Black Adam movie review & film summary (2022) | Roger Ebert (2024)

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Black Adam movie review & film summary (2022) | Roger Ebert (1)

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Directed by Jaume Collet-Serra, and featuring a remarkable lead performance by Dwayne Johnson, the spiky and majestic "Black Adam" is one of the best DC superhero films to date. This tale of a gloomy, seemingly malevolent god who reappears in a long-occupied Middle Eastern nation rejects most of the choices that bland-ify even the good entries in the genre. For its first third, it presents its title character—a champion who challenged a despotic king thousands of years earlier—as a frightening and unknowable force with a bottomless appetite for destruction. Known by his ancient moniker Teth-Adam, his reemergence from a desert tomb proves both a miracle and a curse for people who prayed for someone to defend them against corporate-mercenary thugs who haveoppressed them for decades and strip-mined their land.

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Throughout the rest of its running time, “Black Adam” leans into the inevitability of Adam’s evolution toward good-guy status, condensing the transformation of the title character in the first two “Terminator” films (there are even comic bits where people try to teach Adam sarcasm and the Geneva Conventions). "Black Adam" then stirs in dollops of a macho sentimentality that used to be common in old Hollywood dramas about loners who needed to get involved in a cause to reset their moral compasses or recognize their worth. But the sharp edge that the film brings to the early parts of its story never dulls.

Adam initially seems as much of a literal as well as a figurative force of nature as Godzilla and other beasts in Japanesekaijufilms. It’s initially hard for the people in Adam’s path to tell if he’s good, evil, or merelyindifferent to human concerns. One thing’s for sure: everyone wants Adam to help them prevent a crown forged in hell and infused with the energy ofsix demons from being placed atop the head of someone in Intergang, a global corporate/mercenary consortium whose interests are represented by a two-faced charmer (Marwan Kenzari).

Decades ago, Humphrey Bogart played a lot of cynical men who insisted they weren’t interested in causes, then changed their minds and took up arms against corruption or tyranny. Viewers still love that story, and Johnson has updated it many times during his career, most recently in “Jungle Cruise,” in which he played a character modeled on Bogart's riverboat captain in "The African Queen." He channels vintage primordial acting by Sylvester Stallone and Arnold Schwarzenegger but also poet-brute performances like Anthony Quinn's strongmanin "La Strada," and infuses the totalitywith his unique charisma."Black Adam" confirms thathe’s studied the classics and cherry-picked bits that seem to work for him. There are even tenderheartedmoments of regret and recrimination that seem inspired by 1950s moral awakening pictures like “On the Waterfront.”

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The latterare usually triggered by three “civilian” characters who appeal to Adam’s presumed innate (though submerged) goodness. One is Adrianna Tomaz (Sarah Shahi), a university professor, resistance fighter, and widow of a resistance hero who was killed by the colonizers. Another is Adrianna’s cheerful and indomitable son Amon (Bodhi Sabongui), who zips around the bombed-out city on a skateboard that seems to have as many secondary uses as a Swiss Army Knife. And then there’s Adrianna’s brother Amir (comedian Mohammed Amer), who livens up a standard-issue earthy everymanrole.

Somehow, though, the script by Adam Sztykiel, Rory Haines, and Sohrab Noshirvani resists the temptation to wallow in unearned sentiment. Nor does the movieinsist, despite the evidence, that Adam and the superheroes brought into to confront him (Aldis Hodge’s Hawkman, Noah Centineo’s Atom Smasher, Quintessa Swindell’s wind-manipulating Cyclone, and Pierce Brosnan’s dimension-hopping and clairvoyant Dr. Fate) are wonderful people who have pure motives and always mean well. In conversations about motivations and tactics, nobody is entirely right or wrong.The movie's edgecomes from its determination to live in moral gray areas as long as it can.

It also comes from the violence, which is presented as the inevitable result of the characters’ personalities, ambitions, and duties, rather than being associated with any particular code or philosophy. That framing, plus the sprays of blood and images of people being impaled, shot, andcrushed, pushes the movie's PG-13 rating to the breaking point like “Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom” and “Gremlins” did with the PG rating nearly 40 years earlier. There were several walkouts at the “Black Adam” screening this writer attended, and in every case, it was somebody who brought a child under 10.

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In fairness, they may not have expected the movie tobegin with a flashback that climaxes with a slave at a construction site getting gut-stabbed andthrown off a cliff, and a boy being threatened with beheading, or for thetitle character to obliterate an army with electrical bolts and his bare hands seconds after his first appearance. Nearly every other scene—including expository dialogue exchanges—is setagainst the backdrop of a chaotic city whose residents have been hardened not just by the occupation, but by the catastrophes that are unleashed whenever super-beings clash, which ties into recurring scenes and dialogue about what it means for a small country to be invaded and occupied by outsiders who set their own rules and are indifferent to daily life on the ground.

