Tags / superhero

"superhero"

44 BuzzVerdicts across Movies (27), TV Shows (11), PC Games (3), Board Games (2), Books (1)

Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse

4.8

2018 · Bob Persichetti, Peter Ramsey, Rodney Rothman · 117 min · Animation / Action

Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse took a character audiences thought they knew inside out and found something completely new to say about him. It built a visual language that no animated film had attempted before, grounded it in a coming-of-age story with real emotional weight, and delivered one of the best superhero films in a genre that was already overflowing with them. A handful of side characters deserved more screen time and the villain could have been sharper, but those are footnotes in a film that won the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature and convinced millions of people that animation could redefine what a comic book movie looks like.

The Dark Knight

4.8

2008 · Christopher Nolan · 152 min · Action / Crime

Christopher Nolan built a superhero film that functions as a sprawling crime drama, anchored by a villain performance so commanding it earned a posthumous Academy Award and permanently changed what audiences expected from the genre. The ensemble cast is strong, the moral questions hit hard, and the score burrows into your skull. A rushed third act and an underwritten female lead keep it a fraction short of flawless, but those flaws barely register against everything the film gets right. Almost two decades later, this is still the movie people point to when they want to explain why superhero stories deserve to be taken seriously.

X-Men '97

4.5

2024 · 1 Season · Disney+ · Animation, Action, Sci-Fi

X-Men '97 pulls off something that revival series almost never manage: it honors the original while standing confidently on its own. The animation is a massive upgrade, the storytelling carries genuine emotional stakes, and the show isn't afraid to push beloved characters into uncomfortable territory. A handful of rushed character arcs and the occasional fan-service nod that lands with a thud are the only real stumbles. This is the rare continuation that makes both longtime fans and newcomers understand why these characters mattered in the first place.

The Venture Bros.

4.5

2003 · 7 Seasons · Adult Swim · Animated Comedy / Action-Adventure

The Venture Bros. spent seven seasons and a wrap-up film building one of the richest, funniest, and most emotionally rewarding universes in adult animation. Its character development puts most prestige dramas to shame, its comedy remains endlessly quotable, and its willingness to let characters truly change gave it a depth that no other superhero parody has matched. The long hiatuses between seasons tested patience, and the show's density makes it impenetrable for casual viewers, but for anyone willing to commit, this is one of the finest animated series ever produced.

Logan

4.5

2017 · James Mangold · 137 min · Action / Drama

Logan stripped away everything audiences expected from a superhero movie and replaced it with something raw, personal, and deeply felt. Hugh Jackman, Patrick Stewart, and newcomer Dafne Keen deliver performances that transcend the genre, anchoring a story about mortality, failure, and reluctant fatherhood. The villains can't match the weight of those central performances, but that barely matters when the emotional core hits this hard. It's a film that earned its ending and left audiences wrecked in the best possible way.

Batman: Arkham City

4.5

2011 · Action / Adventure · PC / Steam

Batman: Arkham City takes everything Arkham Asylum built and expands it into an open world that feels like Gotham's most dangerous playground. The freeflow combat is refined to perfection, the gliding traversal transforms movement into its own reward, and the rogues gallery gets expanded encounters that surpass the original's boss fights. The open world adds freedom without sacrificing the focused pacing that made Asylum special, and the narrative builds to one of gaming's most memorable endings.

Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse

4.5

2023 · Joaquim Dos Santos, Kemp Powers, Justin K. Thompson · 140 min · Animation / Action

Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse expands on its predecessor's visual revolution with animation so ambitious that each universe has its own art style, creating a film that looks like nothing else in cinema. Miles Morales' struggle between destiny and choice drives a narrative that's more emotionally complex than most live-action superhero films, and the action sequences push animation into territory that live-action physically cannot follow. The cliffhanger ending is the film's most divisive choice, leaving a complete emotional arc unresolved for a sequel.

