directed by David Leitch
written by Rhett Reese, Paul Wernick and Ryan Reynolds
After the relatively micro-budgeted, ultraviolent superhero...errr...superantihero movie Deadpool managed to make nearly three quarters of a billion dollars in global box office (without China!) two years ago, a sequel was all but guaranteed. It was guaranteed that they would come back with a bigger budget, more violence and even more superhero-movie lampooning than you could shake a bundle of MAD magazines at.
What wasn't entirely expected was that the sequel a movie so fond of skewering narrative cliches would turn up with quite a few of its own.
After the events of the first movie, Wade Wilson aka Deadpool (Ryan Reynolds, gamely donning the red tights and human raisin makeup again), spends his days gleefully killing the scum of the earth such as human traffickers and his nights romancing the love his life Vanessa (Morena Baccarin), who wants to start a family with him.
When tragedy strikes (more on that in a minute) Wade finds himself in a funk, but the X-Man Colossus (Stefan Kapicic and a lot of really bad CGI) isn't about to let him lie around feeling sorry for himself; he tries (again) to recruit him for the X-Men, and their first mission is to rescue a young mutant, Russell Collins (Julian Dennison) an orphan who is currently in a standoff with the police. When Deadpool learns that Russell has been suffering abuse at the hands of his caregivers, including the headmaster (Eddie Marsan), he reacts violently and as a result both he and Russell are sent to a prison for mutants known as the "Ice Box." While they are there, the prison is invaded by the time-traveling cyborg Cable (Josh Brolin) whose sole mission is to kill Russell, who only just escapes with his life as Deadpool takes on Cable. Deadpool then finds new purpose in his life: to save that of Russell, and recruits a whole crew of super-powered people, including mutants Bedlam (Terry Crews), Zeitgeist (Bill Skarsgaard), Shatterstar (Lewis Tan), Vanisher (it's a surprise!), Domino (Zazie Beetz) and the non-super-powered Peter (Rob Delaney) whom he dubs "X-Force" to help him in his newly-adopted mission. But Cable, whose grudge against the future version of Russell is deeply personal, will be extremely tough to stop.
It's hard to elaborate on how I feel about this movie without going into spoiler territory, but suffice it to say that in their efforts to put more "heart" into the movie, the film's writers have become guilty of some of the very cliches they ridicule. That said, the movie has plenty of the things made its predecessor enjoyable, most notably the humor, though a lot of the gags feel like retreads of old jokes, like the severed/regenerating hand joke from the first movie, which gets a somewhat more disturbing update for this edition. I found one particular series of jokes particularly enjoyable but I won't spoil it for anyone.
As for the action, this film is a bit like last year's John Wick 2 in that there was really only so much neck-snapping, bullet-riddling wanton murder, I could watch before I started feeling a little queasy. Violence porn was never really my thing, and nowadays, even less so with school shootings in the United States becoming a startlingly regular thing and extra-judicial killings here on my home soil continuing almost unabated. Additionally disappointing was the fact that Leitch, who, with John Wick co-director Chad Stahelski actually started reintroducing well-choreographed, well-shot fight sequences into action movies, is surprisingly guilty of the rapid-cut editing style that obscures actual fighting and which has been a bane on action cinema since Paul Greengrass popularized it over ten years ago with the Bourne movies. I would not have expected this from a champion of old-school movie fighting like Leitch. It's not nearly as bad as the Taken movies, but definitely not up to John Wick standards.
The good news is that the film is pretty solid on the acting front; Reynolds is still as charming in the role as ever, and new additions to the cast Julian Dennison, Zazie Beetz and Josh Brolin turn in some truly entertaining performances, with Beetz being the standout for me, even though Brolin's obviously the most high-profile addition to the cast. There are a couple of hilarious cameos that help spice things up. Overall, despite its flaws and the inevitable pitfalls of being a sequel, the film still manages to entertain.
I just hope they use a little more imagination next time around.
6.5/10
Sunday, May 20, 2018
Thursday, May 3, 2018
(SPOILER ALERT) So Who's Getting the "Logan Treatment" in Avengers 4? (MAJOR SPOILERS FOR AVENGERS: INFINITY WAR)
SPOILER ALERT FOR AVENGERS: INFINITY WAR
Last chance...
Okay, let's go.
Let's be honest; right after Thanos snapped his fingers in Avengers: Infinity War and caused half of the population of the universe to disintegrate, including most of the Marvel superheroes gathered in the film, I'm fairly certain only the members of the audience who had never picked up a comic book in their lives, or had never seen a single Marvel Cinematic Universe film truly believed that they were dead for good. The rest of us knew better. With respect to the four characters who died before then, however, even some seasoned comic-book veterans may not be quite so sure about their eventual return, and we all have one movie to thank for that: Twentieth Century Fox's Logan, in which a major Hollywood studio killed off arguably one of their most valuable intellectual properties, played by a bona fide superstar in Hugh Jackman, all in the service of a genuinely moving story.
While Marvel and Disney rattled off one box-office hit after another, they could never quite escape the criticism that their films had no real consequences or stakes, and that people would always be back for the next installment. It was even the case after they had quite clearly killed off Quicksilver in Avengers: Age of Ultron. For some reason, some people thought that Superman's death in Batman vs. Superman, which was going to quite obviously be undone in Justice League, carried more weight than the ideological and emotional rift that had torn apart the Avengers in Captain America: Civil War. Such was the reputation Marvel had garnered for itself.
It might have remained that way, as well, had Logan not shown us what was possible. Sure, it was produced not by the family-friendly Marvel but by Twentieth Century Fox, who also brought us the potty-mouthed, ultra-violent Deadpool, but it showed us that even studio execs could have the balls to put the kibosh on cash-cow characters. As a result, while there are a number of deaths which will undoubtedly be undone in next year's as-yet untitled Avengers sequel, it's now treated as an inevitability that there will be definitive casualties, most likely from among the original six Avengers.
And so, as we await the final chapter in the ongoing saga of Thanos, I can't help but wonder aloud who will get the "Logan" treatment from among the six original team members.
Conveniently, just about all of the original Avengers live in, or come from extremely dysfunctional situations. Captain America is a man out of time, Iron Man had his parents murdered by a brainwashed assassin, and he was held hostage by terrorists, Hulk has a nine-foot, super strong monster living inside him, Black Widow has an extremely checkered past as a former Soviet assassin (though I honestly have a hard time doing the math on that one, considering that the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, when her character was still seven years old, according to Captain America: The Winter Soldier), and Thor's lost his mom, dad, brother AND the evil, murderous sister he only just met one movie ago, as well as most of his people in a huge fireball. The closest thing they have to a "normal" character is Hawkeye, who's also got quite a bit of blood on his hands, though at least he's got a family.
Of the six, only Thor and Hawkeye have several people in their lives who need them. Thor is now King of what's left of Asgard, while Hawkeye has a wife and three kids. By no means does this mean they're safe from getting "Logan"ed (and in fact it might for even more compelling drama if Hawkeye gives his life to save his kids from the ultimate destruction of the world, or if Thor lays down his life to save what remains of his people), but it does give the filmmakers some incentive to have them survive the carnage ahead. If it were up to me, Thor and Hawkeye would live, though Thor would "retire" from superheroing to help his people rebuild. Hawkeye's already sort of "retired" to take care of his family, so he could go back to that, especially since Avengers 4 will introduce a freakin' cosmic superhero and a guy with a bow and arrow will just be a little too out-of-place.
