Showing posts with label chris nolan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chris nolan. Show all posts

Monday, June 17, 2013

Man of Steel

2.5/4 stars

After the wise decision to abandon the story arc of 2006’s laborious Superman Returns and give the franchise a true reboot under the supervision of Christopher Nolan and David S. Goyer, fans had hope that Man of Steel would be the film that finally does for Superman what Nolan and Goyer’s Dark Knight trilogy did for Batman. Seeing Zack Snyder, director of the excellent Watchmen adaptation, at the helm certainly didn’t hurt either. But Man of Steel is at best a partial success in this goal, burdened with an excess of increasingly meaningless action scenes and too little background to hold them together.

The film opens with an extended sequence set in the last days of Krypton, starring Russell Crowe as Superman’s biological father Jor-El and featuring plenty of action scenes of its own. This sequence serves to introduce the origin of Superman himself, as well as antagonist General Zod, and the primary McGuffin. The first thing that struck me was this film’s incredible lack of patience. It’s always providing us with beautiful, interesting things to look at and almost no time to take them in. This Kryptonian prelude manages to feel overwritten and underdeveloped at the same time.

When the movie gets going, it does manage to draw compelling versions of the Superman cast. Henry Cavill plays the title role with all the requisite charm and authority, and Amy Adams’ Lois Lane may be one of the best interpretations of the character yet. There are good supporting performances too, particularly Laurence Fishburne’s intimidating but fatherly Perry White. Two of my favorite television actors, Richard Schiff and Tahmoh Penikett, are also seen, but sorely underutilized. The script also provides plenty of interesting opportunities for dramatic hooks and variations on the known Superman mythos. But the film doesn’t seem to care about any of this back story it introduces, as it pushes aside any chance for real drama or unpredictable complications in favor of more straightforward action sequences. Superman has no time to establish himself as a hero, or have any interaction with most of his supporting cast, because the moment Clark Kent discover the truth about himself, he inadvertently broadcasts his location to General Zod and the rest of the Kryptonian refugees, and from there the action hardly takes a breath.

Michael Shannon’s turn as Zod is another missed opportunity. Shannon is a fantastic actor, capable of playing a rational yet ruthless enemy. But the plot robs him of any real chance to communicate with Superman with anything other than his fists, leaving the stakes of their conflict feeling half-baked. On the occasions when the movie does pause for a dramatic moment, it’s usually a flashback of young Clark being taught some formative lesson by Pa Kent. There’s nothing wrong with these scenes per se, and they’re made no worse by Kevin Costner’s familiar paternal presence, but Goyer hits the same note too many times, and in the process, misses the opportunity to have Clark’s character development more relevant to the people he interacts with in the main story.

Man of Steel has all the ingredients necessary to be the kind of superhero epic that stands beside The Dark Knight or the recent string of quality offerings from Marvel. But it isn’t that movie, nonetheless, because the filmmakers decided they had time for more explosions and special effects, but not enough for good storytelling.

Friday, September 5, 2008

Memento

4/4 stars

I don't really know what to say about this movie. It's amazing. Three actors carry almost the entire movie, and one fairly complicated plot. Thematically dense. A triumph for its director, Chris Nolan. Stands up well to repeated viewings, and in fact almost demands them. It's a sad thing when you finally understand all this movie's mysteries, because unraveling them is such fun.

Written June 26, 2007.

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

The Dark Knight

4/4 stars

When Spider-Man 2 came out, and in the years following, I've been one of many moviegoers to treat it as a guide on what the superhero film looks like at its best. Now, after my second viewing of The Dark Knight, there is no doubt left in my mind that Nolan's new film has supplanted the wall-crawler's second outing as the apogee of that genre. As it was with Raimi's Spider-Man series, the first installment existed to make way for the second, because an origin is an obligatory part of a superhero series, not because the best storytelling takes place there. Having reminded the audience of the already familiar characters and setting with the first movie, the second seems to be where the real work begins. Spider-Man 2 was the best at the time because we had never seen a truer attempt at a character-driven yet iconic superhero tale. The Dark Knight succeeds in many of the same places, through the synthesis of the most potent images and story elements that the source material has to offer. The film's influences will be appreciable to those familiar with them, particularly the graphic novels The Long Halloween and The Killing Joke, but also quite noticabley Michael Mann's exceptional film Heat, all of which are consulted, rather than copied, to create an entirely new story. But where Dark Knight surpasses the earlier film is in offering characters who are not just fully developed and faithful renditions of their comic book counterparts, but take on the role of mythic figures, battling to shape their world, as they were originally envisioned. This movie is a full-blown epic, with all the moral gravity and tragic poetry that such a title implies. The city of Gotham as delivered by Nolan is a living organism, and the actions of Batman, and The Joker (yes, Heath Ledger is excellent), and Harvey Dent and Jim Gordon carry weight and consequences therein. Seven Batman movies have been theatrically released in my lifetime, but the latest two have risen easily to the top of the pile. Christopher Nolan has saved the franchise from obsolescence and embarrassment, while intelligent and inspired films like The Dark Knight, the Spider-Man series and V for Vendetta continue to save the superhero genre from irrelevance.

Written July 21, 2008.