With 34 blockbuster movies and counting since 2008, the Marvel Cinematic Universe has created a cosmos of big stars, from Robert Downey Jr.'s armored Iron Man to Chris Evans' star-spangled Captain America.
There's only one MCU movie on the docket in 2024, but it has some high-profile rookies: Ryan Reynolds's motormouthed Deadpool and Hugh Jackman's iconic X-Men member Wolverine, veterans of Fox's Marvel movies, are introduced into the Disney world of Avengers and Guardians of the Galaxy with "Deadpool & Wolverine" (in theaters Friday).
But how does the third "Deadpool" movie fit into this seemingly never-ending superhero saga? Here’s the definitive ranking of all the Marvel movies so far:
Let’s accentuate the positive: The sequel gave us Scarlett Johansson's sleek Black Widow and put Don Cheadle in the War Machine armor. Everything else was a scattershot mess with Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr.) taking on the wholly underwhelming villain Whiplash (Mickey Rourke).
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Before ultimately being replaced in other movies by Mark Ruffalo, Edward Norton starred as scientist Bruce Banner in this odd duck from the nascent MCU. This mostly forgettable affair exists to serve as a reminder that we still deserve a good solo Hulk film one day.
The results are only so-so as Tony Stark tussles with PTSD, criminally underused antagonist Mandarin (Ben Kingsley) and yawn-worthy villain Aldrich Killian (Guy Pearce). The threequel also proved that, yes, too many armored suits are a bad thing – heck, even Gwyneth Paltrow gets one.
Chris Hemsworth’s thunder god has a sequel that’s a blender of familiar fantasy tropes as Thor and love interest Jane Foster (Natalie Portman) have to deal with a dark elf with an Infinity Stone. Tom Hiddleston’s iconic trickster Loki is in fine form and the film’s highlight in every way.
Not Marvel’s greatest solo movie, but certainly one that takes some admirable swings. A quasi-family drama that boots Thor from the realm of Asgard to Earth in fish-out-of-water fashion – thanks to Anthony Hopkins' big daddy Odin – so the future Avenger can be worthy of his mystical hammer, Mjølnir.
Oscar-winning director Chloé Zhao brings her naturalistic feel to a diverse though overly earnest movie about heroes who protected humanity for thousands of years and have to get the band back together when faced with an existential threat. It charts its own path more than any other MCU installment yet also goes overboard building its mythology.
Bursting with a packed ensemble, it’s lacking the superteam mojo of the first "Avengers." This episode, however, does create sparks between Wanda Maximoff (Elizabeth Olsen) and Vision (Paul Bettany), plus introduces the secret home life of Hawkeye (Jeremy Renner). Also: Bless James Spader’s heart for being the world’s snarkiest killer robot.
The first two breezy, science-y "Ant-Man" films give way to this more generic, messy episode where Paul Rudd's Scott Lang has to protect his teen daughter Cassie (Kathryn Newton) when their family gets trapped in the trippy Quantum Realm. The one saving grace is Jonathan Majors as the complex time-traveling space king, Kang the Conqueror.
Brie Larson's photon-blasting space warrior debuts in a 1990s nostalgia-fest that's part "Guardians of the Galaxy" and part "Memento": Carol Danvers has to figure out her own mysterious human identity while also warding off an alien menace to Earth. Larson's OK but you'll really dig the sweet relationship between youngish Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson) and Goose the cat.
The satisfying sequel doubles down on all the aspects that made the original "Ant-Man" joyful with one big (or, small, depending on how you look at it) addition: Evangeline Lilly debuts her winged and awesomely rough-and-tumble Wasp on an adventure that takes its size-changing heroes from San Francisco to the Quantum Realm.
Benedict Cumberbatch gets a fantastically weird and trippy introduction to the MCU as a sorcerer supreme who goes from rich jerk to humbled hero. It’s a magical version of Iron Man’s origin and some gags are overly goofy, yet the filmmaking wizardry and effects help create a signature psychedelic experience.
Shang-Chi (Simu Liu) and best friend Katy (Awkwafina) get thrown into otherworldly conflict and learn to be heroes when Shang-Chi's dad (Tony Leung) is up to no good, forcing a magical confrontation between estranged father and son. The film gets lost in its own mythology, but the street-fighting scenes, family drama and Liu's charisma do wonders.
Director Sam Raimi ("The Evil Dead") introduces a nifty scary bent to the dark fantasy, where Benedict Cumberbatch's magic man throws down with a dangerous foe and meets his multiverse variations. There are monsters, zombies and even surprisingly brutal horror-movie kills, but also fan service that undermines more than helps.
Thor and Hulk make a dynamic duo in the third "Thor" solo film (and funniest Marvel project), and anything with the two of them is magic. Taika Waititi's larger narrative features a hostile takeover of Asgard by goddess of death Hela (Cate Blanchett), though you'll remember "Ragnarok" for Jeff Goldblum and various over-the-top shenanigans.
Marvel finally does right by Johansson's title character with a solid solo spy thriller, reuniting Natasha Romanoff with her estranged "family" of Russian secret agents. Black Widow aims to right some past sins and deals with a dangerous new threat in a movie that launches Florence Pugh's Yelena Belova as the franchise's next superstar.
