Superman (2025)

James Gunn’s reboot of one of the most recognizable and beloved stories and characters in pop culture history wisely ditches the origin story and hits the ground running, and the momentum never quite slows down. We’re thrown into a world where Clark is already Superman, dating Lois, and surrounded by Metahumans, and the movie greatly benefits for it. David Corenswet, first and foremost, is wonderful as the titular hero, giving us someone more tangible and relatable to aspire to, while actors like Christopher Reeve and Henry Cavill played the character as larger-than-life figures bigger than any normal person could ever imagine to understand. This story is all about Superman’s flaws and embracing of his unique identity, as well as his immovable faith in humanity, even we can’t see it in ourselves or continue to turn on the guy. Corenswet’s performance is oozing with superstar levels of charm while bringing the character down to earth — no pun intended — while the script does the audience many favors by not making us feel like Superman is invincible; he can be defeated with wit and even technology, and that’s what raises the stakes here.

Rachel Brosnahan is probably the best Lois Lane we’ve yet to see, who’s naturally funny, brave, and feels like her own character, while we also care greatly for her relationship with Clark moments into being introduced to it. Nicholas Hoult is outstanding as Lex Luthor, chewing up the scenery while providing a villain that hits far too close to home — a tech billionaire with a God complex and Emperor Nero-like ambitions, who feels like he exists in his own world beyond just a terrific adversary to Superman. Gunn always shines in making his supporting cast feel close to us, like a wondrous family we’re getting to know, and everyone gets to stand out, from Edi Gathegi, Nathan Fillion, Isabela Merced, and Anthony Carrigan as other metahumans to Skyler Gisondo who is hysterical and irresistible as reporter Jimmy Olsen. Most importantly, Superman’s dog Krypto is an adorable scene-stealing standout.

Gunn’s visuals also stand out here, feeling colorful in a comic book nature and often morphing around our actors. The action is dynamic and exciting, and the excitement that’s both playful and grand. Beyond his singular and unpredictable filmmaking, Gunn’s skills as a writer shine, with conflicts that balance the gripping and the over-the-top, and a genuine heart that seeks out to represent what Superman’s been about all along — optimism, hope, and shared humanity. Gunn never feels restrained, however, by what’s defined past iterations of the character, and still makes this Superman his own. The film delivers on every promise while standing out from recent superhero outings and being perhaps the most thrilling, lovable, and worthy Superman movie yet.

Black Adam

After using his powers for vengeance, the mortal slave Teth-Adam was imprisoned by the gods and trapped for centuries, becoming Black Adam. Nearly 5,000 years later, Black Adam is freed and finds his unique form of justice challenged by the Justice Society of America (JSA).

If you’re familiar with the kind of blockbusters Dwayne Johnson is often a part of, this is no different — an action movie that tries to be as crowd pleasing as possible with as little brain energy as possible. And it’s very middle-of-the-road for his filmography — it’s not as fun as the Jumanji or Fast & Furious films but not as embarrassingly bad as Skyscraper or Baywatch, so right there in the middle with forgettable spectacle like San Andreas, Red Notice and Jungle Cruise. Johnson delivers a solid performance as Black Adam, whose humor this time around comes more from Adam’s “fish out of water” aspect. However, his character’s actual development in order to justify him turning into a more rageful anti-hero is pretty uninteresting and it says a lot that all four members of the Justice Society have no backstory or arc but are far more interesting than him. Aldis Hodge shows off his badassery as Hawkman, going toe-to-toe with Johnson and even managing to steal the show from him, along with Pierce Brosnan, who is also great as Doctor Fate, whose powers and presence are intriguing. Noah Centineo and Quintessa Swindell are also entertaining as the other two members of the JSA. Unfortunately, the movie is brought down by a bloated conflict, weak CGI and a script you’ve seen a thousand times before. The rapid editing of action scenes takes away lots of the grandiose, even when Black Adam fighting the JSA starts off fun. By the third act, it descends completely into a forced “good guy vs bad guy” CGI-fest of action that feels pulled straight out of Justice League. Though the style manages to occasionally have fun, it’s got too many elements working against it, whether it be the editing, Marwan Kenzari’s awful character, the lack of thematic clarity, or a willingness to take itself less seriously than it should.

Black Adam serves loud noise and huge action scenes — exactly what The Rock is known for — but unfortunately nothing more. The solid supporting cast and occasionally entertaining action and scale isn’t enough to save this movie from descending into generic chaos.