Posts Tagged 'kick-ass'

Misjudged Eulogy of Early Cinema – the Hugo review

The two most Oscar-nominated flms this year are the fantastic The Artist, the big favourite that has received ten nominations, and Hugo, Martin Scorsese’s first 3D and first family film. It has received eleven nominations, mostly in technical categories, although Best Film and Best Director are also on the list. Curiously, both films are about the past of cinema. But whereas The Artist is a wonderful birthday party, Hugo is a bittersweet eulogy. At its better moments at least.

Because for the longest part of its running time, it is boring, standard fare. My list of things that I dislike about Hugo kicks off with its infuriatingly romanticized, stereotypical representation of 1930s Paris, a quality which the film curiously shares with another overhyped nominee, Woody Allen’s Midnight in Paris. But at least Midnight in Paris admitted that this representation was a fantasy. This is literally a film in which the Eiffel tower can be seen from every window in the city.

The second problem is the story, which is strangely two-sided. There is a bit about a young boy – the titular Hugo Cabret – living in the walls of a train station, operating the clocks and trying to rebuild the automaton his late father left him. And when this story is more or less told and done with (after a little more than an hour, a proper running time for a mediocre kids’ flick) another story begins, about an old and bitter shopkeeper and his mysterious past. Needless to say, that story is much more interesting, and I would have loved to see it as a proper drama on itself.

The third problem lies very close to the second problem. It is the actors’ performances. As the depiction of Paris, they are so stereotypical that it hurts. Starting with the young Asa Butterfield (Hugo), who for the sake of his youth will be spared harsh criticism. And continuing with the also-very-young Chloe Moretz, who we have seen in such better form in Kick-Ass and Let Me In. Far more problematic is the supporting role of Sacha Baron Cohen as the station chief, who is a stumbling cliche of a man, and a painfully underused Jude Law as Hugo’s father. The only major cats member who fare better are Sir Christopher Lee as a bookshop owner, also much too little in the picture, and Sir Ben Kingsley, as the ill-fated shopkeeper. Also, what is it with the thick English accents in a film set in Paris? What is the point of that?

The good things then. First of all there is the 3D, which is actually justified in some moments; for instance when showing the inner mechanics of the station clocks, or in flashbacks to the first years of the twentieth century. It isn’t perfect, but it shows at least a bit of potential for the technology. Unfortunately an inferior variety of the technology is used – the one with the heavy glasses that give me headaches – instead of the more common and superior RealD.

The second good thing are those flashbacks, which are the crown jewels of the film and which belong to the second, more interesting, part of the story. Without giving away too much, these are the scenes that won Hugo its Oscar nominations, the technical ones as well as the ‘ major’ ones. They are the ones that won over the hearts of film ‘connaisseurs’ (rather than fans or the regular audience) and members of the Academy. There may be some rewriting of history going on in the process, when the First world War substitutes for copyright struggles and financial misadventures, but that fits the drama and is pardonable.

Director Martin Scorsese is a film connaisseur. A lover of the history of the medium and the art, as his many documentaries on the subject clearly show. In interviews he says that he wanted, for once, to make a film that his children could enjoy, who are too young for Taxi Driver or The Departed. But it was a mistake to make his first 3D film, and an ode to early cinema at the same time. The three objectives fit crudely together, much unlike the perfect mechanisms of the clocks and the automaton.

Leftovers of 2011: The Change Up, Ironclad, Gnomeo & Juliet & Hanna

It is December, so let us take stock of the cinefrigerator and see what leftovers are still there in need of some microwaved reviewing. We do, after all, need to make place for Christmas dinners, schmaltzy holiday movies on television and all the nice award-claiming stuff that will be coming our way the next couple of months.

Rotten:

The Change Up: Evil filth. Never see any film with anyone from this flick involved in it ever again!

Lukewarm:

Ironclad: Brutal. Pointless. A bit boring, but Paul Giamatti is ace as King John.

Gnomeo and Juliet: Funny small jokes about the Bard’s original text cannot make up for an excruciating subplot about a plastic flamengo.

Tasty:

Hanna: Strange mix of Bourne Identity, Kick-Ass and arthouse film. Director Joe Wright (Atonement) is showing off with the one-shot Berlin chase-and-fight scene though. A film that for some inexplicable reason did not get a Dutch cinematic release. Saoirse Ronan plays a kid raised and trained as an assassin by father-figure Eric Bana, somewhere inFinland. Once released into the real world she plays hide, seek, catch and kill with Cate Blanchett’s CIA executive in Morocco, France and Berlin.

