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by Joshua Starnes, CMRO Editor

The Avengers

Directed by Joss Whedon

Released: April 2012

Marvel’s “The Avengers” isn’t the Second Coming, though it feels like it’s been in the works almost as long as, but as far as big summer entertainment goes you’ll rarely get much better.

For those who may not have been following along, the Powers That Be of the Marvel films have been tracking the comings and goings of the newly immerged super powered people like Iron Man (Robert Downey, Jr.) and the Hulk (Mark Ruffalo, replacing Edward Norton), approaching them in the form of shadowy superspy Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson) to tell them about ‘The Avengers Initiative.’ An initiative to bring the most powerful individuals on the planet together to face the problems the world can’t. And they’re about to get that opportunity when Loki (Tom Hiddleston) arrives on Earth looking for the mysterious artifact Captain America (Chris Evans) nearly died trying to destroy during World War II.

With this many characters and this much plot going on everything about “The Avengers” is a balancing act, where any given toe out of line could send the entire thing collapsing like a house of cards. Fortunately, co-writer/director Joss Whedon (“Buffy the Vampire Slayer”) has long shown his understanding of the need for developed character to the get most out of even the most superficial of stories. Combined with a sharp ear for dialog, the result is the sort of light thrills we deserve but don’t often get. There’s not much underneath that all that skill – it’s one of the few weaknesses keeping “The Avengers” out of the Great column – but it’s eminently forgivable with this much fun going on.

Like the best of these kinds of films, “Avengers” gallops along at break neck pace beginning with Loki breaking out of a secret SHIELD instillation right up until an invading army of aliens descends on New York, only stopping occasionally to catch its breath. Which is when it tends to get really interesting, letting Whedon’s gift at humanism and insight into these characters is allowed to come out and play. Rather than fall back on clichéd adventure mechanisms and hackneyed dialog, Whedon takes the time look understand what makes these characters tick, bringing the viewer in and making them care what happens to these people rather than just wait to see what happens next.

He hits his apotheosis, and “The Avengers” best moments, in the second act as the team is gathered for the first time to try and find out what Loki’s plan really is, and immediately begin to mistrust one another in a way which is perfectly organic and believable. It doesn’t have quite the level of adrenaline madness as the rest of the film, even once the Hulk and Thor start tearing the place apart in a frenetic melee (just one of a variety comic book ‘X vs. X’ moments “Avengers” is full of), but you can’t turn away from it for a moment.

It helps greatly that Tom Hiddleston’s Loki continues to be among the best of modern Marvel’s villains and Whedon has an excellent idea how to use him. He doesn’t have quite the presence he did in “Thor” as most of his mental breakdown is in the past, but his ability to show Loki’s conflict – particularly when Thor is around – brings more out than most super villains ever get.

And visually it is resplendent, particularly in IMAX 3D, which is the best way to experience the climactic New York battle as the Avengers come together to fight off Loki and his horde. All of the four color brilliance of 60s Marvel comics are on display and several extended single shots which swoop through the city showing each of the Avengers in battle really are a sight to behold.

All of this fun does come at a cost, however. Adventure films do not, as a rule, handle large casts of central characters particularly well. Not unless they are several parts long with a collective viewing time of over 10-hours, anyway. “The Avengers” has some of that going for it; with so many of its major figures starring in their own films they don’t have to be introduced and most of us already have a feel for who they are. However this is the first time they are interacting together and for all of Whedon’s skill there’s only so much even he can do in two hours plus.

Whedon himself clearly has favorites – particularly Iron Man, Black Widow and the Hulk – with non-favorites gradually fading into the background. With some characters, like Black Widow who haven’t had a chance to be developed on their own, this makes sense. But as a whole it is a noticeable lapse, especially in the case of Captain America who comes on strong in the beginning and gradually fades despite being one of the franchise players. Being the most straightforward and least ironic of all the Avengers, Whedon, for all his strengths, seems to have no idea how to use him. And the lack of screen time for Thor, the other straight man with not much of a dark side, is almost as noticeable as he has the deepest emotional connection with Loki of any of the players, as is obvious in all of their scenes together and how few and far apart those scenes are.