For my money, I'd say Iron Man, Cap and Black Widow are basically toast. In the first Avengers, Iron Man seals his bona fide hero credentials by showing willingness to make the supreme sacrifice and blow himself up along with the Chitauri fleet. There'd be something fitting about giving him the chance to make that sacrifice one more time, and for him to take it. Cap is a lonely, old man whose old flame died two years ago and who basically doesn't have anyone or anything left in his life to fight for except "what's right." Black Widow, who will never be able to settle down and have kids, having been sterilized (as was established in Avengers: Age of Ultron), and who has a lifetime of bloodshed she'd probably like to redeem herself for, was all ready and set to bite the big one in A:AoU, and, I'm guessing, has been for some time.
I'm not sure Marvel would want to kiss Bruce Banner goodbye, considering that there has yet to be a definitive, truly satisfactory standalone Hulk movie, but at minimum I suspect this is the last time Mark Ruffalo will be playing this character.
So I'm betting at least two, with an outside shot of three, of the original Avengers will get to ride off into the sunset come May 2019, though really, thanks to Logan you can't really be sure of anything.
On an unrelated note: one major upside to all the death in Avengers: Infinity War is that for the first time in the whole series, the team's name actually makes sense, as they now have people to avenge.
Last chance...
Okay, let's go.
Let's be honest; right after Thanos snapped his fingers in Avengers: Infinity War and caused half of the population of the universe to disintegrate, including most of the Marvel superheroes gathered in the film, I'm fairly certain only the members of the audience who had never picked up a comic book in their lives, or had never seen a single Marvel Cinematic Universe film truly believed that they were dead for good. The rest of us knew better. With respect to the four characters who died before then, however, even some seasoned comic-book veterans may not be quite so sure about their eventual return, and we all have one movie to thank for that: Twentieth Century Fox's Logan, in which a major Hollywood studio killed off arguably one of their most valuable intellectual properties, played by a bona fide superstar in Hugh Jackman, all in the service of a genuinely moving story.
While Marvel and Disney rattled off one box-office hit after another, they could never quite escape the criticism that their films had no real consequences or stakes, and that people would always be back for the next installment. It was even the case after they had quite clearly killed off Quicksilver in Avengers: Age of Ultron. For some reason, some people thought that Superman's death in Batman vs. Superman, which was going to quite obviously be undone in Justice League, carried more weight than the ideological and emotional rift that had torn apart the Avengers in Captain America: Civil War. Such was the reputation Marvel had garnered for itself.
It might have remained that way, as well, had Logan not shown us what was possible. Sure, it was produced not by the family-friendly Marvel but by Twentieth Century Fox, who also brought us the potty-mouthed, ultra-violent Deadpool, but it showed us that even studio execs could have the balls to put the kibosh on cash-cow characters. As a result, while there are a number of deaths which will undoubtedly be undone in next year's as-yet untitled Avengers sequel, it's now treated as an inevitability that there will be definitive casualties, most likely from among the original six Avengers.
And so, as we await the final chapter in the ongoing saga of Thanos, I can't help but wonder aloud who will get the "Logan" treatment from among the six original team members.
Conveniently, just about all of the original Avengers live in, or come from extremely dysfunctional situations. Captain America is a man out of time, Iron Man had his parents murdered by a brainwashed assassin, and he was held hostage by terrorists, Hulk has a nine-foot, super strong monster living inside him, Black Widow has an extremely checkered past as a former Soviet assassin (though I honestly have a hard time doing the math on that one, considering that the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, when her character was still seven years old, according to Captain America: The Winter Soldier), and Thor's lost his mom, dad, brother AND the evil, murderous sister he only just met one movie ago, as well as most of his people in a huge fireball. The closest thing they have to a "normal" character is Hawkeye, who's also got quite a bit of blood on his hands, though at least he's got a family.
Of the six, only Thor and Hawkeye have several people in their lives who need them. Thor is now King of what's left of Asgard, while Hawkeye has a wife and three kids. By no means does this mean they're safe from getting "Logan"ed (and in fact it might for even more compelling drama if Hawkeye gives his life to save his kids from the ultimate destruction of the world, or if Thor lays down his life to save what remains of his people), but it does give the filmmakers some incentive to have them survive the carnage ahead. If it were up to me, Thor and Hawkeye would live, though Thor would "retire" from superheroing to help his people rebuild. Hawkeye's already sort of "retired" to take care of his family, so he could go back to that, especially since Avengers 4 will introduce a freakin' cosmic superhero and a guy with a bow and arrow will just be a little too out-of-place.
For my money, I'd say Iron Man, Cap and Black Widow are basically toast. In the first Avengers, Iron Man seals his bona fide hero credentials by showing willingness to make the supreme sacrifice and blow himself up along with the Chitauri fleet. There'd be something fitting about giving him the chance to make that sacrifice one more time, and for him to take it. Cap is a lonely, old man whose old flame died two years ago and who basically doesn't have anyone or anything left in his life to fight for except "what's right." Black Widow, who will never be able to settle down and have kids, having been sterilized (as was established in Avengers: Age of Ultron), and who has a lifetime of bloodshed she'd probably like to redeem herself for, was all ready and set to bite the big one in A:AoU, and, I'm guessing, has been for some time.
I'm not sure Marvel would want to kiss Bruce Banner goodbye, considering that there has yet to be a definitive, truly satisfactory standalone Hulk movie, but at minimum I suspect this is the last time Mark Ruffalo will be playing this character.
So I'm betting at least two, with an outside shot of three, of the original Avengers will get to ride off into the sunset come May 2019, though really, thanks to Logan you can't really be sure of anything.
On an unrelated note: one major upside to all the death in Avengers: Infinity War is that for the first time in the whole series, the team's name actually makes sense, as they now have people to avenge.
Tuesday, May 1, 2018
(SPOILER ALERT) How "Avengers: Infinity War" May Have Hurt "Ant-Man and the Wasp" Even as It's Given Another Upcoming Film a Huge Boost (SPOILER ALERT)
MASSIVE SPOILERS FOR AVENGERS: INFINITY WAR
LAST CHANCE!
Okay, anyone who's seen Avengers: Infinity War knows by now that the film begins (and ends) with the death and apparent death of several characters in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, including four deaths at the hands of Thanos and/or his henchmen and nearly a dozen deaths that happen instantaneously when Thanos, having assembled all of the Infinity Stones, snaps his fingers and extinguishes half of all life in the universe. The film ends with Marvel's beloved end-credits stinger, with a crumbling-to-dust Nick Fury using an old-school pager to make an emergency call, the recipient of which is identified solely by a symbol that flashes on the tiny display of the pager.
Marvel Comics geeks will instantly recognize that symbol as the insignia borne by Carol Danvers, also known as Captain Marvel.
Marvel Studios has therefore strongly suggested, if not definitively established that Captain Marvel will be key to Thanos' defeat in next year's sequel to A:IW and has, in doing so, has virtually guaranteed that a significant percentage of the tens of millions of movie viewers all around the world whose patronage powered A:IW to a record-crushing $641 million opening weekend (without China!) will want to check out Captain Marvel's solo film which is due out in March of next year. While the Marvel badge has, over the years, proved to be the closest thing to a guarantee of box-office success, this little tidbit has all but guaranteed generous box-office returns for Marvel's first female-anchored superhero film, assuming the film itself is a decent product. Such is the strength of the Marvel marketing machine that they they have, in general, managed to sell the heck out of even the weakest of their movies (I'm looking at you, Thor: The Dark World). That's not the big surprise.
