In Suicide Squad: Hell to Pay, the 10th movie of the DC
Animated Movie Universe, Amanda Waller sends Task Force X – composed of Deadshot,
Harley Quinn, Bronze Tiger, Captain Boomerang, Killer Frost, and Copperhead –
to retrieve a supernatural item that holds power over the afterlife, as other interested
parties are in pursuit of this McGuffin as well.
So is it better than the
live-action Suicide Squad movie? I think so.
It nails what a Suicide Squad adventure should be, and effectively depicts
the dysfunctional, powder-keg dynamics in a group of
villains being forced to perform black ops missions.
The movie is dark, gritty, and
violent – as it should be. But it doesn’t
dwell on just gratifying through being those things. It also goes out of its
way to add a sense of depth that most direct-to-video animated comic book
movies don’t usually have. At one point,
it even goes surprisingly spiritual.
Moreover, it’s also funny, containing the dosage and kind of humor appropriate to its tone and theme. I genuinely laughed out loud a couple of times.
Moreover, it’s also funny, containing the dosage and kind of humor appropriate to its tone and theme. I genuinely laughed out loud a couple of times.
Aside from the Suicide Squad, a
couple of recognizable DC characters also make appearances in this movie in
varying degrees of importance to the plot.
But what’s shocking is the narrative’s willingness to kill a couple of
them off, meaning they would no longer be available to future DCAMU movies. This aspect significantly increases the movie’s
levels of surprise and stakes.
Suicide Squad: Hell to Pay is not free from imperfections at parts, but it’s a
great DC animated movie as a whole. It’s entertaining,
action-packed, humorous, and even thought-provoking. In fact, I believe it’s the franchise’s best
installment yet (taking the spot from TeenTitans: The Judas Contract).
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