Tag Archive | "Captain America: The First Avenger"

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Rumor: Renner Being Dropped By Marvel Studios

Posted on 15 May 2013 by William Gatevackes

The-Avengers-Jeremy-Renner-Hawkeye
If ComicBookMovie is correct, it appears that Jeremy Renner did not learn the lessons of Terrence Howard and Edward Norton and will now pay the price for it.

The website is quoting “Hollywood sources” in saying that the actor who played Clint Barton/Hawkeye in both Thor and The Avengers is being dropped by Marvel Studios, mainly due to negative comments he made about his role in the latter film.

Renner was candid in his feelings about the way his character was portrayed on screen in an interview with Total Film magazine:

“For 90 percent of the movie, I’m not the character I signed on to play. It’s kind of a vacancy. [He's] not even a bad guy, because there’s not really a consciousness to him. To take away who that character is and just have him be this robot, essentially, and have him be this minion for evil that Loki uses … I was limited, you know what I mean? I was a terminator in a way. Fun stunts. But is there any sort of emotional content or thought process? No.”

To be fair to Renner, he does have a point. On the other hand, Hawkeye pretty much serves the same purpose as Scarlett Johansson’s Black Widow character, and since Johansson joined the Marvel family first, she gets to play the hero and they had to find something else for Renner to do. That being said, even in the 10% of the film where he WAS the character he signed on to play, he really didn’t make that much of an impression. His quiver had more personality than his Hawkeye did.

But regardless, Marvel has made a point not keeping any actor who is unhappy or unable to work the Marvel way. Terrence Howard was rumored to be difficult to work with during Iron Man. so his role as James Rhodes was minimized in the sequel and he was asked to take a substantial pay cut. He balked and was allowed to walk and Don Cheadle (who was rumored to be Marvel’s first choice originally) took his place. Edward Norton was supposedly so hands-on during The Incredible Hulk that rumor has it he even did script rewrites on set. This didn’t sit well with Marvel or Joss Whedon, so in The Avengers he was replaced with Mark Ruffalo (who was rumored to also be Marvel’s first choice for the role). Hugo Weaving has also been very vocal about  not being excited about his role as the Red Skull in Captain America: The First Avenger and has expressed not being interested in reprising his role in the future. Well, everyone from Toby Jones to Hayley Atwell to Dominic Cooper will be back for Captain America: The Winter Soldier, but not Weaving.

All of this makes the rumor very plausible. And all things considered, this might be the best thing for Renner. He has a burgeoning franchise in Hansel and Gretel: Witch Hunters(which made an inexplicable amount of money overseas), appears to be in line to take over the Mission Impossible franchise in the event Tom Cruise ever lets go of it, and while many view The Bourne Legacy as a disappointing entry into the franchise, it made enough money worldwide that he might be in the mix if they continue with it. While, at Marvel, his next appearance would have been in a similar, low-key capacity in The Avengers 2. Hawkeye wouldn’t be even considered for a solo film until 2016, and there are a lot of characters, concepts and ideas in development ahead of him.

The source also brings up the possibility of the character being recast and appearing on the Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. TV series. If the role is recast, it will probably be with whoever Marvel’s first choice for the role was.

Comments (0)

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Will We See More Of CAPTAIN AMERICA’S Peggy Carter At San Diego Comic-Con?

Posted on 19 April 2013 by William Gatevackes

HayleyAtwellCaptainAmerica

Even though Hayley Atwell’s Peggy Carter was only in a little bit of Captain America: The First Avenger, she seems to have made an impression fans. And thanks to those fans, we’ll be seeing a little bit more of her.

Atwell was interviewed by The Age about her possible involvement in Captain America: The Winter Soldier, involvement she is reticent to confirm or deny even though she is included in a cast list in an official press release from Marvel. However, she did reveal that footage featuring her would be shown and a certain comic book convention:

“There’s been an online campaign for Peggy to be featured. People really liked her. So Marvel have made sure that as part of Comicon there will be a little kind of snapshot as to what Peggy’s actually really capable of, which was finished here and which was great fun. Hopefully, it will lead to other things.”

