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Black Adam is a 2022 American superhero film based on the DC Comics character of the same name. Produced by New Line Cinema, DC Films, Seven Bucks Productions, and FlynnPictureCo., it is a spin-off from Shazam! (2019) and the eleventh film in the DC Extended Universe (DCEU), serving as the first installment of Phase One. Directed by Jaume Collet-Serra and written by Adam Sztykiel, Rory Haines, and Sohrab Noshirvani, the film stars Dwayne Johnson (who also served as a producer) as the titular character alongside Aldis Hodge, Noah Centineo, Sarah Shahi, Marwan Kenzari, Quintessa Swindell, Bodhi Sabongui, and Pierce Brosnan.
Johnson was attached to Shazam! early in development and confirmed to portray the villain Black Adam in September 2014, but the producers later decided to give the character his own film. Sztykiel was hired in October 2017. Collet-Serra joined in June 2019 for a planned release date of December 2021, but this timeline was delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic. Additional casting took place over the next year, including four members of the Justice Society of America (JSA), and the script was rewritten by Haines and Noshirvani. Filming took place from April to August 2021 at Trilith Studios in Atlanta, Georgia, and also in Los Angeles.
Black Adam had its world premiere in Mexico City on October 3, 2022 and was theatrically released in the United States on October 21, 2022, by Warner Bros. Pictures. Critics praised the performances of Johnson and Brosnan but criticized the screenplay and villain, while the action sequences drew polarized responses.
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Plot
In 2600 BC, the tyrannical king of Kahndaq, Anh-Kot, created the Crown of Sabbac, known to give the wearer great power. After attempting to stage a revolt, a young slave boy is given the power of Shazam, transforming him into Kahndaq's heroic champion Teth-Adam; he kills Anh-Kot and ends his reign.
In the present day, Kahndaq is oppressed by the Intergang. Archaeologist Adrianna Tomaz tries to locate the Crown of Sabbac with the help of her brother Karim, and colleagues, Samir and Ishmael Gregor. As Adrianna obtains the crown, they are ambushed by Intergang. Adrianna reads an incantation that awakens who she believes to be Teth-Adam from his slumber, who subsequently slaughters most of the Intergang troops.
Public government official Amanda Waller[a] learns of the incident and contacts Carter Hall / Hawkman and the JSA (Justice Society of America) (consisting of Kent Nelson / Doctor Fate, Maxine Hunkel / Cyclone, and Albert "Al" Rothstein / Atom Smasher) to assist in taking Adam into custody. The JSA arrives in time to stop Adam from doing further destruction to the city and Intergang's troops. The JSA explains that Adam was not a savior in his time, but instead a madman who was imprisoned, rather than entombed.
Ishmael is revealed to be the leader of Intergang, and chases Adrianna's teenage son Amon, who has stolen the crown. Adam, Adrianna, and the JSA intend to use the crown to trade for Amon. They reach Ishmael, who reveals that he is the last descendant of King Anh-Kot and, wanting his rightful place on the throne, demands the crown, which Adrianna willingly gives to save Amon's life. Ishmael betrays his part of the deal and shoots at Amon, and Adam, trying to save Amon, loses control again and destroys the hideout with his power, killing Ishmael.
Guilt-ridden, Adam flees. He reveals to Hawkman that he is not Kahndaq's ancient champion "Teth-Adam", but in fact the champion's father; knowing that Adam's son, Hurut, was invincible, the king's assassins elected to execute Hurut's family instead to avenge their king, including Adam and Hurut's mother, and that Hurut had given his power to his father to save him, turning him into Black Adam, only for Anh-Kot's assassins to kill the now-mortal Hurut. Enraged, Adam slaughtered all of the king's men, bringing destruction to the city, before being summoned by the wizards of Shazam, who imprisoned him after deeming him unworthy. Feeling incapable of becoming Khandaq's champion, Adam surrenders to the JSA, who take him to Waller's underwater prison. Soon after, Fate sees an ominous premonition of one of the JSA's impending deaths. As the group returns to the city, they realize Ishmael intentionally made Adam kill him while he was wearing the Crown of Sabbac so that he could be reborn as the host of the demon Sabbac himself, and he arises from the underworld to claim his throne.
