Well, Christmas is fast approaching and perhaps, like me, you’re not really celebrating the holiday, but you still want a dose of all the good stuff from the best of Christmas movies without the trappings of the holiday? Well, here’s a good alternative for any, celebrating or not, to watch on their time off. And it’s even one that’s good for the whole family. Way back in August I did a Lone Wolf and Stub about The Fantastic Four: First Steps. If you’re not familiar with that particular series in my posts, it’s my absolutely spoiler-free, no context reaction series on movies I see in the theater. These posts here are generally light on spoilers, but I do explain the premises of the subject matter—well, you know the drill by now.
So this holiday season, since I already found one Christmas movie I really enjoyed and didn’t think I should push my luck, I decided to revisit First Steps for a full post and found that it’s actually kind of a great non-Christmas Christmas movie.
You probably know the story of the Fantastic Four, but if you don’t, I’ll nutshell it for you. They’re astronauts who go into space and are bombarded by cosmic rays, giving each of them unique superpowers through the altering of their DNA. We open on Reed having a very normal moment of looking for something in the medicine cabinet and not being able to find it. I get that, nothing is ever where I think it’s going to be. But, unbeknownst him, his wife Sue is finding out that she’s pregnant. Ben Grimm intuits it immediately and the family shares a nice moment as Johnny gets seriously excited to become an uncle.
This is a big deal for them, that goes without saying; having a child is a life-changing experience for all involved and when your life involves dressing up in a bright blue sweater and fighting the forces of evil, it’s a different prospect altogether. But it’s a bigger deal because not only have they been trying for a long time, they are also the first superpowered people in the world to get pregnant. So they’re breaking some new ground. As such, Reed is more worried than your average soon-to-be father. He has no idea how their altered DNA will affect a child or how Sue will be affected by her pregnancy. Johnny pushes Reed to go back into space, but he’s preoccupied, understandably. Reed is afraid because even this clean looking retrofuturistic world they live in is a dangerous and frightening place, so he focuses on his very specific kind of baby-proofing. But this is interrupted when a shiny woman on a surfboard flies in from space in dramatic fashion and heralds the end of Earth and the coming of Galactus.
And that introduces the main conflict of the story. Johnny is impulsive and chases after her, going to such a high altitude that he burns out his oxygen trying to catch her. It’s a short sequence, but it’s a pretty cool scene and it leads Johnny to want further understanding of The Herald, as they call her (you and I will probably know her better as Silver Surfer). Having your entire planet marked for death by someone who is going to turn it into an all-you-can-eat buffet is a pretty rough circumstance to get your wish, but Reed decides they’re going back into space to meet Galactus on his terms and try to find a solution. Little note here, their ship is called the Excelsior, and I love that. I love seeing these little things that keep Stan Lee alive and present in these films. Anyway, Galactus offers them a trade—give them their baby, whom he claims has the power to quell his endless hunger and he will spare their planet. Now, if Captain America wouldn’t trade Vision’s life for the Infinity Stones, what are the chances that Reed and Sue Richards are going to give him their child? There’s more than a little Star Wars feeling to these scenes, in the way they use the score and how the action plays out in space, and even though Star Wars isn’t exactly in a great place right now (especially with regards to the fandom), I mean this in the best way. This is a very fun movie, but I don’t mean to say it’s frivolous, but this space sequence really gives you that intergalactic adventurer feeling that previous iterations on this foursome completely lacked (among other things).
Surprisingly, though, when they return to Earth, they reveal that they refused to trade their baby, Franklin, for the planet’s safety and this idyllic retrofuture shows it dark underbelly as they turn on their heroes. This isn’t the dark, dusty post-apocalyptic retrofuture we’re used to seeing in properties like Fallout (coverage coming soon on that show). No, it’s glitzy and bright and seems plucked right out of Walt Disney’s dome back in 1955. But we’re all just animals when faced with extinction and it takes a lot to overcome that primal fear.
