In his
first appearance in 2017's Justice League,
Jason Momoa’s Aquaman made his mark by being the bro-est superhero
around. Now he has his own movie (out now on DVD and blu-ray), and director James Wan actually dials
down his bro-ness – which is
pretty much the only thing dialled down here, because this is a film
that’s
going extremely hard in pretty much every direction. While not all of it
works, its failures end up being part of its charm: whatever you think
of its extremely loud and fairly dumb approach, it knows the only way to
make it work is to commit 100%.
There’s a real balancing act going on
here: even for a superhero, underwater fish lord Aquaman is hard to take
seriously, and yet treating him as a joke would be fatal. So this sets out to
make him the most normal thing in the film, plonking the hard-drinking part-time superdude into a meandering story that takes
in a sad lighthouse dad, seven distinct (and usually bonkers) undersea
kingdoms, a royal feud, the title “Ocean Master”, a modern-day pirate bad guy,
Nicole Kidman as a trident-wielding mum, killer fish, a desert quest, killer
fish men, beach training sequences, dinosaurs just in the background because why
not, trash tidal waves, and a racist sea monster – and that’s barely scratching the surface.
The not-so-secret to Aquaman's
success is that while the story is actually kind of flaccid - it's
basically a slow race between two Aqua-kings to see who can bring off
their scheme first - it's constantly throwing new things at the screen.
Over the course of the film Aquaman (AKA Arthur Curry) travels via ute, a
regular submarine, an Atlantean submarine, a plane, by foot across the
desert, a fishing boat and sea monster - plus he swims around using both
regular and super-styles. He fights at least four different kinds of
bad guy / creature, has multiple training montages, goes from punching
dudes in the head to disrupting an epic fantasy battle, and occasionally
drops a servicable one-liner. He's a very busy man.
With all
that going on, it's no surprise that this is an uneven film at the best
of times. The visuals are often stunning, but the dialogue is
serviceable at best (there's a big speech about the difference between a
king and a hero that had someone near me groaning), while the fight
scenes are always competent but rarely memorable. But what this does get
right is the world-building. To date DC's superhero movies have largely
taken place in the real world, but this covers everything from
futuristic underwater super-cities to "lost world" islands to desert
ruins to teeming sub-surface nightmares in a way that still sells them
as a (somewhat) cohesive whole.
It's all a
bit exhausting, and Momoa's slightly subdued performance occasionally
feels like a reflection of how the audience most likely feels at this
onslaught of new sensation. But again, the slightly cheesy tone works in
the film's favour: it may take it all seriously, but there's enough
oddball moments scattered throughout that the tone is never grimly
relentless in the way that something like Batman vs Superman: Dawn of Justice was.
There's a moment where Aquaman wakes up on a fishing boat while noodlely nautical flute music plays on the sountrack, then he goes out on deck and sees his underwater tour guide Mera (Amber Heard) is actually playing the music on a flute she found; you can't hate a film that finds time for that.
- Anthony Morris
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