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Revision as of 01:48, 12 April 2019

Shazam!
File:Shazam! theatrical poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed byDavid F. Sandberg
Screenplay byHenry Gayden
Story by
Produced byPeter Safran
Starring
CinematographyMaxime Alexandre
Edited byMichel Aller
Music byBenjamin Wallfisch
Production
companies
Distributed byWarner Bros. Pictures
Release dates
  • March 15, 2019 (2019-03-15) (Toronto)
  • April 5, 2019 (2019-04-05) (United States)
Running time
132 minutes[2]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$80–100 million[3][4]
Box office$193.7 million[5]

Shazam! is a 2019 American superhero film based on the DC Comics character of the same name. Produced by New Line Cinema and distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures, it is the seventh installment in the DC Extended Universe (DCEU). Directed by David F. Sandberg from a screenplay by Henry Gayden, and a story by Gayden and Darren Lemke, the film stars Asher Angel as Billy Batson, a teenage boy who can transform into an adult superhero, played by Zachary Levi. Mark Strong, Jack Dylan Grazer, and Djimon Hounsou also star. It is the first live-action film version of the character since the 1941 serial Adventures of Captain Marvel (the character's original name).

Development of a live-action Shazam! film began at New Line in the early 2000s, but was delayed for many years. The film went into pre-production in 2009 with director Peter Segal and writer John August, and Dwayne Johnson considered to star as the villain Black Adam,[6][7] but the project fell through. Though Johnson serves as an executive producer. William Goldman, Alec Sokolow, Joel Cohen, Bill Birch, and Geoff Johns, among others, were all attached to the project as writers at various points. The film was officially announced in 2014, with Johnson attached to star as either Shazam or Black Adam.[8] He would later be cast in January 2017 to lead a solo Black Adam development project.[9] Sandberg signed on to direct Shazam! in February 2017 and Levi was cast that October, with Angel joining the following month. Principal photography began in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on January 29, 2018, with most of the film shot at Pinewood Toronto Studios, and wrapped on May 11, 2018.

Shazam! was released in the United States by Warner Bros. Pictures in RealD 3D, Dolby Cinema, and IMAX 3D on April 5, 2019. The film has grossed over $193 million worldwide and received praise from critics for Sandberg's direction and the performances of Levi and Grazer, as well as its light tone and sense of fun.[10] A sequel is currently in development.

Plot

In 1974 Upstate New York, young Thaddeus Sivana is arguing with his father and brother when he is magically transported to the Rock of Eternity, a magical temple hidden in another dimension. He meets the ancient wizard Shazam, the last of the Council of Seven Wizards. Shazam explains that he has spent centuries searching for a new champion who is "pure of heart" after the previous champion went rogue and the Seven Deadly Sins were released by him upon the ancient world. The Sins, now trapped in statues within the Rock, tempt Thaddeus with promises of power, and for succumbing to them so easily he is banished back to Earth as unworthy to be the champion. Upon returning, Thaddeus' car gets in a wreck that cripples his father and for which his brother blames him.

In the present, Philadelphia foster kid Billy Batson runs afoul of the law while searching for his birth mother. Billy is placed in a new group home run by Victor and Rosa Vazquez, who have five other foster kids: Mary Bromfield, Pedro Peña, Eugene Choi, Darla Dudley and Freddy Freeman, his new roommate who is an amateur superhero expert and enthusiast. Meanwhile, a now adult Sivana discovers a way of re-entering the Rock of Eternity. Upon arrival, Sivana steals the Eye of Sins from the Rock, freeing the Sins and becoming their vessel. He uses his new powers to attack the Wizard, and later returns to Earth to kill his abusive father and brother.

While in school, Billy saves Freddy from bullies and leads them on a chase into a subway, where he is summoned by Shazam who chooses Billy as the next champion. By touching the staff and saying Shazam's name, Billy is transformed into an adult costumed superhero who takes on the wizard's name before the wizard turns to dust, leaving behind his staff. Shazam returns home and, with Freddy's help, begins to learn the full extent of his newfound powers: electricity manipulation, superhuman durability, hyper speed, super strength, wisdom and flight. Freddy posts videos online of Shazam testing his powers, making him a viral sensation. After Freddy brags to their classmates about knowing Shazam, Billy abandons him and skips school to entertain fans for money. After seeing Shazam save a bus on the news, Sivana attacks him demanding he give up his power. The untested Shazam is easily defeated but transforms back into Billy to escape into the fleeing crowd. Sivana sees news coverage of Freddy and Shazam, deducing Billy's identity. He captures Freddy, demanding him to reveal where Billy lives.

