|
Iron Man
Reviewed By Rich Drees
There will be some reviewer who will feel the need to be apologetic
for liking Iron Man, as if something as disposable as a
summer action film can actually have good writing and acting as well
as a relevant subtext. These are the ones who have forgotten that
good filmmaking is good filmmaking, no matter what genre it happens
to be in. And let’s make no mistake, Iron Man is good
filmmaking.
Billionaire Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr.) is a restless genius. His
reputation as a billionaire lothario is tempered by the fact that he
heads one of the leading weapons development and manufacturing firms
in the world- Stark Enterprises. He knows the value of publicity and
showmanship which is probably why he personally goes to Afghanistan
to unveil a new weapons system for the military. Unfortunately,
while being escorted back to his plane, Stark’s military convoy is
attacked by Afghani rebels. During the attack, a rocket manufactured
by his own company wounds Stark and when he comes to, he finds that
he is held prisoner by an Afghani warlord who wants Stark to build
weapons for him. Stark does build a weapon, an armored exo-skeleton,
which he uses to escape, but not before destroying the rebels’ camp.
Returning to the United States and troubled by what he saw in
Afghanistan, Stark announces the closing of his company’s weapons
division. He also secretly begins building a new, sleekier version
of the armor he used to escape, determined to find out how weapons
his company has made found their way into the Afghani rebels’ hands.
Aided by his longtime personal assistant Pepper Potts (Gweneth
Paltrow), discovers that his investigation leads him to his business
partner Obidiah Stane (a bearded and bald Jeff Bridges), who has
discovered Tony’s original armor suit and has constructed his own.
Iron Man’s
script is a well-crafted piece of writing, where character informs
the plot more than story necessity does. Stark doesn’t build a suit
of high tech armor to fight crime because he can; he does so because
he feels compelled to. His conflicted feelings over the weapons his
company makes is greatly encapsulated by Downey in Stark’s
post-escape press conference where he wonders aloud if his deceased
father had mixed feelings over his contributions to the Manhattan
Project.
To be sure, the film manages to hit all the story beats that one
expects in a franchise launching film like this. But the film also
manages to buck conventions a bit. Both hero and villain are safely
past the mid-20s age range that their analogues in other films
inhabit. Whereas other superhero films have moments where the hero
realizes what Spider-Man summed up perfectly as “With great
power, comes great responsibility.” Iron Man, flips that idea
on its head. As Stark realizes he has a responsibility for what his
weapons are being used for, he creates something of great power to
help him tackle that responsibility.
Less obvious than the X-Men films’ “homosexuality as mutant
powers” meme, Iron Man reveals itself to be rather subversive
when it comes to analyzing what the film has to say about America
and the military weapons it sells overseas. Is the film critiquing
America as an arms merchant whose wares often fall into the hands of
its enemies or is it arguing for a consolidation of power only in
the hands of the United States? There are arguments to be found for
both sides of the issue, with the film leaving the audience to draw
their own conclusions.
Iron Man
is a film that plays a little rougher than most comic book-inspired
movies, and says so to the audience right in the film’s opening
moments when Stark’s convoy is attacked. The attack is intense, if
mostly bloodless. Equally brutal is Stark’s escape from captivity in
his first armor. The only thing keeping the film’s final
confrontation between Stark and Stane from reaching the same levels
of visceral action is the fact that they are locked in a battle of
wits more than a battle of raw physical strength.
Moviegoers unfamiliar with the comic book character should not let
that stop them from heading to the local cineplex. The film is
totally accessible for general audiences. Still, comics fans will
find lots of small things to be excited about. Details about the
Afghani rebels, Roady’s envious glance at a spare set of armor
hanging in Tony’s workshop and Tony’s habit of not being too far
from a glass of Scotch are all nods towards various storylines from
the four decades worth of Iron Man stories Marvel Comics has
published. Most of these touches aren’t done merely to wink to those
fans, but appear quite naturally in the flow of the film, while at
the same time feel as if they are story elements being put into
place for further exploration in any forthcoming sequel. And as long
as any future adventures of Tony Stark is crafted as well as this
one is, this critic at least isn’t apologetic about saying he is
looking forward to them. |