Film history buffs might note the studio that originated the project: the Warner Bros. subdivision New Line. It rose to prominence with horror films, grew by releasing auteur-driven, down-and-dirty genre pieces and dramas (including “Menace II Society” and “Deep Cover”), and got into blockbusters with the original “Lord of the Rings” trilogy. You can see that lineage reflected in many scenes and sequences of this film, which is PG-13 in fact but R in spirit. “Black Adam” immediately announces what sort of film it is by weaving in quotes from the Rolling Stones’ “Paint it Black” (the melody of which is referenced in Lorne Balfe’s score) and musical as well as visual snippets from “The Good, The Bad and the Ugly”—key works from artists whose best work invites you to root for people who move through their worlds like threshers.

The film’s director honed his mayhem chops in horror movies, then in R-rated thrillers in which Liam Neeson brutally dispatches adversaries. Collet-Serra makes a PG-13 film feel like an R by cutting away or jumping back from the nastiest violence, but letting us hear it (or imagine it when people watch from a great distance). He also does itby insisting, through actions as well as dialogue, that individuals, even superhuman ones, do things for multiple, often contradictory reasons. (A boy’s bedroom is filled with superhero posters and comics, and when a “good guy” and Adam fight in there, they burn andtear through DC’s most recognizable icons in a way that rhymes with scenes of the city'shistoric monumentsbeing toppled or pulverized.)

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Fidelity to basic film storytelling keeps "Black Adam"centered even when it's doing ten things at once. The film ispacked with foreshadowings, setups, payoffs, twists, and surprises, and is filled with well-defined lead and supporting characters. Onestandout is Brosnan, who delivers a moving portrait of an immortal who is tired of seeing the future and thinking back on his past. Dr. Fate looks at those who can live in the present with a mixture of melancholy, wisdom, and envy.

Another is Johnson, who has real acting chops but in recent years has often seemed to be constrained (maybe intimidated?) by his lucrative image as the people’s colossus. He’s as minimalist as one could be when playing a god. He takes a lot of his cues from the screen star that the film quotes most often, Clint Eastwood, but he also seems to have learned from action-hero performances by stars likeNeeson, Toshiro Mifune, Stallone, Schwarzenegger, and Charles Bronson, who understood that the camera can detect and amplify faint tremors of emotion as long asyou act with the film—not just in it, and never against it. The peak is a fleeting moment when Johnsonlets us know that something deep inside Adam has changed by glancing in a different direction and softening his features. It's maybe half a second. It’s not the kind of acting that wins prizes because if it’s done well—as it is here—you feel as if it happened in your mind rather than on the screen.

The politics and spirituality of the movie are just as committed andconsistent. Even when the story flirts with Orientalism or incorporates simplistic Western heaven-and-hellimagery, “Black Adam” never loses track of what Adamrepresents in our world: autonomy, liberation, the possibility of redemption and renewal, and a refusal to be defined by however things have always been done.

The result sometimes plays like the DC answer to the pop culture quake that was “Black Panther,” serving up a Middle Eastern-inflectedversion of the Marvel film’s Afro-Futurist sensibility, and letting its setting stand in for any place that was colonized. But its politics are more clearly defined and less compromised. “Black Adam” is staunchly anti-imperialist to its marrow, even equating the Avengers-like crew sent to capture and imprison Black Adam to a United Nations “intervention” force that the people of the region don’t want because it only makes things worse. The movie is anti-royalist, too, which is even more of a surprise considering that the backstory hinges on kings and lineage.

"Black Adam" isa superlative and clever example of this sort of movie, coloring within the lines while drawing fascinating doodles on the margins. In its brash, relentless, overscaled way, Collet-Serra's film respects its audience and wants to be respected by it. "Black Adam"gives the audience everything they wanted, along with things theynever expected.

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Film Credits

Black Adam movie review & film summary (2022) | Roger Ebert (9)

Black Adam (2022)

Rated PG-13for sequences of strong violence, intense action and some language.

125 minutes

Cast

Dwayne Johnsonas Teth Adam / Black Adam

Aldis Hodgeas Carter Hall / Hawkman

Pierce Brosnanas Kent Nelson / Doctor Fate

Noah Centineoas Al Rothstein / Atom Smasher

Sarah Shahias Adrianna Tomaz / Isis

Marwan Kenzarias Ishmael Gregor / Sabbac

Quintessa Swindellas Maxine Hunkel / Cyclone

Bodhi Sabonguias Amon Tomaz

Viola Davisas Amanda Waller

Jennifer Hollandas Emilia Harcourt

Mo Ameras Karim

Director

  • Jaume Collet-Serra

Writer (based on the characters created by)

  • Bill Parker
  • C.C. Beck

Writer

  • Adam Sztykiel
  • Rory Haines
  • Sohrab Noshirvani

Cinematographer

  • Lawrence Sher

Editor

  • Michael L. Sale
  • John Lee

Composer

  • Lorne Balfe

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Black Adam movie review & film summary (2022) | Roger Ebert (2024)

FAQs

What is Black Adam about summary? ›

What is the point of Black Adam movie? ›

Movie Info

Synopsis Nearly 5,000 years after he was bestowed with the almighty powers of the ancient gods--and imprisoned just as quickly--Black Adam (Dwayne Johnson) is freed from his earthly tomb, ready to unleash his unique form of justice on the modern world.