The JSA arrives in time to try to stop Sabbac, who summons the undead to Kahndaq. The JSA prepares to face Sabbac in Anh-Kot's ruins, but Fate creates a magical force field that forbids Hawkman, Cyclone and Atom Smasher from entering and reveals that Hawkman's death can be avoided with his own sacrifice. Fate then fights Sabbac alone, and at the same time uses an astral projection to release Adam. Sabbac kills Fate, causing the force field to disappear, and allowing the others to fight. Just as he is about to kill the JSA, Adam arrives and engages Sabbac, ultimately killing him. The JSA departs on good terms with Adam, who accepts his new role as protector and ruler of Kahndaq.
In a mid-credits scene, a message from Waller warns a defiant Adam never to leave the country, before Superman arrives and suggests the two of them should talk.
Cast
- Dwayne Johnson as Teth-Adam / Black Adam: An antihero from Kahndaq who was imprisoned for 5,000 years. Similar to the superhero Shazam, he has had bestowed upon him the powers of various Egyptian gods from the ancient wizard of the same name. Johnson previously portrayed the character in Shazam! (2019) in a facial cameo role, and voiced the character in a post-credits cameo (alongside his protagonist role as Krypto, and additional cameo role as Black Adam's dog Anubis) in DC League of Super-Pets (2022).[3][4]
- Aldis Hodge as Carter Hall / Hawkman: The leader of the Justice Society of America (JSA).[5][6]
- Noah Centineo as Albert "Al" Rothstein / Atom Smasher: A young member of the JSA who can control his molecular structure and manipulate his size and strength.[7][4]
- Sarah Shahi as Adrianna Tomaz: A university professor and resistance fighter in Kahndaq.[8]
- Marwan Kenzari as Ishmael Gregor / Sabbac: A militant leader of the criminal organization Intergang, whom Adam must work with the JSA to bring down after becoming Sabbac.[9][10][11]
- Quintessa Swindell as Maxine Hunkel / Cyclone: A member of the JSA who can control wind and generate sound.[12] As the granddaughter of Abigail "Ma" Hunkel / Red Tornado, she seeks to live up to her familial superhero legacy.[13] Swindell studied dancing techniques when designing their character's movement.[14]
- Bodhi Sabongui as Amon Tomaz: Adrianna's son.[15]
- Pierce Brosnan as Kent Nelson / Doctor Fate: A member of the JSA and the son of an archeologist who learned sorcery and was given the magical Helmet of Fate called Nabu.[16] Brosnan wore a motion capture suit for the role.[17]
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Additionally, Mohammed Amer portrays Karim, Adrianna's brother,[18][19] while James Cusati-Moyer portrays Samir, a colleague of Adrianna and Karim.[20] Jalon Christian appears as Hurut, Black Adam's son who becomes the original champion of Kahndaq, deemed pure of heart to wield the power and name of Shazam, with his superhero form Teth-Adam portrayed by Uli Latukefu.[21] Several actors also reprise their roles from previous DCEU media, including Djimon Hounsou as the wizard Shazam,[22] Viola Davis as Amanda Waller,[23] Jennifer Holland as Emilia Harcourt,[24] and Henry Cavill as Kal-El / Clark Kent / Superman, the latter in an uncredited cameo appearance during the mid-credit scene.[25][26] Henry Winkler cameos via FaceTime as Atom Smasher's uncle Al Pratt, the previous Atom who lent the suit to Albert.[27]
Production
Development
New Line Cinema began the development of a Shazam! feature film in the early 2000s, based on the DC Comics character Captain Marvel. The title came from the wizard Shazam who gives the hero his powers, with DC unable to use the title Captain Marvel due to legal issues.[28] Peter Segal signed on to direct the film in April 2006,[29] and Dwayne Johnson was approached about portraying Captain Marvel later that year. By November 2007, Johnson was also interested in the film's antagonist, Black Adam, and had received positive responses from fans about him possibly playing that character.[30] Development on the film was placed on hold by January 2009,[31] but had begun again by April 2014 when Warner Bros. (the parent company of New Line) and DC began planning a slate of superhero films for its shared universe, the DC Extended Universe (DCEU).[32] That August, Johnson said he was still attached to the film but had not yet decided if he would play Captain Marvel or Black Adam.[33] A month later, Johnson announced that he would portray Black Adam.[34]