Where We Stand: Nine Months in the Multiplex

It is September. We’ve had the Oscars, Cannes and the blockbuster season, and this weekend saw the end of the Venice film festival.  So, most of what was to happen in film this year has already happened. Time for a little overview then.

Last year I kept lists of the best ten and the worst ten films of the year. I’ve done the same thing for this year so far. And to start off on a good note: this year’s worst films aren’t that much worse than last year’s worst films. 2011’s Clash of the Titans was Conan the Barbarian, in terms of noisy nonsense, but Conan still offered some fun. Last year we had a Sex and the City sequel, this year we had the third Transformers movie. Those two cancel each other out. The same goes for Sucker Punch and Prince of Persia, and for Get Low and Fair Game. The ‘worst films of 2011’ list, for all the dreadful terrors that are on it, is not my main concern.

I have two main concerns. The first one is the list of films that should have been on the ‘worst film’ list, but aren’t there, because the list is already filled. I’m thinking of Clint Eastwood’s Hereafter, of the superfluous The Eagle, of the failed Horrible Bosses and the incoherent The Rite (review forthcoming). That these films are now in the large bulk of ‘mediocre’ films is a problem.

My second concern is the ‘best films of 2011’ list. There are films on there that really don’t deserve to be there. Mainly because I am still to stumble upon anything resembling A Serious Man, or The Hurt Locker. True Grit, though good, was nowhere near the Coen’s best work, and Oscar grabber The King’s Speech felt strangely tame and artificial, despite outstanding performances.

So on this year’s ‘best of’ list, so far, we find such films as Rise of the Planet of the Apes and Rango. For a film to be simply exciting (Rise…) or simply funny (Rango), and for it to showcase impressive technological advances (both) is now good enough. Just compare: In 2010 the one animated movie on the list was Toy Story 3. Now it is Rango.

Of course The Fighter was excellent, and so was Black Swan. And Bridesmaids was fantastically funny, despite the excessive vomiting and diarrhea. Source Code is the closest we’ll get to an Inception this year. But it is the closest to it, not a match. Furthermore Bridesmaids doesn’t hold up to Four Lions or Kick Ass. And I am yet to find anything as emotionally charged as Winter’s Bone or El Secreto de Sus Ojos. Harry Potter 7.2 was satisfying, but not much more than that…

Nothing to feel really good about then? Well, Thor and Captain America: The First Avenger were not as bad as I expected them to be. They were surprisingly entertaining actually, apart from the action scenes. X-Men: First Class lived up to its expectations, and Fast Five was an outrageous guilty pleasure. These films kinda make up for the big let down of Pirates of the Carribean: On Stranger Tides.

But in conclusion, all in all? Quite too many films did not live up to potential or expectations or the sheer common decency of meeting the lowest level of quality you can still get away with. 2011 is just not good enough. Yet.

What’s left to look forward then? Well, the award films will start pouring in, with strong contenders in We Need To Talk About Kevin, Martha Marcy May Marlene, War Horse, The Help, The Iron Lady, We Bought a Zoo and The Ides of March. And perhaps the The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo remake. But I’m looking forward most to Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, which really should see Gary Oldman pick up a long overdue little gold statue.

Best of 2011 so far: Black Swan, The Fighter, The King’s Speech, True Grit, Rango, Source Code, Bridesmaids, Harry Potter 7.2, Rise of the Planet of the Apes and The Tree of Life.

Worst of 2011, so far: The Green Hornet, The Green Lantern, Paul, Pirates of the Carribean: On Stranger Tides, Transformers: Dark of the Moon, Unknown, Sucker Punch, Get Low, Conan the Barbarian and The Tree of Life.

Yes. Malick’s is in both categories. Everyone who has seen it will understand.

True Delight for Fans – the X-Men: First Class review

I saw X-Men: First Class with my girlfriend, who had seen the original trilogy a couple of years ago, but had forgotten most about them. She had enjoyed them, but was not a fan. And throughout the first hour of First Class she kept asking me: “Who are these guys?” “What are they doing?” and “I don’t remember anything from this from the other films.” And it is true. Matthew Vaughn’s (known from Kick-Ass) X-Men: First Class is, especially in the beginning, a film for the fans, not for the incidental film public.

