This article contains spoilers forBlack Widow.

Let’s get something out of the way,Black Widowis as much a spy movie as it is another small part of the ever-expandingMarvel Cinematic Universe. It’s not like the film tries to hide its spy genre influences by any means, as Marvel Studios heads into Phase Four growing increasingly comfortable with tying its production to a specific niche within traditional cinema.

Black Widow herself is defined by the movie as a James Bond fan, withMoonrakerbeing the perfect 007 film to reference ahead of the plot taking Natasha and her family aboard the flying Red Room for its third act. However, throughout the entire course of its story,Black Widowwants fans of the Bourne saga to feel right at home as much as it tries to do the same for Marvel enthusiasts.

Moonraker James Bond

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At its heart, this makes perfect sense because Natasha Romanoff herself is a byproduct of the cold war era and that’s an essential element both to her long-running comic book origin story and the kind of picture the MCU has been trying to paint ever since she first appeared inIron Man 2. To further expand on this idea,Black Widow’sopening scene takes a very Bond-like approachshowing Natasha and Yelena’s parents on the family’sgenesis mission right before launching into an opening credits sequence that’s perfectly complemented with a great cover of Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen Spirit.”

By framing the movie’s bad guy into contemporary history, General Dreykov is infused with a touch of realness that would make him perfectly slot in a modern James Bond movie, up untilBlack Widow’spheromones trick turn him into a sillier villain echoing the eccentricity of Goldfinger, Ernst Stavro, and -of course-Moonraker’sHugo Drax. At the same time,Taskmaster’s much-debated role inBlack Widowturns her into the sort of henchman that usually beats up Bond before he gets to the real villain.

black widow ending

That’s not where the similarities end asBlack Widowalso sees Natasha go off the radar for her official government job, just like Bond turns his back on MI6 inA License to Kill, or more recentlySkyfallandSpectre. Funnily enough, Natasha has her own Q to fulfill her housing, transport, and weaponry needs as her dialogue with the film’s Rick Mason sees her go back and forth like they’ve known each other forever, much like Q and James Bond have been working together for almost 60 years.

Clearly,No Time to Dieis still building upto its fall premiere, but fans looking for some globetrotting action still get their fair share of varied landscapes with places like the suburban USA, Norway, Morocco, and Budapest. Granted Yelena and Natasha’s stop getting new stamps on their passports halfway through the movie, but what’s shown goes a long way towards establishing the general feel forBlack Widow.

black widow young natasha Cropped

Overall, there are enough elements to Natasha’s character and story that would make her slot in as the perfect soviet spy in an old James Bond movie, which is packed with beautiful red-haired Bond girls that have tricked 007 (think ofThunderball’sVolpe for example). Nevertheless,Black Widowis still much more than a simple Bond homage, and its two female heroes do a fantastic job at making the Red Guardian look like the Soviet relic he is because they’re more like superhero versions of whatNo Time to Dieseems to be wanting to do with its own female 00.

Why Black Widow Is Different From Other Spy Movies

DespiteBlack Widowlacking a specific comic book storyline from which to pull its core story and very obviously borrowing so many elements from the spy genre, the film still has plenty of dues to pay to the MCU and Disney, something that definitely ends up hurting its credentials when applying for a license to kill.

Throughout the whole movie, audiences are told Natasha has spent so many years being eaten away by the famed Budapest story where she apparently killed an innocent child; Yelena and Melina speak of the horrors women are put through in the Red Room where few really make it, yet the audience is only told all of this that is never shown to them, which isone of Black Widow’s biggest flaws.

Naturally, the MCU is burdened by its family-friendly tag so thatBlack Widowcould never expose Natasha’s trauma like Bond movies do, let alone Jason Bourne’s, but the way it has to ultimately link back to theInfinity Sagaand beyond is too much of a constraint to pay off those aspects even if age ratings weren’t an issue. Perhaps that’s the reason why director Cate Shortland and screenwriter Eric Pearson veeredBlack Widowinto the more fictitious Bond universe rather than Bourne’s.

When Natasha successfully escapes from the Thaddeus Ross led government effort to capture her, when she’s on the run in Norway, and the brief moment when she and Yelena manage to escape before heading to break out theirflawed surrogate Red Guardian father, these are all instances where the close-up filming style seems much more Bourne-inspired. It’s truly fantastic to see the MCU have grown so much that it’s starting toreach into other genres withWandaVisionandLoki, it might not be something that has been perfected just yet but it’ll surely get better as the Multiverse keeps on expanding.