseman’s Black Panther and Scarlett Johansson’s spy superhero Natasha Romanoff (a.k.a. Black Widow) seem positioned to be the moral centers of the narrative. Both Johansson and Boseman do a nice job of conveying their respective characters’ uncertainty about the events transpiring around them and the opposing, rigid positions taken by each side’s leader. It’s an interesting — and clever — juxtaposition, with Black Panther offering an outsider’s perspective, while Black Widow is too deeply entrenched to fully commit to either side. It’s a difference that both actors seem well aware of in their performances, and adds another layer to the story being told in the film.

As the first installment in “Phase Three” of Marvel’s cinematic universe, Captain America: Civil War does an excellent job of establishing a new status quo for The Avengers and the world they inhabit, and leaves the audience craving more without relying on a cliffhanger. It’s not an easy feat, and the film succeeds where so many other projects envisioned as chapters in a larger, over-arching story fall short.

At a time when the failings of Batman V. Superman seem to have opened the door once again to discussion of “superhero fatigue,” Captain America: Civil War offers a strong argument that the best is yet to come in the superhero movie genre.

Rick Marshall
Former Contributing Editor, Entertainment
A veteran journalist with more than two decades of experience covering local and national news, arts and entertainment, and…
The House of the Dragon season 3 final trailer just spoiled its most anticipated moment
Rhaenyra takes King's Landing but is already surrounded by plots, betrayal, and threats.
house-of-dragon-season-3-final-trailer

HBO has never been shy about building suspense, so it came as a surprise when the final trailer for House of the Dragon season 3 casually revealed one of its biggest moments up front.

The outcome of the much-anticipated Battle of the Gullet, the centerpiece naval clash that opens the season, is effectively out in the open. Rhaenyra Targaryen wins the battle and takes over King's Landing. For fans of George R.R. Martin's source material, Fire and Blood, this was inevitable. For everyone else, it is a bittersweet spoiler they might have preferred to discover on screen themselves, though the closing moments of season 2 made this development all but unavoidable.

Read more
Hulu app is about to die and you might soon see its catalog appear on Disney+
Hulu may be headed for the streaming graveyard
App icons for Hulu and Disney+ on Apple TV.

The Hulu app might not be dead right now. But Disney might be working behind the scenes to make you want to use it less. Disney's streaming tech teams are working on a multi-phase plan called Project Gemini, which aims on bringing more of Hulu's content and features into Disney+.

The reports claims that the unified experience is expected to be finished by the end of the year, based on a leaked internal document and two streaming employees. However, Disney told Business Insider that there are "no current plans to sunset" the standalone Hulu app.

Read more
You can make the Ghostface do whatever you want on this Scary Movie website
The Subservient Ghostface website for Scary Movie lets fans boss around the masked killer on screen.
scary-movie-6-subservient-ghostface-website

The popular horror parody Scary Movie is back with an interesting movie marketing campaign. With the movie hitting theaters on June 5, Wayans Bros. Entertainment has launched a website called Subservient Ghostface, where you type a command and watch the masked killer carry it out on screen.

Turns out Ghostface takes orders really well and fans cannot get enough

Read more