Tag Archive for 'Comic Book'

How to Watch: “Iron Man 2″

Step 1: Realize it’s tough to beat the first one. It’d be difficult for any additional Iron Man incarnation to surpass the original, but Iron Man 2 is a worthy follow-up.

Step 2: Love the Iron Man. I guess you could say the element of surprise — the realization that someone so unlikely as Robert Downey Jr. could actually pull off the role of a lifetime — is gone in IM2.  I remember when they cast the actor. I thought “What an odd choice for a superhero.” But now, you can’t even fathom the idea of anyone else playing Tony Stark. The actor mixes just the right amount of snarkiness, arrogance, thoughtfulness and brawn – and in IM2, the characterization only deepens. This time around, having announced to the world he IS Iron Man, Tony has become a rock star, negotiating world peace and creating the Stark Expo, where all number of inventions can be displayed. Except he’s really just putting on a brave face since the palladium in the arc reactor keeping his heart pumping is slowly poisoning him. But he can’t think about that now, too many other distractions.

Step 3: Squash Uncle Sam. The U.S. government demands he hand over the Iron Man suit and the technology to run it, publicly viewing it as a threat but secretly wanting it for their own military purposes. While snively rival Justin Hammer (Sam Rockwell) just wants to steal it. Even Tony’s good friend Lt. Colonel James Rhodes (Don Cheadle) isn’t on his side. Cheadle, who replaces the original’s Terence Howard, and Rockwell are both welcome additions, especially the always good Rockwell, who adds a lot to IM2‘s greatly enhanced funny bits.

Step 4: Pass the Pepper … Potts, that is. Tired of all the minutiae and thinking he’s going to die soon anyway, Stark appoints his personal assistant Pepper as the new CEO of Stark Industries. As the will-they or won’t-they couple, Gwyneth Paltrow and Downey Jr. banter like pros, throwing in the zingers much more than they did in the original. I suppose it’s all that sexual tension built up. Speaking of sexual tension, Scarlett Johansson slinks her way into the cast as Tony’s new personal assistant, the mysterious Natalie Rushman, who may or may not be moonlighting as a secret agent for S.H.I.E.L.D. Lead by Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson), they are looking to possibly recruit Stark.  And finally, the villain. Mickey Rourke plays Whiplash, a tatted up Russian baddie/engineer genius, who’s father once helped Tony’s father create the arc reactor – until the elder Stark had him deported for  nefarious deeds. Like Cheadle and Rockwell, Rourke’s presence, too, adds a certain level of credibility to the proceedings. Rourke never takes it too over the top, but still uses his subdued manner and physicality to intimidate.

Step 4: Maintain the status quo. Director Jon Favreau has a deft handle on the subject matter, no question, with a few key action sequences sprinkled among the contemplative scenes. And with the clever screenplay by actor/writer Justin Theroux (Tropic Thunder), IM2 ups the ante and keeps the Iron Man mythology humming without feeling forced, also setting up Marvel’s other upcoming adaptations. So why do I say the sequel doesn’t surpass the original? Because it just can’t quite reach that same level of excitement the first Iron Man gave us. The film never seemed like an introductory story, much like many comic-book adaptations (i.e. X-Men, Spider-Man, etc.), which then makes their sequels more compelling. Iron Man had it going on from the get-go, with Downey Jr. exceeding all expectations. In essence, all IM2 is required to do is to continue laterally along the comic-book lines, which it does entertainingly and successfully.

Level of difficulty in watching Iron Man 2: None. It’s going to make another butt-load of money.

How to Get Your “Hex” On

I’ve got to admit, Jonah Hex doesn’t look half bad — even if Megan Fox is in it. Agree?

How to Watch: “The Losers”

Step 1: Don’t be a Loser, Part I. After watching this stylized comic-book action flick and admitting you thoroughly enjoyed yourself, you won’t feel like a Loser at all.

