Entries Tagged as 'Comic Book'

‘Iron Man’ (2008)

Was this worth my $10?

While most superhero origin stories are simple – the protagonist has a life, something happens to change that life, and the protagonist dedicates the remainder of his or her life to a new cause as a result – they don’t have to be simplistic. The best origin stories grapple with the complexities of both the human condition and with our often conflicting motivations. Unfortunately, despite all the high-gloss special effects, ‘Iron Man’ fails to embrace those subtleties and instead looks at the world from that either/or perspective that has been so popular in America in the last decade. [Read more →]

Marvel headed for the B-list?

Ghost RiderThis past Saturday, the LA Times ran a piece about how Marvel, now Marvel Studios the feature-shingle of parent corporation Marvel Entertainment now has to resort to their B-list of characters now that their A-listers, the Fantastic Four, Spider-Man and the X-Men have now run their courses as franchises and are only going to become more expensive with the increasing salary demands as the actors who created the onscreen characters are likely only to become more and more expensive.

Sure, there’s an Iron Man movie in the works, an Ant-Man movie and ‘Fantastic Four II‘ coming this summer. [Read more →]

Marvel’s ‘Civil War’

Tony Stark is a Proxy?
Despite the mixed reviews coming from the fans, Marvel’s Civil War is a momentous event. People can talk their DC Kingdom Come stuff as much as they want, but Civil War is the book that they’ll be talking about in the graduate-level Ivy seminars and MLA conferences ten years from now.

Why? Well, it’s certainly not the subtlety.

Most of the fan-problem with CW is that many characters are depicted out-of-character. After a 40 year friendship, Captain America (Steve Rogers) and Iron Man (Tony Stark) have suddenly been depicted as rivals. In Marvel’s continuity, Rogers and Stark have been friends and teammates on the Avengers for more than 40 years, yet, in an almost painful evocation of the McCarthy era and the Alien and Sedition Acts, Marvel has created a ‘Super-Hero Registration Act’ (SHRA) that requires all super-powered persons to register with the Federal Gov’t, otherwise face lifetime incarceration. [Read more →]

“Heroes” (2006)

'Heroes'O.k., it’s been on for 2 months and I was initially non-plussed when I saw a preview back at the end of August.

As ‘Unbreakable:The Series’, I was sure it would be cancelled before October, but it’s managed to hold on, and gain my attention, in part owing to my brother retuning from Europe and taking an immediate interest.

Personally, I’m not invested in the drug-addicted (cliché) artist, though his dealer is a hottie. And the A.D.A.-turned-politician (played by Adrian Pasdar) is as much a non-entity as is his brother, the lover of the art-dealing hottie. OTOH, what’s drawn me into the show are a number of tertiary characters — specifically Charlie, the Odessa TX waitress that Hiro time-travels 6 months into the past to try to save from Sylar the Hero killer. And Claire the cheerleader daughter of the would-be bad guy with the horn-rimmed glasses calling the shots for all of the mind-controlling hero-types. [Read more →]

DC vs. Marvel?

I was going to write a review of ‘Superman Returns‘ (previous comments here) but I’ve got comic book movie fatigue — for the near future, I’m swearing off the writing of such reviews as much of that stuff, I fear, is a waste of time, considering that the artistes who make these movies never take them as seriously as I’d like them to. (Granted, this is from someone who majored in Semiotics while he was in college — thus I ought to be excluded from most serious discussions..)

I’m all about the revisionism (c.1987) in comics and I’m disappointed that the rest of the world still hasn’t caught up with Alan Moore’s ‘Watchmen‘, Watchmen, importantly being THE signal event in the American comics industry that changed just about everything, with Frank Miller’s revisionist Batman miniseries, ‘The Dark Knight Returns’ being a close second. [Read more →]

‘X-Men:The Last Stand’ (2006)

Did it suck completely? No. Was it less than I expected? Frankly, no. With all the months and rumors of Brett “the Rat” Ratner taking the helm of X3, the movie ended up being more competent and entertaining than I ever expected it to be.

That said, you can leave all of your X-Men canon at the door. Especially for ‘The Last Stand’.

