Despite having given this film a 4 star rating eleven months ago, I could
hardly remember anything about it. Strange. So I checked
my review, and it didn't help at all, because it was spoiler-free. As it should have
been for a new film. Seeing it today was like watching it for the first time.
Sergei Kravinoff (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) is portrayed as a hero, even though
the film posters had a tag line that suggested he would turn to evil:
"Villains aren't born, they're made". The posters were probably designed before the
film was completed by someone who had no idea what the plot would be. Not
everyone in Hollywood is competent.
Sergei is shown as a boy growing up with a father who was a ruthless drug
dealer. He's supposed to follow in his father's footsteps and
take over the business, but his conscience prevents him. He doesn't
want to become the same as his father. He runs away from home, leaving his
younger brother Dimitri behind. This plagues him for years, and eventually
leads him back to his family home.
The film's villain is the Alexei Sytsevitch, a crook who's a deceitful ally of
Sergei's father. He's the super-villain known in Marvel Comics as the Rhino.
Apart from a certain physical resemblance he doesn't have much in common with
the comic book character. In the film he's an intelligent criminal, but in the
comics he's a simple minded brute.
In the course of the film Dimitri develops into the Chameleon, one of Marvel's
oldest villains.
Kraven is a hunter. It's not a matter of him being attacked by the Rhino or
the other bad guys. He tracks them down.
Aaron Taylor-Johnson puts on an excellent performance as Kraven. The film
didn't deserve to be a box office flop. Put it down to Marvel Fatigue.
Is there a way for Kraven to be adopted by the MCU? I hope so.
Success Rate: - 1.8
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