Step 2: Don’t be a Loser, Part II. Based on a comic-book, The Losers revolves around an elite U.S. Special Forces unit – with nicknames like Clay (Jeffery Dean Morgan), Jensen (Chris Evans), Roque (Idris Elba), Pooch (Columbus Short) and Cougar (Óscar Jaenada) – who all have special skills and are, of course, far from being losers. When a mission in Bolivia goes wrong, they find themselves on the short end of the stick and are presumed dead. Which is a good thing, cause when they decide to go after the ruthless dude (Jason Patric), who orchestrated the lethal betrayal against them, they are going need all the cover they can get – which includes the help of a sexy and beautiful operative named Aisha (Zoe Saldana), who may or may not be a femme fatale. So, the guys remain deep undercover while tracking the heavily-guarded dude, hell bent on embroiling the world in a new high-tech global war.

Step 3: Don’t act like a Loser. The boys are great together. They’ve got that camaraderie one needs to make a movie like this work. Morgan (Watchmen) is scruffy and sexy, the real leader; Elba (Obsessed) plays the disgruntled grumbler; Short (This Christmas) is the badass driver/mechanic, who’s also the only family man; Spanish actor Jaenada is the strong, silent and deadly-with-the-sniper-rifle type; and there’s Evans (Fantastic Four), the snarky comic relief egghead who nearly steals the show. It’s going to be good fun seeing him play Captain America. As for the female of the group, Saldana is really making a name for herself as a kick-ass heroine with Star Trek, Avatar and now this. She makes it believable. Patric goes a tad over the top with his bad guy, but it’s nice to see him onscreen again.

Step 4: Don’t direct like a Loser. Stomp the Yard‘s Sylvain White tries his hand at full-blown action, and while he falls into some of the same footsteps of other gritty and campy actioners (Joe Carnahan’s Smokin’ Aces comes to mind), he makes The Losers his own. There’s the right combo of slow-mo kill shots, fast cuts and up close, shaky documentary style camera angles — the key to all action movies these days.

Level of difficulty in watching The Losers: Totally easy. Let’s hope The A-Team is just as good because it looks like it’s basically the same movie.

How to Interview: “Kick-Ass” Without Getting Your Ass Kicked,Part 2

by Robert Sims, Special to TheMovieKit.com

Who said heroes aren’t made? In Kick-Ass, the eponymous costumed crusader isn’t an invincible super-powered being but a physically meek and emotionally vulnerable teenage wallflower trying to make sense of his life and the world he lives in. He’s especially prone to getting his ass kicked by the very crooks he seeks to put behind bars. But he soldiers on in an effort learn more than

His partners in keeping the streets include the vigilante Big Daddy and his daughter Hit-Girl, an 11-year-old lethal weapon with a dirty mouth. Together they fight to take down a mobster, whose son pretends to be the superhero Red Mist in an effort to stop those intent on harming his father.

Behind the masks of Kick-Ass, Red Mist and Hit-Girl are, respectively, British newcomer Aaron Johnson, Superbad’s Christopher Mintz-Plasse, and 13-year-old Chloë Grace Moretz of (500) Days of Summer. This dynamic trio attended SXSW— along with director Matthew Vaughn and Kick-Ass comic-book co-creator Mark Millar — in advance of the superhero satire’s April 16 opening to discuss being onscreen crime-busters, their costumes, and the training required to vanquish a small army.

Step 1: Find the Right Kick-Ass

Matthew Vaughn: “I’m an English director, [Millar’s] a Scottish writer. I was worried we would do a Mary Poppins and have a Dick van Dyke version of an American kid. I just felt I needed an American to help me make sure — I’m not a teenager, either — so I wanted a teenage American boy. But we couldn’t find one. It’s sound crazy. Five hundreds kid I auditioned. I think a lot of the kids wanted to be famous and not interested in having any acting technique.”

Step 2: Accept Your Mission

Aaron Johnson: “When you’re growing up, you always want to be Batman, Spider-Man. This was a fantastic opportunity, to be put a twist on [it].”

