| TONY STARK: | We're safe. America is secure. You want my property - you can't have it! But I did you a big favor. I have successfully privatized world peace. |
IRON MAN
2: THE
FOREWORD
I wanted to like this movie, and I did. I do. The first Iron Man
outing was a triumphant big screen display of how to do the
comic adaptation thing right, and this second effort
from Jon Favreau didn’t disappoint—well, me, at least.
It both broadened and deepened the Iron Man world, gave a nice
spin on our favorite self-promoting billionaire arms dealer,
gave him a fun little romance (not canon, but I like it!), and
Robert Downey Jr. -- in addition to his ineffable presence and
awesome acting talent -- has really nice arms.
But my favorite part of Iron Man 2 came at the very end
of the film. I don’t think I’m giving away too much when I say
that the post-credits epilogue is a teaser for the next Marvel
movie; it wasn’t the epilogue itself but what came after, as I
was leaving the theater, that gladdened my comic chick soul. A
little voice piped up behind me: “That was Thor’s hammer,
Daddy.” I turned my head to see an adorable little moppet with
blonde curls and a Hannah Montana T-shirt smiling beatifically
up at her father. She then went on to explain, in painstaking
and accurate detail, exactly how Iron Man and Thor were related
to one another, to Nick Fury, and to most of the rest of the
Marvel Universe. And she was all of seven years old! “Daddy,
will you please buy me the Warren Ellis Iron Man trade
paperbacks for my birthday?” was the last thing I heard her say
as she and her bemused parent walked away. I was so proud of her
I had tears in my eyes.
If I had ever lost any hope for the future, it has now been
restored.
But as for the movie itself… I got nothin’. I enjoyed it, was
even occasionally impressed by it, but aside from a few comments
on things like Tony Stark evidently sharing a hairdresser with
Edward Cullen and Black Widow’s incessant flipping of her own
touseled mane after every cool kung fu move (and, oh yes, there
are cool kung fu moves aplenty), I am fairly dispassionate about
Iron Man 2, and will therefore leave the actual
reviewing in the much more capable hands of our David Baldwin
below.
Although I will note that I did love this moment, when
our roving-eyed hero first encounters Scarlett Johansson’s
“Natalie”:
| TONY | I want one. |
| PEPPER | No. |
-- Rachel Hyland
IRON MAN
2: THE REVIEW
| In Short: | Downey Jr. and Rockwell are outstanding, but this sequel lacks the balance and energy of its predecessor. |
| Recommended? | Yes. |
Without a doubt, Iron Man was a total knockout when it
was released in early 2008. It was an all around awesome movie
that surprised just about everyone with how well made it was.
Having Robert Downey Jr. sizzle in the lead role likely helped,
as did the blend of action, thrills and laughs. It was a great
start to the summer, and one of the few movies people remembered
even came out that year after The Dark Knight was
unleashed almost three months later. With hype running high on
Iron Man 2, is there any way it could even possibly
match up to the original film?
The film opens with an interesting introduction to Ivan Vanko
(Mickey Rourke), a Russian physicist who does not appear to be
much of a fan of Tony Stark (Downey Jr.). Rather quickly, the
film jumps a few months after Stark's announcement to the world
that he is Iron Man. He has become an even bigger celebrity, has
helped bring peace to a few warring nations, and the US
government is hounding him to hand over the technology for
military use. And that is just the start of his new set of
problems to go along with his new public identity.
While Iron Man was a fairly straight-forward story with
fairly little jumping, at times, Iron Man 2 feels like
a convoluted mess. On top of Stark coming to terms with his new
life and issues with long time friends and colleagues Pepper
Potts (Gwyneth Paltrow) and Jim Rhodes (Don Cheadle, replacing
Terrence Howard), writer Justin Theroux throws in rival weapons
manufacturer Justin Hammer (Sam Rockwell) to turn up the heat
alongside Rourke's Vanko, new "assistant" Natalie Rushman
(Scarlett Johansson) and a more fleshed out Nick Fury (Samuel L.
Jackson). While a movie like The Dark Knight was able
to use its multitude of story lines to its advantage (with no
small help to its longer running time), Iron Man 2
seems to have problems not too long after blasting through the
starting gate.
The multiple stories going on and weaving throughout the film
are not bad, they just lack the interest and the drive of the
story at the heart of the original film. At times there is just
so much going on that it becomes boring and feels like it is
dragging the film out. I originally envisioned the added
emphasis on S.H.I.E.L.D. and the first real push towards 2012's
The Avengers would hinder the film, but sometimes they
are the most interesting things about it. Their mere mentions
and initial origins feel more fleshed out, and more developed,
than half the ideas Theroux seems keen to throw at the audience.
They are the elements that stick, and despite having just come
from the film, seem to be the only real integral things I can
take away from it.
Even worse is the character development. With the exception of
Stark and Hammer, the rest of the cast gets very little time to
really do much of anything. We get hints at how deadly an
adversary Vanko is, but outside of a moderately thrilling
sequence at a racetrack, we never really see how devastating he
can be. Natalie is offered up as more of an enigma than
anything, although we all know who she really is. The
chemistry between Potts and Stark is the only thing worthwhile
thing Paltrow really gets to offer in the film, and Rhodes seems
even more downplayed here than in the first Iron Man
(even though Cheadle seems to be a much better fit for the
character than Howard ever was). Spider-Man 3 had this
same problem of adding too much to a good thing, so why did
anyone think it would work out for the best here?
But I digress. Downey Jr. was perfect the first time in the role
as Stark, and looks even more at home in the role in this second
outing. We really get to see the psychology and inner workings
of the character more in this film, and Downey Jr. pulls it off
with finesse over and over again. There are times where he looks
like he should and wants to be doing more, but even at his most
subdued, he is chewing up everything around him. He was born to
play this role, and at no point does he ever seem to lose track
of who the character is or how he should be played. At the same
time, Rockwell knocks his role right out of the park. He plays
Hammer with just the right amount of sleaze and sarcasm that he
nearly steals the show in some sequences. He does great as the
villain, and while some may be annoyed by his character, I could
not get nearly enough.
The effects are stellar across the board. I had heard some of
them were not quite up to par, but I could not find any scene
where I was not impressed by what was happening on screen. They
are not perfect by any means, but the wow factor of the original
film is still on display here. And thankfully, the extended
ending battle scene for the most part more than makes up for the
stilted and much too short battle from the original film's
finale.
Jon Favreau took a gamble on Iron Man and it paid off.
For Iron Man 2, I think the gamble was a bit too much.
I really enjoyed his extended performance as Happy Hogan, but
the film just lacks the balance and the energy of the original
film. There are some awesome sequences, and excellent
performances from Downey Jr. and Rockwell. But as a cohesive
whole, the film just feels like a bit of a disappointment. A
decent disappointment, but a disappointment nonetheless.
-- David Baldwin

Iron
Man 2
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