Avengers: Endgame

4.5

2019 · Anthony Russo, Joe Russo · 182 min · Action / Adventure / Sci-Fi

Avengers: Endgame is an ending that earns its three-hour runtime by paying off a decade of storytelling with character conclusions that actually land. Tony Stark's final sacrifice, Steve Rogers' quiet resolution, and the sheer spectacle of that final battle represent something the film industry had never attempted at this scale. The time travel logic wobbles under scrutiny, one founding Avenger gets shortchanged in the farewell department, and the first hour will test your patience if you aren't deeply invested in these characters. None of that changes the fundamental achievement here. This is a finale that understood its audience, respected the journey, and stuck the landing where it mattered most.

Superman

4.3

1978 · Richard Donner · 143 min · Action / Sci-Fi

Superman proved a comic book character could carry a big-budget Hollywood production with heart, humor, and spectacle. Christopher Reeve's dual performance as Clark Kent and Superman remains the definitive take on the character, John Williams delivered one of the most iconic scores in film history, and Richard Donner treated the source material with a sincerity that made audiences believe a man could fly. Gene Hackman's comedic Lex Luthor divides opinion and the time-reversal ending frustrates as much as it moves, but the film's foundational impact on the superhero genre is beyond dispute.

Batman: Arkham Asylum

4.3

2009 · Action / Adventure · PC / Steam

Batman: Arkham Asylum redefined what superhero games could be by making you actually feel like Batman, from the fluid freeflow combat to the predator stealth rooms to the detective vision that ties it all together. Rocksteady's tight, focused design confines the game to a single night on Arkham Island, and that restraint produces a pacing and atmosphere that the later open-world sequels never quite recaptured. The boss fights are the weakest element, often falling back on generic patterns that don't match the villain encounters' narrative buildup.

Spider-Man: No Way Home

4.3

2021 · Jon Watts · 148 min · Action / Sci-Fi

Spider-Man: No Way Home weaponizes nostalgia with surgical precision, bringing together villains and heroes from across the Spider-Man film legacy in a multiverse story that's simultaneously a crowd-pleasing spectacle and a genuinely emotional coming-of-age conclusion. The final act delivers moments that had audiences cheering and crying in the same sequence. The film leans so heavily on fan service that its emotional beats depend on investment in previous films, and the multiverse logic doesn't survive close examination, but the theatrical experience it created was among the most memorable of the decade.

Iron Man

4.3

2008 · Jon Favreau · 126 min · Action / Sci-Fi

Iron Man is the film that launched the MCU, and it succeeded because it was a great film first and a franchise starter second. Robert Downey Jr.'s Tony Stark is the most perfectly cast superhero in cinema history, bringing charisma, humor, and vulnerability to a character that the film builds from weapons dealer to hero through a transformation that feels earned. The third-act villain battle is the weakest element, falling into generic CGI spectacle after two acts of character-driven brilliance, but Downey's performance ensures the film transcends its genre.

Avengers: Infinity War

4.3

2018 · Anthony Russo, Joe Russo · 149 min · Action / Sci-Fi

Avengers: Infinity War accomplishes something that seemed impossible: it juggles dozens of characters across multiple storylines while maintaining emotional coherence, and it does so by making the villain the protagonist. Josh Brolin's Thanos is the MCU's finest antagonist, a figure whose twisted logic and genuine conviction make every confrontation feel consequential. The ending is devastating precisely because the film earned it through two and a half hours of escalating stakes and the audacity to let the villain win.

Invincible

4.3

2021 · 4 Seasons · Amazon Prime Video · Superhero / Drama / Action

Invincible takes the familiar origin story of a teenager discovering superpowers and turns it into something brutal, complicated, and surprisingly moving. The voice cast, led by Steven Yeun, J.K. Simmons, and Sandra Oh, elevates every scene they touch, and the writing consistently finds ways to make superhero violence feel like it costs something. Animation quality dips too often for a show this popular, and pacing stumbles crop up across multiple seasons. Those flaws haven't stopped it from becoming one of the strongest superhero series in any medium, animated or otherwise. Four seasons in, with more on the way, Invincible keeps earning its place near the top.

