Friday, May 4, 2012

The Avengers


Genre:                   Action/Adventure


Starring:             Robert Downey Jr. (Iron Man 1&2)

                                Chris Hemsworth (Thor)

                                Samuel L. Jackson (Captain America)

                                Scarlet Johansson (Iron Man 2)

                                Chris Evans (Captain America)

                                Tom Hiddleston (Thor)

Director:              Joss Whedon



To Thomases (boys/men/dude/guys/fellas, in short the majority of the masculine race)the world over who have said fairy tales were only silly stories for silly girls, yeah? Here’s to you! This one’s right up your alley. Or memory lane. Or  garage sale. Or charity home.  Or your kid brother’s bookshelf. Or … OR that mouldy old taped-up carton that has carved a nice niche for itself in a pile of dust underneath your bed that would have your mother in a flying fit not particularly different from the effect of a random overdose of gamma radiation – and I’m not referring to the fit that’s entirely Hugh Hefner’s fault!  * Snickering* Oh fine, the pile of superhero comics that you have sworn to protect with – well, let’s just say I have known guys to swear unmentionables by unmentionables!

Now, there’s 3D and then there’s IMAX 3D. I had the entire movie right in my face, and I came away feeling like I’d sat through the entire production, direction and everything in between, for this movie. For the first time ever, I truly appreciated the silliness of wearing very dark recycled shades inside a room to watch regular TV in order to attain some “movie experience”. Over-rated, I tell you. Except, well, this time anything but. The experience was AMAZING!!! The adrenaline, the goose bumps, the thrill, the magic, the oestrogen … Not to worry, I absolutely – and with all the willpower I could muster – refused to allow this oestrogen fest of which I so fondly speak, blindside me. Promise.

For those of you unfamiliar with comic hero semantics, for those who have never understood the obsession with “boy dolls in plastic capes and stern faces” (putting it mildly) and for those to whom “marvel” is  the 6-letter noun for “that which causes wonder, awe, admiration or astonishment” or verb for similar situation, (wild guess: by now you must’ve caught a glimpse of the light at the end of the tunnel; otherwise…) you have committed no heinous crime of any sort – well, just a little. For the rest of you, feel free to skip the next 1000 words . . .

In plain English this is the gist of it: the bad people took  - no, stole - something powerful, very powerful, very, very, VERY powerful (I am not exaggerating), some sort of weapon –and you know how something that powerful could be in the hands of bad people, very bad powerful people. I’ll tell you – nothing good! So, the Mayor (there’s always one in every superhero comic) gathers a band of good people to gather a band of powerful, superheroic people (spot the difference?) -  by that I mean they could do Things! Things that regular people quite frankly can’t do, things that would make you  ____ (pray forgive my restraint). Their job description is of course to find that very powerful weapon and take it away from the bad, very bad, in fact evil fellas, and then destroy the very bad evil fellas (VBEF, for the sake of future reference). Or wait, there’s a word for it, Villain. Ha!

Unfortunately, there’s plenty my-power-is-more-special-than-your-power (or ego) and there’s plenty oh-yeah?-let’s-go-outside-after-school-and-prove-it (in other words, beef). Boys will be boys, I guess! And  then the good people start fighting one another and there’s blood – no, wait Superheroes don’t bleed (now you get the obsession, in part)  – and alladat,  and evil almost wins. Apparently, there is such a thing as Too Much Good! But then, good remembers why it’s called good. And the superheroes get their acts together and tackle (I’m seriously putting it mildly) the villains and win. Evil does put up a pretty good fight which made the win all the more worth it. And earth lives happily ever after, with a lot of damage and destruction in its wake – covered by insurance. Of course.

After the 1000 words . . .

There’s nothing sexier than a sexy girl doing damage in an action flick. I concur 100% which is why I have proceeded to steal without permission (forgive the tautology/redundancy) the exact words of my movie mate. Indeed, there’s nothing sexier than a slightly-less-sexy-than-usual Scarlet Johannson in a tight (of course!) LBD decking the bad guys. For a newcomer to the genre of guns and breaking bones and not-so-newcomer to seduction, girl did good. Very good. Besides that, the rest is as I said before. You seriously did not skip the 1000 words, did you? Hmph!

Agent Nick Fury of S.H.I.E.L.D. (pleasantly portrayed as man-in-charge by darling S.L.J.), makes perhaps his biggest appearance/return in which he’s assigned by the Mayor and some others at a round-table meet to form a team of superhumans or superheroes. Of course, we now appreciate the need for the sufferance of all the other WOW and not-so-WOW Marvel movie retellings of the life and times of each individual comic superhero. 

The Team: Iron Man 1 and 2 (and 3 around the bend, we (I) can’t wait!); Captain America (hot but hopefully no 2); Thor (while a 2 would be redundant – he could have a kid - we (I) would not be complaining anytime soon); Incredible Hulk (you gotta admit, working with something so big and green and ugly tends to clog a few directors’ wheels; still somewhere out there it’s been done super-successfully FOUR times for something even uglier and admittedly, smaller, a whole lot smaller, and probably the same shade of green and far less superheroic – wake up, people!); Hawkeye (nah, no movie); Black Widow (sexy, but no movie) and a whole bunch of others … that about sums up the team. The good guys, that is.