Disney+ teen heroine Kamala Khan (Iman Vellani) gets her big-screen debut in an enjoyable, body-swapping space romp that partners her with her idol Carol Danvers (Brie Larson) and superpowered astronaut Monica Rambeau (Teyonah Parris). It mostly sticks to the Marvel formula, except for one scene involving a herd of cats that's an all-time MCU moment.
The heist comedy with a super-shrinking dude was a bigger risk than "Guardians of the Galaxy." Paul Rudd, Michael Douglas and Evangeline Lilly are great together, though, and Marvel gave us something we hadn’t seen yet: a hero who’s also an ex-con dad. (Also, major props to Michael Peña's Luis, who can tell a story like no one else.)
Puppy love and summer flings abound when Tom Holland's Peter Parker goes on a European vacation to spend quality time with his crush MJ (Zendaya) and instead gets thrown into a few international incidents. High-school high jinks keep it lighthearted, while Jake Gyllenhaal makes an over-the-top splash as the enigmatic Mysterio.
They had us at “Kurt Russell plays a living planet.” The gravy is everything else: adorable Baby Groot dancing in the middle of a space battle, Dave Bautista’s Drax being the buff, oddball voice of reason, and Michael Rooker’s space outlaw Yondu stealing the show.
Two Thors are better than one! Chris Hemsworth's hero returns to figure out who he is in this big crazy world, Natalie Portman's back as his astrophysicist ex – now a buff powerhouse wielding his old magic hammer – and Taika Waititi delivers a surprisingly profound romantic comedy with Guns N' Roses needle-drops and screaming goats.
The beginning, the kickoff, the OG. A crew of Avengers was probably still a pipe dream for fans and most of Hollywood when Robert Downey Jr. first put on the Iron Man suit, but from the start, the signature swagger, attitude and swig of humility he gave Tony Stark set the tone for everything that was to come.
Spider-Man, Spider-Man, does whatever a spider can – and when you're the newest version of the teen hero, you also deal with balancing extracurriculars, getting a date for the big homecoming dance, trying to impress Tony Stark and fighting the Vulture in an epic young-adult adventure.
Director Ryan Coogler pulls off a stellar sequel that honors Chadwick Boseman and his character while also setting up the future of his Wakandan heroes. Facing global threats, including a kingdom of undersea warriors, a new Black Panther comes to the forefront in a stirring story about life, legacy and loss.
Marvel nailed the origin story of Steve Rogers (Chris Evans), the little guy whose heart was bigger than his biceps until a super-soldier serum pumped him up. It offered a great World War II aesthetic, two-fisted adventure and a moral code that created an intriguing thread for his next two movies.
The third "Avengers" film is the all-night buffet of superhero fare, with a slew of folks rallying to fend off Thanos, a dude bent on destroying half the universe. It's all pretty tasty, though, with great one-liners, a narrative where good people make some bad decisions, and a stupendous cliffhanger that you'll love to hate.
Rocket (voiced by Bradley Cooper), the coolest space raccoon of them all, earns the spotlight in James Gunn's trilogy finale, as Chris Pratt's Star-Lord and the gang go on a mission to save one of their own. The threequel riffs on the fabulous first "Guardians" while charting its own emotional narrative about compassion and empathy.
The emotional and satisfying conclusion of the teen-oriented trilogy featuring Tom Holland's hero also cleverly pays off aspects of Tobey Maguire's and Andrew Garfield's earlier Spider-films. Old bad guys like Alfred Molina's Doc Ock and Willem Dafoe's Green Goblin show up, too, for a stirring story about second chances.
Curse words, cartoonish violence, A-list cameos and meta gags pepper this freewheeling, R-rated adventure, in which Ryan Reynolds' Merc with a Mouth and Hugh Jackman's clawed grump try to save their worlds. A great turn by Jackman and a focus on the characters' vulnerabilities lends needed depth to an entertaining romp.
From hanging in 1990s Oakland to flying through futuristic present-day Africa, the solo film for the late Chadwick Boseman’s warrior king is a magnificent journey with awesome set pieces (including a car chase through South Korea that'll leave you breathless) and a near-perfect villain in Michael B. Jordan's Erik Killmonger. Wakanda forever!
The jam-packed ensemble completely lived up to its giant-size expectations. While the heroes-batting-each-other trope is starting to get played out, the excitement is palpable and fanboy hearts melt when hammers and shield fly as Iron Man, Cap and Thor meet.
Personal and political stakes are at play as Cap chooses his best friend (and brainwashed assassin) over Iron Man, blowing up the Avengers dynamic. Plus, it has the an awesome superhero battle and memorable intros for Black Panther and Spider-Man.
Marvel's greatest-hits compilation is also a secret handshake of sorts for long-invested fans, with three hours of rousing storytelling starring Earth's mightiest heroes that pays off everything that came before it with callbacks and cameos. The climactic battle will knock your socks off, though you'll need a couple of hankies by the uplifting yet heartbreaking finale.
Fantastic tunes, a strange cast of characters that inexplicably works, and a story where you’re hooked on a bunch of feelings, from the emotions of young Peter Quill crying over his dying mother to the hilarity of grown-up Peter (Chris Pratt) explaining "Footloose" to new pal Gamora (Zoe Saldana). We are Groot, indeed.
More political thriller than superhero blockbuster, Captain America’s second solo film – and the best Marvel jam of them all – taps into timely themes of privacy concerns, an enemy growing from within, and military might used in ethically questionable ways. Come for the timeliness, stay for Cap wrecking a bunch of guys in an elevator.
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