At the Vazquez home, the other children discover Billy's secret and also tell Billy they found his mother, who lives nearby. Billy goes to meet his mother, but learns that she intentionally abandoned him, believing she was unable to care for him as a teenage single mother. Sivana then calls Billy from the Vazquez home, so he flies home as Shazam and agrees to give Sivana his powers in exchange for sparing his family's lives. Sivana and Shazam travel to the Rock of Eternity, but the other kids follow and attack Sivana, giving them time to escape. Shazam realizes that when the Sins leave Sivana's body, he loses his powers.

Sivana chases Shazam and the kids to a winter carnival, where Sivana unleashes the Sins. While Wrath occupies Shazam, the other Sins capture his family, coercing him to give up his power. As Sivana recalls the Sins, Shazam uses that moment to take the staff and stun Sivana. Shazam remembers the wizard's words and shares his powers with his foster siblings, transforming them into adult costumed superheroes with powers equal to his own.[N 1] Shazam breaks the staff and as the family keep the Sins busy, Shazam fights Sivana. Shazam baits out Envy, who had remained housed in Sivana's body, leaving Sivana powerless. Shazam defeats Envy and saves a falling Sivana. He removes the Eye of Sin from Sivana, which seals away the Sins. Shazam and his family are hailed as public heroes, and Billy embraces his foster family as his true family. The family return the Eye of Sin to the Rock of Eternity, and realize that they can use the Rock as their secret lair. Later on, Billy shows up at school as Shazam to have lunch with his foster siblings, revealing he had also invited Superman.

In a mid-credits scene, an imprisoned Sivana is recruited into a partnership with the caterpillar-like creature Mister Mind. In a post-credits scene, Freddy tests whether Shazam can talk to fish, citing Aquaman, only for Shazam to dismiss the power as stupid.

Cast

  • Asher Angel and Zachary Levi as William "Billy" Batson: A troubled orphan boy who is chosen as the "Champion of Eternity." Given powers by an ancient wizard, he transforms into an adult with superpowers when he yells the sorcerer's name. Batson is chosen as the new Champion, eons after the Council of Eternity selected another hero, who eventually killed all of the Council except for Shazam.[11] The powers given from the ancient wizard to Batson include gifts bestowed upon the sorcerer from various others. These powers include: the Wisdom of Solomon, the superhuman Strength of Hercules, the superhuman Stamina of Atlas (near-limitless resilience), the Powers of Zeus (lightning control and magical resistance), the courage of Achilles (and near indestructibility), and the superhuman speed of Mercury (which also provides flight).[12][13] The production team saw over one hundred candidates for Shazam before casting Levi, who originally auditioned for a smaller part before being asked to audition and test for the lead.[14] Angel, cast as Billy, shot his scenes for Shazam! in-between his commitments to the Disney Channel series Andi Mack.[15]
    • David Kohlsmith as 4-year-old William "Billy" Batson.[16]
  • Mark Strong as Dr. Thaddeus Sivana: A physicist who had grown up as an outcast in his wealthy family. Sivana himself was summoned by the Wizard Shazam as a child, but was not chosen as his champion, leading Sivana to spend his life trying to unlock the secret to return to the Rock of Eternity.[17][18]
    • Ethan Pugiotto as Young Thaddeus Sivana.[19]
  • Jack Dylan Grazer as Frederick "Freddy" Freeman: Billy's foster brother and best friend, a disabled, nerdy superhero enthusiast who is the only person who knows that he is Shazam.[20]
  • Djimon Hounsou as Shazam:[22] An ancient wizard seeking a successor, who bestows his powers on Billy Batson so that he can magically transform into an adult superhero. Hounsou previously portrayed Ricou, the King of the Fishermen, in Aquaman.[23][23][24]
  • Faithe Herman as Darla Dudley: Billy's youngest foster sibling at his new home, an energetic and effusive little girl.[25]
  • Grace Fulton as Mary Bromfield: Billy's foster sister at his new home, the "den mother" who helps take care of the other kids and is debating attending college in California.[26][27]
  • Ian Chen as Eugene Choi: Billy's foster brother at his new home, an obsessive gaming enthusiast and budding techie.[28]
  • Jovan Armand as Pedro Peña: Billy's foster brother at his new home, a shy, sensitive kid who has trouble opening up.[28]
  • Marta Milans as Rosa Vasquez: The foster mother of the group home where Billy and his friends live.[29]
  • Cooper Andrews as Victor Vasquez: The foster father of the group home where Billy and his friends live.[30]

