The Fantastic Four: First Steps Review
The Fantastic Four: First Steps (PG)
115 minutes, opens on July 24
★★★★☆
The story: On Earth-828, human society has made great leaps in technology by the 1960s. The planet is protected by guardians dubbed The Fantastic Four by the media. Reed Richards/Mister Fantastic (Pedro Pascal), his wife Sue Storm/Invisible Woman (Vanessa Kirby), Reed's best friend Ben Grimm/The Thing (Ebon Moss-Bachrach) and Sue's brother Johnny Storm/Human Torch (Joseph Quinn) are astronauts who, four years ago, travelled to space and returned with superpowers from an encounter with cosmic rays. Their gifts are put to the test with the arrival of the Silver Surfer (Julia Garner), a herald of doom announcing that the planet will be consumed by her master Galactus (Ralph Ineson), a cosmic being who devours worlds.
Here we go again: A new decade, a new Fantastic Four reboot. Marvel has analysed the previous failures and tweaked the formula. Its answer? A slightly older cast, whose members are comfortable with and confident in their superpowers.
Compared with the 2005 version, which had the beats of a sitcom built around a dysfunctional family, or the 2015 reboot, a brooding exploration of what it means to be different, this iteration of the comic book heroes presents them as the picture of mental health.
Reed and Sue are a couple deeply in love. Ben and Johnny have professional respect and admiration for each other.
In one revealing scene, Johnny and Ben are together, minus Sue and Reed, preparing dinner.
In lesser hands, this would have been a moment for mean-spirited quips, or building jokes around the idea of the armour-encrusted The Thing being clumsy in the kitchen or a cocky Human Torch shooting flames to cook sausages. Instead, Ben is portrayed as a delicate perfectionist, with Johnny his wary but respectful companion who 'flames on' only in the line of duty.
Top stories
Swipe. Select. Stay informed.
Singapore S'pore's domestic recycling rate drops to all time low of 11%
Singapore HDB launches 10,209 BTO and balance flats, as priority scheme for singles kick in
Business Singapore's digital banks finding their niche in areas like SMEs as they narrow losses in 2024
Asia Japan Prime Minister Ishiba to resign by August, Mainichi newspaper reports
World Trump says US will charge 19% tariff on goods from Philippines, down from 20%
Singapore Two found dead after fire in Toa Payoh flat
Singapore 2 foreigners arrested for shop theft at Changi Airport
Singapore Ports and planes: The 2 Singapore firms helping to keep the world moving
As Ben notes in another scene, catchphrases like 'flame on' belong only in cartoons. The two of them set the table and, in a charming display of sensitivity, wonder if it would be impolite to start the meal without Reed and Sue.
These are among the small character-based surprises director Matt Shakman sprinkles throughout the film.
His gift for character-driven drama has been showcased in the Emmy-winning Disney+ miniseries WandaVision (2021), which had the American film-maker directing all nine episodes of the story centred on Marvel's Wanda Maximoff (Elizabeth Olsen).
(From left) Pedro Pascal as Reed Richards/Mister Fantastic and Vanessa Kirby as Sue Storm/Invisible Woman in The Fantastic Four: First Steps.
PHOTO: THE WALT DISNEY COMPANY
In First Steps, the retro-futuristic setting – featuring furniture, flying cars and rocket ships from the minds of designers from a parallel world where it is still 1960 – feels natural and lived-in, yet unlike anything seen in a Swinging Sixties picture.
The sense of mystery that drives WandaVision pervades this movie as well. Haunting the minds of all four heroes is the question of Sue's unborn child, glimpsed in the movie's trailer.
The irradiated couple's worries about the physical state of the baby are handled with a graceful economy, within a story that opens the door to the wider Marvel Cinematic Universe without making it obvious.