Brendon Connelly over at  Bleeding Cool seems to think that Peggy Carter will be making an appearance in a Marvel One-Shot, a line of short subjects that began with The Consultant on the Thor Blu-Ray, continued with A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Thor’s Hammer on the Captain America: The First Avenger Blu-Ray and  Item 47, a short that was attached to The Avengers Blu-Ray. Even though the last two had at best a transitory connection to the Marvel Film Universe, using these One-Shots to flesh out supporting characters who might not be able to support their own film is a great idea.

However, the way it sounds is that footage being shown will not be as long as the shorts typically run. So what this footage might be might be scenes from Winter Soldier featuring Peggy.

I guess we’ll see in a couple months when Comic-Con rolls around.

Comments (0)

Tags: , , , ,

Will Hayley Atwell Be In CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE WINTER SOLDIER After All?

Posted on 13 February 2013 by William Gatevackes

HayleyAtwell1 There is a long-standing military term that goes “loose lips sink ships.” Well, if Hollywood was run like the military, Stanley Tucci would be in line for a court-marshall and Hayley Atwell might be in line for a Silver Star.

It was less than a month and a half ago that Hayley Atwell disappointed Peggy Carter fans by breaking the news that the character would not be returning for the Captain America: The First Avenger sequel, Captain America: The Winter Soldier. At the time, the news made sense because the sequel would be set in the present day, which would make Peggy at least 90 years old, a stretch (or at least an extensive make-up job) for the 30-something Atwell to pull off.

However, we have new information that might prove that Atwell was engaging in a cunning display of subterfuge at that time. Because her First Avenger co-star (and post-filming friend) Stanley Tucci told a very different story than Atwell.

In an interview with Collider promoting Jack the Giant Slayer, when asked if he was getting a cameo as Prof. Erskine, Tucci let slip that Atwell WAS coming back for a cameo.

No, they haven’t, unfortunately.  I’m really sad.  I know that Hayley is going back to do a flashback scene, but I have not been asked.

The matter-of-fact way Tucci tells us that Peggy will have a flashback in the film lends veracity to the statement. Add to that the fact that if the Winter Soldier is in fact Bucky like he is in the comic books, and if Emily Van Camp is playing Sharon Carter as she is rumored too, flashbacks and Peggy Carter need to be part of the film.

We’ll see who is telling the truth on April 4, 2014.

Comments (0)

Tags: , , , , , , ,

Jessica Biel Cast As The Viper In THE WOLVERINE

Posted on 13 July 2012 by William Gatevackes

The more I hear about The Wolverine, the more I like it. It has the potential to be one of the most faithful comic book adaptations to date. And the casting of a big name in a major role gives us a little more insight into what the film’s plot may be.

Deadline is reporting that Jessica Biel has been cast as The ViperThis will be Biel’s second Marvel film. She has played Abigail Whistler in 2004′s Blade: Trinity.

The Viper character has had a long and interesting history in comics. She first appeared in Captain America #110, created by writer/artist Jim Steranko. She is an international terrorist, and her plots have brought her into conflict with Captain America, Spider-Man, Spider Woman, and many other Marvel heroes.

I have spoke about her involvement with the comic book storyline The Wolverine appears to be partially adapted from here. Her inclusion will hopefully mean that the partnership of the Viper and Silver Samurai will carry over from the comics, but it also means that unless she only comes in during the final act of the film, the film storyline will have to be very different than the comics that inspired them (her character and the Silver Samurai appears after conflict between Wolverine and Shingen is over).

Also missing, presumably,  will be The Viper’s connection to HYDRA, the Marvel Comics terrorist organization that was brought to the screen in Captain America: The First Avenger. On the surface, her comic book involvement might seem like something that can easily be erased for the film,  but she once was known as Madame Hydra in the comics. Perhaps this could appear as a bit of subtle continuity between the Fox films and the Marvel films if they keep this tidbit intact.

Regardless, between this, her involvement with Blade: Trinity, and her role in the upcoming Total Recall remake, she is developing quite the geek cred.