Harley Quinn

4.2

2019 · 5 Seasons · Max · Animation, Comedy, Action

Harley Quinn is the rare comic book adaptation that found its voice early and kept refining it across five seasons. Its Harley is chaotic, violent, vulnerable, and laugh-out-loud funny, and the show built an entire Gotham around her that feels more alive than most live-action versions. The Harley and Ivy relationship gives the series an emotional core that grounds even its most absurd moments. Later seasons don't quite reach the heights of the second and third, and the violence occasionally tips from darkly comic into gratuitous. But as a complete package, this is one of the most entertaining and emotionally satisfying animated shows DC has produced.

Batman Begins

4.2

2005 · Christopher Nolan · 140 min · Action / Drama

Batman Begins is the definitive Batman origin story, grounding Bruce Wayne's transformation in psychological realism and anchoring it with an exceptional cast. The fight cinematography is frustratingly murky and the third act loses some of the discipline of its opening hours, but Nolan's vision of a broken man becoming something larger than himself changed what superhero films could be. It earned its place as the foundation of something special.

The Avengers

4.2

2012 · Joss Whedon · 143 min · Action / Sci-Fi

The Avengers accomplished what seemed impossible in 2012: uniting characters from separate film franchises into a single coherent, entertaining movie that justified years of buildup. Joss Whedon's script balances six heroes with distinct personalities, gives each their moment, and builds to a New York battle that set the standard for superhero spectacle. The villain's plan is generic, the first act takes time finding its rhythm, but the team dynamic and the Battle of New York deliver a payoff that changed blockbuster filmmaking permanently.

Captain America: Civil War

4.2

2016 · Anthony Russo, Joe Russo · 147 min · Action / Thriller

Captain America: Civil War splits the Avengers along philosophical and personal lines in a film that manages to be both a satisfying ensemble action movie and a surprisingly intimate story about friendship, guilt, and the limits of loyalty. The airport battle is peak MCU spectacle with character, the final confrontation strips away the spectacle for raw emotion, and Zemo proves that the MCU's best villain plans are the simplest. The film juggles too many characters to give each adequate development, and the political framework that motivates the split is underexplored relative to the personal conflicts that drive it.

Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3

4.2

2023 · James Gunn · 150 min · Action / Sci-Fi

Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 is the emotional conclusion the trilogy deserved, centering Rocket Raccoon's devastating origin story within a final mission that gives every Guardian their sendoff. James Gunn delivers his most emotionally ambitious MCU work, with Rocket's backstory providing the gut-punch the film builds toward. The High Evolutionary is the franchise's most hateable villain, and the action set pieces are Gunn's most inventive. The 150-minute runtime creates pacing issues, and the film asks for more emotional bandwidth than some blockbuster audiences expect.

Daredevil

4.2

2015 · 3 Seasons · Netflix · Action, Crime, Drama

Daredevil set the standard for what a grounded superhero show could be, delivering three seasons of brutal action, moral complexity, and one of the great hero-villain dynamics in television history. Charlie Cox's Matt Murdock is a superhero defined by his contradictions, a blind lawyer who fights crime with his fists, a Catholic struggling with the violence he can't stop inflicting. Vincent D'Onofrio's Wilson Fisk is a villain so fully realized that he occasionally steals the show from its own protagonist. The thirteen-episode seasons can drag in their middle sections, and the second season's split focus creates structural problems. But the hallway fights are legendary, the performances are exceptional, and at its best, Daredevil proved that superhero television could be something great.

X-Men: The Animated Series

4.1

1992 · 5 Seasons · Fox Kids · Animation, Action, Sci-Fi

X-Men: The Animated Series brought Marvel's mutants to a massive audience with a level of narrative ambition that Saturday morning cartoons rarely attempted. Its willingness to adapt complex comic book storylines, tackle themes of prejudice and identity, and treat its audience as capable of following serialized drama set a standard that superhero animation measured itself against for years. The final season's production collapse is painful, and the animation never matched the quality of the writing throughout the run. But the storytelling confidence and emotional weight of its best arcs, from the Dark Phoenix Saga to the Sentinel conflicts, represent something truly special in the history of animated television.

