mitch f. anderson’s review published on Letterboxd:
legitimately surprising by being thematically engaging, actually fun for much of its runtime, and, probably most applaudingly, containing a real sense of closure and ending to this story instead of teasing and likely-to-be-unkept promises, allowing those who want to jump ship the ability to do so with a clean narrative conscious; sure, torches are passed and future threads are set up, but multiple stories are allowed to actually satisfyingly end here. still plenty of wonk (narrative treatment of women is sketchy, a character's reaction to trauma feels too played for comedy, and some of the moping-in-place-of-pathos of the first act could absolutely be trimmed), but particularly in the aftermath of the, in my opinion, rather turgid Infinity War, which would've functioned for me only as a thematically fascinating deliberate anti-ending, a well-done piece of popcorn entertainment feels appropriate as a true farewell.