Comments (0)

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

AMC Offers The Ultimate Marvel Marathon In May

Posted on 12 March 2012 by William Gatevackes

You’ve got to love AMC Theaters. Much like they do with the Academy Award nominees each year, the theater chain is offering comic book movie fans of great endurance a chance to see all six Marvel films (Iron Man, The Incredible Hulk, Iron Man 2, Thor, Captain America: The First Avenger and The Avengers) on the big screen, one after the other, all on the same day. Well, two days if you count The Avengers being a midnight showing. That day would be May 3rd.

Tickets for the event are on sale at these theaters:

  • Boston Common 19,  Boston, MA
  • Burbank 16,  Burbank, CA
  • Downtown Disney 12,  Anaheim, CA
  • Aventura 24,  Aventura, FL
  • Empire 25,  New York, NY
  • Garden State 16,  Paramus, NJ
  • Downtown Disney 24,  Lake Buena Vista, FL
  • Metreon 16,  San Francisco, CA
  • Alderwood 16,  Lynnwood, WA
  • Tysons Corner 16,  McLean, VA

You can also buy tickets for The Avengers alone at those theaters, if there are any available.  More participating theaters will be announced on March 16.  Tickets for the Marathon cost $40 for the whole day, which comes out to an economical $6.67 per film. The film viewing orgy starts at 11:30 am.

Be forewarned! Thor, Captain America: The First Avenger and The Avengers will be shown in 3D, but it appears that you will be able to select from a choice of four commemorative 3D glasses.

For more information, including the expanded list of theaters, visit http://go.amctheatres.com/marvel

Comments (0)

Tags: , , ,

Dissecting The New THE AVENGERS Poster

Posted on 28 February 2012 by William Gatevackes

The new poster for The Avengers has hit the Internet today, and, for the first time, we get to see the whole team on one page. More discussions after the poster.

It is always fun to over-analyze these things. And that’s just what I’ll do now.

  1. Judging by my piss-poor knowledge of Manhattan, it appears we are looking west from First or Second Avenue, judging by the Chrysler Building being on the right. What throws me off is that other than the Chrysler Building, none of the architecture quite matches. There should be an overpass directly past the Chrysler, crossing over 42nd Street at Park that just ain’t in the poster, folks. It should be right behind Sam Jackson’s head. That overpass leads Park around Grand Central Terminal. If you recall, we do see some signage in the trailer that indicates that some of the action takes place near GCT, or, well, a Cleveland-ized version of GCT. So, it’s safe to say that the alien invasion will be hitting the East Side of Manhattan near 42nd Street. Perhaps the battle will start at the United Nations building which is right at the end of 42nd street facing the river.
  2. Another piece of architecture that is out of place, this time deliberately, is the addition of the Stark Tower in the background. This would be the Manhattan headquarters of Stark Industries and in the present-day comics serves as the Avengers home base. Not sure this will carry over into the film, but if it does, they will be pretty close to the action.
  3. From the looks of it, it seems the Stark Tower is located directly in the heart of Midtown, perhaps even on Times Square.  Again, as you recall at the end of Captain America: The First Avenger, Cap wakes up in present day Manhattan and is a few steps from Times Square (at least being able to run there from where he was held). It was implied that Cap was at a S.H.I.E.L.D. installation, but could he have woken up at Stark Tower? It is possible that both Stark Tower and that S.H.I.E.L.D. installation could be on the same block in the busiest section of Manhattan, but it could be something else. And here, you thought that all Times Square had nowadays were overpriced theme restaurants, gaudy neon signage, and dicey bodegas selling cheaply made tourist souvenirs.
  4. In something not tied into me being anal about Manhattan geography and trying to play into the world-building for the franchise, for some reason I find it funny that those who normally wears a mask isn’t wearing one.  It has the air of a contractually-mandated dictum that we must see Mr. Evans and Mr. Downey Jr’s faces in any and all publicity for the film, but it kind of spoils the tense mood the poster is trying to create. I want to scream, “Tony! Put your helmet on! The aliens who may or may not be the Skrulls are coming!”
  5. And I don’t know if this is deliberate or not (but it probably is) the character who have already had movies are pretty much arranged, front to back, in the order of their films’ grosses.
  6. Also, does the fact that Scarlett Johansson is the only member of the cast who does not have a solo film whose face isn’t obscured with shadow mean that the Black Widow will be the first of the non-film group to get their own movie? Or is it just because Scar Jo is gorgeous?
  7. Love the “A” in May. Love it.