The team, (or the Avengers) bands together to save dear Earth from the evil clutches of Loki (Hiddleston, with a delicious serving of fluid evil swag, makes us wonder if we skipped the memo on #TeamLoki – we’re blaming it on Thor’s divine looks, literally!) and his army. And putting the bias against evil aside, this army was something else entirely! Well, naturally, seeing as it came from the underworld or was it the skies above?! You never know with evil, ever-so-cunning …


Now, without getting too much into the heat of things (I've been called a tease one time to many), I move on to the reason I started this blog to begin with slash the part where I constantly get allergies, particularly where it concerns the action genre (save a few lucky times): BALANCE. The balance between the story and the ‘action’ for a well-delivered plot. Striking the balance, hitting and scoring where it matters, maintaining the focus and not putting the story in a position where its crumbs are carelessly (although with good intent) scattered and the birds have dinner, and the lost trail has causes the entire plot to end up as thickening sauce for the witch’s pot. 11 out of 10 times this happens, so I do beg your pardon if my metaphor is something of an itch.


Knowing where the wisecracks end and the skull-cracking begins is admittedly, tricky. To holster or to hold? In this case, balance was intact. The story was not lost. The action was on point. I didn’t come away feeling that the sole aim was to blow me away with the latest of ‘stuntsmanship’ in 3D, while dulling my English-speaking brain cells to numbness.  If the plan here was for the entire movie to fall into place without a series of unanswered questions to an audience that had had no previous courtship (a mere acquaintance would not suffice except perhaps with help from google or wikipedia) with at least 3 of the superheroes in question … nah! That wasn’t the plan. And I say this with conviction. In retrospect though, I guess they could have gotten away with it, but to what end? As they say, there’s a difference between being driven in a Ferrari and driving one! OK, maybe I made that up!  Seriously though, if you haven’t, you might want to do yourself a favour and see all the superheroes in action individually in order to get a base. A base never hurts. Especially where a heightened sense of appreciation is your reward!

Which brings me back to the subject of balance, forgive the digression. We know the beginning. We know the end. Good fights evil. Good wins. Evil is destroyed. As easy as 1-2-3. So easy that the difficulty in spitting the same line over and again to pretty much the same audience over and again paradoxes maximally and of course, rather sadistically. However, again in retrospect, and this is really tough, having only recovered from the blindsidedness of all those super sexy abs, beautiful biceps, too much ego, excess adrenaline, comic relief and all (see what I had to deal with?), I would say this one was right in the money. According to my weighing scale, the odds were not tipped in favour of adrenaline-pumped action against the fine art of story-telling. While the latter was no marvel (last time, promise), seeing as there really isn’t much to be expected, there really was hardly much to be desired. Wit and banter strung it along adeptly and made us very happy. Without stealing from the sense of the movie in and of itself and still managing to hold us in with a fair share of pleasant surprises, it worked!


Of course, what good is an action flick without chemistry? And here’s where I’d hoped to catch Mr Whedon off-guard: the superhero - damsel in distress saga. However, with the subtle injection of the romantic lives of the team members throughout the plot, he was well prepared. It was so delicately inferred that so much as a less-than-perfect attention to the intimate emotional details and the intent would be misinterpreted as borderline disinterest/ lack of emotion. Thankfully, and rather surprisingly, there were no new ‘alliances’. That is, not counting the palpable egoistic foreplay involving all sides, with a cult-like presence, the absence of which would have marred the very essence of the plot, leaving us wanting, wondering, bored and sad, thus rendering it fodder for the joyous feasting of critics the world over (sad cue, enter Green Lantern). Clearly, Whedon had a plan: no cliché. And he stuck with it. And we applaud.


On a lighter note, comedy. The comic relief was totally devoid of comic relief (no pun intended, or maybe some). And that, in a good way. In other words, it was not the sad excuse to keep the audience in place on the occasion of a poorly executed plot. The comic aspect was just that, pure comedy: funny, witty, rib-tickling and unapologetically funny. There was no such thing as too many wise-cracks. I daresay the people in charge borrowed from the comical pages of well-performed Transformers 3 and tailor-fitted it seemingly effortlessly – fluid. Revved up by none other than genius, billionaire and playboy Tony Stark (aka Downey Jr. (Sigh! Sigh!)), it was a marvellous (oops!) hit from start to finish!

Amidst all the bickering and powerplay and gunfight and thrills and chills and all the works, which for 99% of the entire movie was a pleasure to watch and had us on the edges of our seats for the most part (I’m thinking that had a lot to do with the 3D+), the good guys, Avengers and co. (OK, scratch the ‘and co.’) take on Loki and co. (a HUGE ‘and co.’) in a winner-takes-all battle, kinda . . . and WIN! YAY! Curtain Call! But first a minute’s silence for Loki, just because evil has never looked so … good! Speaking of good . . .

Good – ALL THOSE HOT DELICIOUSLY TONED BEAUTIFUL MEN!!!!!! I am not about to apologise to anyone for my open declaration of lust!

Evil – One, the tacky coming together of the team, which turned out to be my dear Whedon taking the  no-cliché therefore no cue music a tad too seriously, but then he fixed that. Two, the   … I honestly found nothing else wrong with this piece of thrill – oh, except where they tried to make me choose between Thor and Iron Man, I mean c’mon! I’m still seething, and I still refuse to take sides!

Ugly – in 3 words, The Incredible Hulk. Although even he managed to look kinda good. Not enough to eat. Not bad enough to make us puke. Just ugly.
                                                                                                                                                                              
Popcorn: There’s good. There’s evil. There’s you. Pick a side … in the meantime, we’ll settle for a victory of sorts . . . in 3D . . .

Scene . . . or Sin?   For those who have committed our previously discussed heinous crime, do the time! You deserve it! For those whose fantasies have come alive – well, duh! Go get your glasses already. And if you’re in neither phase, seriously … it would be a SIN not to see this movie. 
For giving us cause to Marvel (there really is no better word), I’m slamming a 4.9 out of 5 on this one! I look forward to the competition . . .

See for yourself ... and thank me later!