The film also features John Glover as Mr. Sivana, the estranged father of Dr. Thaddeus Sivana and the head of Sivana Industries.[31] Wayne Ward portrays Thaddeus' bullying brother Sid as an adult and Landon Doak portrays Sid as a teenager. Andi Osho reprises her role as social worker Emma Glover from Sandberg's film Lights Out in an Easter egg appearance,[32][33][34] Natalia Safran was cast as Mrs. Sivana, Doctor Sivana's mother. Safran previously portrayed Rina, the Queen of the Fishermen Kingdom of Atlantis in Aquaman.[35] Caroline Palmer portrays Billy's biological mother Marilyn, who secretly allowed child services to take her son due to giving birth to him as a teenager.

Director David F. Sandberg makes cameo appearances performing as each of the three Crocodile-Men (collaboratively assisted by Steve Newburn and Ned Morill), and provides the voice of Mister Mind for a mid-credits sequence.[36] Sandberg's wife, actress Lotta Losten, portrays Dr. Lynn Crosby, a researcher working with Dr. Sivana.[37] Sound designer Bill Dean has an uncredited cameo as the voice of a Batman toy.[38] Ryan Handley, Zachary Levi's stunt double, also appears as Superman in a silent cameo appearance where the character was only seen from the neck down.[39]

The Seven Deadly Sins – a supernatural team of villains consisting of the demons Pride, Envy, Greed, Lust, Wrath, Gluttony, and Sloth – were portrayed by stunt doubles in motion capture suits on-set during filming and depicted as CGI characters.[40] Their voices were collectively provided by actors Steve Blum, Darin De Paul, and Fred Tatasciore.

Production

Development

New Line Cinema began development of a Shazam! live-action feature film in the early 2000s, with multiple screenplay drafts by William Goldman, the team of Alec Sokolow and Joel Cohen, Bryan Goluboff, and John August. The version of the Shazam! script written by August, which went into pre-production in 2008, was an action-comedy which focused on the origin story of the hero, then known by his original name of Captain Marvel, and his young alter ego, Billy Batson.[41] Peter Segal[6] was attached as director and actor Dwayne Johnson was in talks to appear as the film's villain, Black Adam.[6][7] The Shazam! film was being produced by New Line Cinema, which was absorbed into Warner Bros. during the course of development.

Following the success of Warner's Batman film The Dark Knight and the commercial failure of its lighter, family-friendly Speed Racer during the summer of 2008, August departed from the project citing pressure from the studio to make the screenplay darker and more serious.[7][42][43] In August 2009, Bill Birch and Geoff Johns, a prominent DC Comics writer, were assigned to write the screenplay, while Segal remained attached as director.[44] In August 2010, the studio considered canceling the theatrical movie in favor of a live-action series for prime time network television.[45] In December 2013, Segal stated that the film would not be happening, as the similarities between Captain Marvel and Superman had become an obstacle after the successful launch of Man of Steel.[46]

While development on the Shazam! film was in limbo, DC Comics rebooted the comic book franchise as part of their New 52 relaunch in 2012. Due to ongoing trademark conflicts with Marvel Comics, who owned the trademark for "Captain Marvel" for use with their own character of the same name,[47] DC renamed their Captain Marvel superhero character "Shazam" at this time.[48] DC had always been required to market and promote the character using the trademark Shazam! since acquiring the publishing rights from Fawcett Comics in 1972.[49] Captain Marvel had originated at Fawcett in 1939, but fell into limbo after 1953 following a long legal battle with DC over Captain Marvel's similarities to Superman.[50]