Vaughn takes a lot of time to establish the backgrounds of Charles Xavier (Professor X) and Erik Lensherr (Magneto) in the 1940s and 1960s. And to introduce a number of other characters that will become important in the story that we already know (Beast, Mystique, Moira Taggart). Next to that he sets up a complicated plot to bring all these characters together. It involves a group of supremacist mutants that want to unleash World War 3 to get rid of all the ‘common’ humans.

 

So X-Men: First Class is anything but a stand alone film. It is a prequel, but to really understand and follow it, it requires the knowledge one usually expects from a sequel. In that respect X-Men Origins: Wolverine, in every other respect the lesser film, was a better prequel.

But First Class is the better film. It matches (and at some points beats) the quality of the first two films that were directed by Bryan Singer (who has now a producer’s credit). That is mostly due to the excellent acting jobs performed by James McAvoy (Charles Xavier) and especially Michael Fassbender (Erik Lensherr). McAvoy combines likability with an arrogance and superiority that will eventually come to cost him dearly. If we already knew the basic background of Magneto from the first films, Professor X was still a mystery. Now the back-story is revealed and it is a beautiful one. Fassbender meanwhile is a magnetic screen presence (forgive the punch). He is a James Bond like avenger, with superpowers, and the most human of all these non-humans on screen. His anger and sadness stem from a great trauma and fuel his quest for revenge on Kevin Bacon’s bad guy Sebastian Shaw, but through his friendship with Xavier a warm and likable side of him breaks occasionally through the surface. One sour note: the hurried post-production must have resulted in too little time for dialogue re-recording: in the last act Fassbender suddenly sounds like the Irishman he is, whereas he mastered dialects and languages (English, French, German and Spanish) throughout the film without so much of a stutter.

There is lots of fun to be had; with plenty of tongue-in-cheek references to the later films, and with a beautifully filmed two-word cameo that pops a smile on any fan’s face. And with the banter between the young X-Men: Mystique, Beast, Banshee and Havock. Although it might be argued that the last two are underdeveloped. However, that was always a bit of a problem with the ensemble-constructions of the X-Men films.

Vaughn also succeeds in bringing the 1960s back to life. The cold war intrigue does a nice bit of alternative historiography, actual television images of the decade are used, and one feels as if any moment Sean Connery might walk in to assist the X-Men in taking on Sebastian Shaw and his special submarine.

The colors and the effects are gorgeous, as they were in Kick-Ass, and the sound design is excellent. Especially some sounds of falling and spraying water are amazing. I hate to have to repeat myself, but this is another film that proves the irrelevance of 3D.

But it is not fair to end a review of X-Men: First Class on such a clichéd note. It is by any means a film that will delight the fans, and even amuse the regular audiences. Because, when the characters are in place and the plot is kick-started, everyone will enjoy this perfect summer movie. Even my girlfriend admitted that much.

Super Hero: The Abominable Onslaught

I previously wrote that 2011 would be the Year of the Alien. As there were so many films coming out that were, well, about aliens. But there is another trend this year, especially in the blockbuster season: the summer of 2011 is the summer of the uninteresting b-grade super hero. The source of all this mayhem? Characters have become ‘properties’, commodities owned by studios to wrench out as much cheap money as possible. And if your movie studio is, owns or cooperates with a comic book publisher, you have a lot of  ’properties’.

Marvel, for instance, is pillaging its back catalogue so that we can be given an ‘Avengers’ film next year or in 2013. But before that can happen The Hulk and Iron Man must be joined by Thor and Captain America. Who? A Norse God who has fallen to earth to combat stupid super-robots and a pumped up White Anglo Saxon Protestant in a spandex suit made out of the United States flag. Who’s going to take on a red-skulled Nazi by the name of, you guessed it, Red Skull. Disgusting. The little appearance of Tony Stark (Iron Man) in The Incredible Hulk was a nice joke, but the way Iron Man 2 was a mere commercial for the other Marvel films was sickening.

But let’s not just blame Marvel alone. DC Comics have wonderful ‘property’ in Superman and Batman, although Superman to me has always been something of a bore. But can someone explain to me what the appeal is of ‘Green Lantern’, an inter-alien cosmic police force who can just about summon anything they like using a red ring?

And what are all these good directors doing making these films? Martin Campbell (Goldeneye, Casino Royale) doing Green Lantern, Kenneth Branagh directing Thor? Are these guys deliberately torpedoing their own careers? Like Michel Gondry did with The Green Hornet earlier this year?

