Forced to balance their roles as heroes with the strength of their family bond, the Fantastic Four must defend Earth from a ravenous space god called Galactus and his enigmatic herald, the S... Read allForced to balance their roles as heroes with the strength of their family bond, the Fantastic Four must defend Earth from a ravenous space god called Galactus and his enigmatic herald, the Silver Surfer.Forced to balance their roles as heroes with the strength of their family bond, the Fantastic Four must defend Earth from a ravenous space god called Galactus and his enigmatic herald, the Silver Surfer.
- Awards
- 3 nominations total
- H.E.R.B.I.E.
- (voice)
- Power Plant Worker #2
- (as Michael Bailey-Smith)
Summary
Featured reviews
No doubt it's a different take on recent Marvel movies: retro and conventional, yet elegant. There's just enough action, depth, and climax, though nothing exceptional. It's gentle and centered around family, making it enjoyable for anyone not just hardcore comic fans. The plot, characters and acting was done very well in my opinion and what sets this movie apart from most marvel movies out there.
Then come the parts that only comic fans might question. How Sue managed to handle Galactus in the final battle, and the portrayal of Galactus's own capabilities, felt a bit questionable. A little too light, I'd say.
I give it an 8, not because it's great, because in the current struggling landscape of marvel movies, it somehow worked and managed to stand out by avoiding any major faults. And you have to look at it from a marvel comics lens. But in some other ways, it's more of a 7.
Hopefully, Marvel is on track to gradually bring back the glory, intense and climax of Avengers: Infinity War and Endgame to the big screen. Fingers crossed!
Unlike most origin stories, the setup here is brisk and assured. The film's first act is structured to give audiences a quick, satisfying look at the team's backstory and past deeds, never lingering too long but still managing to earn every emotional beat. There's no hand-holding, and yet nothing feels rushed.
Where this film truly surprises is in its character work. Johnny Storm isn't just the loud, reckless sibling - here, his intelligence is finally given equal weight, offering context to his presence among astronauts. Ben Grimm, too, is more than the "muscle"; there's a deep sincerity to his character, a balance of science and strength. The team chemistry feels lived-in - full of quiet bickering, mutual admiration, and a rhythm only shared by families who've been through things together. Their bond feels earned.
Villain-wise, First Steps pulls off a rarity: a visually formidable Galactus rendered with restraint, not excess. Though Silver Surfer purists may still hold a soft spot for Doug Jones' performance in Rise of the Silver Surfer, this iteration serves the story's vision well. And in a surprise turn, even HERBIE - the team's robo companion - is no gimmick. The CGI character is narratively vital, not just another quip machine.
Director Matt Shakman strikes an impressive balance between science-fiction and superheroism, giving each frame a purpose. The film doesn't lean heavily on humor (thankfully), instead relying on strong dramatic beats, coherent action, and a screenplay that embraces a comic-book sensibility - particularly during its stylized crescendo.
Visually, the film is a treat. From cosmic scenes to grounded lab environments, everything feels tangible and lived-in. The action is clean, never bloated, with each power sequence well-thought-out and easy to follow. While the score doesn't stand out as a whole, it's used judiciously, heightening the right moments without becoming overwhelming.
Despite being part of a sprawling cinematic universe, First Steps works remarkably well as a standalone. It carves space for the Fantastic Four without relying on MCU cameos or overstuffed references. That said, the post-credit scene is minimal yet seismic - enough to send a wave of gasps through the theatre.
Sum up - The Fantastic Four: First Steps is both a film and a foundation. It's smart without being cold, epic without losing intimacy, and finally gives Marvel's First Family the treatment they deserve. More than a comeback - this is a course correction.
What's really refreshing about the film is that you can jump into this movie without prior MCU knowledge as this film stands on its own in Earth 828 (numbers used as an homage to Jack Kirby's DOB). Even with the aesthetics of the 1960's, director Matt Shakman throws us into an intrepid and exciting universe with little time spent on the Fantastic Four's origin story. The origin story still gets the exposition hand out there but within the confines of a news montage celebrating the team's heroics early on.