In January 2017, Johnson met with DC's Geoff Johns to discuss the project after studio executives grew concerned that an actor of Johnson's profile was being used as a villain and supporting character in the film instead of starring in it. Following that meeting, they decided to split the project into two films: Shazam! (2019), starring the hero Captain Marvel who DC had since rebranded as Shazam; and Black Adam, with Johnson starring as the title antihero.[3] Johnson said the two characters would meet onscreen in the future.[35] Johns confirmed in July that Johnson would not appear in Shazam!,[36] though his likeness is used in that film for a magical hologram of Black Adam conjured by the wizard Shazam.[37]
Adam Sztykiel was hired to write the screenplay for Black Adam in October 2017, with Johnson set to produce the film with Dany and Hiram Garcia of Seven Bucks Productions along with Beau Flynn of FlynnPictureCo.[38][39] At that time, there were plans for Johnson to first appear as Black Adam in the sequel to Suicide Squad (2016), which had Gavin O'Connor attached as writer and possible director. The intention was for the members of the Suicide Squad to be tracking a weapon of mass destruction which would be revealed as Black Adam in a small role for Johnson,[40] but these plans were abandoned when O'Connor left that film in 2018.[41] Sztykiel completed a draft of the Black Adam script by April 2018, when Johnson said there was potential for filming to begin in 2019.[42] At the end of August, Sztykiel handed in another draft and further revisions were underway. Hiram Garcia said then that giving Shazam and Black Adam their own films was allowing the best movie for each character to be developed, and he added that their depiction of Black Adam was not going to be "softened up for audiences", explaining that he is "not the boy scout superhero, he's the guy that's like, okay, you cross him? Well, I rip your head off".[43] In December, Johnson said filming would not begin until the end of 2019 at the earliest due to his commitments to Jumanji: The Next Level (2019) and Red Notice (2021).[44]
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After the successful release of Shazam!, Black Adam became a priority for New Line. By June 2019, Jaume Collet-Serra was in talks to direct the film after impressing Johnson as the director of Jungle Cruise (2021).[39] Collet-Serra described Black Adam as the Dirty Harry of superheroes, and said the film would show a darker version of Johnson compared to the adventure comedy Jungle Cruise.[45] Johnson revealed in October that filming would begin in July 2020,[46] and announced the following month that Black Adam was scheduled to be released on December 22, 2021.[47] He also said Shazam would not appear in the film, but members of the Justice Society of America (JSA) would be introduced.[48]
Pre-production
Johnson stated in mid-April 2020 that filming had been delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and they were now planning to begin production in August or September of that year.[49] By July, filming was expected to begin in early 2021 in Atlanta, Georgia,[50][9] and Noah Centineo was cast as Atom Smasher.[7] During the virtual DC FanDome event in August, Johnson revealed that the film's version of the JSA would include Hawkman, Doctor Fate, and Cyclone, in addition to Atom Smasher.[4] He explained that Hawkgirl was originally included in the team, but for a complicated reason she ultimately could not be used in the film and was replaced with Cyclone.[51]
Rory Haines and Sohrab Noshirvani had written a new draft of the script by September,[5] when Aldis Hodge was cast as Hawkman.[5][6] Collet-Serra discussed his comparisons of the character of Dirty Harry with Johnson, saying "The systems were corrupt, so you had criminals taking advantage. You needed a cop that would cut through the bullshit and basically do what needed to be done. That's very much in line with Black Adam and his way of thinking. I think that's appealing to pretty much everybody. Everybody knows how the world sometimes is not fair, and you need people that break the rules to even out the playing field." Johnson remarked that "the Black in Black Adam refers to his soul", and described his worldview as "myopic", adding that for Adam, "There's no room or space for him being wrong. There's no room or space for anyone else's opinion. There's only room and space for him to justify anything that he does because of his pain. And he pushes and pushes and pushes and does not see any other way. It's very black and white."[52]