What, to me, is surprising, is how A:IW with basically one throwaway line in the script may have subtly, ever-so-slightly undermined the chances for the breakout box-office success of Ant-Man and the Wasp, the sequel to the 2015 superhero/heist hybrid.
One of the characters mentions that neither Jeremy Renner's Hawkeye nor Scott Lang's Ant-man is in the film about a third of the way through the movie, citing the fact that they were incarcerated at the end of Captain America: Civil War and had to cut a deal to stay free, and no mention is ever made of them again. It actually makes quite a bit of sense in the context of the story because Hawkeye and Ant-Man are the only two Avengers characters with children. From a viewer's perspective, though, this line basically declares "these characters don't advance the overall narrative." In Hawkeye's case, this isn't a problem; I'm sure Jeremy Renner appreciated the time off from dangling from wires and other bruising stunts, plus the fact that he doesn't have a standalone movie to sell. In Ant-Man's case it wouldn't have been much of a problem either, if it wasn't for the fact that Avengers: Infinity War delivered a series of emotional gut punches that left much of the audience reeling and a heck of a cliffhanger. The takeaway from the A:IW script, however, is that Ant-Man and the Wasp will have no impact whatsoever on this story.
Does that mean it won't sell? Of course not; the first Ant-Man movie made half a billion dollars with barely any connective tissue to the ongoing narrative at the Marvel Cinematic Universe. I'm sure the core audience will be back for more of Scott Lang, but what about the millions of new viewers won over by Black Panther and bowled over by Avengers: Infinity War, and who will no doubt be eagerly anticipating the next chapter in the story? They've just been told that Ant-Man and the Wasp will basically have nothing to do with A:IW.
In truth, it's to Marvel's credit that they were willing to leave all that money on the table rather than force some kind of connection to the larger narrative; they're letting Ant-Man and the Wasp stand or fall on its own merits. It's just a bit surprising considering that just about every one of the 18 films leading into Avengers: Infinity War was tied into it somehow, to see Marvel categorically declaring that this one stands on its own. Perhaps it's the start of a new era of confidence in their product where they content to let movies stand on their own and not be inextricably woven into one big meganarrative, who knows?
LAST CHANCE!
Okay, anyone who's seen Avengers: Infinity War knows by now that the film begins (and ends) with the death and apparent death of several characters in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, including four deaths at the hands of Thanos and/or his henchmen and nearly a dozen deaths that happen instantaneously when Thanos, having assembled all of the Infinity Stones, snaps his fingers and extinguishes half of all life in the universe. The film ends with Marvel's beloved end-credits stinger, with a crumbling-to-dust Nick Fury using an old-school pager to make an emergency call, the recipient of which is identified solely by a symbol that flashes on the tiny display of the pager.
Marvel Comics geeks will instantly recognize that symbol as the insignia borne by Carol Danvers, also known as Captain Marvel.
Marvel Studios has therefore strongly suggested, if not definitively established that Captain Marvel will be key to Thanos' defeat in next year's sequel to A:IW and has, in doing so, has virtually guaranteed that a significant percentage of the tens of millions of movie viewers all around the world whose patronage powered A:IW to a record-crushing $641 million opening weekend (without China!) will want to check out Captain Marvel's solo film which is due out in March of next year. While the Marvel badge has, over the years, proved to be the closest thing to a guarantee of box-office success, this little tidbit has all but guaranteed generous box-office returns for Marvel's first female-anchored superhero film, assuming the film itself is a decent product. Such is the strength of the Marvel marketing machine that they they have, in general, managed to sell the heck out of even the weakest of their movies (I'm looking at you, Thor: The Dark World). That's not the big surprise.
What, to me, is surprising, is how A:IW with basically one throwaway line in the script may have subtly, ever-so-slightly undermined the chances for the breakout box-office success of Ant-Man and the Wasp, the sequel to the 2015 superhero/heist hybrid.
One of the characters mentions that neither Jeremy Renner's Hawkeye nor Scott Lang's Ant-man is in the film about a third of the way through the movie, citing the fact that they were incarcerated at the end of Captain America: Civil War and had to cut a deal to stay free, and no mention is ever made of them again. It actually makes quite a bit of sense in the context of the story because Hawkeye and Ant-Man are the only two Avengers characters with children. From a viewer's perspective, though, this line basically declares "these characters don't advance the overall narrative." In Hawkeye's case, this isn't a problem; I'm sure Jeremy Renner appreciated the time off from dangling from wires and other bruising stunts, plus the fact that he doesn't have a standalone movie to sell. In Ant-Man's case it wouldn't have been much of a problem either, if it wasn't for the fact that Avengers: Infinity War delivered a series of emotional gut punches that left much of the audience reeling and a heck of a cliffhanger. The takeaway from the A:IW script, however, is that Ant-Man and the Wasp will have no impact whatsoever on this story.
Does that mean it won't sell? Of course not; the first Ant-Man movie made half a billion dollars with barely any connective tissue to the ongoing narrative at the Marvel Cinematic Universe. I'm sure the core audience will be back for more of Scott Lang, but what about the millions of new viewers won over by Black Panther and bowled over by Avengers: Infinity War, and who will no doubt be eagerly anticipating the next chapter in the story? They've just been told that Ant-Man and the Wasp will basically have nothing to do with A:IW.
In truth, it's to Marvel's credit that they were willing to leave all that money on the table rather than force some kind of connection to the larger narrative; they're letting Ant-Man and the Wasp stand or fall on its own merits. It's just a bit surprising considering that just about every one of the 18 films leading into Avengers: Infinity War was tied into it somehow, to see Marvel categorically declaring that this one stands on its own. Perhaps it's the start of a new era of confidence in their product where they content to let movies stand on their own and not be inextricably woven into one big meganarrative, who knows?
Friday, April 27, 2018
(SPOILER ALERT) So How About Those Twists? (Avengers: Infinity War Edition - HEAVY SPOILERS)
SPOILER ALERT
I once wrote that it's cathartic to follow up spoiler-free reviews of massive movies that I enjoyed with spoiler-filled discussions on the things that happened in the movie, and this is especially the case with the gargantuan Avengers: Infinity War, which is so loaded with hidden gems (pun intended), twists and shocking developments that Marvel itself has gone all-out on social media pleading for fans to keep from spoiling anything in the film. Well, I'm putting two spoiler alerts on this post just to make sure everyone understands what they're reading when they click this story. With that out of the way, let's get this started.
AGAIN...SPOILER ALERT
Last chance...okay, here we go...
I had mixed to negative feelings about the first two deaths in the movie, those of Heimdall and Loki, and I don't mean I'm upset that they died. I get that these deaths were meant to establish that Marvel meant business, but I mean, wow. LOKI, the arch-villain of the first Avengers movie who has, over the years, become a fan-favorite character, was dispatched less than ten minutes into the movie, just to make a point. Loki's death seemed oddly anticlimactic, and if I'm honest, I would have preferred something quite a bit more dramatic considering the impact this character has had on the Marvel Cinematic Universe. He was the benchmark Marvel bad guy for years, so taking him out with barely any thought, while certainly not without its reasons, just feels a tad disrespectful. But that's just me.
Also, given the unprecedented success of Black Panther, it was also unfortunate that the filmmakers went, inadvertently or not, with one of the most tired, old story tropes around, i.e. killing the black guy first, even though Heimdall died right after doing something appropriately heroic. It seems he survived the holocaust of Thor: Ragnarok mainly so that he could be used as a plot device to whisk one of the characters to safety. Oh, well, at least he was given far more dignity than the Warriors Three.
