cinemabon
05-02-2008, 04:28 PM
IRON MAN – a film by Jon Favreau
***************SPOILERS******************
First of all, let me express my warmest welcome back to Robert Downey, Jr. Sir, it is good to see you up on the screen again. You came through on several key scenes in this film. Again, nicely done, sir. Cudos also to director Jon Favreau, whose previous effort, Zathura, fell with a plop, but his “Elf” soared to Christmas heights. You, sir, have another “Elf” on your hands!
“Iron Man” hits the big screen today with all the popcorn-crunching special effects we’ve come to expect from a big budget superhero movie taken from the pages of Marvel Comics. The film also comes at a time when audiences might be getting tired of Batman, Superman, Spiderman, and the like. I’m certain that Producers Stan Lee and the other dozen on this picture held baited breath today to see if their baby has wings. I hope it does. I thoroughly enjoyed my two plus hours.
“Iron Man” is a departure from the past superhero genre in that it delves into contemporary controversy in the first five minutes of the movie. Tony Stark, a cocky multi-millionaire (aren’t they all) is sipping whiskey, riding in a hummer in a desert location, when his vehicle is hit and he is taken hostage. For nearly the next forty minutes, Tony lives in a cave as a POW in Afghanistan. We discover that Stark makes weapons of mass destruction, and his company is somehow selling them to our army yet also exporting them to our enemies at the same time. The company’s ‘board of directors’ do not care which side buys, only profit matters.
Prior to his capture, we learn Tony lives a secluded wealthy life with a house computer the envy of Bill Gates. His secretary, Pepper Potts (Gwenth Platrow) matches wits with the playboy in being his butler/secretary/assistant. They flirt but keep their friendship a business relationship.
Back in the cave, Tony manages to build a robot, not just any robot, one that can perform super maneuvers, such as creating a blowtorch and withstanding a barrage of bullets. He manages to escape his captures and flees into the desert. His military friend finds him wandering the dunes and brings Tony home. Naturally, he devotes his weapons technology to creating a refined version of the robot he built in the cave. The warmth and humor expressed when Tony builds his creation is the heart of this film and the best part of the movie.
That would be enough for any superhero. Once he has the suit, this one flies back to Afghanistan and intervenes with the slaughter of innocent women and children by an Arab terrorist group (stick in Alqueda). Downey, Jr. carries off several scenes well where directors and special effects must sit idly by and simply let cameras roll while the high paid actor must deliver. Downey, Jr. does just that, more so than Toby Maguire or Christian Bayle do in their beefy superhero suits. Robert brings a level of acting missing in these genre pictures that is welcome by this member of the audience.
Yes this is a comic book story, and yes this is not the serious stuff folks, this just the ‘easy-on-your-eye’ kind of film with no strings or promises attached. Still I found enough tension, plot twists to make it interesting, and worth watching when all you want is a cheeseburger and a coke.
***************SPOILERS******************
First of all, let me express my warmest welcome back to Robert Downey, Jr. Sir, it is good to see you up on the screen again. You came through on several key scenes in this film. Again, nicely done, sir. Cudos also to director Jon Favreau, whose previous effort, Zathura, fell with a plop, but his “Elf” soared to Christmas heights. You, sir, have another “Elf” on your hands!
“Iron Man” hits the big screen today with all the popcorn-crunching special effects we’ve come to expect from a big budget superhero movie taken from the pages of Marvel Comics. The film also comes at a time when audiences might be getting tired of Batman, Superman, Spiderman, and the like. I’m certain that Producers Stan Lee and the other dozen on this picture held baited breath today to see if their baby has wings. I hope it does. I thoroughly enjoyed my two plus hours.
“Iron Man” is a departure from the past superhero genre in that it delves into contemporary controversy in the first five minutes of the movie. Tony Stark, a cocky multi-millionaire (aren’t they all) is sipping whiskey, riding in a hummer in a desert location, when his vehicle is hit and he is taken hostage. For nearly the next forty minutes, Tony lives in a cave as a POW in Afghanistan. We discover that Stark makes weapons of mass destruction, and his company is somehow selling them to our army yet also exporting them to our enemies at the same time. The company’s ‘board of directors’ do not care which side buys, only profit matters.
Prior to his capture, we learn Tony lives a secluded wealthy life with a house computer the envy of Bill Gates. His secretary, Pepper Potts (Gwenth Platrow) matches wits with the playboy in being his butler/secretary/assistant. They flirt but keep their friendship a business relationship.
Back in the cave, Tony manages to build a robot, not just any robot, one that can perform super maneuvers, such as creating a blowtorch and withstanding a barrage of bullets. He manages to escape his captures and flees into the desert. His military friend finds him wandering the dunes and brings Tony home. Naturally, he devotes his weapons technology to creating a refined version of the robot he built in the cave. The warmth and humor expressed when Tony builds his creation is the heart of this film and the best part of the movie.
That would be enough for any superhero. Once he has the suit, this one flies back to Afghanistan and intervenes with the slaughter of innocent women and children by an Arab terrorist group (stick in Alqueda). Downey, Jr. carries off several scenes well where directors and special effects must sit idly by and simply let cameras roll while the high paid actor must deliver. Downey, Jr. does just that, more so than Toby Maguire or Christian Bayle do in their beefy superhero suits. Robert brings a level of acting missing in these genre pictures that is welcome by this member of the audience.
Yes this is a comic book story, and yes this is not the serious stuff folks, this just the ‘easy-on-your-eye’ kind of film with no strings or promises attached. Still I found enough tension, plot twists to make it interesting, and worth watching when all you want is a cheeseburger and a coke.