The next month, Warner Bros. adjusted their upcoming release schedule due to the pandemic, leaving Black Adam without a release date.[53] Later in October, Sarah Shahi joined the cast as Adrianna Tomaz.[8] Quintessa Swindell was cast as Cyclone in December,[12] with Marwan Kenzari joining the cast in February 2021.[9] Filming was expected to begin that April,[9] with construction of the sets beginning by mid-March.[54] Pierce Brosnan was cast as Kent Nelson / Doctor Fate at the end of March,[16] and the film was given a new release date of July 29, 2022.[55] In April, James Cusati-Moyer, Bodhi Sabongui, Mo Amer, and Uli Latukefu joined the cast in undisclosed roles.[20][15][18][21] Latukefu previously worked with Johnson on the series Young Rock,[21] while Sabongui's character was described as a key role from the Black Adam comics.[15]
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Filming
Principal photography began on April 10, 2021, at Trilith Studios in Atlanta, Georgia,[56][57] with Lawrence Sher serving as cinematographer.[58] Filming was delayed from an initial July 2020 start due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[46][49] Johnson said on June 20, 2021, that there were three weeks left of filming,[59] and on July 15 he announced that he had completed his scenes.[60] Filming then continued without Johnson for several weeks, with the production moving to Los Angeles,[61] and had wrapped by August 15.[62]
Henry Cavill reprises his role as Superman from other DCEU films during the film's post-credits scene; this marks his first time shooting material as the character since Justice League (2017), with the character being portrayed by stand-ins for his appearances in Shazam! (2019) and the HBO Max series Peacemaker (2022), while Zack Snyder's Justice League (2021) featured Cavill through pre-recorded footage. Johnson stated that Seven Bucks Productions, including himself, Dany Garcia, and Hiram Garcia, played an integral role in the re-negotiations between Warner Bros. and Cavill.[63] Johnson originally pitched the idea for Cavill to reprise his role to DC Films president Walter Hamada while working on reshoots for the film. Hamada rejected the idea due to his own plans for Superman projects set outside the DCEU, so Johnson instead approached Warner Bros. Motion Picture Group co-chairmen Michael DeLuca and Pam Abdy, who approved the idea. The scene was shot in September 2022, a month before the film's premiere, after a series of negotiations during Labor Day.[64]
Post-production
Bill Westenhofer serves as the visual effects supervisor for the film, after doing so for the DCEU film Wonder Woman (2017),[65][66] while John Lee and Michael L. Sale are the editors.[67][68][69] Visual effects vendors included Weta FX, UPP, Scanline VFX, Digital Domain, DNEG, Rodeo VFX, Lola VFX, Cantina Creative, Tippett Studio, and EDI Effetti Digitali Italiani.[70]
In March 2022, Warner Bros. adjusted its release schedule due to the impacts of COVID-19 on the workload of visual effects vendors. Black Adam was pushed back to October 21, 2022, with The Flash and Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom moved from late 2022 into 2023 to allow time for their visual effects work to be completed.[71] The delay for Black Adam was also reportedly due to reshoots that were scheduled for February 2022 having to be postponed because most of the studio space at Trilith was being taken up by production on Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 (2023). Once shooting for that film ended,[72] reshoots for Black Adam began in early May,[73] and had concluded early the next month.[74] Collet-Serra confirmed that work on the film had been completed with a picture lock being achieved by July 2022.[75] Final writing credits were given to Sztykiel, Haines, and Noshirvani, while an additional literary material credit was attributed to David Leslie Johnson-McGoldrick.[76] In October 2022, Djimon Hounsou and Jennifer Holland were revealed to be reprising their respective DCEU roles as Shazam and Emilia Harcourt, the former from Shazam! (2019) and the latter from The Suicide Squad (2021) and Peacemaker (2022).[22][24] The film initially received an R rating due to several gruesome death scenes and many cuts had to be made to the film to receive the lower PG-13 rating.[77]
Music
In July 2022, it was announced that Lorne Balfe, who previously wrote additional music[78] for Christopher Nolan's The Dark Knight Trilogy and composed the music for The Lego Batman Movie, would compose the score for the film.[79] Black Adam and the Justice Society's themes were released by WaterTower Music as singles on September 29 and October 7, respectively,[80][81] and the full soundtrack was released on October 14.[80]
All music is composed by Lorne Balfe.
