About the movie: Black Adam

In ancient Kahndaq, Teth Adam bestowed the almighty powers of the gods. After using these powers for vengeance, he was imprisoned, becoming Black Adam. Nearly 5000 years have passed, and Black Adam has gone from man to myth to legend. Now free, his unique form of justice, born out of rage, is challenged by modern-day heroes who form the Justice Society: Hawkman, Dr. Fate, Atom Smasher, and Cyclone. The movie is releasing in India on 20th October in Cinemas in Hindi, English, Tamil, and Telugu. The movie stars Dwayne Johnson, Sarah Shahi, Noah Centineo, Pierce Brosnan, and others in lead roles.

Black Adam: Reviews from Critics

TheWarp’s Alfonso Duralde writes, “That task is the capture of an exceedingly powerful ancient metahuman known as Teth Adam, and despite the movie’s best efforts to jazz up the increasingly predictable superhero genre- this one doesn’t care if he kills people-“Black Adam” feels like both too much and not enough, and none of its narrative gambits are helped by a sludgy visual style that’s either distractingly artificial or dispiritingly gloomy, except when it managed to be both.” Eric Eisenberg from Cinemablend writes, “Black Adam is more mediocre than bad, but that’s perhaps worse in a pop culture landscape that will be quick to forget about it as audiences’ attentions drift to the next superhero blockbuster. Even Dwayne Johnson seems ready to move on, as the biggest hype he has generated for the release has been about it setting the table for the future. Given the number of years, this project was in development, and how it was promoted to shift the balance of power in the DC Universe, it’s disappointing that the end result is unremarkable.” Gizmodo’s Germain Lussier wrote in his review, “Black Adam is filled with intended emotional threads but most of it gets lost in the explosions. Everything is rushed, half-explained, glossed over and as a result, a movie that’s generally fun to watch ends up feeling super messy.” Mike Ryan from Uproxx writes, “For the life of me I will never understand why anyone would make a superhero movie with perhaps, the most charismatic action star working today decide, hey what if we took away all that charisma? It’s truly baffling.” Critic David Ehrlich from IndieWire says, “The question that Black Adam poses is a simple one: What happens when Hollywood’s most risk-averse movie star collides with Hollywood’s most risk-averse movie genre? The answer provided by Dwayne Johnson’s depressingly inevitable foray into the superhero industrial complex is, of course, even simpler: Exactly what you’d expect. Only worse.” CNN’s Brian Lowry writes, “There’s simply no getting around the clunkiness of the dialogue, or the sense “Black Adam” overestimates the character’s appeal. Even a sequence during the closing credits hinting at a more dynamic follow-up doesn’t do as much as it should fuel an appetite for an encore.” /Fim’s Witney Seibold found Black Adam to be a “hastily sped-read footnote than a feature” adding that it is jumbled with blockbuster plot beats, making it hard to watch. “If the entire function of Black Adam is to set up a fight between Adam and Superman, as Johnson has said in public, perhaps skip a Black Adam movie and make only a 50-minute long fight sequence,” he writes. IGN’s Joshua Yehl believes Black Adam to be oversaturated and underdeveloped, thanks to the inclusion of the JSA, a trio of human characters, and a villain, all squeezed into one movie. “When it’s the same kind of action on repeat, where we see Black Adam perform an endless string of PG13 Mortal Kombat Fatalities against nameless goons, then it starts to get old.”

Δ