Posts Tagged ‘Chris Evans’

Captain America: The First Avenger

July 21, 2011

Actually, yes, the United States did flirt with eugenics for a while, and Nazi Germany did try to vaporize whole populations, but of course those scenes played out a lot less wholesomely than do the plot points in “Captain America: The First Avenger.” Even having the word “avenger” in its title at all seems bold for the movie in question, whose emotional baseline is so safe, so neutral, that for a while there he might as well be Captain Switzerland. (Consider also the perforated cheese of the plot.)

Just have a little faith, avers director Joe Johnston, with writers Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely, for maybe you can get a good summer blockbuster from a comic book based on a 70-year-old propaganda trope. Just like maybe you can get a metabolically enhanced “super-soldier” from a puny and sickly but brave and eager kid.

Chances are better than average if the kid’s played by Chris Evans, who got into superhero movies as the man on fire in “Fantastic Four” but now at last inhabits his more suitable element. Here he is as Steve Rogers, the willing World War II enlistee who actualizes a pronouncement made by Stanley Tucci’s sagely-schmaltzy German scientist: “A weak man knows the value of strength.” However weird it is to behold those early scenes with Evans’ head digitally grafted onto somebody else’s much less brawny body, his face and voice seem durable and reassuring. Swerving away from self-pity and into plausible humility, passing tests of character with declarative pluck, his Rogers is as ready for this particular promotion to captain as anybody can be — ready to stand up and sacrifice himself, if necessary, for the privilege of luxuriating in chastely spiffy, square-jawed Americana.

This is twice-filtered nostalgia, really, as Johnston draws much from the vintage Lucas-Spielberg playbook, itself a study of the pulp serials those directors grew up with. But moral reductiveness affords a certain popcorn-compatible clarity of presentation. In “Captain America”’s world, every Allied soldier is a decent guy, every woman a pin-up-worthy beauty, every authority figure an avuncular wit and every villain a faceless monster — be he a bondage-hooded foot soldier or, well, the aptly named Red Skull. Sebastian Stan, Hayley Atwell, Tommy Lee Jones and Hugo Weaving pose very naturally in these respective categories, each enjoying and enlivening the proceedings considerably. Meanwhile Toby Jones gives a glimmer of intelligence to a sub-par supporting role in just such a way as to suggest we’d all be better served had the role been reduced to a single scene.

Affability can’t last forever, and doesn’t, in a film so willing to neutralize its own personality for the sake of humdrum plot. But overall it does compare favorably with recently reviewed YouTube snippets of the draggy 1979 “Captain America” TV movie, which plays like educational-film-strip kitsch, and the 1990 attempt, which appears to have just plain sucked.

Determinedly, this one works as another component of a now familiar franchise kit. Iron Man’s father is here, and the inter-dimensional portal that brought us Thor, and so on. As to that bold extra bit of title, it too obviously sets up next summer’s “The Avengers” — cleverly encouraging us to wonder just how the good captain’s super-square valor and virtue will play in (the comic book movie version of) the America of now.

Scott Pilgrim vs. The World

August 12, 2010

It’s like a comic. It’s like a vintage video game. It’s like every Michael Cera movie rolled into one big video for an innocuous Canadian indie-rock band. It’s like the graphic novels of Bryan Lee O’Malley adapted by the director of “Shaun of the Dead” and “Hot Fuzz.” Oh, wait, it isn’t like that last one; it is it.

“Scott Pilgrim vs. the World” is a pop-culture defenestrator. It keeps throwing references out the window — not to be done with them, you understand, but to see them fly. It makes no sense and perfect sense.

Scott, played by Cera, is an underemployed 22-year-old garage-band bassist, living in snowy suburban Toronto with a gay buddy (Kieran Culkin) and leading on an impossibly adoring high-school girl (Ellen Wong) in order to rebound from that one ex who “kicked his heart’s ass” (Brie Larson). Although repeatedly described as a ladykiller, he’s clearly just another of Cera’s quavering lovelorn dorks, waiting impatiently for the next infatuation.

That would be Ramona Flowers (Mary Elizabeth Winstead), the stoic pseudo-punk beauty who just moved up here from New York to get away from her past. And all the smitten Scott has to do to be with her is throw down with her seven evil exes, who’ll otherwise kick his ass’s ass. These include Chris Evans, Brandon Routh, Mae Whitman, Jason Schwartzman and others, each level-upping the last in a pageant of deliberately preposterous, “Mortal Kombat”-style set-pieces. Scott gets no pity from his older sister (Anna Kendrick) and not much help from his bandmates (Mark Webber, Alison Pill and Johnny Simmons), but he does get fair warning from Ramona that she might be trouble (let alone the most austerely characterized female movie love interest since Zooey Deschanel in “(500) Days of Summer”).

And still he persists. Dauntlessness is “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World”‘s secret weapon — its only weapon, really. What fun to see that director Edgar Wright, who co-scripted with Michael Bacall, seems somehow to keep himself perpetually inspired. Here, Wright’s possibly compulsive mashing up of genres and tropes repeatedly teeters toward embarrassment at how silly it all is (quite), only then to burst into yet another frenzy of contagious mirth — with every onscreen smooch abetted by a text of “kissy kissy” or a confetti of pink hearts or music by Beck or Metric or Frank Black or Broken Social Scene.

