KRAVEN: THE HUNTER is a perfectly cromulent movie. It is a film that
is not nearly as bad as MORBIUS or MADAME WEB. It is a film. It has a
three act structure. There are characters within it. There is (sort of)
character development. They have conflicts. Conflicts that are resolved.
There is action (of a sort). It is truly, yes, a film. If you think I
am struggling for things to say, you would also be right.
This film is incredibly rote, paint by the numbers, and not even so
bad that it’s good. Morbius was incredibly bad. So bad that it had
several very laughable scenes. Madame Web wasted the movie potential of
not one but four Spider-Women, five if you count the fact Dakota Johnson
should have been playing Jessica Drew.
Kraven the Hunter…is.
The funny thing is, it’s not a bad Catman movie. If this had been
about Thomas Blake from THE SECRET SIX and they’d gotten Gail Simone to
punch up the script then I probably would have enjoyed it a lot more.
Thomas Blake got re-envisioned as a “rich kid who becomes Tarzan
antihero” well before the stab at making Kravin into it.
However, this IS about Sergei Kravinoff and we get a white-washed
version of one of Spider-Man’s villains because given access to the
entirety of Spider-Man’s supporting cast, they couldn’t think of someone
to make a superhero movie out of despite the Prowler, Black Cat, Silver
Sable, or even Ben Reilly existing. Mind you, we have the Spider-Verse
so it’s really just the live action films that are suffering.
If you’re looking for fidelity to Kraven the Hunter from the comics,
look elsewhere. Kraven is a character with a fascinating history as he
was widely considered to be a joke for most of his runtime until the
super-dark, KRAVEN’S LAST HUNT that wrapped up his character for decades
like THE NIGHT GWEN STACY DIED did for Norman Osborn. We got to meet
his ridiculous collection of children and his resurrected version that
befriended Squirrel Girl but I’ve always liked Kraven. He’s one-note but
he’s also a bonafide psychopath and if you can ignore the silliness of
comics, I think he’s a good villain.
This movie is about a younger Kraven (Aaron Taylor Johns), who is the
son of a Russian mob boss, Nikolai Kravinoff (Russell Crowe), and
brother of Dmitri Kravinoff (Fred Hechinger). While hunting with his dad
in Africa, Kraven is wounded by a lion and healed by a local medicine
woman’s daughter, Calypso (Ariana Debose). He gains the power of a lion
and becomes an international mercenary and hitman that goes after people
associated with his dad. Eventually, a Russian with mysterious powers
nicknamed “The Rhino” (Alessandro Nivola), kidnaps Dmitri and Kraven has
to go rescue him. There’s also the Foreigner (Christopher Abbott), who
has the power of temporarilly stopping time (or maybe he’s speeding up
in bursts).
Movie happens.
Fidelity wise to the comics, it’s not very faithful but I’ve seen
worse. Calypso is Kraven’s lover, Dmitri AKA The Chameleon is his
brother, and the Rhino becomes the Rhino. They even namedrop Miles
Warren. I mean, the Rhino isn’t the dumb muscle of the comics. Calypso
isn’t a magical priestess but a lawyer who can do a little magic either.
But I actually believe the people who wrote the script have READ comics
before. Possibly even Spider-Man issues with Kraven in them. They at
least consulted his Wikipedia page. Damned by faint praise as this may
be, it’s better than some depictions.
It’s fine-ish. It’s also an incredibly safe movie. Kraven isn’t a
villain. He’s a hero who kills horrible evil people and does nothing
worse than Jack Reacher does on a Tuesday. Calypso isn’t a villain. No
one has any real menace and even the Rhino seems like a fairly decent
fellow who doesn’t want to hurt Dmitri. Russell Crowe is playing the
only real scumbag in the movie and all I can think is that he would have
been perfect for a Spider-Man movie where he plays an aging Kraven, the
kind who might have adult children, and wants to die in one final
battle before he completely loses his edge. You know, the plot of the
recent Spider-Man 2 game.
It’s not a great movie but I was able to finish it in one sitting. I
hesitate to call the movie boring but it is incredibly low energy.
Kraven is effectively invincible, the CGI is obvious, and any edge the
character might have as a villain protagonist is gone. So, yeah, it’s
not something I recommend but it’s not terrible. However, if you don’t
get a seratonin high by pointing and going, “That’s from the comics!”
then it probably is terrible.
5/10
Available here