The Avengers opens May 4.

 

Comments (2)

Tags: , , , , , ,

Marvel Releases Digital Comic Prelude To THE AVENGERS

Posted on 06 February 2012 by William Gatevackes

The Super Bowl ad wasn’t the only thing related to The Avengers that was relased yesterday. Marvel also released the first issue of a digital miniseries that is advertised as a canonical prequel to the May 4 film.

Marvel’s The Avengers Prelude: Fury’s Big Week is a eight-week digital comic book focusing on Samuel L. Jackson’s Nick Fury, and purports to fill in the blanks between the Iron Man films, The Incredible Hulk, Thor and Captain America: The First Avenger and set the stage for this year’s blockbuster.

Much like your neighborhood crack dealer, Marvel is offering the first, twelve-page issue for free, the rest you have to pay for. The remaining issues will be released every Tuesday starting February 14th for seven weeks and will cost $.99 each.

The book can be purchased through the Marvel app for you smart devices, or through the digital comic service, Comixology.  What if digital comics are not your thing? Well, considering the fact the digital series will be ending in March, it just might be collected into a analog, ink and paper format sometime in April before the film arrives in theaters.

Of course, FilmBuffOnline has its own Marvel Universe Cinematic Timeline as well if you want another way of seeing how all these films fit together.

Comments (0)

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

2011 In Review: What The Top Ten Grossers Say About The State of Cinema

Posted on 24 December 2011 by William Gatevackes

If we had to guess what the highest grossing films of 2011 would be back in January, I’d think we’d be able to get the list about 80% right. We might have substituted Green Lantern for Fast Five, maybe Kung Fu Panda 2 for Rise of the Planet of the Apes, but we could probably guess the rest.
Which isn’t to say that the list isn’t surprising. This year’s list of top grossing films tells us something surprising about the state of the cinema today and where it will go in the future. All we have to do is look at the connections.

Numbers accurate as of 10:30 pm, December 15th.