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Teth-Adam" | 3:33 |
2. | "Kahndaq" | 6:09 |
3. | "The Awakening" | 3:04 |
4. | "The Revolution Starts" | 1:29 |
5. | "Introducing the JSA" | 4:41 |
6. | "Shaza-Superman" | 2:23 |
7. | "Our Only Hope" | 2:06 |
8. | "Change Your Name" | 1:27 |
9. | "What Kind of Magic?" | 2:10 |
10. | "Is It the Champion?" | 0:57 |
11. | "Your Enemies" | 1:50 |
12. | "Black Adam Spotted" | 1:37 |
13. | "Not Interested" | 1:41 |
14. | "Just Say Shazam" | 4:11 |
15. | "Ancient Palace" | 3:15 |
16. | "Little Man" | 1:40 |
17. | "Time to Go" | 1:35 |
18. | "Release Him" | 0:56 |
19. | "Father & Son" | 3:36 |
20. | "Black Adam Theme" | 3:57 |
21. | "Fly Bikes" | 3:25 |
22. | "Nanobots" | 1:33 |
23. | "Through the Wall" | 2:54 |
24. | "23 lbs. of Eternium" | 2:27 |
25. | "Is This is End?" | 2:05 |
26. | "It Was Him" | 5:49 |
27. | "Lake Baikal" | 2:59 |
28. | "Capes and Corpses" | 1:07 |
29. | "Hawkman's Fate" | 2:10 |
30. | "The JSA Fights Back" | 2:12 |
31. | "A Bad Plan Is a Good Plan" | 1:56 |
32. | "Dr. Fate" | 1:20 |
33. | "Prison Break" | 2:35 |
34. | "Wet Rocks" | 0:54 |
35. | "Not a Hero" | 1:22 |
36. | "The Doctor's Destiny" | 0:55 |
37. | "Slave Champion" | 1:27 |
38. | "Legions of Hell" | 2:17 |
39. | "The Man in Black" | 0:46 |
40. | "Adam's Journey" | 3:50 |
41. | "The Justice Society Theme" | 5:12 |
42. | "Black Adam Theme" (iZNiiK Remix) | 4:01 |
43. | "The Justice Society Theme" (iZNiiK Remix) | 3:52 |
Total length: | 1:49:00 |
Marketing
Johnson promoted the film at the virtual DC FanDome event in August 2020, revealing concept art and narrating an animated teaser for the film as well as announcing which members of the JSA would be appearing.[4] The film's new July 2022 release date was announced on March 28, 2021, with another teaser narrated by Johnson that was aired ahead of an NCAA Basketball Regional semifinal game and also announced during a "takeover" of New York's Times Square. Carly Lane at Collider described the Times Square event as thrilling,[82] while CNET's Mark Serrels said "booming it over a giant speaker in Times Square" was a "very cool way to announce a movie's release date".[83] The film was promoted at the 2021 DC FanDome in October, with Johnson revealing an opening scene for the film introducing himself as Black Adam. Tom Reimann of Collider was excited to finally see footage from the film after its long development history, and said "looks like Dwayne Johnson in a superhero movie, which is to say it looks awesome".[84] Both The Wrap's Ross A. Lincoln and The A.V. Club's William Hughes highlighted the short scene's violence,[85][86] while Matt Patches at Polygon compared the footage's tone to the Mummy franchise.[87]
In February 2022, more footage from the film was released as part of a showreel for Warner Bros.' 2022 slate of DC films, which also included The Batman, The Flash, and Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom (before the last two were delayed to 2023 in March).[88][71] Johnson, Centineo, and Swindell promoted the film at Warner Bros.' CinemaCon panel in April 2022, where a teaser trailer was launched.[89] The first official trailer was released on June 8, featuring an orchestral remix of Kanye West and Jay-Z's song "Murder to Excellence" (2011).[90] Jennifer Bisset at CNET wrote that the trailer posed Black Adam as a character who "must choose between being a hero or villain -- and it looks like he takes the darker path, judging by his take on the question of whether heroes kill people".[91] Both Maggie Lovvit from Collider and Charles Pulliam-Moore from The Verge also noted Adam's brutality in the trailer. Pulliam-Moore felt that the death of Adam's son "radicalizes him and emboldens him to use his newfound powers to seek a kind of justice so brutal that those around him are forced to lock him away". Lovvit opined that Adam's morality exists "within the grey area between black and white" and was excited at seeing the character's future in the DCEU.[92][93] Writing for IGN, Rosie Knight also felt that it showed Adam's "tragic" backstory, speculating that it could take inspiration from the New 52 iteration of the character, and that it would determine his future actions.[94] Collet-Serra and the cast promoted the film in the 2022 San Diego Comic-Con and revealed exclusive footage for the film.[23] Scottie Andrew of CNN compared the footage to that of Shazam! Fury of the Gods (2023), calling it "somehow even moodier".[95] Charles Pulliam-More from The Verge felt the footage depicted Adam as a villain rather than an antihero, noting how the Justice Society of America (JSA) "seem much more keen on stopping him than trying to recruit him to their ranks."[96] Similarly, Pete Volk of Polygon also highlighted Adam's confrontation with the JSA.[97] Germain Lussier of Gizmodo praised the action sequences in the trailer, calling it an "action-packed little sizzle".[98]