The other two deaths in the film, that of Gamora and, in the film's climax, that of Vision, delivered real gut punches, even though they were telegraphed fairly early on in the movie, and I found Gamora's death particularly affecting for some reason, in part because she's "real" unlike the synthezoid Vision and because it was her own father who murdered her. Both of these deaths delivered considerable impact, and given the way they played out, it seems unlikely that they will be undone by the next film, though given the nature of the Infinity Stones, one cannot say for sure.
On that note, with regards to the people crumbling into dust at the end of the film, which was basically almost everyone who WASN'T one of the original team of Avengers, I didn't feel quite as shaken because, more than any of the four character deaths I just mentioned, those deaths have a distinct whiff of impermanence about them. I mean, let's be honest, Marvel isn't going to kill off a cash cow like Spider-Man, OR their newest golden boy Black Panther, so I'm pretty sure I can safely call b.s. on that.
It was also quite telling that it was the original Avengers team that was left behind (along with Rocket, Nebula, Okoye and War Machine) because it's somewhat fitting that they'll face off against Thanos for the final battle.
It does a film a great disservice, though, to dwell solely on the deaths or pseudo-deaths that punctuated the narrative. There were quite a few story developments, if not necessarily "twists" that stood out, not just because they enhanced the story, but because kudos MUST go to Marvel for keeping these things so tightly under wraps.
For me, the single most impressive feat of Marvel's "spoiler blackout" effort was keeping the identity of the character played by Peter Dinklage under wraps, and as it turns out, as short as his screentime as Eitri, the maker of Mjolnir, was, it was quite pivotal.
Also, the return of the Red Skull, even if he wasn't played by Hugo Weaving but The Walking Dead actor Ross Marquand, was a lovely Easter Egg that I absolutely did not see coming, even though I had a feeling, years ago, that the Red Skull hadn't actually died but was simply transported somewhere else. I just never figured on him turning up here.
This was, at the end, a bad-guy-centric movie, and on that note there was something distinctly uncomfortable about the fact that Thanos, having presided over the extermination of half of life in the universe, sat down and looked at a sunset in the Philippines. It was most likely unintended, but it was a startling parallel to our own mass-murder-endorsing president here in the Philippines, Rodrigo Duterte.
Finally, the return of Samuel L. Jackson's Nick Fury to the MCU after a three-year and SEVEN-film absence is a truly welcome development, even as he joins the characters who turn to dust, especially since he spends his last moments calling in the MCU's next heavy hitter Carol Danvers, better known as Captain Marvel.
Anyway, in an age of social media and internet leaks I found it particularly impressive that Marvel were able to keep so much under wraps right until the release of this movie, and I honestly hope this is the norm, moving forward.
I once wrote that it's cathartic to follow up spoiler-free reviews of massive movies that I enjoyed with spoiler-filled discussions on the things that happened in the movie, and this is especially the case with the gargantuan Avengers: Infinity War, which is so loaded with hidden gems (pun intended), twists and shocking developments that Marvel itself has gone all-out on social media pleading for fans to keep from spoiling anything in the film. Well, I'm putting two spoiler alerts on this post just to make sure everyone understands what they're reading when they click this story. With that out of the way, let's get this started.
AGAIN...SPOILER ALERT
Last chance...okay, here we go...
I had mixed to negative feelings about the first two deaths in the movie, those of Heimdall and Loki, and I don't mean I'm upset that they died. I get that these deaths were meant to establish that Marvel meant business, but I mean, wow. LOKI, the arch-villain of the first Avengers movie who has, over the years, become a fan-favorite character, was dispatched less than ten minutes into the movie, just to make a point. Loki's death seemed oddly anticlimactic, and if I'm honest, I would have preferred something quite a bit more dramatic considering the impact this character has had on the Marvel Cinematic Universe. He was the benchmark Marvel bad guy for years, so taking him out with barely any thought, while certainly not without its reasons, just feels a tad disrespectful. But that's just me.
Also, given the unprecedented success of Black Panther, it was also unfortunate that the filmmakers went, inadvertently or not, with one of the most tired, old story tropes around, i.e. killing the black guy first, even though Heimdall died right after doing something appropriately heroic. It seems he survived the holocaust of Thor: Ragnarok mainly so that he could be used as a plot device to whisk one of the characters to safety. Oh, well, at least he was given far more dignity than the Warriors Three.
The other two deaths in the film, that of Gamora and, in the film's climax, that of Vision, delivered real gut punches, even though they were telegraphed fairly early on in the movie, and I found Gamora's death particularly affecting for some reason, in part because she's "real" unlike the synthezoid Vision and because it was her own father who murdered her. Both of these deaths delivered considerable impact, and given the way they played out, it seems unlikely that they will be undone by the next film, though given the nature of the Infinity Stones, one cannot say for sure.
On that note, with regards to the people crumbling into dust at the end of the film, which was basically almost everyone who WASN'T one of the original team of Avengers, I didn't feel quite as shaken because, more than any of the four character deaths I just mentioned, those deaths have a distinct whiff of impermanence about them. I mean, let's be honest, Marvel isn't going to kill off a cash cow like Spider-Man, OR their newest golden boy Black Panther, so I'm pretty sure I can safely call b.s. on that.
It was also quite telling that it was the original Avengers team that was left behind (along with Rocket, Nebula, Okoye and War Machine) because it's somewhat fitting that they'll face off against Thanos for the final battle.
It does a film a great disservice, though, to dwell solely on the deaths or pseudo-deaths that punctuated the narrative. There were quite a few story developments, if not necessarily "twists" that stood out, not just because they enhanced the story, but because kudos MUST go to Marvel for keeping these things so tightly under wraps.
For me, the single most impressive feat of Marvel's "spoiler blackout" effort was keeping the identity of the character played by Peter Dinklage under wraps, and as it turns out, as short as his screentime as Eitri, the maker of Mjolnir, was, it was quite pivotal.
Also, the return of the Red Skull, even if he wasn't played by Hugo Weaving but The Walking Dead actor Ross Marquand, was a lovely Easter Egg that I absolutely did not see coming, even though I had a feeling, years ago, that the Red Skull hadn't actually died but was simply transported somewhere else. I just never figured on him turning up here.
This was, at the end, a bad-guy-centric movie, and on that note there was something distinctly uncomfortable about the fact that Thanos, having presided over the extermination of half of life in the universe, sat down and looked at a sunset in the Philippines. It was most likely unintended, but it was a startling parallel to our own mass-murder-endorsing president here in the Philippines, Rodrigo Duterte.
Finally, the return of Samuel L. Jackson's Nick Fury to the MCU after a three-year and SEVEN-film absence is a truly welcome development, even as he joins the characters who turn to dust, especially since he spends his last moments calling in the MCU's next heavy hitter Carol Danvers, better known as Captain Marvel.
Anyway, in an age of social media and internet leaks I found it particularly impressive that Marvel were able to keep so much under wraps right until the release of this movie, and I honestly hope this is the norm, moving forward.
Marking Ten Years of Excellence in Fine (If a Bit Overwhelming) Style: A Review of Avengers: Infinity War
directed by Anthony and Joe Russo
written by Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely
It's hard to believe it's been ten years since a fledgling Marvel Studios broke away from the studio system with one of their B-list characters and set out to change the way filmed storytelling was done. Ten years and 18 movies after the surprising success of Iron Man, Marvel has, indeed, changed the way blockbuster movies tell stories with the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and are, with this film, finally culminating a story that has long been brewing.