Step 3: Find the Right Red Mist

Step 4: Understand that the Costume Makes the Superhero

Christopher Mintz-Plasse: “That was the most badass I’ve ever felt [putting on the Red Mist costume for the first time].”
Vaughn: “Come on, that’s not true. You complained you looked liked Michael Jackson in Thriller.”
Mintz-Plasse: “When we first made the costume it was red on the sleeves and black here [pointing to his chest]. Then you came in and said, ‘It looks like Michael Jackson.’ We completely juggled it and reversed the colors around and it turned out to be really good.”
Johnson: “And you padded him up with muscles and that sort of thing.”
Vaughn: “My 7 year old fits into his costume.”
Mintz-Plasse: “The very first costume, I looked like the Michelin Man because there was fake muscle padding all over. I looked kinda bulky walking around this [arms bent at his hips] feeling very uncomfortable. I’m glad we got rid of that.”

Step 5: Train, Train, Train

Chloë Grace Moretz: “Two months before the movie started…I started training for Hit-Girl. I knew I was going to be really physical, but I never knew it was going to be this physical until I went to this place and did basic training, how to take apart your gun, how to put it back together, don’t point it where you’re not going to shoot it, keep your finger on the trigger …”
Johnson: “Basically she became a marine.”
Moretz: “I did more training that was more technical with the bow staff and the saw.”
Aaron Johnson: “She’s a terrorist now.”
Moretz: “They made me do a thousand crunches a night.”
Vaughn: “In my defense there are no such thing as an 11-year-old stunt girl. We had no choice.”
Moretz: “This man, he pushed me to the limit.”
Vaughn: “But it was worth it.”
Moretz: “But in a good way. I loved it. What would I do without Hit-Girl?”

Step 6: Don’t Faint at the Sight of Nicolas Cage, as Big Daddy, Shooting His Preteen Onscreen Daughter

Millar: “That was the first day of shooting, and I remember they had a stunt child do that fall, and I remember thinking, ‘What kind of parent allows their kid to be a stunt child?’”

Step 7: Go [Adam] West

Vaughn: “When we did the first costume fitting, Nic starts running lines. I was pretty impressed as the costume fitting was six weeks before we shot and he knew all his lines already and he started it he was telling me he with the Adam West style, before we get sued. Performance started and I just encouraged it. I thought it was very funny and I wasn’t sure whether he was going to do it on the day of filming but we went with it. The only thing about Dark Knight that drove me nuts was the stupid voice when Christian Bale spoke, so it was a little bit like we’ll have a silly voice as well but we’ll do it in a way that’s actually meant to be silly.”
Moretz: “My dad’s a big comic guy and he had to tell me who [Adam West] was.”

How to Watch: “Kick-Ass”

by Robert Sims, Special Contributor to TheMovieKit

Step 1: Don’t go in expecting the next Spider-Man. Kick-Ass may not deconstruct the superhero mythos in the same solemn manner as last year’s Watchmen, but by simultaneously spoofing and paying tribute to the crime-busting activities of costumed crusaders, it offers a fresh take on a well-worn genre.

Step 2: Forget about reading every issue of the Mark Millar-penned, John Romita Jr.-illustrated Marvel comic book. You don’t need to go into Kick-Ass knowing every little detail about this non-superpowered superhero’s mythology, especially as the third act deviates from events depicted in later issues of series. Your lack of familiarity with Kick-Ass will make the experience of watching director Matthew Vaughn’s playful origin story all the more enjoyable. The high school student behind the mask is Dave Lizewski (Aaron Johnson), the geek every bully loves to pick on and every girl thinks is gay. How Dave adopts his alter ego is relatively simple: he just decides to become a superhero out of “optimism and naivety.” He has no powers, which is evident the first time tries to stop a crime in progress. He’s busted up so badly that his nerve endings are messed up, so he can barely feel pain. A good thing, too, as the beatings continue. Still, Kick-Ass willingly unites with compatriots Big Daddy (Nicolas Cage) and Hit Girl (Chloë Moretz—yes, (500) Days of Summer’s little sister!) to take down New York City crime kingpin Frank D’Amico (Sherlock Holmes’ villain du jour Mark Strong).