Hot take: This reboot succeeds by focusing on emotionally mature, mentally well-adjusted characters rather than rehashing the dysfunction and angst of previous versions.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


AsiaOne
2 hours ago
- AsiaOne
Mark Ruffalo to join Tom Holland in Spider-Man: Brand New Day, Entertainment News
Mark Ruffalo will join Tom Holland in Spider-Man: Brand New Day. According to The Hollywood Reporter, the 57-year-old actor will reprise his role of Bruce Banner / The Hulk in the upcoming Sony/Marvel movie sequel, alongside Tom as Spider-Man. Michael Mando will also return to his role of the Scorpion, the villain from 2017's Spider-Man: Homecoming, along with Jon as vigilante the Punisher. Tom, 29, recently revealed how excited he is to return to the Spider Man universe, after Covid-19 restrictions made shooting difficult on the third movie, 2021's Spider-Man: No Way Home. He told Flip Your Wig: "I think we were really restricted with what we could do in the last movie because of Covid-19. We shot the entire film on stages. Now we're really going to lean into that old school filmmaking and shoot in real locations. "We are going to use the streets of Glasgow for this massive set piece that we are putting together." Tom added that playing Peter Parker and his web-slinging alter-ego is like "like hanging out with an old pal" and filming the fourth movie is "going to feel like making 'Spider-Man 1 [2017's 'Spider-Man: Homecoming] again". He added: "It's been such a long time that I've done it that it's going to feel like a breath of fresh air. I think the fans are going to be over the moon with what we're putting together." Zendaya will also be returning as MJ in Spider-Man 4, along with Jacob Batalon as Peter Parker's best friend Ned. Sadie Sink has joined the cast, but her character has not been revealed. ALSO READ: Kevin Feige teases Tom Holland will become 'proper Spider-Man' in next movie instalment


AsiaOne
2 hours ago
- AsiaOne
The Fantastic Four: First Steps star Ralph Ineson on how his costume change felt like he was in a 'Formula One pit', Entertainment News
Ralph Ineson "felt like a Formula One car" during the making of The Fantastic Four: First Steps. The 55-year-old star plays villain Galactus in the new Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) blockbuster and explained the lengths that the crew had to go to keep him cool in his heavy costume. Ralph told Collider: "For the actor, it's like working in a huge rubber suit in a sauna, but you're not allowed to sweat. "So, I have a whole pit crew around me — I'm like a Formula One car — with people taking off bits of my costume in between takes to bring my body temperature down, and then bring it back on for the next take. "People are shoving air conditioning units up the back of my armour to keep my body temperature down. So, it's a really strange sight. There are eight people buzzing around me like a Formula One pit crew." Ralph explained that the "strangest" part about starring in the film is seeing his character recreated in toy form for merchandise. The Harry Potter star said: "It's really crazy. The maddest one for this, for me, is the popcorn bucket of Galactus' head, which is about this big. It's enormous! That's kind of surreal. "I saw a picture of a toy that's being released, which is kind of to scale to the normal toys, so the Galactus one is about two and a half feet tall. So, yeah, it's very strange to see yourself in toy form." Ineson explained that there was some dialogue from Galactus that he was disappointed to see absent from the flick's final cut, but he respects director Matt Shakman's editorial decisions. He said: "From my point of view, there's no kind of sections, but there were various versions, dialogue-wise, of certain speeches, and there were a couple of phrases that I particularly liked that I would have liked to have stayed in that were replaced by other ones. "But that's not my job. I don't do those things. That's Matt and editors." The Fantastic Four: First Steps also stars Vanessa Kirby as Sue Storm/ Invisible Woman and she has confessed to becoming a "nerd" about her alter ego. She told Variety: "I'm such a Sue nerd. "There was something so allegorical about her. She was called Invisible Girl. Then Psycho-Man comes and disrupts everything, and she has a meeting with her own dark side in Malice. She comes back, and she renames herself Invisible Woman. So she transforms from a girl to a woman. "There's something about meeting the hardest parts of yourself in Malice that felt extremely poignant to me. I'm really hopeful I might be allowed to be Malice at some point for her." Vanessa previously described how she loves to take on "challenging" roles. The Crown actress told TheTalks: "I really like pushing past my limits in that way - I love it. "When I read something and go, 'Uh, I don't know how I am going to do this,' then I know I should do it. I don't think it feels as challenging when you read a script and go, 'I know exactly how I am going to do this.'" ALSO READ: Vanessa Kirby lost her voice after Fantastic Four birth scene


CNA
9 hours ago
- CNA
Commentary: Hollywood has lost the plot on telling stories