Thanos the Mad Titan (Josh Brolin) has, for the last several years, been seeking the six Infinity Stones with the goal of wiping out half of the population of the entire universe, an act of mass murder he justifies as bringing balance (that's not a spoiler; it's in the trailers). In past MCU films, Thanos had others track down the stones, but in this film, he gets somewhat more hands-on in his approach. As a direct result, the story begins with a catastrophic confrontation for Thor (Chris Hemsworth) and the rest of the refugees from the now-destroyed Asgard, who include Loki (Tom Hiddleston), Heimdall (Idris Elba) and Bruce Banner, aka the Hulk (Mark Ruffalo). They are then separated, with Hulk plummeting to earth, in particular New York and then warning Doctor Stephen Strange (Benedict Cumberbatch) and his colleague Wong (Benedict Wong) of the coming threat, which actually arrives quite quickly as two of Thanos' henchmen, Ebony Maw (Tom Vaughan-Lawlor) and Cull Obsidian (Terry Notary), drawn to the time stone, which Dr. Strange has with him, show up in very short order.
This is enough to bring Tony Stark aka Iron Man (Robert Downey,Jr.) and Peter Parker aka Spider-Man (Tom Holland) into action, but it soon becomes clear that they'll need the rest of the Avengers, like Steve Rogers (Chris Evans), Sam Wilson aka Falcon (Anthony Mackie), Natasha Romanoff aka Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson), Wanda Maximoff aka the Scarlet Witch (Mary Elizabeth Olsen) and Vision (Paul Bettany) to do battle with Thanos. Vision is particularly vulnverable as the infinity stone on his head draws Thanos' other henchmen, Proxima Midnight (Carrie Coon) and Corvus Glaive (Michael James Shaw) to him. Soon, they find themselves enlisting even more help as they travel to Wakanda to seek the help of King T'Challa aka the Black Panther (Chadwick Boseman), to help remove the stone from Vision's head without killing him.
Meanwhile Thor, having sent a distress signal while Thanos was attacking his ship, is now floating in space when he encounters the Guardians of the Galaxy: Star Lord (Chris Pratt), Gamora (Zoe Saldana), Drax (Dave Bautista), Rocket (Bradley Cooper) and Groot (Vin Diesel). Having lost his hammer Mjolnir in Thor: Ragnarok, Thor, accompanied by Rocket and Groot, sets out to find a new weapon with which to fight Thanos, while the rest of the Guardians travel to Knowhere, a mining planet where they believe Thanos will seize an infinity stone stored there some years ago.
One thing is for absolutely certain: Thanos is unlike any threat any of them have ever faced.
I'll keep this review as short as I can, lest I spoil any key plot points, but I will say this: even though the Russo brothers and their writers Markus and McFeely may have stumbled every now and then in telling this story, they deserve full credit for this mammoth effort, unprecedented in its scale.
Amid the truly stunning CG pyrotechnics and the immensity of a movie that has to feature just about every major character from their shared universe spanning 18 films (with the exception of Paul Rudd's Ant-Man and Jeremy Renner's Hawkeye, who are explicitly NOT in it), the Russos and their writers made the canny decision to narrate the story mainly from the point of view of the film's antagonist, Thanos, whose coming has been foreshadowed since the end credits stinger of the very first Avengers movie. He is given nuance, and pathos, and a motivation which, while it does not justify his genocidal desires, definitely goes a long way towards developing him as a character and distinguishing him from Marvel's crop of generic bad guys. Brolin turns in a stunning performance, and wears the CGI that brings his character to life as one would wear a costume or makeup. I couldn't imagine anyone else in this role after seeing him in this film. In short, whatever criticisms may be leveled against this film, one cannot say that it has a lame bad guy.
That's not to say that this film is above reproach; as tight as Markus and McFeely try to keep the narrative, which is squeezed into two and a half hours, there's still so much to take in that it definitely feels a little overwhelming, and the rapid-fire shifts in tone are a daunting tightrope to walk. This is an extremely grim movie, but it nonetheless features Marvel's patented humor all throughout. I once raked a movie over hot coals for tonal inconsistency, and had this film been made by lesser filmmakers, it might not have worked. I'll admit that the cracks do show every now and again.
In a movie this big, it's inevitable that some of the characters will get crowded out. Some ballyhooed appearances in the trailers amount to little more than walk-ons, but to be fair, everyone in the cast is pretty much in top form here, no matter how short their screen time.
In truth, EVERYONE here brings their A-game, from the visual effects wizards at ILM, Digital Domain, and Weta Digital, to cinematographer Trent Opaloch, who infuses the different locales, which include several different planet, with a broad (and lush) color palette that breaks away from, and looks so much better than the washed out, blue-grey drabness of his last two Marvel films with the Russos. This film also marks the return to the Avengers of original composer Alan Silvestri, and while he leans on variations from his heroic theme from the first film, he creates, quite possibly, the richest, most nuanced music score I've ever heard from him, and I've followed this guy's work since Back to the Future. His music is a huge part of the characters' journey on this film, and enhances the impact of the Oh-my-gosh moments without being cloying or overbearing.
This was always going to be an extremely difficult film to put together, and it shows, but overall I think Marvel and their cast and crew have pulled off something truly outstanding.
8.7/10
written by Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely
It's hard to believe it's been ten years since a fledgling Marvel Studios broke away from the studio system with one of their B-list characters and set out to change the way filmed storytelling was done. Ten years and 18 movies after the surprising success of Iron Man, Marvel has, indeed, changed the way blockbuster movies tell stories with the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and are, with this film, finally culminating a story that has long been brewing.
Thanos the Mad Titan (Josh Brolin) has, for the last several years, been seeking the six Infinity Stones with the goal of wiping out half of the population of the entire universe, an act of mass murder he justifies as bringing balance (that's not a spoiler; it's in the trailers). In past MCU films, Thanos had others track down the stones, but in this film, he gets somewhat more hands-on in his approach. As a direct result, the story begins with a catastrophic confrontation for Thor (Chris Hemsworth) and the rest of the refugees from the now-destroyed Asgard, who include Loki (Tom Hiddleston), Heimdall (Idris Elba) and Bruce Banner, aka the Hulk (Mark Ruffalo). They are then separated, with Hulk plummeting to earth, in particular New York and then warning Doctor Stephen Strange (Benedict Cumberbatch) and his colleague Wong (Benedict Wong) of the coming threat, which actually arrives quite quickly as two of Thanos' henchmen, Ebony Maw (Tom Vaughan-Lawlor) and Cull Obsidian (Terry Notary), drawn to the time stone, which Dr. Strange has with him, show up in very short order.
This is enough to bring Tony Stark aka Iron Man (Robert Downey,Jr.) and Peter Parker aka Spider-Man (Tom Holland) into action, but it soon becomes clear that they'll need the rest of the Avengers, like Steve Rogers (Chris Evans), Sam Wilson aka Falcon (Anthony Mackie), Natasha Romanoff aka Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson), Wanda Maximoff aka the Scarlet Witch (Mary Elizabeth Olsen) and Vision (Paul Bettany) to do battle with Thanos. Vision is particularly vulnverable as the infinity stone on his head draws Thanos' other henchmen, Proxima Midnight (Carrie Coon) and Corvus Glaive (Michael James Shaw) to him. Soon, they find themselves enlisting even more help as they travel to Wakanda to seek the help of King T'Challa aka the Black Panther (Chadwick Boseman), to help remove the stone from Vision's head without killing him.