Step 3: Avoid Kick-Ass if you faint at the sight of blood. The film isn’t for your 6-year-old who’s just discovered Iron Man. Working from a script co-written with Kick-Ass’s creators, Vaughn can’t help but stay true to the comic book’s generous helping of graphic violence. And there’s no interest in playing by the usual PG-13 comic-book film rules,either. For example, Kick-Ass’s idea of father-daughter bonding involves Cage firing couple rounds at a bulletproof-vested Moretz so she knows how it feels to be shot. How sweet. Cage, as you may already suspect, storms through Kick-Ass like a psychotic version of the smiling and devoted 1950s TV dad. He also does a hilarious job of channeling Adam West when in costume (his resembles Batman’s, Hit Girl’s resembles Batgirl’s). Cage, though, doesn’t perpetrate much of the violence in Kick-Ass. That task is given to Moretz. It’s impossible not to be both impressed and disturbed that this angel-faced cutie could cause as much harm and damage as Arnie, Bruce or Sly combined. This is in stark contrast to Johnson, who is more human punch bag than one-man army. You get to the point where you wince when Johnson takes a beating. Superbad’s Christopher Mintz-Plasse is all mouth and little action by design, but that’s OK. His Red Mist—a rail-thin superhero sidekick created for nefarious reasons—is mostly there for comic relief.

Step 4: No need to stress out pondering this question Dave asks himself: “How come no one’s never wanted to be a superhero?” D’oh. We can’t leap tall buildings in a single bound. We feel pain. We die. The self-aware Kick-Ass doesn’t treat its superheroes as superbeings—one protagonist dies a horrible death—but Vaughn et al. do dissect the question Dave poses to the point of redundancy. Also, there are times when you feel Kick-Ass thinks it’s a little more clever and radical than it is. But you forgive Kick-Ass for its arrogant streak because of its switchblade-sharp wit and unwillingness to compromise.

Level of difficulty in watching Kick-Ass: Like your superheroes to save the day PG-13 style? Stick to Spider-Man and Fantastic Four. Kick-Ass lives up to its name, even if its superhero rarely does.

How to Interview: “Kick-Ass” Without Getting Your Ass Kicked, Part 1

By Robert Sims, Special to TheMovieKit.com

The world hasn’t known a superhero like Kick-Ass.He can’t fly. He can’t climb walls. He can’t turn invisible.

What can he do? Throw a punch. Just about.

High school geek Dave Lizewski (Aaron Johnson) may not possess any superpowers, but that doesn’t stop him from fighting crime. Night after night, though, his costumed alter ego and YouTube star Kick Ass is more likely to end up bruised and bloodied than the crooks and thugs he hunts. So he teams up with two other masked crusaders — Big Daddy (Nicolas Cage) and his sweet but deadly 11-year-old daughter Hit-Girl (Chloë Grace Moretz) — to bring down mobster Frank D’Amico (Mark Strong). Throw in D’Amico’s son Chris (Christopher Mintz-Plasse), who takes on the persona of Red Mist to deceive and defeat his father’s enemies, and Kick-Ass lives up to its name time and time again.

Both a celebration and spoof of the superhero genre, Kick-Ass is the creator of two comic-book icons, Wanted writer Mark Millar and illustrator John Romita Jr. They had barely started work on the Marvel-published series when Layer Cake and Stardust director Matthew Vaughn decided to give Kick-Ass the Spider-Man treatment.

In advance of Kick-Ass’s April 16 opening, the British director, the Scottish writer and the American illustrator premiered their cheerfully violent and decidedly unconventional superhero saga at SXSW. The day after the premiere, the three gathered—along with most of the cast — to discuss the origin of Kick-Ass, the differences between the comic book and the film, and the reaction to Moretz playing a foul-mouthed one-preteen army.

Step 1: Unleash Your Inner Superhero

Mark Millar: “It was very autobiographical. Like when I was 15 my best friend and I were reading Frank Miller comics like Batman: Year One… We were so into it we should have been studying for our O Levels, our exams, at the time. We said, ‘Let’s start going to the gym, let’s start learning karate, and let’s start being superheroes.’ It was that pathetic. We were five years too old to be doing this. And we really got into it. The story is really about what would have happened if we hadn’t come to our senses, that we had actually gone out and done this. It’s funny, because the character I created is called Mr. Danger, and I thought it was a cool look and design. My friend’s idea was Batman. It was Batman’s exact costume. I said, ‘You haven’t put a lot of thought into this at all. If D.C. gets wind of this you’re fucked.’ He was like, ‘They’ll never know. They don’t know who’s under the mask.’ And it was a good point.”

