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Eternals: Mixed reviews for Chloé Zhao's 'insipid' Marvel movie - BBC News

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Kit Harington, Angelina Jolie, Chloe Zhao and Gemma Chan pose on the red carpet at the Eternals premiere
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Eternals, the latest movie from the Marvel universe, has received mixed reviews, with critics calling it over-ambitious yet progressive.

The film's ensemble cast includes Gemma Chan, Richard Madden, Kit Harington, Angelina Jolie and Salma Hayek.

It is the first major studio film by Chloé Zhao, who won the best director Oscar earlier this year for Nomadland.

The Guardian gave Eternals two stars, calling it "magic hour meets PowerPoint".

The paper's critic Steve Rose said Zhao "manages to get some nice-looking shots and personal drama in her superhero debut, but there's just too much mythology to explain".

'Bigger isn't always better'

The problem, he added, is that "there's just too much going on: it's all headed towards yet another 'race against time to stop the really bad thing happening' climax".

He continued: "It's not exactly boring - there's always something new to behold - but nor it is particularly exciting, and it lacks the breezy wit of Marvel's best movies."

Chloe Zhao at the 2021 Oscars
Getty Images

Eternals is about the titular group of 10 demigods who join forces to protect the Earth from the "Deviants".

In his review, The Times' Kevin Maher also plumped for two-stars, declaring the movie to be a tale of "navel-gazing superheroes in quest for a decent script".

He wrote: "There's a strange self-sabotaging energy at the heart of this landmark blockbuster."

Maher did note, though, how the movie had made efforts to show a more diverse mix of superheroes on screen.

'Two steps forwards'

Eternals offers two major firsts for the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU). Brian Tyree Henry plays Phastos, its first openly gay superhero; while Lauren Ridloff plays Makkari, its first deaf superhero, who is also gender-swapped from the comic books.

"Eternals is two steps forwards for representation but three steps backwards for dramatic ingenuity," added Maher.

The Telegraph's Robbie Collin also gave it two stars, stressing that Marvel had attempted to "push boundaries" but with "insipid" results.

"This gallumphing new offering is a white elephant," he wrote.

He felt that Zhao's "compassionate eye and poetic feel for landscape", which helped her also win best film for Nomadland at this year's Academy Awards, was "nigh-on undetectable".

"Perhaps the hope was that Marvel's 26th film might rattle the franchise out of its comfort zone," he concluded. "But the franchise is nothing but comfort zone, which renders its latest entry an instant white elephant."

BBC Culture was a little more generous, offering three stars. Writer Nicholas Barber still called it "watchable but ultimately unmemorable", and possibly "the most disappointing MCU [Marvel Cinematic Universe] film yet".

"Hiring a writer-director who specialises in muted, documentary-like dramas for an action spectacular about interstellar demigods may not have been the wisest choice," he said.

Empire also dished out three stars, with reviewer John Nugent noting how the inclusion of "a genuine sex scene, and an onscreen gay kiss" were indeed firsts for the MCU.

"But anyone anticipating the first 'arthouse Marvel' should temper their expectations," he warned.

"Director Chloé Zhao's entry into the superhero world is assured, ambitious and told on a dizzyingly cosmic scale - but even it can't escape the clichés of superhero storytelling."

'Right to take her time'

Despite its critics, Eternals is "still worth seeing for all fans of the MCU, from casual to diehard", according to Screenrant's Molly Freeman. She described the movie as "a thrilling, epic superhero adventure all its own, with a captivating emotional heart brought to life beautifully by Zhao's direction."

She added: "It's a Marvel movie unlike anything the MCU has seen thus far."

The Evening Standard, with its four-star review, was also effusive in its praise - with caveats. "The whole cast are fabulous, with one exception," wrote Charlotte O'Sullivan. "Chan's a bit wooden. As far as the script's concerned, she's the chosen one. But I wish Zhao hadn't chosen her."

Clocking in at more than two-and-a-half hours long, Eternals is a long film, O'Sullivan said, but not without good cause.

"Does it take an eternity to end? Not at all. With characters and concepts this strong, Zhao's quite right to take her time."

Eternals is in cinemas from 5 November.

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