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The Fantastic Four: Baby Steals The Show In This Dishy Redux

The Fantastic Four: Baby  Steals  The Show  In This Dishy Redux

Rating: *** ½

 Agility and  fragility are  effortlessly married in this , the most lucid and  coherent  super-hero  film   since Man invented  Marvel  & DC.

Let’s  cut to the chase. The Fantastic Four: First Steps  is  a treat, sumptuous treat.  It is one helluva good looking film with  charismatic  actors pitching in  like there  is no tomorrow. Which  happens to be  the literal truth,  if we consider that the world is  under attack by a space-god  name  Galactus.

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 Yeah yeah , I know. In how many ways is this world going to be saved by the  super heroes, right? Give us, and them, a break will  you…

 But hold on !  This  is not the  usual Super-heroes  versus  Super-villain saga  clogged  to the  brim with showoffy special   effects. There is more here..more emotional velocity,  more  compelling drama . Most of all there is  a cute baby involved this time , and he must be saved  before the world.

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 I loved the  maternal conflict  coming  into  play with the  larger interest of  humanity.And when the fantastic(pun intended)  Vanessa Kirby as  the  mother  comes out in the  public view to declare  that  she won’t sacrifice her baby to  save the world, but neither would she sacrifice the world  for the baby, I actually sprang out of my  seat to applaud her ceetee-scan moment.

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How  important selfpreservation  has become, and how to balance  our world with the  world outside, that’s the theme  FF: First Step nails noiselessly.  There is  lot more quiet wisdom in this super-hero film that any we’ve seen in recent times.

 Director Matt Shakman and his  screenwriters  Josh Friedman, Eric Pearson, Jeff Kaplan  and Ian Springer spring a sumptuous surprise on us. The Fantastic Four: First Steps is at once  spectacular and intimate.  The baby steals  the show, just as  the  dog in  the recent  Superman. Unlike the  unsettling(but nonetheless  hugely entertaining)  hijinks  in  Superman ,   The Fantastic Four creates  an enviable  balance between  the spectacle  and  the emotions.

 Admitably the  aero-dynamics  in the film are agreeable  and  unignorable. But it  is not all  up in the air this time. The  writers have rightly  focussed on  the human element. This is  at the end of the day,  the story of  a mother who must protect her baby  at any cost. In her  epic endeavour  Sue Storm(aka  the Invisible Woman) is enthusiastically  supported by  her  husband Reed Richards(Pedro Pascal)  , her kid brother Johnny Storm(Joseph Quinn)  and of course  the Thing, an outwardly ugly reptilian  soul, humanized   by the  plot to the extent that he appears  to be the most emotional of the  foursome.

    This is  where this segment  of the series scores over  its 2015  predecessor. This  time, the emotions matter. When the superhuman quarter is not busy saving the  world  it does what we all do: look for spaces to cuddle into.

A  remarkable  additional character is The Silver Surfer played by  Julia Garner, a marvel of motion capture,  her  journey from a world  destroyer  to  a conscientious  evil-buster  reminded me of the vamps from Hindi cinema in the past.The cabaret is  missing. The  drama is not.

There  a traffic of  oldworld charm swamping the plot. The  film’s  1964 setting is  never over-emphasized.  But the  way Times Square is retro-created is  a worthy  topic for  a thesis. So much  bang-on nostalgia, so many  able actors,  so  much food for thought  on family and  the  larger community…But my  hero, superhero  , is  the baby Franklin. Can’t wait to see what he does in the next instalment .

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