Step 2: Find the Right Sidekick

Millar: “About three years ago Matthew was going to be doing Thor, and it didn’t quite work out. He was just looking for a new project, and we have a mutual friend who thought, ‘You guys would get on well.’ We have a phone call that about lasted four hours. Normally, a first phone with someone, it’s a couple of minutes. But we talked all afternoon about these all geek things we were into, and we both thought it would be quite nice to work on something together. Matthew asked, ‘What have you got?’ He was looking at a few items, a few potential projects, and I had a thing called American Jesus which was a sequel to the Bible…. Matthew and I talked about that briefly, and I mentioned informally that I had started writing a thing called Kick-Ass, and I had only written two issues and I was working on the third. He said, ‘Can you send it down?’ He read it, he liked it, and he said, ‘Can you finish the third? I’d like to see it.’ I sent it down. He said, ‘Where’s the fourth?’ I said, “Can you give me a week?’ So I wrote it and sent it down, and he said, “Where’s the fifth one?’ I said, “I can’t do this.’ He said, “Do you mind if I move on from here?’ It’s weird, it was so informal, there were no agents [involved]…. It was just two mates sitting informally, saying, “Let’s do something together.’ So Matthew went off and did a draft of the screenplay, I had various notes, I had written a bit of issue six, and Matthew brought all this new stuff. It was really cool. The best bits, I nicked [stole] and then put back in the book, which was great. Before we knew it, a screenplay emerged. And Jane Goldman came in and did another draft—magnificent—we thought this is the Pulp Fiction of superhero movies. We thought was awesome, but everyone else thought it was shit. They hated it. Every studio knocked it back.”

Matthew Vaughn: “I wanted to make a post-modern superhero movie. After looking at Thor and X-Men 3, and all the other scripts I read, they all just felt, you could change the superhero characters and the film would be virtually identical. It was just a different baddie and a different goodie. I just wanted to try to create the feeling I had when I first saw the comic-book movie. I was like, ‘Wow!’ When I read the Kick-Ass one—I can’t even remember our phone call to be honest…”

Millar: “You may have hung up three hours earlier.”

Vaughn: “I might have, as you can tell by his long answers. But it just felt like the right time to do. I was getting bored of the Hollywood bullshit. I thought it was time to do something independent and different.”

Step 3: Don’t Be Watchman-Faithful to Your Source Material

Millar: “We had something hammered out but as I was writing the comic after Matthew had finished the screenplay I realized the episodic nature of comics means that I had an eight-act story really and there had to be reveals and twists that would have messed up the structure of the movie. So things like Big Daddy’s big reveal would have been awful in the movie if it had gone that way, so they kept the original back-story for Big Daddy… It’s only one page of the comic book but it turns everything on its head and would have just ruined the movie. Likewise, the jetpack scene wouldn’t have worked in the comic. In the movie, things were building up so much at that point you need some ‘Luke Skywalker blowing up the Death Star’ moment. It was only two or three real diversions it took but it was necessary. Whenever someone slavishly adapts a graphic novel it can be quite tedious. First and foremost, I think the guys were just trying to make a good movie.”

John Romita Jr.: “It’s a kinetic thing. With the comics, it’s stop action. So you can have them come up an elevator and still do it fine visually but you can’t that type of stop action with film. You have to have that kinetic movement. The jetpack had to be done that way.”

Step 4: Declare Your Independence

Vaughn: “All the studios said no. It was a totally independent film. We couldn’t get any of shall we say the more safe places of raising finances for movies. The studios that were intrigued by it said that, ‘We’ll do it if you get rid of Hit-Girl and it make it as a PG.’ I was like, ‘No.’ Luckily enough, I’m sorta connected to — I made a lot of independent films before I made studio movies so I raised the money. It was pretty easy. I was lucky.”

Romita Jr.: It’s got to be so satisfying, knowing that after it’s all said and done, they came crawling back to you. I think that’s fantastic. That’s a testament to Matthew.”

