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'The Great Gatsby': An Old Classic Reimagined
Kurt Loder is off this week. The following review is by Peter Suderman.
After seeing "The Great Gatsby" in hip-hopified 3-D, I'm looking forward to the other similarly hip updates on other early-20th-century literary classics, which are …Read more.
'Mud' and 'Deceptive Practice: The Mysteries and Mentors of Ricky Jay': Matthew McConaughey Scores Again, and Ricky Jay Defies Belief
Matthew McConaughey's midcareer resurgence is a glorious thing, and it continues with "Mud." Over the past decade, McConaughey has sometimes wasted his talent in dim rom-coms ("How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days," "Failure to …Read more.
'Oblivion' and 'Upstream Color': Tom Cruise Copes With a Post-apocalyptic Future, New Indie Offers a Baffling Present
"Oblivion" is a light sci-fi snack of gently pre-chewed elements from other, meatier futuristic movies. Biding your time as these familiar tokens drift by — the "Blade Runner" identity games, the hovering white pods and …Read more.
'To the Wonder' and 'Disconnect': Terrence Malick Stuck on Repeat, Jason Bateman Standing Tall in the Cyber-Dark
Sitting through Terrence Malick's "To the Wonder" is like watching a stranger sort through a packet of old photographs. To the photographer, the snapshots recall a story. To us, they're disconnected episodes in an unknown narrative. The …Read more.
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'Iron Man 3': Robert Downey Jr.'s International Man of Metal ReturnsThe most surprising thing about "Iron Man 3" — which is otherwise pretty much what you'd expect, in spades — is its unanticipated sense of finality. The movie plays out like the concluding installment of a standard trilogy, with the story winding down into tidy resolution. The obligatory post-credits scene, in which another sequel is traditionally teased, here teases nothing so specific. Is a retrospective box set already in the works? Maybe not. Although irreplaceable star Robert Downey Jr.'s franchise contract reportedly ended with this film, the forces of commerce may prove overwhelming. The first two "Iron Man" movies grossed more than $1.5 billion worldwide (with DVD sales factored in), and then there's "The Avengers," which grossed even more on its own. "The Avengers 2" is due to start shooting next year, and does anyone think that superhero reunion will take place without Downey's metal-clad character on board? In any case, "Iron Man 3" is a great big whiz-bang of digital entertainment, exactly as advertised. The 3-D conversion is a little light on wow; the action is occasionally muddy; and the plot's a bit wobbly in spots, if that matters. But new director Shane Black, taking over from Jon Favreau, has layered some nice pulp trappings into the story: an exotic master criminal and an infestation of fiery-eyed demons. And he knows how to use his one-of-a-kind star. (He and Downey previously worked together on the 2005 film "Kiss Kiss Bang Bang," which Black also co-wrote and directed.) Downey's nervy intelligence and mastery of the throwaway quip are enough to supercharge any movie, and Black lets him rip. As always, some of the actor's best lines have the zing of improvisation. Confronted with a smoldering demon girl, Downey notes, "I've dated hotter chicks than you." The evil genius here — well, one of them — is a shadowy terrorist called the Mandarin. In the Iron Man comics, this character is a formidable megalomaniac, born and based in China. Here, for reasons we'll get to in a moment, the Mandarin is more ethnically ambiguous; with his Osama bin Laden-like beard and his penchant for on-camera executions, he seems like a very familiar sort of jihadi (although without the usual Islamist palaver). He also looks exactly like Ben Kingsley. The Mandarin's sudden appearance on the scene catches billionaire industrialist Tony Stark (Downey) at a low moment. Still shaken by the intergalactic assaults of "The Avengers," Stark is now prone to panic attacks (a bit of narrative business that quickly disappears). Plagued by insomnia, he spends days on end building new Iron Man suits, which line the walls of the vast workshop in his cliff-top Malibu, Calif., home. This obsession has begun to irritate his longtime colleague, Pepper Potts (sweet/saucy Gwyneth Paltrow), now his live-in girlfriend. But Stark snaps out of his funk when the Mandarin mounts an explosive attack on Los Angeles, which seriously injures Stark's security chief, Happy Hogan (Favreau, returning for his third go-round in the role). Stark challenges the Mandarin to a one-on-one faceoff, and the gutsy bad guy responds with a blazing CGI assault, which dumps Stark's deluxe house into the ocean. Meanwhile, one of Stark's old girlfriends, an experimental botanist named Maya Hansen (Rebecca Hall), has turned up with bad news about her boss, the brilliant nanotechnologist Aldrich Killian (Guy Pearce with a malevolent smirk).
Director Black has engineered some agreeably rousing action sequences, most impressive among them an airplane bail-out, in which plummeting passengers are linked hand to hand in midfall so they can be guided down to a relatively soft landing. A number of nasty thrills are provided by lead demons James Badge Dale and Stephanie Szostak, and there's also a detour to rural Tennessee, where Stark, with his iron suit drained of juice, is aided by a little nipper, named Harley (Ty Simpkins). This latter interlude could have degenerated into cutesy goop, but Downey fends off the syrup with a stream of tart one-liners and a bracingly bad attitude. There's no point in nitpicking a film like this — and there's really not all that much to nitpick anyway. But I think there is a fundamental problem in having a whole squad of Iron Man suits zooming around under their own power (controlled by Stark's robo-concierge, Jarvis, voiced by Paul Bettany). This calls into question the need to have Stark around at all. But even the most heavily computerized uproar here has a disarming enthusiasm, and the overqualified actors bring valuable texture to the time-tested superhero proceedings. (Kingsley is especially funny in providing the story's big twist.) Short take: This is a better movie than it needed to be. It's also a model of the new international movie business. Because China is now the world's second-largest movie market (and purportedly on track to surpass the U.S. by 2020), accommodating the country's official film censors — who are very touchy about political affront — has become a major Hollywood concern. So the makers of "IM3" — Marvel Entertainment and its corporate parent, The Walt Disney Co. — decided not only to climb into bed with the Chinese film establishment but also to bring along extra pillows and complementary cocoa. Thus, a slightly different version of the movie has been created for China, in partnership with the film's Chinese distributor, DMG. This tweaked edition includes extra footage shot in China and features Chinese stars Fan Bingbing and Wang Xueqi. (Wang also makes a fleeting appearance in the un-tweaked "IM3," but by the time you're trying not to blink, you already have missed him.) There's some pretty bold product placement here, too. Last January, the Chinese electronics manufacturer TCL bought the rights to put its name on Grauman's Chinese Theatre, the venerable Hollywood movie palace; shortly thereafter, "IM3" producers staged a major action sequence for the film right outside what is now the TCL Chinese Theatre. In addition, there are more TCL video monitors and smartphones popping up in this movie than you might expect in a story set in the U.S., where TCL is a little-known brand. Sealing all of these deals with a kiss was Downey, who flew into Beijing for the movie's Chinese premiere last month and, according to BBC News, delivered himself in these words: "I'm interested in all things Chinese, and I live a very Chinese life in America." Before long, the American blockbuster audience may be sharing that sensation. Kurt Loder is the film critic for Reason Online. To find out more about Kurt Loder and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2013 CREATORS.COM
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