In April 2014, Warner Bros. revealed the upcoming slate of films based on DC Comics properties. A Justice League film was set to be released in 2017, alongside upcoming adaptations of Shazam!, Fables, and 100 Bullets. The Shazam! film was tentatively set for release in July 2016.[51][52][53] Dwayne Johnson confirmed he would be starring in Shazam! that August, but was undecided between portraying Shazam or Black Adam.[8] In September, Johnson was confirmed to play Black Adam, while Darren Lemke was set to write the script.[54] In January 2017, Henry Gayden was hired to rewrite Lemke's script.[55] In February 2017, David F. Sandberg was in talks with the studio to direct Shazam!,[56] Dwayne Johnson was set to first star in a Black Adam solo film, as opposed to appearing as the villain in Shazam!,[9] while Doctor Sivana, another archnemesis of Shazam, became the Shazam! film's main villain.[18]

By July 2017, the studio had begun active development on Shazam! and Sandberg was confirmed as director, with production to begin in early 2018.[57] Dwayne Johnson relayed that a different creative team was now involved than when he first signed on to the film, and stated his excitement over the studio's decision to split the film into two separate movies.[58] After being cast as the lead, Zachary Levi stated in an interview, "the idea is that it's gonna feel like the movie Big, but with super powers" when he was asked about what direction DC Films and New Line Cinema are going for with Shazam![59] The film was later stated by Warner Bros. to be based on the 2012-2013 Shazam! backup feature from the Justice League comic book by writer Geoff Johns and artist Gary Frank, which told a modernized version of Shazam's origin.[26][60]

Pre-production

In August 2017, director David F. Sandberg stated that the film would be the next to shoot in the DC universe,[61] and by the end of the month, it had begun pre-production.[62] By October 2017, cinematographer Maxime Alexandre and production designer Jennifer Spence, who previously worked with Sandberg on Annabelle: Creation, were added to the production.[63] The next month, Aquaman stunt coordinator Kyle Gardiner was hired to work on the film's action sequences.[64] On January 12, 2018, the film's release date was officially announced.[65]

Casting

Zachary Levi at 2018 San Diego Comic-Con International

By September 2014, Dwayne Johnson was set to portray Black Adam in the film, but by July 2017, he had left the project to pursue a Black Adam solo film.[54][9] In August 2017, the casting process for Shazam and other characters for the film had begun. Sandberg had stated in an interview that instead of de-aging an actor using special effects or CGI, he would cast both a child actor and an adult actor for the role of the main character.[66] Zachary Levi, John Cena, Zane Holtz, Jake McDorman, Derek Theler and Billy Magnussen had all met with and/or auditioned for Sandberg for the role of Shazam.[67]

By October 2017, Levi was cast in the titular role.[12] In November, Grace Fulton joined the cast as Mary Bromfield, one of Billy Batson's foster siblings.[68] Fulton is reteaming with the director after Annabelle: Creation.[27] Later that month, Mark Strong was in final negotiations to play Dr. Sivana.[18] Strong confirmed he would be playing the role by January 2018.[69] By November 2017, Asher Angel was cast as the titular hero's child-age alter ego Billy Batson.[13] In December, Jack Dylan Grazer was cast as Freddy Freeman, Batson's best friend.[20] Later that month, Jovan Armand, Ian Chen, Faithe Herman, and Cooper Andrews were cast as Pedro Peña, Eugene Choi, and Darla Dudley, while Andrews portrays Victor Vazquez, Batson's foster parent.[28][25][30]

By January 2018, Ron Cephas Jones entered talks to play the role of the wizard Shazam, who grants Batson his powers.[70] Later that month, Spanish actress Marta Milans joined the cast to play one of the foster parents at the home where Billy lives.[29] By the end of January 2018, actress Lotta Losten, wife of director David F. Sandberg, revealed that she has a role in the film.[71] On April 23, 2018, Ross Butler was announced to have joined the cast.[72] In July, it was announced that Djimon Hounsou had replaced Jones as the wizard Shazam during filming, due to Jones having scheduling conflicts.[24] Henry Cavill was in talks to reprise his role as Superman from previous DCEU films for a cameo, but was unable to because of scheduling conflicts.[73]