DC Comics published a series of one-shots focusing on each member of the JSA, titled Black Adam - The Justice Society Files, beginning on July 5 and concluding on October 4. Each issue also features a variant cover of the JSA members as they are depicted in the film.[99] The film partnered with ZOA Energy Drinks for an exclusive edition at the 2022 SDCC.[100]
Release
Black Adam had its world premiere in Mexico City on October 3, 2022,[101] and had screenings in New York City, Toronto, London, Atlanta, Miami, Madrid and Los
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Angeles between October 12 and October 20, 2022, before being released in the United States on October 21, by Warner Bros. Pictures.[71] It was originally set for release on December 22, 2021,[47] but was moved from that date due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[53] It was then given a July 29, 2022, release date,[55] but was moved to the October 2022 date when Warner Bros. adjusted its release schedule due to the impacts of COVID-19 on the workload of visual effects vendors.[71]
Reception
Box office
In the United States and Canada, Black Adam was released alongside Ticket to Paradise, and is projected to gross $50–60 million from 4,350 theaters in its opening weekend.[102][103] The film made $7.6 million from Thursday night previews, the highest solo outing of Johnson's career and besting Shazam!'s $5.9 million.[104] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale.[105]
Critical response
Rotten Tomatoes and Deseret News called film reviews mixed,[106][107] while Variety and Yahoo! News stated the film received negative reviews.[108][109] On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 42% based on 201 reviews, with an average rating of 5.10/10. The website's critics consensus reads: "Black Adam may end up pointing the way to an exciting future for DC films, but as a standalone experience, it's a wildly uneven letdown."[110] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 41 out of 100, based on 49 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[111]
Katie Walsh of the Los Angeles Times wrote "The director does heroic work crafting a film around Johnson that is fast and entertaining."[112] Writing for Consequence, Liz Shannon Miller gave the film a B grade and said: "On its own merits, Black Adam might feel a little thin in terms of story, but it does deliver plenty of enjoyable moments and a solid ensemble to back up Johnson. But perhaps the most exciting aspect of it is how it might shake up the rest of the franchise going forward."[113] Helen O'Hara of Empire rated it 3 out of 5 and wrote that the film attempts "to offer a grand unified theory of DC, mixing family-film tropes with a protagonist who straight-up murders people. The result is sometimes a mess, but it's a generally entertaining one."[114] Todd McCarthy of Deadline Hollywood praised Johnson's performance and the action scenes, writing: "The visual spectacle just keeps coming at you for two hours, and the effects are all so stupendous that you could begin to take it for granted. Practically every shot features something epic or at least unusual going on and director Jaume Collet-Serra, who guided Johnson's [2021] hit Jungle Cruise, takes good care to present the star in the most favorable dramatic light."[115]
Maya Phillips of The New York Times was more critical of her review, calling the film "a dull, listless superhero movie that hits all the expected touchstones of the genre under the guise of a transgressive new antihero story."[116] Rachel LaBonte of Screen Rant gave the film a 2.5 out of 5 and wrote, "Though suffering from repetitive plot beats and thin characters, Black Adam is powered by Johnson's performance and its promise of an exciting future."[117] TheWrap's Alonso Duralde called the film a "muddled, overstuffed origin story" and wrote: "Most disappointing of all, Black Adam is one of the most visually confounding of the major-studio superhero sagas, between CG that’s assaultively unappealing and rapid-fire editing that sucks the exhilaration right out of every fight scene."[118]