Loki himself also suffers from degeneration as the film wears on. Many of Whedon’s classic ticks are on display in “The Avengers,” particularly his need to take the mickey out of well-worn tropes. This often works in the short term, adding humor and surprise and enjoyment, but it can weaken the overall structure by removing pieces that need to be there (which is why they always are). For all his strength as a villain as time wears on he tends to mainly exist to get punched in the face for a joke. Which is great at the moment, in fact it’s “The Avengers” most memorable moment, but it also robs the film a true climax between the heroes and the villain.

If that small part of the film, however important, doesn’t work it’s still only a small criticism of a generally good film. It might not have been actually possible to turn it into a great film – it has too much it has to do and actually accomplishes most of it – but it’s a damn good one and worth the time to check it out on the big screen.

The only real problem – it’s going to be a long wait till “Avengers 2.”

Cast:
Robert Downey, Jr. as Tony Stark/Iron Man
Chris Evans as Steve Rogers/Captain America
Chris Hemsworth as Thor
Mark Ruffalo as Bruce Banner/The Hulk
Scarlett Johansson as Natasha Romanoff/Black Widow
Jeremy Renner as Clint Barton/Hawkeye
Tom Hiddleston as Loki
Samuel L. Jackson as Nick Fury
Colbie Smulders as Maria Hill
Clark Gregg as Agent Phil Coulson
Stellan Skarsgard as Eric Selvig
Gwyneth Paltrow as Pepper Potts
Paul Bettany as the voice of JARVIS

 


X-Men: First Class
Rating: 8 out of 10
Review by: Joshua Starnes from ComingSoon.net

Cast:

James McAvoy as Professor Charles Xavier
Michael Fassbender as Erik Lensherr/Magneto
Kevin Bacon as Sebastian Shaw
Jennifer Lawrence as Raven/Mystique
January Jones as Emma Frost
Rose Byrne as Moira MacTaggert
Nicholas Hoult as Dr. Henry ‘Hank’ McCoy/Beast
Zoë Kravitz as Angel Salvadore
Caleb Landry Jones as Sean Cassidy/Banshee
Lucas Till as Alex Summers/Havok
Edi Gathegi as Armando Muñoz/Darwin
Jason Flemyng as Azazel
Álex González as Janos Quested/Riptide
Oliver Platt as The Man in Black
Ray Wise as the Secretary of State
Michael Ironside as US Captain
Glenn Morshower as Colonel Hendry
Matt Craven as CIA Director McCone
James Remar as US General
Rade Serbedzija as Russian General


Review:

The short version is “X-Men: First Class” is an excellent return to form after several mis-steps, capturing everything that made the series great and jettisoning must of the unnecessary stuff. That’s all you really need to know, but if you need more, keep going.

The problem with prequels is a lot like the problem with sequels, in that you want to remind viewers that this new iteration is related to a previous story while at the same time charting your on course and not falling into the pit of simply repeating what audiences liked the first time around. Prequels have it even tougher because they’re endpoint is already known, leaving filmmakers to try and find an unlikely route to get there in order to create suspense.

“X-Men: First Class” then is a shining example of how to chart that course without giving up anything in the process. After a brief trip to the mid-40s to remind us of the vast differences in the upbringing of Charles Xavier (James McAvoy) in cushy upstate New York and Erik Lensherr (Michael Fassbender) in a Nazi concentration camp, we’re off to the Jet Age of the 1960s, where grown up Charles and Erik are about to be thrown together to stop the machinations of mutant mastermind Sebastian Shaw (Kevin Bacon).

Director Matthew Vaughn (“Kick Ass”) and his screenwriters, including original series mastermind Bryan Singer (“Superman Returns”) have returned to what made the series work in the first place, the interaction of the characters between each other and the world they live in and how that ultimately drives the plot. And they do that by getting rid of quite a bit which had worked before, but it’s not missed.

Considering how much the “X-Men” franchise has to date relied so heavily on Hugh Jackman and the Wolverine character in general as its centerpiece some people could be justifiably concerned in a film without that character driving it. But it turns out sending him off on his own is the best thing that could happen for the X-Men franchise.

Despite the best efforts of the various filmmakers involved in the series, including Singer himself, it’s always been a tough fit to squeeze the man-against-himself struggle of Wolverine into the societal discrimination allegory of the X-Men series. Without  him, the filmmakers have been able to focus on what is really the heart of the story, the choice between how to deal with discrimination in the form of Xavier and Lensherr’s own relationship. Given its own space to breathe, the relationship is finally allowed to come to the fore the way it always should, dramatizing the films central message with often poignant tragedy.