Filming

Principal photography for Shazam! began in Toronto and Hamilton, in Ontario, Canada on January 29, 2018, under the working title Franklin,[74][75][76] and was scheduled to wrap by mid-May 2018.[77] The film is set primarily in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and firmly established within the DCEU.[26] A majority of the production was shot at Pinewood Toronto Studios and also held on several public locations around the city, including the University of Toronto, Woodbine Shopping Centre[78] and Hearn Generating Station. In early March 2018, filming took place at Fort York National Historic Site in downtown Toronto.[79] By early May 2018, Asher Angel, among other young cast members, finished filming his part.[80] Principal photography wrapped on May 11, 2018.[81] Additional photography took place in Toronto between November and December 2018.[82][83] Shazam! had a filming budget of as low $80–90 million (and about $100 million once post-production was complete), making it the cheapest DCEU film to-date.[84][4] Footage of the skyline and aerial shots, as well as other location work, were filmed in the city of Philadelphia in December 2018 as well.[85]

Post-production

David F. Sandberg's two-time collaborator Michel Aller served as the editor for Shazam!.[26] Mike Wassel (Hellboy II: The Golden Army and The Fast and the Furious franchise) and Kelvin McIlwain (Aquaman) were the overall visual effects supervisors for the film. Technicolor's VFX studios Mr. X (known for The Shape of Water and Tron: Legacy) and Moving Picture Company (MPC) are providing visual effects.[86][87] Rodeo FX, Digital Domain, and Rise FX are also working on the VFX for the film.[88]

Music

On July 21, 2018, Benjamin Wallfisch was announced as the composer for Shazam!, marking the third collaboration with director David F. Sandberg after previously scoring Sandberg's Lights Out and Annabelle: Creation.[89] Wallfisch previously provided additional music for Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, the second film in the DC Extended Universe.[90]

Marketing

(L:R) Zachary Levi, Asher Angel, Jack Dylan Grazer and David F. Sandberg promoting Shazam! at the 2018 San Diego Comic Con International

In April 2018, a first look at Shazam! made its debut at CinemaCon convention in Las Vegas, Nevada with director David F. Sandberg introducing the behind-the-scene footage.[91][92] During an interview with Film Riot Podcast in June 2018, Sandberg stated that "On this one, it was just like 'Yeah, I want this to be a classic superhero movie.' It takes place in the winter, so it's a lot of dark exteriors, but with a lot of colorful lights and stuff around them."[93] On July 21, 2018, the first teaser trailer was shown at San Diego Comic-Con during the Warner Bros. panel at Hall H, with Sandberg, Zachary Levi, Asher Angel, and Jack Dylan Grazer in attendance. The trailer was later released online.[94] It received a favorable response from journalists and audiences, who praised its humorous, zany tone.[95]

New footage from the film made its debut at Brazil Comic Con (CCXP) in São Paulo on December 9, 2018 during the Warner Bros. studio panel, with the footage described for the attendees as action packed.[96] A new trailer was released on March 4, and a three-minute sneak peek was included with the digital home media of Aquaman.

At the STP 500 on March 24, 2019, Shazam! was the primary sponsor of Aric Almirola and the #10 Ford Mustang in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series. Almirola would go on to finish 9th after starting 2nd.[97][98]

Release

On March 13, 2019, Warner Bros. Pictures announced that they were teaming up with Fandango for exclusive preview screenings on March 23, two weeks before release on 1,200 select screens and 40 exhibition circuits.[99]

Shazam! premiered in Toronto on March 15, 2019,[100] and was released in the United States by Warner Bros. Pictures in RealD 3D, Dolby Cinema and IMAX 3D on April 5, 2019.[65]

Reception

Box office

As of April 10, 2019, Shazam! has grossed $67.4 million in the United States and Canada, and $126.3 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $193.7 million, against a production budget of between $80–$100 million.[5]

In the United States and Canada, Shazam! was released alongside The Best of Enemies and Pet Sematary, and was projected to gross $40–50 million from 4,260 theaters in its opening weekend.[4][3] Two weeks before its release, the film grossed $3.3 million from Fandango advance screenings, higher than the $2.9 million made by fellow DCEU film Aquaman the previous December.[101] It then made $5.9 million from Thursday night screenings, for a combined preview total of $9.2 million.[102] It then made $20.5 million on its first day, including Thursday previews. The film went on to debut to $53.5 million, finishing first at the box office.[103]

