cliftonofun
Se unió el oct 2001
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Well, that was the most fun I've had watching a Superman movie since I was a kid and Richard Donner was involved. James Gunn clearly understood the assignment and the comic books better than most. And so did the casting director, who just plain nailed it: this cast brought us truly great versions of Clark/Superman, Lois, and Lex. So we got the right vibe and the right cast, which goes a long way. But there were still some tradeoffs. When you lean this hard into the comics and building a "universe," there will be moments where the story feels too packed, too complicated, and (in Superman's case) too earnest. And boy did it. I mean, the whole reason I looked forward to seeing this one was not having to watch 5 shows or previous movies to jump into the story...but Gunn still couldn't resist cramming this one movie with too much of just about everything (including sappy speeches). But I showed up for a Superman story, and I got one. Even if it was a little too much at times, even if it got distracted, even if the central plot was a bit too cliche/predictable. After the last few attempts fell as flat as they did, it's hard to complain about this one.
I hate to be all contrarían, but this movie is absolutely gorgeous to look at...and also a little lacking when it comes to compelling characters/conflicts. You would think a movie about another planet colliding with ours as a dysfunctional family struggles to find its footing would have plenty of plot to work with, but I will mostly remember the slow motion sequences set to loud orchestral movements in the first 5 minutes. Pretty? Yes. Compelling? Not really. Sometimes a movie is just a bit less than the sum of its parts. The performances were great and the cinematography was wonderful and, and, and...I just wanted to spend the last couple days of our planet's existence with more interesting people.
The part about the earth being evil, though? Resonates.
The part about the earth being evil, though? Resonates.
Jesse Armstrong has a gift, and thankfully he's chosen to share it with all of us. This four character one act play should not work as a film. Four guys standing around talking? And they just move around the house? Yup. That's it. And yet as the dialogue descends into madness, absurdity, and satire, I gleefully went along for the ride. Every scene seemed to be a perfect collection of competing motivations and hilarious jargon. As the stakes escalate, Carell and the cast make the smart/dumb dialogue sing. They may be caricatures of the super rich, but they are OUR caricatures. I couldn't resist seeing what they would do next.