By now, the fate of Marvel’s superhero known as Black Widow, aka Natasha Romanoff, is probably known to all, even those who are not really avid MCU (Marvel Cinematic Universe) followers. This writer needs to admit right off the bat to being part of the latter camp. I’ve only seen the first of The Avengers, Iron Man and Thor movies and the second Captain America, but I have seen both Ant Mans, both Guardian of the Galaxys, plus Captain Marvel, Dr. Strange and Black Panther. Spiderman is my favorite so I’ve seen all of those. Clearly there are holes in my recognition and understanding of the universe, or rather multiverse, due to what I haven’t seen, which, if you count all the Disney+ stuff, is a lot.
L.A. Weekly’s resident expert broke down the MCU films and their connection to Disney+’s TV shows in her excellent cover story about Wandavision earlier this year, but there’s a lot to understand and it takes effort. Fans love it, but some of us just aren’t that invested beyond the action and excitement we all know these movies deliver, especially since the powerhouse visionaries at Disney took over.
So yeah, you don’t have to be a Marvel uber-nerd to enjoy the latest “origin story” based movie starring Scarlett Johansson. In fact, it’s so well done, you kinda don’t even need to know anything about Marvel to be entertained on a face-value level. There’s a lot of fighting and expertly-measured CGI-infused fanfare as you might expect, but there’s also a lot of chemistry between the leads who are really at the top of their game here, making us believe they are real people with real inner-struggles and real relationships with each other.
In terms of learning more about Natasha, we get to see her smalltown American childhood and her “family” life in the opening scenes, which quickly takes a turn to showing us how she became an assassin in Russia (before she became an Avenger) along with her younger “sister.” We come to learn the two siblings were separated and became estranged over the years, with sis Yelena (played with irresistible moxie by Midsommar’s Florence Pugh) also getting swept up in spy life only to discover that it was due to mind control. In fact, all of the “widows” in Russia have been forced to kill and do nefarious deeds against their will as Natasha once did, thanks to Dreykov (Ray Winstone), who works out of an HQ called the “Red Room,” and sends out a masked robot-looking killer by the name of Taskmaster to stop the sisters from learning more. Also, he probably wants revenge on Natasha for killing his daughter, which (thanks Google) was apparently mentioned by bad guy Loki in the original Avengers movie.
The post There Goes My Hero: <i>Black Widow</i> Finally Gets her Due appeared first on LA Weekly.
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