X2: X-Men United

4.0

2003 · Bryan Singer · 133 min · Action / Sci-Fi

X2: X-Men United is the rare sequel that improves on its predecessor in nearly every dimension. The Nightcrawler White House opening remains one of the finest action sequences in superhero film history, the alliance between Xavier's team and Magneto adds compelling dramatic tension, and Brian Cox's William Stryker gives the franchise its most effective human villain. An overcrowded cast means several characters get sidelined, and the climax trades some of the film's intelligence for convention, but X2 represents the X-Men franchise at its most confident and cohesive.

The Batman

4.0

2022 · Matt Reeves · 176 min · Action / Crime / Drama

The Batman commits fully to its noir detective vision, and that commitment is both its greatest strength and the source of its only real problem. Nearly three hours of rain-soaked Gotham, a Batman who thinks more than he punches, and a visual style that makes every frame feel like a graphic novel panel. Robert Pattinson brings something entirely new to the character, and the film earns its place in the pantheon of great Batman adaptations. It just asks you to sit still for a very long time to get there.

X-Men: Days of Future Past

4.0

2014 · Bryan Singer · 132 min · Sci-Fi / Action / Superhero

X-Men: Days of Future Past pulls off something most franchise films never attempt: merging two separate casts and timelines into a single coherent story that actually works. The Quicksilver Pentagon sequence alone is worth the price of entry, and the McAvoy-Fassbender dynamic gives the film a dramatic core that elevates it above standard superhero fare. Time travel logic buckles under scrutiny, and the original trilogy cast gets short-changed in favor of their younger counterparts. Those are real flaws. But the ambition of the concept and the confidence of its execution make this one of the strongest entries in the X-Men franchise and a standout among the superhero films of the 2010s.

X-Men: First Class

4.0

2011 · Matthew Vaughn · 132 min · Action / Sci-Fi

X-Men: First Class breathed real life back into a franchise that badly needed it, anchored by two lead performances that gave the X-Men mythology its strongest emotional foundation since the original films. Michael Fassbender and James McAvoy turned what could have been a routine prequel into something with genuine dramatic weight, and Matthew Vaughn's Cold War setting gave the whole thing a texture that most superhero films never bother reaching for. The supporting cast gets shortchanged and the final act leans too hard on conventional blockbuster spectacle, but the core relationship between Xavier and Magneto carries enough power to make those shortcomings feel secondary. It's the rare franchise restart that actually understood what made the source material work in the first place.

Deadpool

4.0

2016 · Tim Miller · 108 min · Action / Comedy

Deadpool proved that a superhero film could be profane, self-aware, and R-rated while still connecting with a massive audience. Ryan Reynolds owns every frame, the fourth-wall humor lands more often than it misses, and the romance at the center gives the whole thing an emotional anchor that most films in the genre lack. A forgettable villain and a plot that never rises above its formula keep it from greatness, but the sheer force of personality carries it further than a $58 million budget had any right to go. It blew open the door for R-rated superhero films and remains one of the most entertaining entries the genre has produced.

Black Panther

4.0

2018 · Ryan Coogler · 134 min · Action / Sci-Fi

Black Panther brought something new to the superhero genre by building an entire civilization worth caring about and then asking hard questions about what that civilization owes the world. Ryan Coogler delivered a film with real thematic ambition, a villain whose anger carries weight, and a supporting cast that outshines most leading ensembles. The CGI stumbles in the final act are real and noticeable, and the plot follows a structure that Marvel fans have seen before. Those flaws keep it from the top tier of the genre. What elevates it beyond the formula is everything happening underneath the action, a story about identity, legacy, and responsibility that has only grown more resonant with time.

Marvel Champions

4.0

2019 · 1-4 Players · ~45-90 min · Cooperative / Living Card Game

Marvel Champions is the most accessible living card game on the market, and it earns that distinction without sacrificing the strategic depth that keeps card game veterans engaged. The hero/alter-ego system captures the feel of being a superhero better than any tabletop game before it, and the cooperative gameplay makes every session feel like a team-up pulled from the comics. The LCG expansion model will test your wallet over time, and the game loses some momentum at three and four players. But the core experience, especially solo or with a partner, is fast, fun, and endlessly replayable once you start building your collection.