Future
In February 2015, Johnson told Total Film that Black Adam would fight Superman or Batman in the future.[119] In April 2017, he stated that DC Films plan on Black Adam and Shazam appearing in a future film together.[35] Henry Cavill, who portrays Superman in the DCEU, said in April 2018 that there were plans for Johnson's Black Adam to face off against Superman in the future, though he believed this will take place after Black Adam and Shazam collide.[120] Dany Garcia stated in May 2021 that Johnson and the other producers planned to make multiple Black Adam films during their "long-term relationship with DC",[121] and Hiram Garcia reiterated in July that there was potential for Cavill and Johnson to appear in a future project together as Superman and Black Adam.[122] That November, Hiram elaborated that they already had an outline for future films and spin-offs featuring Black Adam and the JSA that would be dependent on the first film being a success;[123] and added later that other characters beyond Shazam and Superman were being considered as potential future rivals for Black Adam such as Wonder Woman.[124]
In October 2022, Johnson confirmed future plans for Black Adam to fight Superman in the DCEU, and reaffirmed plans for the character to crossover with Shazam.[125][126] In a separate interview, Johnson stated that the character will interact with various characters within the DCEU continuity, while there are also options for iterations of characters that exist in their own separate universes (namely The Batman and Joker) to crossover through a multiversal scenario.[127] Furthermore, he confirmed Black Adam serves as the first film in Phase One of a new storytelling initiative in the DCEU, in the same vein as the Marvel Cinematic Universe's manner of presenting their film slates in phases.[128]
Producers Hiram Garcia and Beau Flynn confirmed to ComicBook.com on October 21, 2022 that a sequel was planned and it would not take as long to make as Black Adam did. Garcia added that they envisioned the film to be a buildup towards an eventual clash between Superman and Black Adam.[129]
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References
Notes
- ^ Waller's role in superhuman affairs having been exposed to the public in the Peacemaker first season finale "It's Cow or Never" (2022).
Citations
- ^ Moreau, Jordan (October 21, 2022). "Box Office: 'Black Adam' Flies to $7.6 Million in Previews". Variety. Retrieved October 21, 2022.
- ^ "Black Adam (2022)". The Numbers. October 21, 2022.
- ^ ab Kit, Borys (January 19, 2017). "Dwayne Johnson's DC Villain Black Adam Getting His Own Movie". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on February 1, 2017. Retrieved March 18, 2017.
- ^ ab c d D'Alessandro, Anthony (August 22, 2020). "Dwayne Johnson Confirms That 'Black Adam' Will Feature DC Characters Hawkman, Dr. Fate & Cyclone". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on August 22, 2020. Retrieved August 22, 2020.
- ^ ab c Kit, Borys; Galuppo, Mia (September 25, 2020). "'Black Adam': Aldis Hodge in Talks to Play Hawkman in New Line's DC Movie". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on September 25, 2020. Retrieved September 25, 2020.
- ^ ab Davis, Brandon (September 25, 2020). "Black Adam: Dwayne Johnson Welcomes Hawkman Actor Aldis Hodge to the Shazam! Spinoff". ComicBook.com. Archived from the original on September 27, 2020. Retrieved May 13, 2022.
- ^ ab Kit, Borys (July 16, 2020). "Noah Centineo Joins Dwayne Johnson in New Line DC Movie 'Black Adam' (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on July 16, 2020. Retrieved July 16, 2020.
- ^ ab Gonzalez, Umberto (October 14, 2020). "'Black Adam': Sarah Shahi Joins Dwayne Johnson Superhero Movie". TheWrap. Archived from the original on October 16, 2020. Retrieved April 10, 2021.
- ^ ab c d Kit, Borys (February 17, 2021). "Dwayne Johnson's 'Black Adam' Casts 'Old Guard' Scene-Stealer Marwan Kenzari (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on February 17, 2021. Retrieved February 17, 2021.
- ^ St. Peters, Joel (August 16, 2022). "Black Adam Reveals Key Details About the DCEU Film's Hellish Villain". Comic Book Resource. Retrieved August 16, 2022.
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