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Supercops Vs Super Villains //free\\ May 2026

Rating: ★★½ (2.5/5) Genre: Action / Thriller / Superhero Director: (Imagine a hybrid of David Ayer’s grit and Michael Bay’s chaos) Runtime: 148 minutes (feels every second)

The villains are wasted. Lord Arclight monologues about “human fragility” for ten minutes before every fight. Phantom, who can walk through walls, is reduced to a jump-scare machine. And the film commits a cardinal sin: a second-act training montage that’s just cops shooting targets while frowning. No music. No fun. Just grit. supercops vs super villains

The action is brutally grounded. No slow-motion posing. When Shiver flash-freezes a hallway, the cops don’t break free with “willpower”; they nearly die of hypothermia while cutting through the ice with plasma torches. The film respects its premise: superpowers are terrifying, and normal humans should lose 99% of the time. Here’s the problem: Supercops is allergic to joy. Every scene is drenched in rain, shadow, or a teal-and-orange filter so oppressive you’ll miss daylight. Marcus Cole isn’t a character; he’s a clenched jaw with a tragic backstory (wife killed by a rogue super—shocker). He growls lines like, “We don’t need powers. We need principle.” Meanwhile, the script confuses “dark” for “deep.” Rating: ★★½ (2

The villain? (a scenery-chewing Jason Isaacs type), an electromagnetic megalomaniac who can black out entire cities. He’s assembled a rogues’ gallery: Shiver (ice manipulation), Boomer (sonic blasts), and Phantom (phasing/intangibility). Their goal: detonate a “Quantum Resonator” that will rewrite global power grids. And the film commits a cardinal sin: a