Showing posts with label Scarlett Johansson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scarlett Johansson. Show all posts
Thursday, 23 April 2015
The Avengers: Age Of Ultron
I'm going to try not to spoil this one, I swear.
Earth's mightiest heroes are back again and director Joss Whedon revels in his element here, It's explosive, visually gorgeous and has more one liners than you could throw your shawarma at. Opening up to a Bond style infiltration scene we can see that there's been a few missions between films since The Avengers work as a strong unit, often teaming up with each other to throw moves that devastate the opposition, all the while exchanging trademark Whedon banter between each other. Thor's fish out of water style comedy still remains a personal favourite and he delivers continuously. The confidence takes a blow however when they face themselves with HYDRA experiments Pietro and Wanda Maximoff, "He's super fast and she's weird". Wanda gets into the teams heads and and we see their deepest fears, each hallucinogenic trip spawning seamlessly from their reality.
The villain of the piece voiced by James Spader breaks the mold when it comes to Marvels usually two dimensional villains, Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr/Iron Man) has the idea to dabble with an AI code found in the HYDRA base to create a self aware safety protocol to protect the world so the Avengers can take it a little easier, Stark telling Bruce Banner (Mark Ruffalo/Hulk) that it would achieve "peace in our time," however as in any artificial intelligence scenario, the Ultron program goes rogue and comes to the conclusion that world peace can be brought about by the extinction of humanity. Cue drama.
The films highlights are the characters interactions with each other, ten movies in to the cinematic universe and the core team members are already well established and yet for a team mainly compromised of leaders the friction that results is satisfying, mostly that the relationship between Stark and Steve Rogers (Chris Evans/Captain America) paving the way to the upcoming Captain America: Civil War. There's even a budding romance between an unlikely couple and I think I can finally say it...
I like Hawkeye.
That's right the bow and arrow guy, fighting besides monsters and literal God's, Jeremy Renner's Hawkeye is actually one of the stand out performances, possibly for being short changed in the last Avengers movie but he has some of the funniest lines and really puts things into perspective to a later reformed Wanda. I think on Whdeon's part Hawkeye was written to be the most relatable team member as without powers and still giving as good as he gets we feel we could be part of the action too.
The film is visually incredible and each action piece is memorable for the most part, a crazed Hulk going head to head with Iron Man's hulkbuster armor is a stand out moment yet the third act of the film isn't too dissimilar to the end of the first Avengers, countless fodder enemies merely being there to make the heroes look good and straying just a little too close into disaster porn. It's not Michael Bay bad, far from it in fact it just feels unnecessary in parts.
My only two gripes with the film are that despite Ultron being a compelling and unconventional villain he is sidelined a little for more of the teams interactions. An eight foot killer robot with a Stark -esque personality and dry humour is a delight to see and Spader is clearly having a field day with it, I just wish they showed us more of him. The other is quite an unpopular opinion but Samuel L Jackson returns as Nick Fury and it's not needed in the slightest, he gives a pep talk and that's really it.
Yes I'm probably seeing this through rose tinted glasses but I loved Age Of Ultron, Whedon manages to juggle all these conflicting egos delicately and only teases future events to come rather than shoehorning them in like many other Marvel films have been known to.
See it for the child in you.
Friday, 28 March 2014
Captain America: The Winter Soldier
The fifth one
I'll try to resist any America puns I can.
Probably going to be spoilers.
Marvels star spangled hero returns (I tried.) for his latest venture and we see a post battle of New York Steve Rogers (Chris Evans) struggling to place himself in modern day Washington DC. Splitting his down time between taking thirteen mile jogs around the Washington Monument and doing undercover stealth missions against Algerian pirates, he's torn up about his current fate and as a familiar face tells him 'he can't go back to that time'. This film changes the game a little and at times feels more like a political thriller than your average comic book movie, at least until the third act The Winter Solider is more spy vs spy just with extraordinary people in it.
Evans has found his Steve Rogers. What sets him apart from the other members of his team is that at heart he's a genuinely good guy among the good guys, sadly for him he's a man lost in time and struggling to come to grips with the modern way of warfare. He was never happy with what he had to do in the forties but as he puts it to Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson) and his controversial project Insight, "This isn't freedom, it's fear." There's an endearing innocence about Steve compared to his morally grey team mates.
Most recognizable would be Scarlett Johansson's Black Widow, self assured and flirtatious all the while proving that the super hero business isn't just left up to the guys. Full of witty comebacks and all said with a wry smile, Johansson is having fun with it and yet at times there are allusions to her dark history that was mentioned in The Avengers, it's at these points Johansson shows her range and happily steps away from being a one trick pony.
Thankfully compared to Iron Man 3 and Thor: The Dark World the comedy doesn't seem shoehorned in or takes away any seriousness from a situation, newcomer Antony Mackie stars as The Falcon, an ex para-trooper with a flight harness you can't help but want to try out, visually it looks incredible while he weaves in and out of explosions and cannon fire and really steals the majority of scenes he's in. Hopefully we'll see him in the sequel or the next Avengers because the guy brings humor whenever it's needed.
Our seasoned veterans in the film come to clash quite often and their chemistry is somewhat lacking. Samuel L. Jackson breathes charisma as S.H.I.E.L.D. director Nick Fury and often comes to clash with Cap himself an how things should be handled, but when he butts heads with world security council member Alexander Pierce (spy movie veteran Robert Redford) the connection doesn't seem as fierce. Both of them actively stand out in the ensemble and by themselves thoroughly convince you but it seemed Redford was just coasting off what felt familiar to him and didn't try much new.
Last but not least and my favourite part as a comic book fan is the films title villain, The Winter Soldier (Sebastian Stan). So anyway spoilers he's secretly Bucky Barnes from the first movie. Captain America's best friend. Fell off the train? I honestly wish they'd made his apparent death more momentous in the first movie because although it's alluded to near the start of the film the reveal that he is the brainwashed villain lacks a little. That doesn't change the fact though that he's the perfect match for Captain America, equally as fast, skilled and strong (a robotic arm will do that to you) as his old friend but fights in a much more brutal manner. Paying no heed to collateral damage and even putting fear into someone as skilled as Black Widow you know he's a big hitter. Stan shows his range between slowly regaining memories lost for 70 years to uncontrollable rage as the memories come back whilst fighting his former friend, it's the first marvel villain since Loki that's had such an impact on the lead characters and the audience themselves, something the past few films have lacked monstrously.
All in all you know what you're in for here, classic action with witty repertoire between provocative characters with all the classic cameo's, Easter eggs and an epic post credits scene that I don't feel at liberty (geddit?) to talk about. Go see it already.
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