EDITORIAL: Why The SHAZAM! Movie Should Embrace The Character's Campiness

EDITORIAL: Why The SHAZAM! Movie Should Embrace The Character's Campiness

If the set photos of Zachary Levi in costume as Shazam! are any indication, the movie is going to stay true to the character's comic book history. Fortunately, that could be a very good thing for DC Films.

Editorial Opinion
By jph152 - Mar 11, 2018 08:03 PM EST
Filed Under: Shazam
Over the last week, we’ve seen an avalanche of set photos and videos that give us a pretty good look at what Zachary Levi’s costume is going to look like in Shazam!. Just based on these unofficial pictures, we’re going to be in for a very comic-accurate take on the character. While the bright colors and felt-like texture might be altered in post-production, this costume looks like it will be a far cry from the first few DCEU super-suits that were revealed.
 
The first images of Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman all featured muted colors, and this could be seen in both official stills and behind-the-scenes photos.
 
The reaction to these set photos has been mostly positive, despite some concerns that the costume is too cartoonish and bulky. While we can’t really judge the costume until we see it in video-form, these pictures do give us a little bit of insight into what we can expect from the movie. After the success of Wonder Woman, which portrayed an unironically optimistic hero, DC would probably feel more comfortable with a comic-accurate Shazam.


However, there were some questions about how this movie was going to be handled when David F. Sandberg was announced as the director. Sandberg fits the trend of hiring directors who are used to working on low-budget films to take on a franchise. However, Sandberg is known mainly for horror movies like Lights Out and Annabelle: Creation, two films that don't have a lot in common with Shazam!.
 
Of course, we’ve seen horror directors successfully make the jump to lighter fare in the past, with Sam Raimi and James Wan being notable examples. If the costume is any indication, Shazam! should be an unabashedly fun superhero adventure, showing that DC Films could be learning from their mistakes.
 
It’s no secret that many critics didn’t like the gritty tone of Man of Steel, and the mixed reaction to that film has left a permanent mark on the franchise. However, this doesn’t mean that a darker, more realistic approach to comic book adaptations are a bad thing. What’s most important is finding a tone that is consistent with the film’s main character and source material.
 
Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight Trilogy featured a grim, brooding hero—and this worked because that’s the kind of character Batman is in many of his best stories. There’s nothing wrong with a dark and gritty movie as long as it stays true to the character. This attention to the hero’s defining traits is part of what made Wonder Woman work, and is essential to the success of Shazam!
 
There have been jokes about the costume looking goofy, but that’s kind of the point. Shazam is a throwback to the Golden Age of Comics, so a dark, realistic version of the character would be impossible to take seriously. He’s a child in the body of a superhero, so he’s clearly meant to be fun.
 
Of course, intentionally being campy is a bit of a dangerous game, and DC fans know that a little bit of cheesiness can go a long wayTo make this movie work, it’s going to take some restraint. However, if Shazam! is done well, we might just be able to say that DC Films is headed in the right direction.

Fingers crossed. 
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BloodyBed
BloodyBed - 3/11/2018, 9:23 PM
I still can't believe they're making more dc movies. Kinda thought they would just quit after aquaman, maybe do ww 2.
TeddiRxpn01
TeddiRxpn01 - 3/11/2018, 9:43 PM
@BloodyBed - really???
ChangAlang
ChangAlang - 3/11/2018, 10:14 PM
@BloodyBed - I blame the top brass at WB. Someone has an idea and they’re like...


Oops, I mean...
Scripturepoetic
Scripturepoetic - 3/11/2018, 9:27 PM
I think the contrast is important.

It's like having Michael Keaton's Batman onscreen with Adam West's Batman

Have two very different personas dealing with fairly identical super powers puts those extraordinary abilities in perspective
genesis609
genesis609 - 3/11/2018, 9:32 PM
this movie will fail and fall so hard
revloveR
revloveR - 3/11/2018, 9:36 PM
zachary does camp fairly well. pretty sure that's what they're going for having hired him to play captain marvel. considering he looks jack shit like shazam is supposed to look like.
MrCamw1
MrCamw1 - 3/11/2018, 9:37 PM
I agree, stay true to the character and the goofiness should work. I'm a side note I do want to see a live action version of Kigdom Come in the near future. That's my favorite go to for a Shazam story.

