According to critics,phim set an do Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings is worth the hype.
As Mashable's Alexis Nedd writes, "Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Ringsis an accomplishment as a standalone movie; if it were not an MCU film it would still be fantastic."
Directed by Destin Daniel Cretton, this latest entry into the MCU introduces hero and martial artist Shang-Chi (Simu Liu), the franchise's first Asian lead. Throughout the movie, Shang-Chi must navigate his complicated relationship with his family, especially his father Wenwu (Tony Leung), leader of the villainous Ten Rings.
Shang-Chigarnered praise for its talented cast and outstanding combat sequences, as well as its attempts to stray from MCU conventions. However, critics noted that the film could be uneven at times, and that it suffered from Marvel's perennial "third-act CGI battle" problem.
Here's what critics thought of Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings.
Mashable, Alexis Nedd
[Shang-Chi] is a Marvel movie that doesn't feel like a Marvel movie, with a fresh, snappy tone that has a lot in common with 2015's Ant-Man, which also felt like a departure from the franchise formula at the time.
The Hollywood Reporter, Angie Han
Shang-Chi, directed by Destin Daniel Cretton, attempts to shake up the Marvel formula by infusing it with martial-arts action and fairy-tale fantasy and grounding it in Chinese and Asian American culture. And while its disparate elements don’t meld together as smoothly as they should, they do, in the end, add up to a superhero movie fresh and fun enough to feel worth a spin.
IGN, Francesca Rivera
Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Ringsstrikes a tricky balance: reflecting the real-life complicated conflict between first-gen Asian American children and the wishes of their immigrant parents while also serving up the dynamic action scenes that the MCU is known for. Director Destin Daniel Cretton skillfully juggles both of these lofty goals, logging an entry in the Marvel universe that’s both emotionally resonant and delightfully exciting enough to outweigh its occasionally uneven visuals and unfulfilled lore.
Mashable, Alexis Nedd
Simu Liu is flawless in the role of Shang-Chi. Every choice he makes on screen builds Shang's character from a hero most people hadn't heard of to an invaluable personality the MCU can bank on for years to come. Liu is so good at defining Shang's exterior charm and inner turmoil that his casting has the miraculous quality of Robert Downey Jr.'s industry-changing role in the first Iron Manor Chris Evans' Captain America.
The A.V. Club, Katie Rife
In the end [Shang-Chi's] greatest assets are human. That refers to the stunts, yes, but more often to Tony Leung, who exudes the type of movie-star charisma critics sometimes complain is on the decline. Leung isn’t exactly being challenged here, but he brings soul to the scant emotional depth of his character, a classic Marvel villain in the sense that he’s sympathetic until he’s not.
Entertainment Weekly, Leah Greenblatt
[Marvel would] be crazy not to give Meng'er Zhang, as Shang-Chi's ferociously watchable sister Xialing, her own spin-off, and Awkwafina, who spends at least a third of the movie in a fanny pack and lime-green parachute pants, polishes her sardonic slacker M.O. to a high one-liner shine.
Mashable, Alexis Nedd
With an instantly lovable hero and one of Marvel's best villains, Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Ringsis a genuinely great movie — for as long as the characters, hand-to-hand combat scenes, and family conflict remain the focus of the film. That's about 92% of the time. The other 8% is, quite frankly, smashy CGI nonsense that feels out of sync with the rest of the movie and smacks of studio executives mindlessly stuffing the third act with shiny junk. So, you know, it's a Marvel movie ending.
Collider, Matt Goldberg
When the film gets into its set pieces, it’s really nothing like anything the MCU has attempted thus far. Of course, fans of martial arts cinema will see this as old hat, but Cretton and his stunt team (lead by the late, great Brad Allan) have fused the kineticism and fluidity of classic kung-fu movies with the VFX-laden worlds of Marvel to create something new and exciting.
SlashFilm, Hoai-Tran Bui
Cretton has never been particularly renowned for his visual flair, coming from the character drama indie world, but manages to at least keep the film visually coherent (and in many of the wuxia-inspired moments, quite beautiful) even as it descends into CGI bombast. And though it falls victim to the dreaded Marvel third-act CGI muddle, Shang-Chi's is one of the more forgivable ones, if only because it verges on full fantasia.
Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings is in theaters Sept. 3.
Topics Marvel
Elon Musk's Neuralink to share 'progress update' soonHow to delete Instagram, WhatsApp, and Facebook8 actually good things about dating in 2020, so far'Deadly Premonition 2' is a gripping mystery wrapped in an ugly gameOne wild chart shows intensity of this year’s Arctic Circle firesWhatsApp adds new video chat, QR code featuresTikTok will exit Hong Kong amidst controversial national security lawsHow to group stream Hulu, Amazon, Netflix, and more with your friendsSamsung's Galaxy Z Flip 5G is basically confirmed in leaked videoThe 10 best documentaries of 2020 so far (that you can watch right now) Ella Fitzgerald, Bille Jean King, and Florence Nightingale are now Barbie dolls Running for office? M.M. LaFleur lends clothes to women candidates. Baby Yoda merch is finally here and it's almost too adorable Tesla's Gigafactory Berlin gets green light as court dismisses environmental challenge Everything coming to Hulu in March 2020 The FTC and FDA are evaluating regulations, effects of influencer #ads How to use Reddit to plan your ultimate trip Samsung Galaxy S20 pre Coronavirus Best compact strollers for traveling with kids in 2020
0.2932s , 8280.6328125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【phim set an do】Enter to watch online.What do critics think of Marvel's 'Shang,