The clunky hodgepodge of cultural flotsam somehow befits the film’s callow but eager protagonist. Maybe it’s something about the resiliency of the young lover’s heart, this sense that his heartbreak seems ultimately as immaterial as his physical punishment: Pummeled and trampled and flung through walls, Scott emerges always without a scratch and duly prepped for the next round. The movie, similarly resilient, just keeps on keeping on with its punchy sight gags and one-liners — even when they only work on one level instead of the attempted three. Even when they don’t work at all.

So maybe the best way to read “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World” is in the first person, as an awkward metaphor for the intense, messy process of romantic maturation. Don’t say you don’t know what it’s like.

 

Sunshine

July 26, 2007

It begins with a solemn voice-over narration: “Our sun is dying. Mankind faces extinction.” Oh, here we go. Again with the facing extinction. What is it with these movies?

Well, in the case of Sunshine, it’s a steady diet of other movies. Director Danny Boyle and writer Alex Garland, who together raised the zombie flick from the dead with 28 Days Later, now rocket headlong into to the quasi-arty science-fiction thriller, with pretty, precious and willfully predictable results. Their taste could be called omnivorous—recognizable seasonings vary from the exquisite (2001Solaris) to the savory (Alien) to the emptily caloric (Event HorizonArmageddon)—and the feast they offer could be called delicious. Just be ready for the food-coma stupor of dulled imagination.

So, OK, the sun’s prematurely burning out, the Earth’s sinking into fatal hypothermia, and a team of eight brave astronauts are off to do something about it. It’s strenuous work, and we’re meant to worry for them. Character development aside (because that’s where Garland and Boyle prefer it), these civilization savers are traveling sunward in a ship called Icarus, which doesn’t exactly inspire confidence. Worse, it’s the Icarus II; this vessel’s predecessor was lost—very reasonably presumed to have perished—on a similar mission several years ago.

The mission, however mythically ominous, actually is quite straightforward: Fly up real close, park, jump-start the great golden giver of life with the mother of all nuclear projectiles, go home. The bomb itself, we’re told, is roughly the size of Manhattan Island. Oh, like that’s a lot? The sun is 865,000 miles in diameter, for crying out loud. You could fit about a million Earths into it. What’s this little firecracker gonna do? OK, fine, suspension of disbelief and all, but Boyle should know that the price of genre authenticity, especially in this genre, is nitpicking geekery. More to the point, though, if the movie really wants to ask a philosophical question, how about this one: Is any species that’s capable of making such an efficiently annihilative weapon really worth saving?

Anyway, on the way to destiny some issues come up. Space madness seems inevitable, its sources as various as beatific heliolatry and bad math: One crew member gets a little too rah rah for Ra on the observation deck, another screws up a crucial calculation and becomes suicidal. Stuff gets fried and falls apart. It’s all precipitated by the crew having good reason to wonder whether the other Icarus might still be out there—its crew, and maybe more importantly, its payload, still intact. (Two big bombs, after all, are better than one.) Would a diversion and attempted rendezvous be prudent?

That decision falls to the ship’s prodigious young physicist, played by Cillian Murphy. Yep, more suspended disbelief: The science of that casting doesn’t really check out, either. But Murphy is what’s best about this movie, and not just because his otherworldly blue eyes evoke that freaky, awestruck yet all-knowing fetus from 2001. His is a necessarily humanizing performance in a film whose other actors (ship’s captain Hiroyuki Sanada, pilot Rose Byrne, shrink Cliff Curtis, engineer Chris Evans, oxygen-garden groundskeeper Michelle Yeoh, among others) have little to do, or offer, and just about the only natural-seeming dialogue is spoken by the onboard computer—because it at least is supposed to seem machine-like. (Waxing poetic is not advised for Garland, as it yields such lines as “ashes to ashes, stardust to stardust.”)

As the plot thickens, Boyle dwells on his team’s other, non-literary, talents: the lovely, luminous, Apple-computer-conference-esque production design by Mark Tildesley; the sufficient soundtrack electronica by Underworld; the director’s own penchant for ratcheting action up with shaky shots, subliminal flash frames, hurried cutting, human sacrifice.

At first it’s a wonderfully unsettling survey, contrasting the frozen void of infinite space with the fierce, incinerating violence of a stellar furnace—each so eerily beautiful, so calmly brutal. And it’s appropriately, cinematically dreamlike, akin to the low-grade hallucinations that sometimes stir under your eyelids after too much sunbathing.

But before long Boyle and Garland have all but abandoned their half-assed climate-change allegory (no great loss), and stopped picking at the sci-fi homage buffet. Needing closure, apparently, they lapse into familiar horror-flick shock tactics. It seems cheap, and dodgy, and would pass for immediate gratification were it not so tediously protracted and unrewarding. It’s unfortunate, but true, what they say: Stare at it too long and you’ll really hurt yourself.

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