And it’s getting worse: the Superman reboot, directed by Zach Snyder and produced and written by Christopher and Jonathan Nolan sounds really cool. But with The Dark Knight Rises just about to start shooting, Warner Bros. and DC are already thinking of another Batman reboot. I hope it’s not going to be as dreadful as the idea of making new Spiderman movies, in which Spiderman is a teenage high school kid. It will please the main demographic for these films perhaps, but it is a bad omen. High school kids can’t be superheroes. Look at Kick-Ass. (Although it must be noted here that the casting of Andrew Garfield was a strong move by the producers of The Amazing Spiderman.)

Other ‘properties’ that DC is now considering for the big screen: Wonder Woman (and you thought Superman is a bad name) and The Flash, whose superpower is that he can run really fast.

Run really fast, yeah, away from your multiplexes when this hits the screen in inevitably eye-blinding 3D.

End of the year round-up: The Best Films of 2010* **

*Dutch release dates. Includes therefore The Hurt Locker and A Serious Man, but no Black Swan or 127 Hours.

** As I am no professional critic I have not seen everything. Films such as The Social Network, Scott Pilgrim and Sex and the City 2 have so far managed to elude me.

10        Centurion

Beautifully shot chase film by horror specialist Neill Marshall, who learned exactly the right lessons from Gladiator and who “masters the art of the graceful decapitation” like no-one else.

9          Four Lions

Proves that you can turn even the most touchiest of subjects, Muslim-terrorism, into comedy-gold. At the expense of the characters perhaps, but that is at no point a killjoy in this film.

 

8          Kick Ass!

Violent, geeky and morally questionable, but sooo funny. Extra credits for a stand-out Nicholas Cage performance.

 

7          Catfish

The controversy over the truthfulness of this documentary is not really that interesting, from a creative point of view. Catfish is an amazing story about very interesting people, and the ‘facebook’ film that The Social Network is not.

 

6          Toy Story 3

Would probably have ended up higher if I had an emotional investment in the series, which I did not have. Excellent characters, great voice work, beautiful music and an appropriate theme for a satisfying final chapter.

 

5          A Winter’s Bone

Who could’ve thought that a film could be deeply depressing and fiercely uplifting at the same time? Debra Granik proves it can be done, owing a big debt to Jennifer Lawrence superior performance.

 

4          A Serious Man

Best. Coen Brothers Film. Ever.

 

3          Inception

A visual and narratological masterpiece. 2nd and 3rd viewings allow for the emotional heart to find its place. Perhaps the most important film of the year, because Nolan shows that very expensive action films need not be stupid. Even Michal Bay now wants his next Transformers film to be smarter.

 

2          The Hurt Locker

Testosterone and adrenaline fuelled “small” film about big issues. Its focus on character rather than politics makes it intensely emotional and, surprisingly, very political. “Exactly 17.3 times better than Avatar”, its big awards-competitor.

 

1          El Secreto de Sus Ojos

Excellent character study, harrowing thriller and portrait of a society. El Secreto de Sus Ojos has no flaws. Its devastating climax lingers and haunts your dreams. The film was the big surprise of 2010’s Foreign Language Oscar category, and of the entire year for that matter.

Blockbuster Season 2010: The Round-up

Okay. So that’s it. It is the first of September, and although some big loud action movies are still to premiere on Dutch screens, I call it a day for the blockbuster season of 2010. September is the month in which we’ll get to see Machete and Piranha 3D, but it is also the month of the Venice Film Festival and, interesting for the locals here, The dutch Film Festival in Utrecht.

And what a weird blockbuster season it has been. Whereas other years were actually good (2008 saw The Dark Knight, Iron Man and only had The Incredible Hulk to cry about) or very bad (2009, if only for Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen and GI: Joe) 2010’s summer saw its major titles sink, but saw other, unexpected, films deliver.

Tent pole pictures such as Green Zone, Iron Man 2, Clash of the Titans, Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time and The Expendables all disappointed, some to the degree of outright awfulness. Robin Hood was okay, as were Predators, Knight and Day and From Paris With Love. And these four films actually belonged to the B-list to be honest.

