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BretLudwig BretLudwig is offline
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Default "Iron Man"

((Money shot- "you try getting a straight story out of an elderly English
rock star about what he was thinking in 1970." Bret.))

"Iron Man"

"From my review in The American Conservative:


In contrast to the manga-addicted Japanese, Americans don't actually
like comic books much. Sales have been sluggish since the collapse of the
speculator-driven collectible bubble in the early 1990s. The fundamental
flaw of comic books is that by using pictures to dispense with
time-consuming verbal descriptions, they quickly chew through countless
plot permutations, exhausting all but the most obsessive readers.

What Americans like instead, as the $100 million opening weekend for
the entertaining "Iron Man" shows, are comic book movies. Two hours is the
right amount of time for the tragic death of the parents of the superhero,
his dawning awareness of his powers for good and evil, a bruising fight
with an older supervillain in the skies over a megalopolis, and an
epilogue setting up the sequel.

Granted, Hollywood is scraping the bottom of the comic book barrel
with Iron Man, a name more famous as the title of the thudding heavy metal
classic by Black Sabbath. (Was the song inspired by the superhero? Nobody
seems to know -- you try getting a straight story out of an elderly
English rock star about what he was thinking in 1970.) Yet, Iron Man's
obscurity didn't prove a marketing problem because, as Canadian journalist
Colby Cosh has noted, "The public adores the familiar, even if all they
know is that it should be familiar."

Iron Man was dreamed up by Stan Lee in 1963 as Marvel Comics' answer
to DC's Batman. Like Bruce Wayne, Tony Stark lacked superpowers, but he
made up for it by being a billionaire playboy inventor a la Howard Hughes.
That was an era of engineer heroes, such as Hyman Rickover of the nuclear
navy, Wernher von Braun of the space program, and Kelly Johnson of
Lockheed's Skunk Works. In contrast, today's most celebrated tech tycoon
is Apple's Steve Jobs, whose specialty is simplifying user interfaces
(while the boring manufacturing is subcontracted off somewhere overseas).

Rather than fighting crime like Wayne, Stark's focus was foreign
policy. While prototyping a new Stark Industries weapons system for our
advisors in Vietnam, he was captured by "red guerilla tyrant" Wong Chu,
who put him to work building a superweapon for some nefarious purpose.
Stark, though, secretly banged together a robot exoskeleton (probably
inspired by the mobile infantry powers suits in Robert A. Heinlein's 1959
novel Starship Troopers) and smashed his way out.

The movie is transplanted to Afghanistan in 2008. The villain isn't
the Taliban (there are a lot of Muslim potential ticket-buyers out there),
but a freelance warlord who has assembled a multicultural gang of
mercenaries from across the Eurasian steppe, from Hungary to Mongolia, to
rebuild the empire of Genghis Khan. (How using Stark's high tech weaponry
to pillage one mud brick village in the Hindu Kush gets him closer to
world domination isn't explained.)

In most action movies, the bad guys' henchmen are suicidally devoted
to the cause, even if they are just in it for money. In a clever touch of
realism in this consistently enjoyable film, however, the hired goons are
just bullies who flee in terror from what looks like a man wrapped in
pick-up truck bumpers.

Soon, the engineering genius is back in his workshop in his John
Lautner-designed Iron Mansion in Malibu, building a more advanced suit to
track down who is bootlegging his firm's weaponry. "Iron Man" is a
refreshing throwback to the pre-virtual age when heroes forged tools out
of metal, rather than just tap on a computer keyboard. It's the most
loving tribute to machinery since James Cameron vanished.

Casting the twice-imprisoned Robert Downey Jr. as the hero was a risk
because the leading man in a $186 million production must be insurable,
and his work ethic should provide a role model for the crew. That's one
reason Cameron made Arnold Schwarzenegger a huge star, even though he can
barely speak English. Downey, in contrast, is blessed with the most nimble
articulation of any American actor since James Woods. He could whip through
Hamlet in three hours. Indeed, one of the more intriguing what-ifs of
recent American theatre history was the drug-cancelled 2001 production of
Hamlet, in which Downey was to be directed by his friend Mel Gibson.

Sober for half a decade, Downey remains the master of the throwaway
line. Watch how lightly he tosses off his inevitable last line, "I am Iron
Man," just before Black Sabbath's power chords clang over the credits.

Rated PG-13 for some intense sequences of sci-fi action and violence,
and brief suggestive content."

http://isteve.blogspot.com/2008/06/iron-man.html

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