  1. The entire list tells us that foreign grosses are very important these days: Overseas grosses were once icing on the cake. A nice addition, but not quite as important as domestic grosses. Not anymore. Each of the Top Ten films have grossed more internationally than they did domestically (sometimes two or three times more). Each and every film had their production budget covered by their foreign grosses (Transformers: Dark of the Moonmade it’s $195 million budget back from Foreign grosses in its first weekend–and then some!). The foreign market can now make or break a film. This is why most producers of blockbusters create these films with an eye on how they would do overseas.
  2. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 and The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 1 show that the literary blockbuster is going out with a bang–maybe: The Harry Potter and Twilight franchises are on opposite poles when it comes to quality, both in book form and on the screen. But both have rabid fanbases that guaranteed that every film in the line would sell gangbusters. But, unfortunately for Warner Brothers and Summitt Entertainment, this year marks the end of the Harry Potter franchise and the penultimate installment of the Twilight one. It is unlikely that any literary adaptations, even the eagerly awaited The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and Hunger Games adaptations in the pipeline, will match the success of these two. It’s an end of an era.
  3. The Hangover Part II shows that originality might officially be dead: Some of you might say that the whole list tells you this. After all, the two movies that aren’t sequels are comic book adaptations and the highest grossing “original” film, Bridesmaids, could only reach as high as #12. But  The Hangover Part II takes lack of originality to a new level. It was essentially the same film as The Hangover. It had the same premise, the same plot points, and the same ending. Well, not exactly the same. Ed Helms has a facial tattoo instead of a missing tooth and they have to take a Buddhist monk back to his home instead of a baby, but the films were essentially the same. I have nothing against sequels that continue a story. But to simply rehash the same formula, note for note, shows how far the sequel has fallen. And the fact that it was such a success means that we might see more of these carbon copy sequels in the future.
  4. Thor and Captain America: The First Avenger prove that the comic book film, at least ones from Marvel, isn’t dead…yet: Granted, both films grossed less than Iron Man did in his first go around, but each film–with foreign grosses added–were able to make a sizable profit, enough to warrant sequels for both. Both were fairly well reviewed. We might have to hold off a final judgement until we see how The Avengers, The Dark Knight Rises and The Man of Steel do before we can definitively prove the genre healthy, but it certainly ain’t dead yet.
  5. Transformers: Dark of the Moon, The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn, The Hangover Part II, Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides, and Cars 2 prove that a film doesn’t have to be good to be successful: The above five films have an average Fresh rating of 34% over at Rotten Tomatoes.com, the review aggragate site. The site considers 60% or above to be a good film, just to put in perspective how poorly reviewed these films really are. So if you’re the type of person who hates that Hollywood keeps putting out crap year in and year out, well, don’t hate Hollywood. Hate your friends and neighbors who see sparkly vampires and robots beating the grease out of one another again and again.
  6. Rise of the Planet of the Apes is a sign that reboots can work, so expect to see more of them: 2001′s Planet of the Apes was supposed to be the film to reboot the franchise. And while it did make a profit, the was critically panned. The reboot was deemed a failure. However, the trend in Hollywood today is that if at first a reboot does not succeed, reboot again. This time around, reviews were better and the money was still there, so it appears that the second time was a charm. Don’t think Hollywood didn’t notice, and be on the look out for more reboots and reboots of reboots in the future.
  7. Fast Five says that there is an alternative to reboots–going back to basics: 2006′s The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift was supposed to be a new direction for the franchise, if not a complete reboot. It grossed the least amount of an F&F film, and the franchise appeared to be dead. 2009′s Fast & Furious reunited the principals from the first film and revitalized the franchise, and this fifth installment was the highest grossing yet. There are plans for a Fast Six and a Fast Seven to be shot back to back. So, in some cases, the best reboot is no reboot at all.
  8. Cars 2 shows a chink in the Pixar armor: The film was the lowest domestic grossing Pixar film since 1998′s A Bug’s Life. And it was the poorest reviewed Pixar film of all time. For other studios and genres, this would not be that much of a problem. However, Pixar has set the standard in CGI animation in both quality and popularity. It has come out with dead solid perfect films each and every time until now. So the performance of this film, more from a reviews standpoint than an earnings one, IS a cause for concern. This makes next year’s Brave, with its rather pedestrian sword and sorcery plot that wouldn’t normally be a question of how Pixar would execute it, a more dicey proposition, one that could decided where this year was a blip on the radar or the start of a decline.

Chart courtesy of BoxOfficeMojo.com

 

Comments (0)

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

The Five Most Important Button Scenes In Cinema

Posted on 14 November 2011 by Rich Drees

The bumper or tag scene. It’s that short scene that comes after the end credits have finished, a little extra for those in the audience who have sat through the scroll list of names of the films grips, sound crew, special effects technicians and caterers. It usually doesn’t have much bearing on the preceding film, but is just a nice little Easter egg for those who stuck around.

Although cinema is over a century old, the tag scene has only come about I the last couple of decades. Up until the late-1960s, most films had their credits in the beginning, just a quick on-screen card or two to note the main crew members behind the film. Sometimes, the main cast list was reprised at the end of a film, but that was all. But as film loaders, grips, focus pullers, stand by painters, transportation captains, boom mic operators and more were added, the credits were shifted to the end of films, where they could play out while the audience left. It wouldn’t be long until someone decided that just because the credits were rolling it didn’t mean that the film was over.

Let’s take a look at the five most influential of these mid- and post-credit scenes.

Airplane!

When David Zucker, Jim Abrahams, and Jerry Zucker released Airplane! in the summer of 1980, they wound up rewriting many of the rules for film comedy. And one of those rules was that the laughs didn’t have to stop just because the films credits had started. Those Airplane! audience members who didn’t jump up and head for the exists the moment when Otto and his inflatable stewardess flew the TransAmerican jetliner off into a hail of fireworks were treated to a couple of gags buried with the film’s end credits crawl. (Generally In Charge Of A Lot Of Things – Mike Finnell, Author of A Tale Of Two Cities – Charles Dickens)

The topper came at the end of the credits, though with a quick little scene featuring the man in the cab who Ted Stryker (Robert Hayes) abandoned on the curbside of LAX at the beginning of the film. Although the film cuts back to him twice during its first 50 minutes, he isn’t seen for the rest of the picture. But Zucker, Abrams and Zucker hadn’t forgotten the poor soul and cut back to let us know that he was still waiting for Stryker to return to take him on his trip. But after waiting nearly the entire run-time of the film for his cabbie to come back, the now slightly frustrated man vows, “I’ll give him another twenty minutes! But that’s it!” A funny moment and one that is noteworthy as it appears to be the first time that a button scene appeared in a film.