Vaughn: “They didn’t crawl, but …”

Step 5: Stare Down the Moral Majority

Vaughn: “As long as they’re not reporting that someone’s gone and copied what they do in the movie, I’ll be fine with them complaining and causing controversy. I personally feel — I’ve been asked this question a lot and I don’t want to answer it without sounding bored… I think it’s really important that if you’re going to criticism a movie, or say this is morally wrong, go see it and then I’ll listen to your opinion. If you haven’t seen it, I’m not really that interested. I’m not forcing someone to buy a ticket to this film.”

Step 6: It’s OK to Be Sensitive

Vaughn: “When Mark first saw the film, his first comment to me was, ‘You’ve gone and made a chick flick out of this film.’ I think he meant that. I think the difference between us is that he’s Scottish, so he’s a bit colder, I’m English and a bit warmer.”

Millar: “A lot of people think it’s quite a violent, dark cynical film, but when you look at it look at it the poster’s all primary colors and in a way it’s the most naïve and idealistic movie I’ve seen in years. It’s about a wee guy who every night could get killed. Spider-Man’s probably going to be all right. Superman’s fine. His movie sucked, but he’s fine. But Kick-Ass at any moment can take a bullet. Even one guy giving him a bad punch to his throat and he’s dead. And it’s so apparent when I was watching it last night [at SXSW] that when he was fighting those three guys outside the diner and you think there’s something so nice about it, that he’s waiting until the cops get there. It’s quite a sweet movie.”

Step 6: Appreciate Your Good Fortune

Millar: “I wrote a comic book about four years called Wanted that was an Angelina Jolie movie last year. What they did with that, the first 58 minutes was the book and then they did their own thing. For those who have seen the movie, it’s all that stuff with the Fate of Loom [Loom of Fate] or whatever. Then they went back to being the book again for the final 10 minutes. I thought that’s just what happens. The studio system, they chew your thing up and hopefully do a good job. Timur [Bekmambetov] luckily did but it could have gone so horribly wrong. First I first saw the script I went, ‘Oh, my God.’”

“To work out like that, with the first two books being turned into movies by two guys at the top of their game, it’s just incredible luck. I should have a whole bunch of shit movies before I got to one good one surely. So I’m really pleased. I’ve been kinda spoiled now… Because there’s good buzz on both movies, other books that I’ve done people are circling and talking to me about them. You just have to be careful. Once you have had two good guys work with you, you want to make sure the next guy’s good, too. You don’t want to just take the check. I don’t know where I’ll go from here. I’m not sure who else will meet this standard.”

How “Scott Pilgrim” Takes on the “World”

OK, this looks like all kinds of awesome. Check out the trailer to the pseudo-comic book hero flick Scott Pilgrim vs. the World, starring Michael Cera and a bunch of other cool people, including the new Captain America Chris Evans.

How to Kill “Spider-Man 4″

Basically by ticking Spidey director Sam Raimi off.  Yeah, apparently Raimi told Sony studio execs he couldn’t make the May, 2011 release date for Spider-Man 4 with a script that would reflect the Spider-Man integrity and walked away, taking star Tobey Maguire with him. Sony then in turn announced they’d do a reboot of the franchise, with a new cast and new director for 2012. Wow. Nikke Finke over at Deadline Hollywood got the whole scoop. Fascinating inside story.

I suppose a brand new vision for the comic-book hero wouldn’t necessarily be a bad thing. In my opinion, it was getting a wee bit old in the third installment. Spider-Man 2 has always been my favorite cause I really like Alfred Molina as the villain. Whatever ends up happening, I’m sure the franchise will still make money hand over fist for Sony — and really, that’s all they care about.

How to Pee in Your Pants Over “Iron Man 2″

OK, get ready to be all a-twitter over Iron Man 2:

Oh hell yes! This. Looks. AWESOME!

How to Pump “Iron Man 2″

The poster is here, the poster is here! Although it’s an exclusive to Yahoo! Movies, I’ve done what Cinematical did and just gave you a little bit of it. You can click on the image to see the whole thing:

iron-man-2

Director Jon Favreau used his Twitter account yesterday to spring the news the poster could be seen on Yahoo! Movies. Looks very sleek and Iron Man 2-ish. I wonder how many ga-gillions this one is going to make when it comes out next summer?