Birds Of Prey Quiz – Which Character Are You?

<span class="author-by">by</span> Samantha <span class="author-surname">Stratton</span>

by Samantha Stratton

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Respond to these rapid questions in our Birds Of Prey Quiz and we will tell you which Birds Of Prey character you are. Play it now.

In “Birds of Prey (And The Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn),” Margot Robbie plays the cutest psychopath you’d ever want to hang out with and blow stuff up with.

In 2016, the sour “Suicide Squad” gave us a taste of the artist once known as Harleen Quinzel as the Joker’s dutifully murderous girlfriend; “Birds of Prey” provides a veritable feast of this DC Comics super-villain in all her fascinating, complicated brilliance. Director Cathy Yan accomplishes the difficult task of blending elaborate action sequences with compelling character development, of transporting us to a richly specific Gotham City while sprinkling in just the right amount of pop-culture references, ranging from Bernie Sanders to Tweety Bird to Frida Kahlo, by detailing the character’s origin story and establishing her own franchise.

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Yan’s picture is a complete blast, bursting with zippy energy and enticing girl power, right from its colorful and vibrant animated opening. Robbie, with her seemingly limitless versatility, is up for any challenge in a character that is as physically demanding as it is vocally demanding. In the candy-colored pandemonium she generates, she is absolutely infectious. Also, you must try to play this Birds Of Prey quiz.

Birds Of Prey Quiz

Whether she’s rhapsodizing over a hangover-curing bacon-and-egg breakfast sandwich or bursting from a cloud of rainbow-colored glitter and smoke in slow motion with a mischievous grin on her made-up face, Robbie shines brightly as the newly single Harley Quinn. However, Robbie is aided by a varied and skilled cast of co-stars, including Jurnee Smollett-Bell, who shows off serious action chops in the strong, physical role of Black Canary. Christina Hodson’s (“Bumblebee”) script is a strong celebration of female strength, of women finding and perfecting their skills to prop each other up in a world where men continually let them down – or worse. Before going into war together, these ladies will gladly gift each other a hair tie.

“Birds of Prey” lags in the middle as it jumps around in time and establishes the backstories for the numerous “birds” with whom Harley would eventually pair up following a thrilling first act with its self-referential comedy, cheeky graphics, and knowing narration. This is perhaps unavoidable when establishing new characters in a growing franchise, but the slowdown feels abrupt in comparison to the fast-paced segment that came before it.

There’s Mary Elizabeth Winstead as the amusingly stoic and socially awkward Huntress, who’s spent her entire life training to strike retribution with a crossbow, in addition to Black Canary, the nightclub singer whose voice spreads powerful sonic waves. Renee Montoya, played by Rosie Perez, is underdeveloped as a former Gotham City police detective facing her issues while finding a new purpose as a vigilante. And Ella Jay Basco, who plays Cassandra Cain, a teenage thief who pulls them all together when she steals the film’s MacGuffin – a precious diamond – from the head honcho to mob lord Roman Sionis, aka Black Mask, gives a genuineness to the part (Ewan McGregor).

About the quiz

The sudden freedom they’re all enjoying from the jobs, relationships, and situations that have tied them down for far too long is more significant than the sparkly thing that connects them together. Although the title refers to Harley’s independence, all five women get a taste of what it’s like to break new ground on their own terms. The tone of “Birds of Prey” feels like a welcome breath of hopeful air following last year’s well-acted but self-serious “Joker,” and the time couldn’t be more fitting in this post-#MeToo world.

In addition, the film is a visual feast. Gotham City is given a chilly, smoky sheen by Matthew Libatique, Darren Aronofsky’s typical cinematographer, all the more to bring out the brilliance of Harley’s colors. Along those lines, Erin Benach’s costume design (“Drive,” “The Neon Demon”) is fantastic, and not just for Harley in her various colorful punk rock outfits. Renee, played by Perez, gets to wear a T-shirt that is so brazenly vulgar that we won’t reveal what it says. McGregor wears aviators, jewel-toned velvet jackets, and a variety of monogrammed gloves to shield his hands from the grime he works in. He seemed to be having a good time.

However, some of the song selections are a little too obvious. “I Hate Myself for Loving You” by Joan Jett & the Blackhearts plays on the stereo while Harley recovers from the Joker breakup by lounging on the couch in a onesie, squeezing easy cheese into her mouth, and sobbing. During a final fight between Harley and her gang vs. Black Mask and the army of angry dudes he’s assembled, Heart’s “Barracuda” explodes.

However, Yan made the prudent decision to let the combat scenes play out rather than artificially inflate the energy by over-editing them, enabling viewers to appreciate all of the athleticism and creativity required by the choreography. These birds have taken to the air and will continue to soar.

For more personality quizzes check this: Which Stuck In The Middle Character Are You.

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