“When In Hollywood, Visit Universal Studios. Ask for Babs.”

While not technically a tag scene, there is a joke that comes at the end of National Lampoon’s Animal House’s credits that calls back to something from the main part of the film. Specifically, the film’s closing moments revealing the futures facing members of the Delta and Omega fraternities. Martha Smith’s character of Babs is revealed to have become a tour guide at Universal Studios. At the time it was standard for Universal Studios films to have an end title card promoting their studio tour in Hollywood and Landis decided to give a last wink to any of the audience still in the theater by changing the card to read “When In Hollywood, Visit Universal Studios. Ask for Babs.”

The gag soon became one of Landis’s many signature touches; perhaps only second to his use of the phrase “See you next Wednesday.” He would use it for all of his subsequent movies made for Universal including The Blues Brothers (1980), An American Werewolf In London (1981), Coming Soon (1982), Into The Night (1985), Amazon Women On The Moon (1987) and Blues Brothers 2000. It also appears on the Animal House DVD supplement/mockumentary Where Are They Now?: A Delta Alumni Update.

Ferris Bueller’s Day Off

One of the refreshing aspects of Ferris Bueller’s Day Off was the amount of times that Matthew Broderick’s titular character broke the fourth wall to speak directly to the audience. It was something that hadn’t really been done in cinematic comedy since the days of the Marx Brothers, Bob Hope and Ollie and Johnson’s Hellzapoppin’. It is a conceit that carries right through to after the credits when Ferris pops back on screen and tells everyone to go home. Probably not a gag that really works in this day and age of home video, but it is still a nice last moment to end the film on.

While I can find no documentation to back it up, I have to wonder if this button scene started as an improvised joke on the set. Hughes was open to improvisation on the set and the moment where Ferris is singing “Danke Shone” in the shower grew out of Broderick practicing the song for the parade sequence while the crew was setting up the shower scene.

Wild Things

While not technically button scenes, there are several short scenes in the 1998 thriller Wild Things that were embedded into the closing credits crawl that revealed that what audiences thought they saw in the bulk of the film might not have been what actually happened. Which is saying something as the movie has several twists and turns.

By this time, it wasn’t completely unusual for a film to have additional material in the credits. Through the late 70s and early 80s, Burt Reynolds would customarily put shooting outtakes into the credits of his films to show how much fun the cast and crew had while making the film. It was a practice that Jackie Chan copied for his Hong Kong action films after he appeared in The Cannonball Run, but he used it to show that how dangerous many of the stunts he and his team performed really were. But Wild Things was one of the first to include material which could legitimately be called vital narrative material. (Yes, I know Ferris Bueller has the credit sequence scene with Rooney’s car getting towed and him having to hitch a ride on the bus, but it is a scene that isn’t really necessary to the story.) And in just a couple of years, the idea of narrative material at the end of the credit roll would be placed into ply by the next film on our list.

Iron Man

On May 2, 2008, comic book movie fans were buzzing about how Marvel Studios’ Iron Man may or may not end. Rumors had been circulating that Samuel L. Jackson had filmed a cameo for the film but early reviews didn’t mention it. It wasn’t until the first midnight screenings ended on the East Coast and folks took to the internet confirmed the existence of such a scene after the credits. Of course, the scene also opened up a flurry of new questions, most specifically, what did Jackson’s character Nick Fury mean when he referred to “The Avengers Initiative”?

