My quick rating - 7.7/10. Thunderbolts* might just be the breath of fresh air the MCU needed after years of playing it safe with interchangeable cosmic threats and half-baked humor (No, The Marvels, I haven't forgotten about you). It’s not just another team-up movie—it’s a surprisingly heartfelt exploration of loneliness, trauma, and the very human toll that heroism (or anti-heroism, in this case) can take on a person’s psyche.
The plot is straightforward enough: a ragtag bunch of disillusioned misfits and castoffs from past MCU stories are thrown together for a mission that quickly morphs into a death trap. I appreciated how the film used this setup to dive deep into each character’s struggles with fear, isolation, and regret. It’s powerful to see mental health given this kind of spotlight in a major superhero tentpole, especially since Marvel comics have always tackled the psychological scars that come with saving (or sometimes endangering) the world.
This is arguably the first time the MCU has truly leaned into that theme. The villain itself is an embodiment of the darkness that lives inside him and all of them. And let's be honest, this is a message for everyone watching. They are showing how unity and vulnerability become the only way to overcome it. I found it to be less of a spoiler and more of a cinematic thesis.
Don’t worry, though. This introspection doesn’t come at the expense of spectacle. There’s still plenty of mass destruction, eardrum-rattling Atmos-ready BOOMs, and well-staged chaos. The fight choreography is crisp, inventive, and the visual effects are reliably up to Marvel’s blockbuster standard. It’s just that, for once, the action feels like a complement to the story rather than the main course.
The cast is truly the film’s secret weapon. Florence Pugh is magnetic as ever, effortlessly balancing Yelena’s sardonic humor and deep vulnerability. Wyatt Russell does stellar work as John Walker, the MCU’s own dented and off-brand Captain America—complex, damaged, yet strangely sympathetic. The rest of the ensemble shines too, though it does feel like Ghost (Hannah John-Kamen) gets a little lost in the shuffle, which is almost inevitable with so many heavy hitters vying for screentime. Their group dynamic is a joy to watch. Everyone’s trying to pull away, yet somehow gets drawn back together. The film mines this tension for both biting humor and genuine emotion.
In the end, Thunderbolts* is more about these broken people trying to hold each other, and themselves, together than it is about saving the world. It’s refreshing to see a Marvel movie put story and character first. Whether this will be the film that finally snaps the MCU out of its creative slump is hard to say, especially since I believe so much seems to hinge on what happens with Fantastic Four: First Steps (which gets an obvious setup in the mid-credits scene). But for now, it’s safe to say the quality is on the upswing, and Thunderbolts* is a big reason why.

Just posted for theater at home prices on Amazon, among other streamers.
https://jackmeat.com/thunderbolts-2025/