What is the message of the movie Black Adam? ›

The main message from Black Adam is that no-one is all good or all bad. Values in Black Adam that you could reinforce with your children include self-sacrifice, heroism, strong female characters, and bravery. Black Adam could also give you the chance to talk with your children about attitudes and behaviours.

Is Black Adam good or bad? ›

Anti-Hero. Black Adam is known to crush both villains and heroes. His first appearance in the DC universe was filled with fear from his enemies and allies. He is a major enemy to the JSA, Justice League, and Teen Titans, and of course, he is Shazam's greatest nemesis.

What made Black Adam a bad movie? ›

Add a Review. Large budgeted and badly disjointed, "Black Adam" belongs in the poor category with the likes of "Justice League" and "Superman vs Batman". The story is hackneyed, and the dialog is eye-rolling with terrible worn out humor. It feels like a bad imitation of better Marvel movies.

Is Black Adam a hit or flop? ›

Despite the failure of Black Adam which saw only a $393 million worldwide gross against a $260 million budget, subsequent releases from the DCEU in the year after the film's release somehow shine a more positive light on the Johnson-led blockbuster.

What do I need to know before watching Black Adam? ›

Originally imagined as an ancient Egyptian pharaoh, Teth-Adam (Black Adam's original alter ego) was the first mortal being to be granted the powers of Shazam, long before the teenaged Billy Batson was chosen as the ancient wizard's champion.

Is Black Adam a hero or evil? ›

ongoing series, Adam is a deadly and evil adversary for Captain Marvel. In this revised origin, Teth-Adam was born on September 11, 1279, BC. Teth-Adam is the son of the ancient Egyptian Pharaoh Ramesses II, and impresses one of the high priests, the wizard Shazam, with his good deeds.

Who is the bad guy in Black Adam? ›

Sabbac is the main villain in Black Adam movie, though he and the titular antihero were occasional allies in the original comics. Three different versions of Sabbac have been presented by DC over the years, each with dramatically different backstories.

What does the ending of Black Adam mean? ›

By the end of the movie, Black Adam has taken on the unofficial role of protector of Kahndaq, the Middle Eastern country he was born in, centuries earlier.

Why does he say Shazam in Black Adam? ›

Black Adam and Shazam both get their powers from the same Council of Wizards, which explains why Teth-Adam says "Shazam!" to power up. Unlike Billy Batson, though, Black Adam draws his powers from the Egyptian gods: Shu, Heru, Amon, Zehuti, Aton, and Mehen.

Why is Black Adam important? ›

One of the world's foremost wielders of magic, Black Adam has been both hero and villain over a life that's spanned thousands of years. Thousands of years before Billy Batson became a magically-empowered hero, the wizard Shazam selected another champion.

Why does Black Adam hate Superman? ›

Black Adam fought alongside Superman and his totalitarian Regime, making him a character fans want to see in Injustice 3. Superman began reaffirming the loyalty of his followers after The Flash betrayed him. Black Adam wanted to keep his home country of Kahndaq out of the fight, which led him to attack Superman.

Can Superman beat Black Adam? ›

As the dialogue in Justice League #73 suggested, while Superman's specific vulnerabilities give Black Adam a chance against him, that doesn't mean the two are equal in power, and the Man of Steel is clearly stronger by any comparison.

Who is stronger, Black Adam or Superman? ›

As far as strength is concerned, it's pretty much a wash. Earth's yellow sun gives Superman immense strength, while Black Adam's strength is, literally, a gift from the gods, specifically Amon. A street brawl between the two could go on for days with neither gaining the upper hand.

Is Black Adam evil in the movie? ›

While Black Adam has been both a villain and a hero in DC comics, the movie seems to be reimagining him as more of an antihero. In the trailers, Hawkman, a hero who's part of the Justice Society of America, tells Black Adam, "In this world, there are heroes, and there are villains.

Is Black Adam evil in Black Adam? ›

While Black Adam has been both a villain and a hero in DC comics, the movie seems to portray him as more of an antihero. In the trailers, Hawkman, a hero whose part of the Justice Society of America, tells Black Adam, "In this world, there are heroes, and there are villains.

How is Black Adam related to Shazam? ›

Black Adam Was Chosen By The Same Council As Shazam

While there were some alternations, this plot point in the movie mirrors the character's origins from the source material. In the classic continuity of DC Comics, Teth-Adam was chosen by the wizard Shazam, who chose Billy Batson to be his champion 5,000 years later.

What happens at the end of Black Adam? ›

The film ends with Black Adam seated on the throne of Kahndaq before also smashing it, saying the city doesn't need a ruler… it needs a protector. And that's where we leave him, protecting Kahndaq and staying out of trouble with Amanda Waller. And speaking of Amanda Waller… there's that mid-credits scene.

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