The following Monday, during a quarterly earnings conference call Marvel formerly announced their plans to build an interconnected series of superhero franchise films that would culminate in one giant crossover/team-up film, The Avengers, confirming what fans were wildly speculating about over the previous 72 hours. And with only one scheduling change – Thor was originally marked to come out last summer and The Avengers was slotted for this summer – the studio has managed to keep on track for what could be considered the most ambitious bit of franchise management seen yet. And Marvel has continued to use button scenes at the end of all their films to help build that shared universe and tease the next film on their schedule. The result is the high-level of anticipation for next summer’s The Avengers even among non-comics fans.

Comments (0)

Tags: , , , , ,

Review: Captain America: The First Avenger

Posted on 22 July 2011 by William Gatevackes

If you were one of the people who were underwhelmed by this year’s comic book film offerings and were wondering when the really great comic book film would arrive, well, you can stop waiting. It’s finally here and its name is Captain America: The First Avenger. To comic book fans, it is a pitch perfect adaptation of one of Marvel’s oldest heroes with plenty of fan service easter eggs thrown in to keep them happy. To the non-comic literate, it is a rousing action film with humor, heart and characters you want to root for.

The film tells the story of Steve Rogers (Chris Evans), a man who weighs 98-lbs soaking wet, with a list of medical maladies a page long, who undergoes a special treatment to become a super soldier. He’s meant to be the first in a line of said soldiers, only the scientist responsible, Dr. Abraham Erksine (Stanley Tucci) is assassinated by a minion of one of his former test subjects, the Red Skull (Hugo Weaving). This sets off a cavalcade of mayhem as Cap and Red Skull move towards their inevitable conflict.

The best comic book films make the necessary sacrifices to years of comic book continuity in order to get a cohesive narrative, yet never lose sight of the spirit of the piece of the work they are adapting. That’s exactly what Captain America: The First Avenger does. There are several major changes from the comic book, especially in the relationship between Cap and Bucky, but the changes improve the film. But they capture what makes Captain America to a T, know what even some comic book writers don’t that Cap doesn’t represent America, he represents the American ideal–never giving up, never backing away from a fight for right even if the odds are insurmmounatable, and putting others above himself. All of this is in the character and present perfectly.

The film, for those of you who have never read a comic in your life, has a plot, and one that doesn’t just exist to move the story from one CGI effect to another. That recap I gave you two paragraphs back? That is only the barest minimum of a descriptions. The plot is far more complex that that, with many twists and turns.

You probably reminded of other films while watching this one, especially Star Wars (the Red Skull’s Stormtroopers look a lot like George Lucas’ Stormtroopers, and there is a motocycle chase through the woods that call to mind the speeder bike chase in Return of the Jedi), but this is less ripping off Star Wars than paying homage to the movie serials that inspired it. There are several “cliffhanger” moments in the film that would be right at home in an offering from Repubilc or Columbia in the 1940s.

Joe Johnson does a great job directing. There are so many little touches, so much attention to detail, that you can’t help to be immersed in the flick. We get the feel of the period, even though the bad guys are firing lasers at us. We willingly suspend disbelief because the creators of the film worked so hard to makes us do that.

The acting is first rate. Chris Evans, usually the cocky and sarcastic rogue in any number of films, plays well against type. He plays Rogers as a kind and earnest man, self-effacing and humble. You believe the weaker Rogers, which is Evans’ head CGIed on another man’s body, because that person never leaves Rogers’ personality. This is definitely some of Evans’ finest work.

Weaving gives an effortless performance as the evil Red Skull and Tommy Lee Jones is suitably errasable as Colonel Chester Phillips, Cap’s commanding officer. And Hayley Atwell plays the character of Peggy Carter with skill and brio. You’ll believe that she is as strong as she appears to be on the screen, and her chemistry with Evans make their tragic romance work.

There are a number of Easter Eggs for the loyal Cap fans in the audience. One “cameo” that takes place early in the film made me shout the character’s name out in the movie theater. And the introduction of Arnim Zola is an artistic reference to his comic book persona. And even though I have seen reviews that state there isn’t an extra scene after the credits, there is.

Captain America: The First Avenger ranks up there with some of the best comic book adaptions ever made. It is a fun time at the theater and offers a lot that other comic book films do not. It is well worth seeing.

Comments (0)