The Boys

4.0

2019 · 5 Seasons · Amazon Prime Video · Superhero / Satire / Thriller

The Boys arrived as the superhero satire that mainstream entertainment needed and built three seasons of sharp, bloody, consistently surprising television out of a premise that could have been a one-note joke. Its best moments combine political commentary, character depth, and gleeful transgression in ways that no other superhero property has attempted. The fourth season revealed the cracks in the formula, with pacing issues and repetitive shock tactics suggesting that the show's creative engine is running on fumes in places. Whether the final season can stick the landing remains an open question. At its best, this is one of the most inventive shows of the streaming era. At its weakest, it's a show that forgot the difference between provocation and purpose.

Spider-Man: The Animated Series

3.9

1994 · 5 Seasons · Fox Kids · Animation, Action, Sci-Fi

Spider-Man: The Animated Series brought the web-slinger to television with ambitious multi-episode arcs, strong voice performances, and a willingness to tackle the character's deeper themes of responsibility and sacrifice. For many fans, it remains the definitive animated version of Peter Parker. Heavy censorship from the Fox network crippled the action sequences, the animation relied too much on recycled footage, and the CGI cityscapes have aged poorly. These limitations hold it back from matching the best of its era. But the storytelling ambition and the emotional core of Peter Parker's journey give the series a lasting appeal that technical shortcomings can't entirely diminish.

Wonder Woman

3.8

2017 · Patty Jenkins · 141 min · Action / Adventure / Fantasy

Wonder Woman succeeds as an origin story and as an action film for roughly two-thirds of its runtime, buoyed by Gal Gadot's magnetic presence and a handful of sequences that rank among the best the superhero genre has produced. The sincerity of its message lands, the World War I setting provides freshness, and the chemistry between its leads carries slower stretches with ease. Then the final act arrives and trades everything distinctive about the film for a CGI battle against a poorly realized villain. It's a frustrating stumble because everything before it was working so well.

Deadpool 2

3.8

2018 · David Leitch · 119 min · Action / Comedy

Deadpool 2 goes bigger than its predecessor in nearly every way, and that cuts both ways. The addition of Cable, Domino, and a full ensemble gives the film more to play with, and David Leitch's action pedigree produces set pieces that are a clear step up from the original. Ryan Reynolds remains the engine that makes everything run, and enough of the humor connects to keep the ride entertaining. But a controversial story choice that sidelines Vanessa, pacing that sags when the jokes thin out, and a sense that the formula is running closer to empty keep it from matching the original's spark. It's a good time that occasionally settles for being a loud one.

Deadpool & Wolverine

3.8

2024 · Shawn Levy · 127 min · Action / Comedy

Deadpool & Wolverine runs almost entirely on the combustible chemistry between Ryan Reynolds and Hugh Jackman, and that fuel turns out to be enough to power a wildly entertaining ride. The action is brutal and inventive, the soundtrack choices are inspired, and the self-aware humor lands more often than it misses. A weak villain, an overreliance on cameos, and a story that sometimes feels like a delivery mechanism for references rather than a narrative keep it from the upper tier of the genre. But as a send-off for Fox's Marvel era and a showcase for two actors who clearly love working together, it does exactly what it sets out to do.

The Dark Knight Rises

3.8

2012 · Christopher Nolan · 164 min · Action / Thriller

The Dark Knight Rises is an ambitious, emotionally charged conclusion to Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy that swings for the fences with its epic scope and thematic weight. Tom Hardy's Bane is a physically imposing villain, Anne Hathaway's Catwoman silenced the skeptics, and the Bruce Wayne arc delivers a deeply moving payoff. Plot holes, a deflating third-act twist, and pacing that sags under a 164-minute runtime keep it a clear step below its legendary predecessor. It's the weakest entry in one of the strongest trilogies in modern blockbuster filmmaking, which still puts it well above most of what the genre has to offer.