Meanwhile Thor, having sent a distress signal while Thanos was attacking his ship, is now floating in space when he encounters the Guardians of the Galaxy: Star Lord (Chris Pratt), Gamora (Zoe Saldana), Drax (Dave Bautista), Rocket (Bradley Cooper) and Groot (Vin Diesel). Having lost his hammer Mjolnir in Thor: Ragnarok, Thor, accompanied by Rocket and Groot, sets out to find a new weapon with which to fight Thanos, while the rest of the Guardians travel to Knowhere, a mining planet where they believe Thanos will seize an infinity stone stored there some years ago.
One thing is for absolutely certain: Thanos is unlike any threat any of them have ever faced.
I'll keep this review as short as I can, lest I spoil any key plot points, but I will say this: even though the Russo brothers and their writers Markus and McFeely may have stumbled every now and then in telling this story, they deserve full credit for this mammoth effort, unprecedented in its scale.
Amid the truly stunning CG pyrotechnics and the immensity of a movie that has to feature just about every major character from their shared universe spanning 18 films (with the exception of Paul Rudd's Ant-Man and Jeremy Renner's Hawkeye, who are explicitly NOT in it), the Russos and their writers made the canny decision to narrate the story mainly from the point of view of the film's antagonist, Thanos, whose coming has been foreshadowed since the end credits stinger of the very first Avengers movie. He is given nuance, and pathos, and a motivation which, while it does not justify his genocidal desires, definitely goes a long way towards developing him as a character and distinguishing him from Marvel's crop of generic bad guys. Brolin turns in a stunning performance, and wears the CGI that brings his character to life as one would wear a costume or makeup. I couldn't imagine anyone else in this role after seeing him in this film. In short, whatever criticisms may be leveled against this film, one cannot say that it has a lame bad guy.
That's not to say that this film is above reproach; as tight as Markus and McFeely try to keep the narrative, which is squeezed into two and a half hours, there's still so much to take in that it definitely feels a little overwhelming, and the rapid-fire shifts in tone are a daunting tightrope to walk. This is an extremely grim movie, but it nonetheless features Marvel's patented humor all throughout. I once raked a movie over hot coals for tonal inconsistency, and had this film been made by lesser filmmakers, it might not have worked. I'll admit that the cracks do show every now and again.
In a movie this big, it's inevitable that some of the characters will get crowded out. Some ballyhooed appearances in the trailers amount to little more than walk-ons, but to be fair, everyone in the cast is pretty much in top form here, no matter how short their screen time.
In truth, EVERYONE here brings their A-game, from the visual effects wizards at ILM, Digital Domain, and Weta Digital, to cinematographer Trent Opaloch, who infuses the different locales, which include several different planet, with a broad (and lush) color palette that breaks away from, and looks so much better than the washed out, blue-grey drabness of his last two Marvel films with the Russos. This film also marks the return to the Avengers of original composer Alan Silvestri, and while he leans on variations from his heroic theme from the first film, he creates, quite possibly, the richest, most nuanced music score I've ever heard from him, and I've followed this guy's work since Back to the Future. His music is a huge part of the characters' journey on this film, and enhances the impact of the Oh-my-gosh moments without being cloying or overbearing.
This was always going to be an extremely difficult film to put together, and it shows, but overall I think Marvel and their cast and crew have pulled off something truly outstanding.
8.7/10
Thursday, April 12, 2018
Guillermo, You Are Sorely Missed: A Review of Pacific Rim: Uprising
directed by Steven de Knight
written by De Knight, Emily Carmichael, Kira Snyder, T.S. Nowlin
Even though Guillermo del Toro's giant-robots-versus-giant-monsters epic Pacific Rim didn't exactly set the box office on fire, it did win a few fans, including myself. In a world where the bottom line means everything, surprisingly, Legendary Pictures saw fit to greenlight a sequel, a decision they stood by even after their lead actor Charlie Hunnam backed out and del Toro moved on to other projects. Truth be told, I don't think it was a bad decision at all, but I will say that a lot of the decisions they made while making the movie were well beyond bad.
The film picks up ten years after the events of the first movie. The war with the massive Kaiju and their alien masters, the Precursors has ended, and while the world rebuilds from the destruction wrought by the giant monsters from another dimension, the Pan Pacific Defense Corps, which consists of the giant robots called jaegers, stands ever vigilant, in case the threat reemerges. It is in this milieu that we find Jake Pentecost (John Boyega), the son of the legendary jaeger pilot Stacker Pentecost (Idris Elba from the first film, who had the rare distinction of delivering the few lines of memorable dialogue in a movie about giant robots punching giant monsters), and who used to be a pilot himself, until he washed out. Jake now lives on the fringes of society, eking out a living selling stolen Jaeger parts, until one of his deals goes south and he finds himself struggling for a spare part with a fellow scavenger, the spunky Amara (Cailee Spaeny) and they are both rounded up by the PPDC, which does not allow trading in stolen jaeger parts. To avoid going to prison and on the urging of his adopted sister Mako (Rinko Kikuchi), Jake re-joins the PPDC, this time as an instructor, with Amara as one of his cadets. This reunites him with his former co-pilot Nate Lambert (Scott Eastwood), in a not-so-warm reunion. Just as he rejoins, the PPDC is on the verge of a crucial decision on whether to approve the deployment of drone jaegers courtesy of the monolithic Shao Industries, headed by the icy Liwen Shao (Tian Jing) for whom former PPDC scientist Newt Geisler (Charlie Day) now works. On the day of the vote, however, a mysterious rogue jaeger emerges from the ocean and wreaks catastrophe on the PPDC before disappearing again. A new threat has emerged, one which could shatter the peace that Jake's father and many others fought and died to win.
I felt that there was a lot this sequel should have had going for it that could have made it work. The whole story of Jake's fall from grace and his quest to step out of his father's long shadow, while hackneyed, could have made for a compelling narrative, had it been more tightly written. I actually liked Boyega's performance relative to that of Charlie Hunnam, but his dialogue (and everyone else's) was so clumsily written I couldn't believe that De Knight, who used to be the showrunner of the excellent season one of Marvel's Netflix series Daredevil, had script credit. There were decent concepts like mystery boxes and twists that, had they been handled correctly, could have made the film, at minimum, a decent distraction, but again, the execution was just extremely slipshod. Also apart from Boyega, who pretty much threw himself into the role, I got the impression that everyone else, from the veterans of the first movie like Kikuchi, Day and Burn Gorman, to newcomers like Eastwood, was phoning it in bigtime. And the Chinese propaganda here was, in a word, laughable. It was so bad that I don't think even Chinese audiences bought into it, as evidenced by the film's lackluster showing in the Middle Kingdom.
One aspect where the filmmakers made it a point to step things up was to have more jaeger fights, and fancier moves, and in that respect the film definitely delivered, with quicker-moving jaegers that actually engage in martial arts moves rather than just punching, kicking and bludgeoning. It was pretty clear that the jaeger movement of the first film was rooted, as much as it could be anyway, in the actual physics of how a robot the size of a skyscraper would move, and here, physics are all but thrown out the window. Truth be told, I completely understand the imperative to speed things up, and there's even a halfhearted attempt to explain why the robots move more quickly, but at times it does feel silly, even though I'll readily admit it looks cool. Still, I think the filmmakers deserve some measure of credit for trying to fill in at least one of the gaps from the first film. And for whatever it's worth, the fights here made much more sense than anything in the Transformers films; at least there was some coherence to them.
