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Monday, October 27, 2025

Universes of Future Past - The Fantastic Four: First Steps (2025) Review

Director: Matt Shakman

Notable Cast: Pedro Pascal, Vanessa Kirby, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, Joseph Quinn, Ralph Ineson, Julia Garner, Paul Walter Hauser, Natasha Lyonne, Sarah Niles

 

The Fantastic Four: First Steps is gorgeously designed to look like it's caught in a time vortex between "the future" and 1960s New York City. It's the kind of production design that ought to catch some Oscar buzz early next year, and it's a shining example of some of the intriguing aspects of this "first" film of the new phase of the MCU. Right away from the trailers, one could tell that there was going to be a little more thought and effort thrown into the mix for this latest adaptation of Marvel’s First Family. To be fair, there was no way it could be worse than Josh Trank’s Fantastic Four (2015).

 

However, First Steps is also a film that seems to be caught in a time vortex between moving the MCU forward in refreshing ways and maintaining the status quo. For every progressive choice it makes for the franchise, it seemingly takes a step or two back out of fear of moving too far away from the blueprint that has made the MCU a movie juggernaut. It's an unfortunate balancing act that never seemingly manages to find its momentum and leaves one wondering what First Steps might have been with just a smidge more courage.

 

Still, the film has many fantastic qualities beyond the previously mentioned production design and its old-school heroic score (including the instantly memorable central theme). The primary key to First Steps' success, however, is the distinct performances of Marvel's First Family. Pascal shines as Reed Richards, playing him with a sincere uncertainty about the one thing he can't science out – fatherhood – and he is the cornerstone of much of the film's overall narrative. Both Johnny and Ben, played by Joseph Quinn and Ebon Moss-Bachrach respectively, get mini-arcs (the latter feels like there was a lot more to his relationship with the local school teacher, but it was edited for time), but they are mostly played to back up the relationship of Reed and Sue. Truthfully, though, it is Vanessa Kirby's Sue Storm that ultimately steals the film. Even when the narrative or plot is not doing them favors, particularly in rushing some of the more heartfelt sequences like Sue's address to the protestors outside of the Baxter Building about her son, Franklin, there's a sincerity to the performances that grounds the entire film as the whirling retro-futuristic sci-fi plot unfolds around them.

 


In terms of being an MCU blockbuster, the action is decent, if not an afterthought to the spectacle of the visuals, which range from impressively dynamic with the Fantastic Four's light-speed spaceship to slightly dipping into the uncanny valley with Ben's The Thing. So fans of the series will get plenty of fun moments with the Four as they battle the intergalactic threats. It’s just key to remember that while this is a film that definitely leans into the spectacle, it’s science fiction thrills first and traditional action second.

 

Ultimately, The Fantastic Four: First Steps does feel caught between two worlds. It wants to be this bigger-than-life Marvel spectacle with big bad Galactus and Silver Surfer bringing world-ending doom to Earth, which unfortunately results in the latter character getting a half assed character arc that never feels nearly as fulfilling as the ending would have you believe. Still, First Steps finds its identity as a familial drama about expanding the extended family and the fears of raising a child in a world about to be devoured by a tireless, greedy entity.

 

Not that we would know what that feels like in 2025 America.

 


Written By Matt Malpica Reifschneider

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