Aquaman | 2

His fragile peace is shattered when an ancient, frozen evil is unleashed: . Driven by vengeance for his father’s death, Manta has found the legendary, corrupting Black Trident. Powered by the spirit of an imprisoned, undead king named Kordax, Manta becomes a near-unstoppable force, capable of melting polar ice caps and unleashing a deadly, global "heat plague" that threatens to destroy the surface and underwater worlds alike.

Picking up a few years after the first film, Arthur Curry (Jason Momoa) is no longer the reluctant heir to Atlantis. He’s now King of the Seven Seas, a new father, and a beleaguered husband to Mera (Amber Heard). Struggling to balance his duties on land (where he’s a clumsy, beer-loving dad) and his responsibilities under the sea (where he’s expected to be regal), Arthur is stretched thin. aquaman 2

Think of it as a —silly, visually cacophonous, and occasionally nonsensical, but buoyed by Momoa’s infectious charisma and Wilson’s deadpan perfection. It’s not high art, but as a final, carefree wave goodbye to the DCEU, it’s an okay splash in the pool. His fragile peace is shattered when an ancient,

★★½ (2.5/5) – Stream it for the bromance; lower your expectations for the plot. Picking up a few years after the first

Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom arrives as both a sequel and a swan song. As the final installment in the now-concluded DC Extended Universe (DCEU), it carries the weight of concluding a decade of storytelling. But does it sink or swim?