TOKYO: Up in the sky! Look! It's a bird! It's a plane! It's … another summer of rehashes. The peak period for the box office is rarely full of the most original ideas. But even so, this year leaps over the offences of the past with a single bound. The three biggest movies Hollywood studios have pinned their hopes on in 2025 are the third new take on Superman in the last 20 years, the fourth iteration of the Fantastic Four, and the sixth attempt to recapture the magic of 1993's Jurassic Park. The only US film to top US$1 billion this year is Lilo & Stitch, another live-action remake tapping into Gen Z and millennial nostalgia. In 2024, there wasn't a single original film that broke the US box office top 15. It's further evidence that Western culture seems to have reached an impasse – wistful for our youth and unable to come up with any new ideas. The contrast was particularly stark here in Japan, the world's third-largest cinema market. A week after Superman opened, I struggled to find a theatre still showing it – with all available screens occupied by the smash Demon Slayer movie. In just 10 days, the animated hit grossed 12.9 billion yen (US$87 million) and is on track to become Japan's highest-earning film ever. While it might be a sequel to the 2020 flick, Demon Slayer is a property less than a decade old. The action fantasy is based on a manga that began in 2016 and concluded just four years later. Superman tales have been continuously churned out for 86 years. FRESH IDEAS IN JAPAN AND CHINA Instead of endless stories involving the same handful of superheroes, Japan's entertainment industry is constantly creating fresh ideas. There are around 300 new anime series produced each year, most coming from the pages of manga – a low-cost way to test what works. And there are far more diverse genres on offer than just superheroes, from the volleyball manga Haikyu!!, which debuted in 2012, to Kingdom, a retelling of the Chinese warring states period that first appeared in 2006, both of which have recently been top-grossing films. It's not just Japan. In China, audiences boosted Ne Zha 2 to the biggest-earning movie worldwide this year. It might be a sequel, but it's one to a relatively recent property, with the first hitting in 2019. And a decade from now, while Hollywood will likely still be going back to the well for Superman, Spider-Man and Batman, I doubt we'll be watching reboots of either. I admit there's a certain charm to seeing the same idea interpreted by different generations – to see how the kooky Tim Burton interpretation of Batman moves through to the more realistic, gritty takes of the mid-2000s. Reflecting the growth of online geek culture, today's adaptations lean into comic-book references, and assume deep audience familiarity with origin stories and characters. But particularly outside of the US, audiences are tiring of the same old story. Nonetheless, studios remain undaunted, with the next few years promising Supergirl, two more Avengers flicks and the ninth live-action Spider-Man movie since 2002. There's Toy Story 5 and yet another Lord Of The Rings prequel. The only thing that's not a sequel might be Christopher Nolan's The Odyssey – though does an adaptation of a nearly 3,000-year-old epic count? Our obsession with the familiar isn't just limited to the silver screen – see how Oasis and Beyonce's tours are capturing the zeitgeist. HOLLYWOOD'S INABILITY TO MOVE FORWARD Algorithms may indeed be corrupting what we interact with, creating a feedback loop of surfacing things we already enjoy. But I don't believe – as some have argued – that the love of nostalgia is a sickness, brought on by the infantilisation of society, 'extended adolescence', or too much time spent online (for one thing, Asian societies are just as online, if not more so). And of course, Japan loves its familiar series, too – this year alone has seen the 28th Detective Conan movie about a sleuth trapped in the body of a schoolboy, and a series in the long-running military sci-fi Gundam property. The hit Godzilla Minus One shows that Japan also loves going back to the well. But these are balanced out by new ideas. Hollywood's inability to move forward seems more like a function of business, in particular the frenetic pace of studio consolidation. That continues with the recently approved merger of Paramount Global and Skydance Media; Marvel and DC, the creators of almost all mainstream American superhero properties, have both been subsumed into these studios. The 'creative destruction' that Western-style capitalism promises doesn't seem to be inventing much besides shareholder value. Instead, it rewards a risk-averse management approach that likes the predictable ticket. Ironically, the 'production committee' approach to most Japanese animated movies, with multiple companies splitting the risks and revenues of original projects, might be bad for artists but seems good for creativity. There's nothing wrong with the familiar. While I'm not sold on the attempts to make Fantastic Four a hit, I'll still be first in line for The Batman Part Two. But we can't live on nostalgia alone. Give us some fresh stories.