On another aide note: Just finished Jessica Jones season 2. It is good but not as strong as season 1. If you weren't a fan of the first season I don't see this winning you over. However Kristen Ritter still does an amazing job and side characters not as annnoying as in season 1, though my tolerance of Trish is dwindling. (Sorry to mention Marvel stuff in a DC thread, I just finished watching the show needed to put thoughts somewhere)
Kryptonmatters
Kryptonmatters - 3/12/2018, 12:39 AM
@MrCamw1 - I'm currently on episode 7, and I definitely agree. But I will say that as long as Robyn the neighbor doesn't show up in this show, I'll be fine.
HannibalLecter
HannibalLecter - 3/11/2018, 9:42 PM
As long as the campiness is not cringe-worthy like Batman v Superman this will have a chance.
RolandD
RolandD - 3/12/2018, 9:36 AM
@HannibalLecter - Wait, what was camp about BvS? I don't see that at all.
HannibalLecter
HannibalLecter - 3/12/2018, 10:22 AM
@RolandD - Most of the movie is full campiness, the bathtub scene, Batman wearing a coat over his batsuit, the shameless way they promote the other JLA members, Lex Luthor in his entirety (and all the scenes he is in), or the fact that Batman and Superman had a lot of good and valid reasons to call it trouce and work together but they almost kill each other before they find out their mothers are called the same, the difference with other campy works of fiction is that this movie had a very unfitting grim and broody tone, Batman v Superman thought itself to be a movie like Logan but it came out almost like a gritty reboot of Adam West's Batman.
kirbyfan
kirbyfan - 3/12/2018, 1:04 PM
@HannibalLecter - That's not true at all!
There was nothing campy about BvS, you just don't like the movie and are making up ways to bash it!

BvS isn't nearly as bad as some want to exaggerate and say it is! I've never believed that INSANITY for one second!
RolandD
RolandD - 3/12/2018, 3:49 PM
@HannibalLecter - Uh, no. That’s not camp.
HannibalLecter
HannibalLecter - 3/13/2018, 6:32 AM
@RolandD - It is camp, they probably made it like that unwillingly though.

Forgot to mention the scene where Bruce arrives at Metropolis just at the right time to save a little girl who was just standing there waiting to be crushed by the buildings.
RolandD
RolandD - 3/13/2018, 6:20 PM
@HannibalLecter - Still not camp, but nice try. You may not like the movie but it was not intentionally farcical or humorous.
SisterSunday52
SisterSunday52 - 3/11/2018, 10:20 PM
One of the things I love most about the DC Universe is the wide range of characters, and how they vary from super serious to downright silly and everywhere in between. The same goes for the stories. You can have Superman fear an Earth that is enveloped in Kryptonite and a fear of it forcing him off planet, as he seeks help from Batman to get rid of it all while the various heroes are debating whether that's such a good idea, and then you can have Superman come across a Kryptonite that makes him stoned in the same story line and it somehow still fits. You can have your Infinite Crisis and your Identity Crisis story lines, and you can have hilarious Plastic Man stories in another part of the universe.

You can have a Batgirl that was trained by her father to be the ultimate assassin as a child, who is traumatized by her first kill at the age of nine, and her becoming Batgirl to redeem herself. Then you can have former Spoiler, Stephanie Brown who is much more upbeat and silly as the new Batgirl. Nothing is too dark, or too campy for the DC Universe. The DC Films Universe should be the same way.

Batman v Superman took the heroes to their lowest points and they still found hope. Wonder Woman is almost as dark as Batman v Superman, but it is still lighthearted and optimistic. While I am disappointed that we MAY not have the Billy Batson that is kind of a jerk because he believes there is no such thing as a purely good human soul, but he still tries to be so and that's what makes him a hero, I don't mind if this is more Donner than Snyder. I don't even mind if it's more Marvel than DC Films. It works perfectly for this character.
Ha1frican
Ha1frican - 3/11/2018, 10:45 PM
If Justice League proved anything it’s the danger of thinking that lighthearted camp works with these characters. There is a place in these stories for that but it’s a very fine line between embracing fun and making a live action Hanna-Barbera cartoon
LordGanja
LordGanja - 3/11/2018, 11:51 PM
@Ha1frican - I agree.
Camp is such an acquired taste and will never cross over into mainstream.

Batman & Robin should've killed camp for ever but DC are still persisting.

However there are degrees of camp - Thor Ragnarok had some very camp elements but controlled them to deliver a fun package - & if they can manage that it could work.

However I have never liked Shazam - it was always a cheap Superman rip-off with a completely juvenile core concept. This kind of cheesy stuff has been sent up so many times (both in films & comics) I just can't see anyone finding the charm in it again.
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