The Fantastic Four here, feel very fleshed out and realized with Pedro Pascal, Vanessa Kirby, Joseph Quinn and Ebon Moss Bachrach's portrayals all uniformly coexisting with excellent banter that the other films tried but skipped out on. Their family dynamics are also on full display in the both quieter moments and the action sequences.
Galactus was the character I was the most worried about. Because thai could have easily been another MODOK situation. Thankfully that's not the case as Ralph Ineson's iteration as the planet harvester. For one, he's not a damn cloud, and two he is very menacing and can cause some serious damage. His herald Silver Surfer is also great and has the best action sequence in the whole film.
The music from Michael Giacchino is great as well as another great superhero score. Alongside the brooding tune for The Batman, his cheery tune for the Fantastic Four is instantly synonymous with them and recognizable.
With Thunderbolts, Superman and now Fantastic Four First Steps, I feel more hopeful than ever before for superhero flicks especially with Marvel back on their winning streak and DC starting their fresh new universe.
Now for pros
1. It had some really good CGI at some points. Atleast it did The Thing right. He is being done dirty for a long time.
2. There was chemistry between the cast. The chemistry was better than 2015 version but it wasn't better than the 2005 one.
3. Galactus was done right you could feel his presence in IMAX.
4. I liked Joseph Quinn. He kept the legacy alive of good human torches.
Now for cons
1. Pedro was such a miscast. He played himself. He is not right for Reed.
2. It has more wacky shots than the good ones. The CGI looks unfinished at some points.
3. It was poorly edited. We know they cut 15 to 20 minutes and you could feel it. Something was missing.
4. CGI baby. I think it's about time they stop using the CGI baby. It was giving uncanny vibes.
5. Reed was really underwhelming. He barely used his powers.
6. Although it was only 1 hour 55 minutes long yet it felt longer than other movies which are longer. The pacing was horrible.
7. Most of it was spoiled in the trailers. If you saw all promotional videos and trailer you just saw 50 percent of the movie.
8. The last act was horrible. It felt like that Yelena scene from Black Widow.
9. This movie felt like it was missing a whole act. They should have given creative control to the director.
10. They could have done the post credit better.
This was a misfire by marvel and they should be worried beacuse it is directly related to Doomsday. It is really average. It places at 2nd last in the ranking of 2025 CBM.
I am really disappointed. Fantastic four are one of my favourite characters and they missed another time. When we will get a good F4 film? That's the question.
The Fantastic Four Answer Your Fan Questions
Did you know
- TriviaThe HERBIE robot was portrayed through a combination of a wooden puppet, a remote-controlled animatronic with a functioning head and arms, and computer-generated imagery.
- GoofsEarly in the movie, when Reed records cosmic sounds, the engraver starts on the inside edge of the disc, by the label. Later, when Johnny listens to the disc, he starts on the outside edge, like a normal LP, but this would result in him hearing the sound played backwards.
- Quotes
Reed Richards: [giving a school lecture] This equation not only confirms alternate dimensions, it suggests that parallel Earths exist on different dimensional planes...
[sees his students are bored]
Reed Richards: Who wants to see a big explosion?
[his students perk up]
- Crazy creditsThere is an animated "Fantastic Four" sequence at the end of the closing credits.
- ConnectionsFeatured in AniMat's Crazy Cartoon Cast: The Rat of All My Dreams (2020)
- SoundtracksGuanacoa
Performed by Juan García Esquivel
Written by Juan García Esquivel
Courtesy of Sony Music Entertainment (Mexico) S.A. de C.V.
By arrangement with Sony Music Entertainment
New and Upcoming Superhero Movies and Series
New and Upcoming Superhero Movies and Series
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- The Fantastic 4: First Steps
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $200,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $266,844,722
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $117,644,828
- Jul 27, 2025
- Gross worldwide
- $508,239,551
- Runtime
- 1h 54m(114 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1