Vaughn and his writers have envisaged Xavier and Lensherr as near opposites of one another, as cast to suit, pinging of soft-spoken McAvoy against the tall, growling menace of Fassbender. While the acting is all around excellent in an “X-Men” film that is finally allowed to be a true ensemble, it’s Fassbender who holds things together and McAvoy often comes off somewhat less in their shared scenes. He embodies the Magneto-to-be in a way that outshines even Ian McKellan. He is the best kind of villain figure, the one who’s motivation and actions you can completely understand, even if you don’t agree with him.

Submitted to the cruelest torments as a boy by Sebastian Shaw’s Nazi puppets as part of his own quest to find fellow mutants with whom to rule the Earth, adult Erik just wants one thing: revenge. Revenge against everyone who ever allowed those awful things to happen, revenge against the normal humans who are terrified of him, and ultimately revenge against Shaw himself.

In one of those fatal meetings that Vaughn wisely resists the urge to over-dramatize; Erik’s quest to find Shaw leads him to the depth of the slippery kingpin’s Hellfire Club at the same time as Xavier and his foster-sister Raven (Jennifer Lawrence) lead beautiful CIA Agent Moira MacTaggert (Rose Byrne) to the same point. Though Erik could care less, MacTaggert and Xavier have discovered Shaw is at the heart of a plan to start a war between the USSR and America, wipe each other out, and leave the planet to the mutants. A plan that rests on installing nuclear missiles in Cuba.

If some of that sounds historically familiar, it also reveals the other realization that makes “First Class” go. The filmmakers have planned “First Class” out less like a standard superhero fantasy (though there is plenty of that by the end) and more of a classic 60s spy romp. Just that instead of gadgets, James Bond has super powers. The story zips along quickly from Geneva to Las Vegas to Oxford to Moscow, unraveling the secret world of mutants and the length of Shaw’s reach with its fair share of spies, underground lairs and submarines popping out of yachts. But with mind reading and shape shifting. And Bacon as it turns out makes a great villain; completely controlled and resisting any urges to chew up the scenery.

As to be expected from a good spy romp, “First Class” lives in ambiguity. While there are heroes, they’re relationships with the villains are complex and not entirely negative. The closer Erik gets to Shaw the more he realizes how alike they are and despite hating the fact he accepts it. Mystique, his future right hand woman, has grown up her whole life with Xavier and truly loves him and it’s heartbreaking to watch him unknowingly drive her away as much as Magneto draws her in. Tragedy is the name of the prequel game here and Vaughn takes full advantage of it.

Or as full as he can. For all the good it does, “First Class” can’t seem to escape some of the franchise recurring weaknesses, the mutants themselves. Someone somewhere along the line decided long ago that what the “X-Men” movies were really about where people with superpower using them, and that’s fair enough. But that point of view has frequently been taken to absurd lengths, to the point where some of the installments have been burdened with nameless, faceless characters whose only point is to represent a character from the books and use a superpower but who could be removed entirely from the film and not be missed. It’s a point of view which ruined “The Last Stand” and the franchise still refuses to part with it.

Once Xavier and Erik realize what Shaw is up to they begin to gather their own team, but outside of young Hank McCoy (Nicholas Hoult) most of the teenagers they’ve gathered do nothing but serve as the grounding for the effects creating their powers. They get a few moments here in there to define themselves, but not much. They’re better off than Shaw’s henchmen, however, who do nothing but stand around and look menacing. All except for literal ice queen Emma Frost (January Jones) who is so wooden she’s the only one of the supporting characters you wish would just stand in the background.

That said, what “First Class” does, it does well; juggling drama and pathos with humor and fun. Despite the depths it plumbs and the complex character relationships that don’t always work out much of it is just a fun ride. And when the first team of X-Men finally does don their classic blue and yellow suits and fly out to try and stop the Cuban missile crisis before it gets going the effect is ultimately joyful in the way a summer adventure film should be.

After giving in to its worst instincts, the return of Singer and the addition of a director with a real eye for character and performance have created the shot in the arm the “X- Men” franchise really needed. Maybe one day they’ll let them remake “The Last Stand.”