Still, a couple of cool fight scenes couldn't distract me from the really deplorable scripting and some painfully obvious corner-cutting. The body armor worn by jaeger pilots in the first film has been replaced by some really embarrassing spandex-cum-rubber-muscles outfits that would look more at home in an old Power Rangers episode than they would in a $150 million movie, and the jaeger helmets don't even have glass visors anymore. Considering del Toro's painstaking effort to make his absurd proposition of giant robots fighting giant monsters something that could actually feel real, these little details speak volumes about how little the filmmakers really care.
It's still kind of a mystery how this film was greenlit in the first place, considering that the first film cost $200 million and couldn't even clear half a billion at the global box office, but the even bigger mystery is why Universal didn't at least try to make a better movie, which, I'll argue, would probably have sold more.
5.5/10
written by De Knight, Emily Carmichael, Kira Snyder, T.S. Nowlin
Even though Guillermo del Toro's giant-robots-versus-giant-monsters epic Pacific Rim didn't exactly set the box office on fire, it did win a few fans, including myself. In a world where the bottom line means everything, surprisingly, Legendary Pictures saw fit to greenlight a sequel, a decision they stood by even after their lead actor Charlie Hunnam backed out and del Toro moved on to other projects. Truth be told, I don't think it was a bad decision at all, but I will say that a lot of the decisions they made while making the movie were well beyond bad.
The film picks up ten years after the events of the first movie. The war with the massive Kaiju and their alien masters, the Precursors has ended, and while the world rebuilds from the destruction wrought by the giant monsters from another dimension, the Pan Pacific Defense Corps, which consists of the giant robots called jaegers, stands ever vigilant, in case the threat reemerges. It is in this milieu that we find Jake Pentecost (John Boyega), the son of the legendary jaeger pilot Stacker Pentecost (Idris Elba from the first film, who had the rare distinction of delivering the few lines of memorable dialogue in a movie about giant robots punching giant monsters), and who used to be a pilot himself, until he washed out. Jake now lives on the fringes of society, eking out a living selling stolen Jaeger parts, until one of his deals goes south and he finds himself struggling for a spare part with a fellow scavenger, the spunky Amara (Cailee Spaeny) and they are both rounded up by the PPDC, which does not allow trading in stolen jaeger parts. To avoid going to prison and on the urging of his adopted sister Mako (Rinko Kikuchi), Jake re-joins the PPDC, this time as an instructor, with Amara as one of his cadets. This reunites him with his former co-pilot Nate Lambert (Scott Eastwood), in a not-so-warm reunion. Just as he rejoins, the PPDC is on the verge of a crucial decision on whether to approve the deployment of drone jaegers courtesy of the monolithic Shao Industries, headed by the icy Liwen Shao (Tian Jing) for whom former PPDC scientist Newt Geisler (Charlie Day) now works. On the day of the vote, however, a mysterious rogue jaeger emerges from the ocean and wreaks catastrophe on the PPDC before disappearing again. A new threat has emerged, one which could shatter the peace that Jake's father and many others fought and died to win.
I felt that there was a lot this sequel should have had going for it that could have made it work. The whole story of Jake's fall from grace and his quest to step out of his father's long shadow, while hackneyed, could have made for a compelling narrative, had it been more tightly written. I actually liked Boyega's performance relative to that of Charlie Hunnam, but his dialogue (and everyone else's) was so clumsily written I couldn't believe that De Knight, who used to be the showrunner of the excellent season one of Marvel's Netflix series Daredevil, had script credit. There were decent concepts like mystery boxes and twists that, had they been handled correctly, could have made the film, at minimum, a decent distraction, but again, the execution was just extremely slipshod. Also apart from Boyega, who pretty much threw himself into the role, I got the impression that everyone else, from the veterans of the first movie like Kikuchi, Day and Burn Gorman, to newcomers like Eastwood, was phoning it in bigtime. And the Chinese propaganda here was, in a word, laughable. It was so bad that I don't think even Chinese audiences bought into it, as evidenced by the film's lackluster showing in the Middle Kingdom.
One aspect where the filmmakers made it a point to step things up was to have more jaeger fights, and fancier moves, and in that respect the film definitely delivered, with quicker-moving jaegers that actually engage in martial arts moves rather than just punching, kicking and bludgeoning. It was pretty clear that the jaeger movement of the first film was rooted, as much as it could be anyway, in the actual physics of how a robot the size of a skyscraper would move, and here, physics are all but thrown out the window. Truth be told, I completely understand the imperative to speed things up, and there's even a halfhearted attempt to explain why the robots move more quickly, but at times it does feel silly, even though I'll readily admit it looks cool. Still, I think the filmmakers deserve some measure of credit for trying to fill in at least one of the gaps from the first film. And for whatever it's worth, the fights here made much more sense than anything in the Transformers films; at least there was some coherence to them.
Still, a couple of cool fight scenes couldn't distract me from the really deplorable scripting and some painfully obvious corner-cutting. The body armor worn by jaeger pilots in the first film has been replaced by some really embarrassing spandex-cum-rubber-muscles outfits that would look more at home in an old Power Rangers episode than they would in a $150 million movie, and the jaeger helmets don't even have glass visors anymore. Considering del Toro's painstaking effort to make his absurd proposition of giant robots fighting giant monsters something that could actually feel real, these little details speak volumes about how little the filmmakers really care.
It's still kind of a mystery how this film was greenlit in the first place, considering that the first film cost $200 million and couldn't even clear half a billion at the global box office, but the even bigger mystery is why Universal didn't at least try to make a better movie, which, I'll argue, would probably have sold more.
5.5/10
Sunday, April 1, 2018
A Whole Lot of Blasts from the Past: A Review of Ready Player One
directed by Steven Spielberg
written by Zak Penn and Ernest Cline
After years of delivering mostly "awards bait" adult fare, and a few misfires (coughcoughINDIANAJONESANDTHEKINGDOMOFTHECRYSTALSKULLcoughcough) Steven Spielberg delivers his most engaging, pure popcorn movie since Minority Report.
Based on the novel by Ernest Cline, Ready Player One tells a story set in the not-so-distant future, where all of humanity is enthralled by a massive, multi-player online role playing game-cum-virtual-reality-platform known as the Oasis, which was created by reclusive genius James Halliday (Mark Rylance) with the help of his former partner Ogden Morrow (Simon Pegg). So massive is the game that it has actually become a driving economic force all by itself, and it is somehow the great equalizer in a world beset by egregious inequality, a world in which trailer parks are now filled with whole stacks of trailers.
Upon Halliday's death, a hidden message that he left is revealed to all the players in the Oasis telling them about three Easter Eggs that, when uncovered, will lead to a fantastic treasure: ownership of the Oasis. The mad scramble to find the Easter Eggs begins, at the forefront of which is Innovative Online Industries (IOI), a monolithic corporation headed by Nolan Sorrento (Ben Mendelsohn) a ruthless CEO with vague ties to Halliday, who employs full-time gamers in a bid to seize control of the Oasis. On the other end of the spectrum, living in one of the aforementioned trailer stacks is Wade Watts (Tye Sheridan) who goes by the online avatar Parzival. Wade spends all of his time in the Oasis to escape the drudgery of his life, and when the contest is announced, he jumps at the chance to win it. With his encyclopedic knowledge of Halliday (including his love of the 80s pop-culture he grew up with), and the help of his online friends Aech, Sho, Daito and the mysterious Art3mis (whose appearances are meant to be a bit of mystery for most of the film, which is why the actors' names aren't mentioned), he might just have a chance.