Of course, Inception was great. If my review seemed critical, it was only because I set the bar higher for that film. Three other films that I really enjoyed were Centurion, Kick-Ass and Salt. Big pictures of course, but not the movie events that dominated the summer. The A-Team was a delightful guilty pleasure, but it disappointed at the (U.S.) box office, so unfortunately there will probably not be  a sequel.

So, apart from Inception, what was the blockbuster season of 2010 about? Well, to be honest, it was not really about big loud action movies. Of course Inception was big and loud, and an action film, but it does not belong to the same league as Armageddon or Transformers. The other films that drew large crowds this summer were, well, kids movies.

Toy Story 3 was amazing; the only film in 3D that was worth the extra bucks so far. It deserved to be as successful as it was. Shrek Forever After (also in 3D) was a disgrace, but it was a popular success. Let’s just hope that Dreamworks will leave Shrek alone now, and in time I may forgive them. Finally, there was the remake of The Karate Kid, which was far from faultless, but was carried by great performances and had a sincere heart.

The big debates now will focus on two questions: is 2010 an exception, or are family films the future of the blockbuster season? Harry Potter will of course finish with two big bangs, but what’s next? The other question: what to think of 3D? Is it the future of the business? The savior of cinema? Some studies suggest otherwise. I think it will only work as an added attraction for films that were from the first moment thought of as 3D pictures. Avatar for instance, or Toy Story 3. Turning ‘normal’ 2D films into 3D, sometimes with the help of inadequate conversion processes, only helps to kill of the hype and the audience willingness to pay extra.

So this was it: the blockbuster season. One film I’ve yet to mention is Scott Pilgrim vs. The World, which has had its American and UK release, but will only hit Dutch screens this autumn. I don’t expect too much of it. It seems immature fatiguing nonsense, with an unlikable hero who thinks the L-word refers to lesbians. Geek stuff I guess. Must be, with Michael Cera doing that Michael Cera thing that some people seem to like.

 

(This trailer is so annoying that I want to see and then hate this film)

So, let’s ease into the autumn, towards the Holiday season films and the first contenders for awards season 2011. Just a few titles you may already want to look up: The American, 127 hours, Four Lions, Tamara Drew and Terence Malick’s The Tree of Life. Terence Malick? Yes. Terence Malick. Also, there is the ‘new Slumdog Millionaire’ with Africa United. I’m looking forward already.

Stop Casting Ridiculously Good Looking People as Regular Joe’s Part Two

In a post last week I voiced my anger over the depiction of women in popular cinema in general and in the films 4.3.2.1 and Transformers in particular. My central argument was that it may be fine to have Ridiculously Good Looking Women casted as princesses, femmes fatales, super heroines and so on, but that ‘normal’ characters should be played by women who are made to look ‘normal’. This does not mean that they should not be beautiful – I also argued against the uglification of Nicole Kidman for The Hours and Charlize Theron for Monster – but that they have slightly acceptable dress sizes, wear a decent amount of clothing and do not wear make-up as if it were war paint. A very specific point considered the casting of Megan Fox as a teenager, and the way her body was framed by Michael Bay.

That was all fine and nice, and I got some friendly comments, and it was definitely all very PC and such, and it boosted my site statistics enormously, but afterwards I felt something nagging. I had only written about the depiction of women, whereas my title was: Stop Casting Ridiculously Good Looking People as Regular Joe’s. Most Joe’s are men.

It is probably very PC to fulminate against a pornographic and voyeuristic sensibility concerning the depiction of women in film, but it is also rather easy for me. Very safe. I said that the depiction of normal women in 4.3.2.1 contributes to insecurity about looks amongst young teenage girls. What I should have said is that the casting of Ridiculously Good Looking Men as normal characters contributes to insecurities amongst young men.

Seriously. Normal young men do not look like Robert Pattinson. Otherwise they (we I mean) would be in film and on television. I won’t go so far as to say they boy can’t act (I have not seen enough R-Patz movies to make such statements) but if he looked like me he would not have been in Twilight.

So should actors be ugly and should R-Patz not be in any movie because it makes me insecure about myself? Of course not. He can be a sparkling immortal vampire. Or a super hero. Or a fighter pilot. Or a prince. But why would he be a normal kid from a normal (be it somewhat overloaded on emotional baggage) family. What is the point of casting him in Remember Me as a regular Joe who develops a normal relationship to a normal girl in his problem-stricken-but-still-painstakingly-plain-and-bourgeois life? What does it add? What does it say? What expectations does it raise amongst his creepily obsessed female fans? Wake up gals, if R-Patz is your ideal and your standard, we’ll never be able to deliver.