In fact, it’s always easy to do the cold math when you’re not the one who has to give anything up. Everyone is happy with sacrifice until it’s their turn, then all of a sudden it’s a different story. I suppose that’s the difference between a hero and a regular person. A hero, like our four here, are willing to make the sacrifice, but not to sacrifice others. And they are definitely willing to sacrifice, but not their child. I’d go ahead and guess not any child. It may be a bold stance to say that good people aren’t cool with child murders these days, but I’m willing to say it.
There were a lot of things I expected when I watched this movie and one of those things was great acting. I know there were some murmurs about Pedro Pascal (The Last of Us, The Mandalorian) being a little overexposed at the moment, but when he’s that good, I don’t care. He might not have disappearing into Reed exactly, but he was completely believable as the father-to-be. He’s incredible in this movie, so vulnerable and brave. Real bravery—not fearlessness, not bravado, not false machismo. Being afraid to do the right thing and still doing it anyway. Real bravery is something the world needs a hell of a lot more of these days and I’m happy to see it, even if only in a movie. Pascal brings so much humanity to the role; he doesn’t feel like a character, he feels like a person. Just a person that looks and sounds like Pedro Pascal with gray temples. Reed is the portrait of a tortured man, and refreshingly, he’s not tortured by the weight of his own brilliance, like so many MCU heroes are (looking at you Tony Stark and Stephen Strange). Rather, he’s haunted by a failure, his failure, to ensure that their last space mission was successfully completed. Sure, they all came back alive, but they were forever changed in ways they are only beginning to understand. Of course he’s afraid. He feels as if he makes a mistake, if he’s not perfect, then everything that follows is his responsibility. Reed is a man who feels the weight of the world and does everything he can to humbly carry it on his shoulders.
And the best part? His performance isn’t even the best in this movie. If you don’t know who Ebon Moss-Bachrach (The Bear) is yet, you really should. First Steps marks his MCU return after the criminally underrated The Punisher and this time he’s a big rock guy, aka Ben Grimm, aka The Thing and he brings his certified brand of warm-hearted tough guy to him. I love to see that archetype of character, the B.A. Baracus, as I like to call it. If there’s one character archetype that always gets me on their side, it’s the gentle giant and Thing gets to show that in spades as he delights school kids with his antics in the street (and as a bonus, he gets to meet Natasha Lyonne, a dream come true if I’ve ever seen one). But the two real stars of the show are Vanessa Kirby (Mission: Impossible series, The Crown) as Sue Richards née Storm and Joseph Quinn (Stranger Things, A Quiet Place: Day One) as Johnny Storm/Human Torch. You see Vanessa Kirby’s name on the team sheet and you know you’re in for at least a 9 out of 10 on the pitch. She’s so good and has been captivating on screen any time I’ve seen her and this is no different. Kirby absolutely shone as Sue, the heart and soul of the team, but also a lot more than that. She’s also the tooth and nail of the team, easily the fiercest one when it comes to not just keeping her family together, but also protecting the innocent. When The Herald comes for her child, there is no hesitation, there is no equivocation. There is nothing more important to her than protecting her family and she will stop at nothing to do so. Both Sue and Kirby are the linchpins of this film.
The real surprise here, though, was Joseph Quinn. I’m not all that familiar with Johnny Storm as a character (I don’t even like playing him in Marvel Rivals), so my only experiences have been with Chris Evans and Michael B. Jordan in the awful Fant4stic film. But I had not expected to see a Human Torch with so much humility, kindness, and caring. He’s just so genuinely good-natured and desperately wants to be a hero. He was great as Eddie on Stranger Things, so maybe I shouldn’t have been surprised, but I found him to be the most moving character in a movie full of characters I absolutely adored. Julia Garner (Ozark, Weapons) is a very talented actress as well and despite the fact her role as The Herald/Silver Surfer lacked the meat of the titular characters’, she played it with a quiet, compassionate desperation that is hard to pull off when you’re CGI’d and chromed. I can only imagine how well she’d do if we could see her face and hear her unmodulated voice. And yet, it was still a compelling performance.