Just as Minority Report presented an interesting moral and philosophical quandary (i.e. should people be punished for crimes that have not been committed yet but merely foreseen) all wrapped within a piece of sublime entertainment, this film challenges our cultural obsession with the internet, particularly internet gaming, while presenting a thoroughly engaging piece of popcorn entertainment. This is the Spielberg I grew up with in the 80s, not just because of the references with which the film is packed to the gills. No, this is just the rock-solid storytelling that made watching movies such an interesting pastime when I was a kid, before the 90s rolled on and the likes of Jerry Bruckheimer and Michael Bay made a career out of dumbing down the blockbuster. From the cat-and-mouse between IOI and the gamers/resistance to the hold-your-breath tension of each time Wade and his friends approach a puzzle, Spielberg just keeps the thrills coming. The slick animation of the virtual world is gorgeous to behold as well, and ILM and whoever else was involved in realizing the Oasis have really outdone themselves here, having vaulted clear over the dreaded Uncanny Valley with this genuinely immersive viewing experience.
Of course, brilliant animation would mean nothing if the human performances didn't work, but Spielberg coaxes winning turns from his entire cast, from Sheridan to the supporting actors, particularly Mark Rylance, who seems to be his muse of sorts, as the shy, nerdy Halliday. It's the first time I've heard Rylance do an American accent (as it's the first time I've heard one from Simon Pegg, of whom I've long been a fan), and they both pull it off flawlessly. I wouldn't mind seeing Rylance in many of Spielberg's other future projects as well.
Unfortunately one of Spielberg's other frequent collaborators, legendary composer John Williams couldn't make it to this particular party due to his Star Wars commitments, but Avengers and Back to the Future composer Alan Silvestri ably fills that gap with some pretty stirring music that pays loving homage to the 80s while coming up with some new flourishes as well. It would have been weirdly entertaining to see an Easter Egg of Mac and Me the truly atrocious late-80s E.T. knockoff which Silvestri actually scored, but there was no such luck.
Speaking of Easter Eggs, though, the film was chock full of them, so many that they actually deserve their own post.
There were drawbacks, of course. Because this was a throwback to the kind of movie I'd grown up on, that meant a few contrivances and unfortunate narrative cliches came along with it, like an Asian character very conveniently knowing martial arts at an opportune time. Also, having people of color serve as sideki--err supporting characters feels so distinctly 80s these days, particularly in the wake of the fantastic Black Panther. I have been waiting for years (yes, before it became fashionable to think about black/POC people in lead roles in action movies) for Steven Spielberg to direct a popcorn movie with a black, male lead, and I'm still waiting. At least Pixar finally broke Disney's white-boys-only streak with Coco last year.
Still, it's been so long since Spielberg's shown this kind of form that it's easy to forgive him these tropes.
7.5/10
written by Zak Penn and Ernest Cline
After years of delivering mostly "awards bait" adult fare, and a few misfires (coughcoughINDIANAJONESANDTHEKINGDOMOFTHECRYSTALSKULLcoughcough) Steven Spielberg delivers his most engaging, pure popcorn movie since Minority Report.
Based on the novel by Ernest Cline, Ready Player One tells a story set in the not-so-distant future, where all of humanity is enthralled by a massive, multi-player online role playing game-cum-virtual-reality-platform known as the Oasis, which was created by reclusive genius James Halliday (Mark Rylance) with the help of his former partner Ogden Morrow (Simon Pegg). So massive is the game that it has actually become a driving economic force all by itself, and it is somehow the great equalizer in a world beset by egregious inequality, a world in which trailer parks are now filled with whole stacks of trailers.
Upon Halliday's death, a hidden message that he left is revealed to all the players in the Oasis telling them about three Easter Eggs that, when uncovered, will lead to a fantastic treasure: ownership of the Oasis. The mad scramble to find the Easter Eggs begins, at the forefront of which is Innovative Online Industries (IOI), a monolithic corporation headed by Nolan Sorrento (Ben Mendelsohn) a ruthless CEO with vague ties to Halliday, who employs full-time gamers in a bid to seize control of the Oasis. On the other end of the spectrum, living in one of the aforementioned trailer stacks is Wade Watts (Tye Sheridan) who goes by the online avatar Parzival. Wade spends all of his time in the Oasis to escape the drudgery of his life, and when the contest is announced, he jumps at the chance to win it. With his encyclopedic knowledge of Halliday (including his love of the 80s pop-culture he grew up with), and the help of his online friends Aech, Sho, Daito and the mysterious Art3mis (whose appearances are meant to be a bit of mystery for most of the film, which is why the actors' names aren't mentioned), he might just have a chance.
Just as Minority Report presented an interesting moral and philosophical quandary (i.e. should people be punished for crimes that have not been committed yet but merely foreseen) all wrapped within a piece of sublime entertainment, this film challenges our cultural obsession with the internet, particularly internet gaming, while presenting a thoroughly engaging piece of popcorn entertainment. This is the Spielberg I grew up with in the 80s, not just because of the references with which the film is packed to the gills. No, this is just the rock-solid storytelling that made watching movies such an interesting pastime when I was a kid, before the 90s rolled on and the likes of Jerry Bruckheimer and Michael Bay made a career out of dumbing down the blockbuster. From the cat-and-mouse between IOI and the gamers/resistance to the hold-your-breath tension of each time Wade and his friends approach a puzzle, Spielberg just keeps the thrills coming. The slick animation of the virtual world is gorgeous to behold as well, and ILM and whoever else was involved in realizing the Oasis have really outdone themselves here, having vaulted clear over the dreaded Uncanny Valley with this genuinely immersive viewing experience.
Of course, brilliant animation would mean nothing if the human performances didn't work, but Spielberg coaxes winning turns from his entire cast, from Sheridan to the supporting actors, particularly Mark Rylance, who seems to be his muse of sorts, as the shy, nerdy Halliday. It's the first time I've heard Rylance do an American accent (as it's the first time I've heard one from Simon Pegg, of whom I've long been a fan), and they both pull it off flawlessly. I wouldn't mind seeing Rylance in many of Spielberg's other future projects as well.
Unfortunately one of Spielberg's other frequent collaborators, legendary composer John Williams couldn't make it to this particular party due to his Star Wars commitments, but Avengers and Back to the Future composer Alan Silvestri ably fills that gap with some pretty stirring music that pays loving homage to the 80s while coming up with some new flourishes as well. It would have been weirdly entertaining to see an Easter Egg of Mac and Me the truly atrocious late-80s E.T. knockoff which Silvestri actually scored, but there was no such luck.
Speaking of Easter Eggs, though, the film was chock full of them, so many that they actually deserve their own post.
There were drawbacks, of course. Because this was a throwback to the kind of movie I'd grown up on, that meant a few contrivances and unfortunate narrative cliches came along with it, like an Asian character very conveniently knowing martial arts at an opportune time. Also, having people of color serve as sideki--err supporting characters feels so distinctly 80s these days, particularly in the wake of the fantastic Black Panther. I have been waiting for years (yes, before it became fashionable to think about black/POC people in lead roles in action movies) for Steven Spielberg to direct a popcorn movie with a black, male lead, and I'm still waiting. At least Pixar finally broke Disney's white-boys-only streak with Coco last year.
Still, it's been so long since Spielberg's shown this kind of form that it's easy to forgive him these tropes.
7.5/10
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