With scores up to 9.5 points on Maoyan, 9.3 on Taopiaopiao and 8.1 on Douban-all seen as barometers of popularity-most netizens say the film is a visual feast, which offers unprecedented spectacles of underwater kingdoms.
Most fans attribute the latest DC spectacle to James Wan, the Malaysia-born Australian director of Chinese heritage.
Earlier during his Beijing promotional tour, Wan said that one of his favorite Chinese novels was the 16th-century Journey to the West, in which a chapter depicts the Monkey King getting into a dragon's underwater palace to seek a powerful weapon
Some Chinese fans say they can identify with the film as the sequences about Aquaman retrieving the Trident remind them of the Monkey King story.
Before directing Aquaman-his first superhero film-Wan was best known for his horror movies such as Saw and Dead Silence, as well as the car-racing blockbusters Furious 7, the second highest-grossing imported film in China.
A question-about what they felt was Wan's main contribution to Aquaman-drew responses from 114,120 netizens on Douban, the country's most popular entertainment review site.
And one of the responses was: "It's amazing to see Wan demonstrate his talent in action sequences, where he combines various elements from various genres-including sci-fi, adventure, epic and horror-to shoot a deep-sea version of Star Wars."
(Photo provided to China Daily)
The film explains the origins of Arthur Curry, also known as Aquaman-the 77-year-old superhero who first appeared in a 1941 DC comic book-and recounts the adventures of the hero to unite the seven seas.
In the 143-minute movie, you can see many special effects-studded scenes.
For instance, underwater armies on giant seahorse-shaped creatures and sharks fight a sea battle; numerous monsters chase Aquaman and Mera, a princess from one of the underwater kingdoms who later becomes Aquaman's wife.
But there are also some dissenting voices from diehard fans of DC superhero films who compare the latest work to Christopher Nolan's The Dark Knight trilogy and Zack Snyder' Man of Steel, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice and Justice League (2017).
One critic Zhang Qi says for those who have read the stories of Aquaman and other major characters in the original comic books, the movie is a bit of a letdown.
"But now superhero films probably don't need to have a serious plot. Mere entertainment will do," he adds.