At the core of this movie is the importance of connection and understanding. Yes, you can insert a Fast and Furious meme every time someone says “family”, but it’s about so much more than the nuclear (or cosmically irradiated) family. There are some aspects of First Steps that remind me of the cow translation scene from Arrival. If you don’t know that reference, watch Arrival, it’s one of the best science fiction movies I’ve ever seen. Communication is so key and at the same time incredibly difficult. Even when two people know and speak the same language, it’s so hard for them to communicate effectively with each other. I mean, just take one quick look at Reddit if you think I’m overstating my case. But when people understand each other, they can accomplish new things. In reality, there are no aliens (yes, yes, I know the law of large numbers); the only people we’ve got on the planet are each other. As awful a prospect as that may seem, we either find a way to get along and maybe accomplish some things together or we can all die clawing at each other’s throats. And that’s the decision the people of the world in First Steps have to make as well.
“We must support each other and dare to hope,” a news report says. What a turn of phrase there. I was reminded recently the importance of hope in the face of what feels like hopeless times. It’s those who hold on to hope who have the chance to make a difference. If you give up, if you concede, if you become a societal recluse doing your best ostrich impression, then you are giving up that opportunity and resigning yourself to your fate. It’s not just our family in blue sweaters that needs to dare to hope, it’s every damn person on the planet. And they have to support each other too.
There is a profound futility to their fight, like those who fight against death itself, but it is that fight that can never be relented. There is real fear, real desperation, and real courage on display here. How they managed to make such an emotionally impactful film out of such an ostensibly goofy property, I’ll never know. And I know the Fantastic Four has lots of very devoted fans, but on the surface it’s about a superpowered Brady Bunch with a robot housekeeper (shoutout to H.E.R.B.I.E. though, that little robot has Wall-E charm in spades, I need a Funko Pop of it immediately) in a somewhat campy future where Paul Walter Hauser (Cobra Kai, The Naked Gun) is the leader of a race of subterranean mole people and he has a crush on Sue. It’s objectively kind of corny, but it works so well because they play it straight up and down. It isn’t winking, it isn’t trying to be too cool for the setting, it leans into it and creates something that feels wonderfully alive. This is the kind of superhero movie I want to see more of. They think things through, they approach problems in a way that makes sense for the characters.
So many times, we get super-genius superheroes whose sole contribution to resolving the main conflict is how hard they punch. Not compassion, not empathy, not intelligence, but brute force. I mean, Tony Stark fancied himself the smartest man on the planet and his solution to the world’s problems was basically a wearable gun. Which is fine, I like Iron Man. But for the most part, his smarts went to creating weapons. Not here, not in this movie; it’s not bigger explosions that they’re trying to make. And not only that, the characters feel different from some of the relative carbon copies we were getting before. No character is snarky or snippy and the comedic moments in the film come from plot-derived jokes and not just drag-and-drop quips. First Steps, Superman, and Thunderbolts* are really showing the way forward for superhero movies. Tell good stories with good characters and it won’t matter if they’re a store clerk or they can set themselves on fire and fly; you’ll have a good movie. And that’s exactly what First Steps is. It’s great, actually. And at just 1 hour and 56 minutes, this PG-13 film that’s streaming on Disney+ is sure to be a hit this holiday season or whenever.
To those of you celebrating Christmas, I wish you a safe and happy one, that you give and receive good gifts, that you get to spend your time with good people, and that you are generous with the things you can’t buy, like your time, caring, and kindness. Because if there’s anything I’ve learned from watching all these Christmas movies, it’s that the things fade away; the socks will wear through, the electronics will get replaced by newer models, gift cards will be depleted, but the time we spend with each other and the memories we make are irreplaceable. And on a personal note, this year of blogging has been a real treat. I truly enjoy bringing these films and TV shows to you every week and I’ve been lucky to see some real growth on this blog over the past year. Things will be changing in 2026, I’m sure, but what won’t change is my dedication to deeper analysis, finding hidden gems, and helping you navigate the sea of media out there. Thank you readers, old and new, for lending me your time.