This much I knew from my lukewarm appreciation of the first 2 movies, with their unnatural emphasis on Rogue and Wolverine. In the comics, Rogue started out as a villain, as she was the adoptive daughter of Mystique (yes!) and a former member of the 3rd incarnation of the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants. For some indeterminate reason, I thought Mystique was Australian when I was reading the X-Titles back in the ’80′s, but that might just have been a bit of poor transcription in whichever way Mr. Claremont had chosen to transcribe her dialogue. [Read more →]

The Odyssey of ‘Superman’

– more than you want to know –

Superman V‘ or ‘Superman Returns‘ had been in development for about a decade. I first heard about it back in 1996, when I was teaching art school down in Georgia and one of my students was going on and on about Kevin Smith of ‘Clerks’ fame writing the screenplay for it.

Again, that was about 1996 and the development process seems to have gone through a number of writers and producers since that time, no fewer than 5 directors have come and gone – Tim Burton, Oliver Stone, McG, Brett Ratner and finally, landing the chair last fall, Bryan Singer — and then Singer only because Fox spun their wheels for too long after ‘X-Men 2′ had come out, and no one had bothered to guarantee his participation in X-3. [Read more →]

‘Batman Begins’? (2005)

‘Batman Begins’ (2005)**possible spoilers**

Too fucking long.

The good? The first hour – the mythic stuff of murdered billionaire parents and quests for self in the Far East. Liam Neeson and Christian Bale did a great job there. At their serviceable best were Michael Caine and Morgan Freeman in the now-split role of Alfred. Where the Butler once did double-duty as Manservant and Armorer, Alfred is now split across Caine’s Alfred and Freeman’s Lucius Fox.

The bad? The gratuitous car chase and the plurality of its villains. There’s the guy that murdered young Bruce’s parents – who may have not been a person, but only a symptom of city-wide corruption and the inevitable crime-boss; then there’s Ra’s Al Ghul – real and fake – and his lackey, the sometimes psychiatrist, sometime supervillain Scarecrow.

The movie was bloated. Writers David Goyer and Christopher Nolan may both be fanboys, but the movie really didn’t need to be 2 hours and 20 minutes long. The movie didn’t have to have all of the Wangerian overtures that it did, and everything DIDN’T have to amount to a massive conspiracy cooked-up by the principal villain. Really, it didn’t have to be that way.

Somewhere into the 2nd half-hour, I found myself wishing for a grittier film about Batman’s training and the Kung fu-like trials that he no doubt had to face. But this was NOT that movie. Instead, the Archvillian’s Far Eastern mountain hide-out (China? Tibet? Khandahar?) was suddenly in the exurbs of Gotham City, and within shouting distance of Bruce’s faithful LearJet. Segue into the 3rd Act of a 4 Act play.

This gives way to the inevitable board-room dramas and the IPO that corporate custodian Rutger Hauer wants to pursue, given the 20 year absence of a Wayne family member to run the company. The corpo-drama was like the car chase, and could have been cut from the final draft, just like the ‘End of Days’ Strum und Drang that brings Gotham to its knees, the survival of which the writers never fully explain.

The promising bits of this film were the Memento-like Nolan signature bits, where he breaks up the timeline, and flashes back and forth between Bruce Wayne’s past and present, between his childhood, young adulthood and the present. A better film could have emeged from further play on that ambiguity – there’s a key moment, somewhere during the 2nd Act that could have taken place anywhere along Bruce Wayne’s timeline, though it’s supposed to take place before Bruce’s Eastern training sessions. If Nolan had been given greater control over the story, I suspect the film might have pursued that arty uncertainty at greater length, but alas, not.

What we got was 70 minutes of promise and 10 minutes of Gary Oldman playing against type.
Rating: ★★★☆☆

‘Global Frequency’ (2005)

Official cast photo for ‘Global Frequency’ (2005)So, I’ve just finished watching the best new show of 2005, one which will likely never be broadcast or see film beyond the pilot episode. That show is ‘Global Frequency’, based upon the comic book by Warren Ellis and a broad swath of illustrators.

‘Global Frequency’ is the name of an underground group that exists to save lives – from terrorist threats, leftover Cold War engines-of-destruction, biohazards and acts of God.

The is an ad hoc collection of 1,001 specialists – soldiers, linguists, scientists, engineers and doctors – the best at what they do, who make themselves available in times of crisis.

Since I’m just the kind of comic book geek that’ll pick up almost any new title written by people with the surname Ennis, Bendis, Vaughn and Straczynski, I checked this series out sometime last year. There were only 12 issues in the book’s entire run, and the sum of them has already been collected in two trade paperbacks. [Read more →]