Batman: Arkham Knight

3.8

2015 · Action / Adventure · PC / Steam

Batman: Arkham Knight delivers the most visually stunning Gotham City ever rendered and adds the Batmobile as a major gameplay pillar, but the vehicle's omnipresence in puzzles, combat, and boss fights transforms what should be a supplementary tool into an overused crutch. The on-foot combat and predator rooms remain excellent, the narrative tackles Batman's psychology with genuine ambition, and the Arkham Knight identity mystery provides strong dramatic fuel even if experienced players guess the reveal early.

My Hero Academia

3.8

2016 · 8 Seasons · ytv / NTV · Action / Superhero / Adventure

My Hero Academia built one of the most appealing superhero worlds in anime and populated it with characters worth rooting for. Its first three seasons deliver a near-perfect run of escalating stakes, creative power matchups, and emotional payoffs that justify the massive fanbase the show attracted. The middle stretch sags under repetitive tournament arcs, underdeveloped side characters, and a pacing structure that struggles to balance its enormous cast. It recovers for a final season that lands its biggest emotional beats, even if the rushed conclusion leaves questions about what could have been with more room to breathe. At its best, this show captures the thrill of watching ordinary people try to become extraordinary, and that core appeal carries it further than its flaws should allow.

One Punch Man

3.5

2015 · 2 Seasons · TV Tokyo · Action / Comedy / Parody

One Punch Man's first season is a near-perfect piece of action comedy that deconstructs superhero storytelling with brilliant wit and some of the best animation TV anime has ever produced. The problem is that the second season exists alongside it. A studio change from Madhouse to J.C.Staff resulted in a dramatic drop in visual quality that stripped the series of its most celebrated trait, leaving strong writing and expanded character work to carry a show that had previously excelled on every front. Taken together, the two seasons represent a series that reached extraordinary heights and then couldn't maintain them, making it both one of the most exciting and most frustrating anime experiences available.

Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2

3.5

2017 · James Gunn · 136 min · Action / Comedy

Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 bet everything on emotional depth and the gamble mostly paid off. Yondu's arc is the best character work in the entire MCU up to that point, Baby Groot is a merchandising phenomenon who also happens to be charming on screen, and the father-son story at the center carries real weight. The humor hits harder when it lands, but it misses more often than the first film, and some jokes undercut dramatic moments that deserved room to breathe. The pacing stalls on Ego's planet, and the Sovereign subplot never earns its screen time. It is a messier film than its predecessor, but the emotional peaks are higher, and that final sequence still hits.

Marvel United

3.5

2020 · 1-4 Players · ~30 min · Cooperative

Marvel United delivers a fast, cooperative superhero experience that punches above its weight in accessibility and theme. The Storyline mechanic creates genuine teamwork moments, and the villain variety keeps early sessions interesting. Limited depth and a small card pool hold it back from being a long-term staple for experienced gamers, but families and Marvel fans will find a lot to enjoy in its breezy 30-minute sessions.

Ant-Man

3.5

2015 · Peyton Reed · 117 min · Action / Comedy

Ant-Man arrived as a palate cleanser in a franchise that was starting to take itself very seriously, and it works precisely because it keeps the scope small. Paul Rudd's charm carries the film through its weaker stretches, Michael Pena steals every scene he appears in, and the shrinking sequences deliver some of the most inventive action in the MCU. The villain is underwritten in ways the film never overcomes, and the origin story structure follows a template audiences had seen several times by 2015. Those are legitimate knocks. But the heist framework gives the film a shape that most superhero origin stories lack, and the sense of fun is infectious enough to forgive the places where the formula shows through.

X-Men

3.5

2000 · Bryan Singer · 104 min · Action / Sci-Fi

X-Men proved that Marvel's mutants could work on screen and effectively launched the modern superhero film boom alongside Spider-Man. The casting of Hugh Jackman, Patrick Stewart, and Ian McKellen gave the film a dramatic credibility that elevated thin material, and the civil rights allegory brought genuine thematic weight to the genre. Dated visual effects, underdeveloped villains, and a runtime that barely scratches the surface of its ensemble keep it from greatness, but its importance as the film that opened the door for everything that followed is difficult to overstate.