The other extreme is of course those infantile ‘comedies’ like Superbad and ‘Knocked Up’, in which young men are so terribly obnoxious and ugly and nerdy and misogynistic that you can only look down on them, rather then sympathize or empathize with them.

Good examples, the principles of which should be followed by casting directors, screenwriters producers and directors world wide are: Michael Cera in Juno, Aaron Johnson in Kick-Ass and Zach Braff in Garden State. They are quirky, nerdy, weird at times, but very normal in every other respect. Cera is a bit of an idiot in Juno, but also a loving boyfriend. He is neither very handsome nor very nerdy. Johnson is a teenager ‘practically invisible to girls’, who can only come in contact with his dream girl by pretending he is gay. BUT WITHOUT ANY STEREOTYPING! Zach Braff is actually able to charm and pick up a girl and face his standard twenty-something problems without staring moodily in the camera or revealing a six pack. I look at Garden State, a film that is supposed to make me happy, and it works. Because the guy is like me, and I am happy for him when he gets the girl, and I am happy for me, because I can do that too!

Of course, my point has been made previously. Much better and more eloquent. By South Park, of course.

Failure to Detonate? – the Blockbuster Season Mid-Term Review

First of all there is not and will not be a review of Sex and the City 2 on this blog. Whatever I could possibly have to say or want to say about it has been said much better and fiercer and more eloquent and with a perspective I could never have by Lindy West in her piece for The Stranger.

So: to the theme of this post: the blockbuster season mid-term review. A brief look back on the films that have graced the first part of the summer. Which is not yet the summer at all; blockbuster season has not just expanded on the calendar: it has literally exploded. The blood and guts of a gazillion multi-million dollar action movies now cover the cinema listings from March until September.

I have previewed the season previously, and I have been right on some, and wrong on many accounts. Already.

Green Zone was indeed Jason Bourne in Iraq, including the masterclass shaky hand-held cinematography. It was not very successful. It was not too political, its politics were just a bit outdated. And it was not too difficult, except for the last act, in which the shaky camera made it impossible to follow the characters’ actions and care for their fate.

Iron Man 2 was indeed top heavy, with too many characters, of which some (Samuel L. Jackson and Scarlett Johansson) only existed to kick-start another franchise. In that I may have been right, but in a retrospectively painful moment of total delusion I argued that Clash of the Titans seemed more balanced than Iron Man 2. Clash of the Titans was only balanced in its outright, no-holds-barred awfulness. It was the paradigm of terrible. It was the ultimate example of a bad bad film (as opposed to the good bad film, like From Paris With Love and the bad good film, of which Green Zone can be considered an example). I predicted that these two films would be the tent-pole pictures of the summer, and by now I certainly hope they are not. In a moment I will discuss some films I have set my hopes on to save the summer of 2010.

The main criticism I have heard of Robin Hood was that it is not Gladiator. Which is an unfair criticism. It is like saying that London is not Rome: sure, it misses the mythical grandeur, but it is still a nice city to spend time in. Robin Hood was fine, bordering close to good and weakened only by a talky second act. Although its battle scenes were impressive, there was a little too little Big and Loud for it to be a major BLAM (Big Loud Action Movie).

I predicted that Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time would be rubbish, and in considerable ways it was. However, on its own terms it provided ample entertainment.

The big surprise was Kick-Ass. I had not even thought about including it in a blockbuster preview, as I though it was a small, independent satire of the comic book genre. It was certainly independent and satirical, but it was also a big action movie, and the best I’ve seen this year, with proper character work and impeccable story arcs.

Mark Strong should stop playing bad guys. He does this great, in Kick-Ass and Robin Hood and in a number of upcoming films, but I’d like to see him doing nice and friendly now. His father-son scenes in Kick-Ass show that he can deliver on this as well.

The general idea of the blockbuster season so far, with the exception of Kick-Ass, is a ‘failure to detonate’. A lot of fuzz, a lot of marketing, very promising trailers and in the end a lack of coherent, well-crafted films. Coming out of a BLAM or blockbuster, you should have the feeling that you can take on the world. The film should linger in your brain and pop up in your dreams at night. None of the films of this summer have managed to achieve this so far.

