Showing posts with label the avengers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the avengers. Show all posts

Monday, June 4, 2012

Movie Review Monday #50: The Avengers (emily edition)

Zoe, I came on here to write a review of The Avengers, and I saw you had already done that! Well, I thought I'd share my two cents as well. Thoughts:

1. Between Katniss (Hunger Games), Merida (Brave), and Hawk Eye (The Avengers, obviously), archery is so in right now. This makes me happy. I especially enjoyed Hawk Eye's moment shooting blindly off to the right and hitting his target. Jeremy Renner is such an unexpectedly awesome action hero, and I look forward to his upcoming Bourne series, even though Matt Damon will always be tops in my book.
2. I loved Heidi Moneymaker's performance. Oh, you've never heard of her? Yeah, she was Scarlett Johansson's stunt double. Some of her fight scenes were so delightfully improbable and simultaneously exhilarating that I giggled with joy. Scarlett was okay in some of her scenes too I guess.
3. The mix of explosions, aliens, lore, and humor was delightful. It was truly impressive that they were able to get at all in depth in the backgrounds of the heroes while also telling a story. Sure, it wasn't a terribly original story, but there was a story. And those explosions I mentioned were freaking awesome. 
4. So Ashley Johnson played the waitress in this film, and I got super distracted by that. She was basically a featured extra, but she's so recognizable that I felt like she must have had a larger role and her scenes got cut. Did anyone else get sidetracked by seeing her?
5. Most importantly, this film was written and directed by Joss Whedon. Joss, if you are reading this, I want you to know that I am not a bandwagon Joss follower. I have loved your work since I was 9 years old and watching Buffy. I have faithfully watched nearly all of your work, and I will continue to do so. After a particularly flowery dialogue between Thor and Loci, I thought "Joss is surely going to mock their way of speaking," and not minutes later, Iron Man says "Shakespeare in the Park? Doth mother know you weareth her drapes?" It wasn't a predictable line, but I felt like I was hanging out with a friend and had an idea of the type of joke he'd make. Also, Joss, if you are reading this please tell me so I can completely freak out.

In conclusion, I too give The Avengers two claws up. That's a total of four claws with Zoe's added in. Go see The Avengers! (Who am I kidding? I think Zoe, Manny, Jeff and I were the last four people to see that film. I honestly wanted to explain myself to the ticket seller when we went to see it.)

Movie Review Monday #50: The Avengers

After an 11 month unintentional theater-fast, Manny and I got in front of the big screen today to see The Avengers to celebrate our 7th wedding anniversary. Huge thanks to our friends, Laura, Mike, and Charlie for keeping Sofia entertained with some rainy day couch-tunnels and train sets so we could enjoy lots of crescendos on a big screen that would have otherwise been severely downplayed and practically ruined on our home TV, trying to keep Sofia asleep, several months from now. Netflix, you're great, but you can only do so much for us.

image borrowed from here

The Prerequisites:
A small glimpse of the upcoming Avengers long ago was enough to convince me to see both Captain America and Thor when I wouldn't have otherwise. Sadly, after seeing those movies, I lost a bit of steam and interest in seeing The Avengers. But having seen them all, I will say Thor provided a surprisingly foundational backdrop to The Avengers, so even though the movie experience was a bit disappointing, and in fact sleep inducing, I was glad to have the background. Captain America was a fine movie, but they give you sufficient hints about his back story within The Avengers that one would be fine without having seen it. Ironman is just great, so essential or not, I'd recommend it, but you've probably already seen it. 

The Experience:
When you get to a place in life where you get to see one, maybe two, movies in a theater (due to your budget, your schedule, your littles), you develop a pretty strict rubric about which movies make the cut. For me, that rubric includes: 

1) I have to feel pretty certain I'll enjoy the film 
2) Its strengths should include elements I can not enjoy at home. 

So for me, this mostly boils down to explosive action films that have promising character development. [as of today, the new Batman film has joined the list of must-see's, I'd welcome any baby-sitting volunteers now! :) ] Granted, I only just got home from watching it, and I'm inappropriately hopped up an indecent quantity of pop-corn, soda, and candy that are usually exempt from my diet, but I would say The Avengers fit the bill on this score. The booming crescendos that had me jumping and nearly shouting at someone to turn the volume down so as not to wake my child that I kept forgetting was miles away. On top of the great action and sound, the pleasant surprise was how much it made me laugh, which was perhaps what I needed most out of a movie going experience today. Robert Downey Jr. just cracks me up. He's come a long way since I developed a crush on him in Only You. [don't tell Manny ;) ]

I will say plenty of the dialogue was thoroughly predictable. But I felt like I could anticipate what characters would say because they were developed so clearly. And when they did execute expected lines, it wasn't dissatisfying, it was just a moment well completed. 

The Characters
I loved Gwyneth Paltrow's character here even more than I've been loving her in Ironman. Her appearance is unfortunately brief, but she seems appropriately aged and yet still strong, impressive, and elegant, all within a committed relationship. Such a respectable female portrayal felt like a rare treat. 

I read elsewhere that one of the strengths of this film was that the writers/directors did a good job of bringing several characters together for one flick while still developing their unique personalities sufficiently well so as not to lose the strong story. I would agree and add that I think this was accomplished by hitting on the Achilles' heel of each hero, not shortchanging the complexity of each character, but instead using their weaknesses to propel the story towards tapping into truth and giving them all (and thereby us) opportunity for transformation through the experience.

Perhaps one of the best portrayed weaknesses of the heroes was how suited they were to having their own spotlight, and therefore how difficult it was to "play well with others." They played this off through several character conflicts, but my favorite might have been between Ironman and Captain America. Captain America was trapped in ice for seventy years, so while he's decades the senior to Ironman, he looks much younger. I appreciated the wise elder role they allowed the Captain to play in the team, how they played off of Ironman's playboy contrast, and how they two ended up complimenting each other in the end: Ironman learning about sacrifice and following the Captain's leadership. We can certainly use more encouragement towards humility and respecting our elders. 

The Follow Up:
I would definitely watch another Avengers movie. But equally intriguing to me are the prospects of a movie with Black Widow and Hawk Eye so I can have a better sense of their back story. Interest piqued, Marvel, well done. 

To The Avengers, two claws up! 

To my husband, Happy 7th Anniversary. You're my hero. ;)