In other territories, the film was released in 53 markets on the Wednesday and Thursday prior to the United States' and was projected to debut to $100–120 million, for a global opening of $145–170. In its first two days of international release the film made $15.7 million, finishing first in 48 of its 53 markets. It was then released in an additional 26 countries, including China where it made $16.4 million on its first day. It went on to have an international debut of $102 million, and a global total of $158.6 million. It came in first in 60 of its 79 markets, with its highest-grossing being China ($30.9 million), Mexico ($6.2 million), the UK ($5.3 million), Russia ($5.2 million) and Brazil ($5.1 million).[104]

Critical response

On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 91% based on 309 reviews, with an average rating of 7.32/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "An effortlessly entertaining blend of humor and heart, Shazam! is a superhero movie that never forgets the genre's real power: joyous wish fulfillment."[105] On Metacritic, it has a weighted average score of 71 out of 100, based on 51 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[106] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A" on an A+ to F scale, while those at PostTrak gave it an overall positive score of 83% and a 61% "definite recommend".[103]

Nick Allen of RogerEbert.com said that "while Shazam! is goofier (and darker) than it may look, you'll wish its superhero came with a little more spark."[107] The Hollywood Reporter's Frank Scheck called the film "Big on steroids" and praised the tone and performances.[108] Alonso Duralde of TheWrap wrote "If the Wonder Woman and Aquaman movies represented DC Comics' first big-screen steps away from the austere color palette of the Zack Snyder movies, Shazam! takes us deeply into primary colors in a single bound... this new DC entry has a lovely lightness, both in the visuals and in its tone."[109]

Writing for The A.V. Club, Ignatiy Vishnevetsky gave the film a "B−" and said: "But while the story of an extremely overpowered champion rising to challenge a one-dimensionally sinister baddie might seem like the epitome of simplicity, Shazam! is still a modern-day tentpole blockbuster, overburdened with backstories for both hero and villain and subtexts that it can't (or won't) fully articulate".[110] That publication followed up with a further consideration of masculinity in the film and the superhero genre generally by focusing on the transition of Billy Batson from an adolescent boy to a man with power and responsibility.[111] Benjamin Lee of The Guardian gave the film 3/5 stars, wrote "The finale, while admirably self-contained and small-scale, grinds on for far too long, a boring escalation of anti-climaxes that cumulatively dull the intended emotional impact. It's a film in need of a tighter edit with a script in need of a sharper polish, an imperfect franchise-launcher that nonetheless represents significant progress for DC."[112]

Sequel

In April 2019, The Wrap reported that Warner Bros. are developing a sequel with Henry Gayden returning to write the film along with David F. Sandberg directing and Peter Safran producing.[113] Mark Strong is set to reprise his role as Sivana.[114]

Notes

References

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  2. ^ "Shazam! (12A)". British Board of Film Classification. Retrieved March 25, 2019.
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  12. ^ a b Kit, Borys (October 27, 2017). "DC's 'Shazam!' to Star Zachary Levi". TheHollywoodReporter. Archived from the original on October 28, 2017. Retrieved October 27, 2017. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |dead-url= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  13. ^ a b Kit, Borys (November 6, 2017). "'Shazam!' Finds Its Billy Batson with 'Andi Mack' Actor". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on November 7, 2017. Retrieved November 6, 2017. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help); Unknown parameter |dead-url= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
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  15. ^ Checcini, Mike. "How the Shazam Movie Brings Magic to the DCEU". Den of Geek. Retrieved April 6, 2019.
  16. ^ "David Kohlsmith (@davidkohlsmith) • Instagram photos and videos".
  17. ^ Prasad, R.A Karthik (July 22, 2018). "Shazam! Movie: Dr. Sivana's New Version Of Backstory Revealed". pursuenews.com. Archived from the original on July 23, 2018. Retrieved July 23, 2018. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |dead-url= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  18. ^ a b c Kit, Borys (November 2, 2017). "'Shazam!': Mark Strong in Talks for Villain Role". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on November 3, 2017. Retrieved November 2, 2017. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |dead-url= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  19. ^ Ehrlich, David (March 23, 2019). "'Shazam!' Review: DC Surprises with One of the Most Fun Superhero Movies Ever Made". IndieWire. Retrieved April 4, 2019.
  20. ^ a b N'Duka, Amanda (December 6, 2017). "It Actor Jack Dylan Grazer Joins Shazam". Deadline. Archived from the original on December 7, 2017. Retrieved December 6, 2017. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help); Unknown parameter |dead-url= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
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