Sunday, 29 April 2012

Avengers Assemble

We're all in this together...Chris Hemsworth as Thor..Chris Evans as Captain America..Avengers Assemble
When you go to superhero movies, you expect them to be long - very long. Avengers Assemble is one of those films with a tremendous 143 minute length. To me, it's length didn't falter how good it was. Director Joss Whedon gives great fun to Marvel fans but also, something actually watchable for parents to enjoy. It's a ensemble superhero movie that pits expert heroes - Captain America (Chris Evans), Dr. Bruce Banner AKA the Hulk (Mark Ruffalo), Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson), Hawkeye (Jeremy Renner), Thor (Chris Hemsworth) and Tony Stark AKA Iron Man (Robert Downey, Jr.) against Thor's manipulative and treacherous brother, Loki (played by a very well-acted Tom Hiddleston.) Before the words, 'Avengers Assemble' have even popped up on the screen, Loki has stolen a energy called the Tesseract, a blue see-through box that many fans will remember from Captain America: The First Avenger. There is a lot of comedy to keep the film at an easy level and not just a lot of action - many films have fallen victim to this *cough* Transformers *cough.* The comedy mainly comes from Iron Man (Downey, Jr.) with his quick wit and snipes at other people at the room - he is the smartest man in the room, although it's self-appointed. The Hulk provides a few decent gags, there is one very funny scene where a man encounters a naked Bruce Banner (after pre-Hulk mode) and one of the best scenes in the whole film, where Loki declares himself a god and that he shouldn't be bullied, only to be tossed on the floor like a doll by the Hulk. One let down is the lack of backstory for Hawkeye. Captain America, Iron Man, Thor and Hulk each have their own films but Hawkeye and Black Widow don't. Black Widow gets a bit of a backstory - enough for you to know the character. Hawkeye is different. He gets possessed in the first few minutes and when he's out of his 'trance' nothing more is explained. To conclude this review, Joss Whedon has put together a terrific ensemble superhero film, that will win over the fans, and surely the critics.




4/5

Saturday, 21 April 2012

Marley

Exhausting stuff...Bob Marley..Kevin Macdonald's Marley.
Surely one of the best documentaries I have ever seen, The Last King of Scotland director, Kevin Macdonald, expresses the world's and his own passion for Bob Marley. It's executive producer is Marley's son, David "Ziggy" Marley and Island Records owner, Chris Blackwell - both huge Marley fans. It consists of interviews with people who knew Bob Marley and it also has lots of old and new footage, like some of the gigs The Wailers threw and shots of the clinic in Germany, Marley was treated at. The film suffers one let down - it's length. It's 144 minutes long and you can feel a bit restless one hour and three quarters in. Kevin Macdonald clearly has a passion for Bob Marley, it's blatantly obvious. It delves deep into Robert Marley's roots, like his father, Norval Marley a captain in the Royal Marines and his racial origins. Macdonald gives you so much information it's tiring stuff and he endlessly screams at you that Bob Marley's hope and belief is still in the world today, 21 years after his death.




4/5

Saturday, 7 April 2012

The Pirates! In An Adventure With Scientists.

Captain Blackadder...Hugh Grant..The Pirates! In An Adventure With Scientists.
There is something I really admire about Aardman Animations. I'm not sure wither it's the amazing animation or the hard work they put into their films but they really stand out as one of the best movie making companies in the 21st Century. The Pirates! lives 100% to it's expectations, just like it's predecessors, Chicken Run and Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of The Were-Rabbit. It's funny, with gags-a-minute, the characters are likeable and it's got a great story. There are several films out this Easter, Mirror Mirror, a bad retelling of the Snow White story and Wrath of The Titans, a CGI adventure bore, if your child begs you to go the any these films, just say no and give them a history lesson and a great film rolled it one. I suppose it's like Horrible Histories except funnier. It tells the story of the dim Pirate Captain, played by Hugh Grant and his motley crew who accidently try to rob Charles Darwin's ship. It then leads to an adventure with what I believe as a mild cameo, scientists. The baddie is great with hints of Imelda Staunton's Dolores Umbridge kicking in. It's like Monty Python and Blackadder on the high seas.




5/5