 

 

 

Captain America The First Avenger
Captain America: The First Avenger
Rating: 7.5 out of 10
Review by: Joshua Starnes from ComingSoon.net

Cast:
Chris Evans as Steve Rogers/Captain America
Hugo Weaving as Johann Schmidt/The Red Skull
Hayley Atwell as Peggy Carter
Tommy Lee Jones as Col. Chester Phillips
Toby Jones as Arnim Zola
Stanley Tucci as Dr. Abraham Erskine
Sebastian Stan as Bucky Barnes
Dominic Cooper as Howard Stark
Neal McDonough as Dum Dum Dugan
Derek Luke as Gabe Jones
Kenneth Choi as Jim Morita
J. J. Field as James Montgomery Falsworth
Richard Armitage as Heinz Kruger
Samuel L. Jackson as Nick Fury

Review:
During the height of World War II, a crazed mad man digging up secret treasures all over Europe has discovered a way to bring the entire world under his control, and the embattled forces of the Allies might not be able to stop him. They’re only hope is to fight fire with some mad science fire of their own by transforming one volunteer into the greatest soldier the world has ever seen: Captain America.

Johnson’s “Captain America” is something of a mixed affair, but if Marvel has proven anything over the last few years it’s their ability to produce quality entertainment even when they can’t get over all the flaws.

On the plus side, like the most successful recent Marvel films “Captain America” benefits from spot on casting and solid performances, keeping even the weaker moments from dragging the whole down.

Nominally the lead, Chris Evans’ makes the transition from the smart-alecky roles he has traditionally played into a straight-forward lead without giving up any natural screen charisma. Evans and the filmmakers have conceived of Captain America as a hero with all of the idealism and none of the cynicism or irony which is often used to make heroes palatable to modern audiences. Captain America is a Boy Scout in the best possible meaning of the phrase; a little naïve but also without ego and genuinely wanting to do the right thing, right from the beginning. It could very easily be arch and boring, but in Evans hands Cap is exactly what he’s supposed to be: heroic.

However, due to the strength of the cast surrounding him, Evans also isn’t the owner of his film. The result is something closer to an ensemble in execution though it doesn’t seem set up to be that. Evans is clearly supposed to be the lead, but he’s surrounded by scene stealers. Still, as problems go, that’s not a bad one to have.

The most notable is Hugo Weaving as Rogers’ counterpoint, the villainous Johann Schmidt. The only other living recipient of the Super Soldier formula, the Skull is everything Captain America is not – selfish, ostentatious, and murderous. Ostensibly a weapons scientist for the Nazis, Schmidt has cast his eyes further, building his own private army and preparing to conquer the world.

Standing against him is a group of secret soldiers run by Colonel Chester Phillips (Tommy Lee Jones) and Howard Stark (Dominic Cooper). Set in the past of the Marvel Universe, similar to the summer’s recent “X-Men,” the filmmakers take their own sweet stroll through nostalgia, showing off the world’s fair of “Iron Man 2,” the beginnings of Samuel L. Jackson’s secret spy agency, even making connections to the recent “Thor” film. It’s a smorgasbord of continuity.

How much that will work for more casual viewers is up for grabs, but the speedy pace of the first half irons out most of the kinks as Rogers tries to figure out the best way to help the war effort after the kindly Dr. Erskine (Stanley Tucci) transforms him from a 90 pound weakling into the spirit of physical perfection.

Johnston has done his best to combine Captain America’s comic book and pulp adventure roots with a desire to treat the characters as real people and approach their adventures as realistically as possible. That is a tall order, especially when you start dealing with men with melted away faces and their magic cubes of destruction, but for the most part the filmmakers pull it off, creating moments of genuine pulp excitement.

Unfortunately it’s a pace the film can’t quite keep up and the film begins to sag noticeably during the second act, tumbling into aching montage in a few sections. Worse, despite the noticeable chemistry between Evans and love-interest Hayley Atwell, the amount of time spent on the two of them never seems as well used as it could have, especially considering how packed the film is.

Still, it works more often than it doesn’t, taking advantage of its setting and milieu to create something different than the standard superhero fare. It helps that thanks to the timing and setting of the piece, “Captain America” has the opportunity to take advantage of real loss and bittersweet conclusions more audience friendly films don’t often attempt.

A bumpy middle section keeps “Captain America” from being as good as the best of Marvel’s recent films, but a sterling cast and an attempt to take the character on faithfully and without irony works more often than not. Sure there’s room for improvement, but the series is still of to a good start.

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