I have my hopes up for Centurion (also not Gladiator, but lots of bloody battling by horror specialist Neil Marshall), Knight and Day (a Tom Cruise/Cameron Diaz action flick that almost passed under my radar unnoticed) and of course The A-Team. The last theater trailer for it proved lots of laughs, explosive action and hardly any eighties nostalgia. Which is good.

But the film of this summer, and the trailer shows that it is a lot more BLAM than I would have expected from the plot summary, is Christopher Nolan’s Inception. Right now I would bet money on it being the new Matrix. But I’m not a betting man. And I have already been wrong on a number of films this season. But the trailer looks, well, just have a look:

Controversial but Outright Funny – the Kick-Ass review

Kick-Ass is not made by a major studio. And that makes perfect sense. Big responsible companies could not possibly risk their image with a film in which an eleven year old girls runs around slaughtering criminals and enlivening her dialogue with ‘fucks’ and ‘cunts’ every now and then.

I will be honest: I found the idea and its execution very, very disturbing. Violence in film, even extreme violence can be justified. It can be properly motivated (historical epics), thematically correct (spaghetti westerns) or aesthetically sensible (kung-fu movies). It can also be exploitative (the Saw series) and/or sickening (Inglourious Basterds). In Kick-Ass it is reasonably motivated and aesthetically sensible. It is a bit exploitative but not really sickening. However, the fact that all this pain and suffering is inflicted by an eleven year old child is simply morally wrong. I do not think that it will inspire young kids to go out on the street and cut drug dealers to pieces, but it does disturb me that human beings are disposed of as computer game characters or movie thugs in a film that for the largest part seems to question the idea of impersonating super heroes in real life.

So far the moral dimension and issues with Kick-Ass. Because if these are set aside, what remains is one of the most moving, entertaining and funniest films of the year. Director-writer Matthew Vaughn could not get his film funded by major studios, and takes full advantage of the lack of ‘suit-supervision’ and the creative freedom this gives him. His film is highly paced, full of very physical jokes (exploiting to the max the fun that can be had of seeing other people take punches) and populated by highly sympathetic characters that go through major emotional developments.

Protagonist Kick-Ass (real name: Dave Lizewski, played by Aaron Johnson) is a normal kid in high school, with the special power of being invisible to girls. He has lost a parent, but his mother was not killed by a criminal; she suffered a heart attack. One day, after being robbed for the umpteenth time, he decides to become a superhero, ordering a diving suit from the internet. Untrained as he is, he mostly gets his own ass kicked, but he does manage to become a Youtube phenomenon.

Dave’s somewhat geeky friends, his eventually found girlfriend and her friends are very likable, but also show the social mercilessness of teenage youngsters. Mark Strong is Hollywood’s new to-go-for bad guy (after RocknRolla and Sherlock Holmes, and with the upcoming Robin Hood), and in this he is effective, combining scariness with good parenting.

However, the movie belongs to Hit Girl (the infamous eleven year old, played by Chloe Moretz) and her father Big Daddy (Nicholas Cage, who has a major career boom this year with this film and Werner Herzog’s Bad Lieutenant), a former cop who is bent on destroying the drugs dealer that destroyed his career. He trains his daughter to be an assassin (to the point of shooting her in the chest to train her to take bullets with a bullet proof vest on), but also enjoys having a marshmallow topped hot chocolate with her. Together, they have the best scenes in the film, and provide most of the laughs.

A special plus for the film concerns the way in which Dave takes on a second double identity in the pursuit of his dream girl. Without giving too much away, it should be said that Kick-Ass deals with this issue in the most mature and natural way I have so far seen in any film aimed at such a big audience.

A minus is the stylistic gimmick of presenting establishing shots as comic book illustrations. It is a move back into the world of ‘real’ comic book heroes, and away from the real life flesh-and-blood characters and the multidimensional story of the film.

Another minus concerns the soundtrack, which is too obviously a collage from the soundtracks of other recent films. At one point I felt really moved by a scene, because of the music, but once I realized it was actually the soundtrack of Danny Boyle’s Sunshine I was sucked out of the scene, and almost out of the film, and was plummeted back in my theater seat. I suddenly recognized the horror of the violence in the scene, and became concerned with the moral issues I have with the film that it had almost made me forget. 

But then the climax of the film rounded off a running gag with a bazooka in such a hilarious way that I was able to look past all that again. Just don’t take under aged children with you to this film. Really, don’t. But do go. And laugh your concerns away.



Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.