Chris At The Pictures: henry jackman
Showing posts with label henry jackman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label henry jackman. Show all posts

Friday, 17 March 2017

'Kong: Skull Island' - Review

3/17/2017 09:47:00 am
'Kong: Skull Island' - Review

★ ★ ★ ½ 

We wave a cheerful goodbye to awards season and prepare for the imminent onslaught of summer blockbuster season with this, the latest incarnation of King Kong and the second in Warner Bros. monsters shared universe. If even half of the franchise properties headed our way in the coming months are as amiable as this fantastically enjoyable romp, we have little to fear.

Kong: Skull Island leaps a few decades past the usual 1930’s escapades and lands just as the Vietnam War is coming to an end, and so that conflict becomes the metaphor at the heart of the film. A band of US soldiers led by war-starved Colonel Packard (Samuel L. Jackson) and a constantly-sleeveless SAS tracker (Tom Hiddleston) are tasked with protecting a scientific expedition to a hitherto unexplored island in the Pacific. Brie Larson tags along as magazine photographer Mason Weaver (a decent attempt to knock Mark Wahlberg’s Cade Yeager in Transformers from the top spot of dumbest action movie names).

You’ll notice I just sort of stuck Larson on the end there as a footnote but believe me, that’s more appraisal than the film gives her. She’s mostly there to provide (admittedly very convincing) horrified stares and awe-inspired gawping. And, for most of the running time, we’re firmly with her. To use a phrase I promised never to use; this movie is a visual feast. Cinematographer Larry Fong – so usually stuck with adhering to the iron-grey sensibilities of Zack Snyder – makes full use of an eye-piercing colour palette here, creating a myriad of iconic shots that you just want to bathe in. Kong’s silhouette framed against a burning sunset, napalm explosions reflected in a grinning pilot’s aviators and a dozen others that I daren’t spoil ensure this film is at least a stylistic match for Gareth Edwards' Godzilla.

While the first of Warner/Legendary’s series was about the myth and mystery, Skull Island is all about the monsters. Almost no time is wasted on shipping our intrepid cast to the island, where they’re immediately set upon not only by the giant ape, but also by skull-faced lizards, enormous spiders, tree-like carapaces and all manner of creepy crawlies. The enormous success these creatures have on drawing the eye is commendable, not least because they distract from the risible dialogue (poor John Goodman’s professor is dealt a bad hand in expedition exposition from the start).

Luckily, clunky lines are often overridden by thunderous sound design or the music. Henry Jackman’s score plays much like his Captain America: Civil War album on shuffle, but it works fine. His part usually plays second fiddle to the jukebox collection of 60s/70s hits, just in case you forgot the whole thing was a metaphor for Vietnam for two seconds.


The military forces ill-prepared to face a jungle-bound enemy, extensive use of napalm, a sophisticated and resourceful indigenous populace and more (Hiddleston’s character is literally called Conrad, for goodness sake) create an analogy so heavy-handed they may as well have called the movie Viet Kong. But Kong: Skull Island is a film that thrives on lack of subtlety, on creatures and camp and its British hero slicing up giant lizards with a samurai sword. It’s one Wilhelm scream away from a classic.

Thursday, 27 March 2014

'Captain America: The Winter Soldier' - Review

3/27/2014 12:04:00 pm
'Captain America: The Winter Soldier' - Review

There’s a moment in Avengers Assemble where Tony Stark/Iron Man and Steve Rogers/Captain America are arguing, and Stark says ‘It’s not really my style.’, to which Rogers replies snidely ‘…and you’re all about style, aren’t you?’. In a way, this one line encapsulates the difference between the different strands of the Marvel cinematic universe. After the high-octane thrill rides that were Iron Man 3 and Thor: The Dark World brought the style, Captain America: The Winter Soldier brings the substance.

The latest instalment in the Marvel franchise follows Steve Rogers (Chris Evans) in the months following Avengers Assemble, adjusting to life in the 21st century and helping S.H.I.E.L.D, led by Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson) track down and eliminate threats, with the help of an elite commando unit led by Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson). Upon returning from a successful mission with some key enemy information, the tables are turned and a nefarious unit within S.H.I.E.L.D make it their mission to track down Captain America, who goes undercover with Black Widow to discover the truth.



Whilst the two previous films felt more like action-adventure romps, The Winter Soldier feels more like a cold-war espionage era thriller that just happens to have a couple of great big special effects sequences in it. Whilst Iron Man 3 – which I really liked – felt somewhat all over the place in terms of pacing, this feels much more coherent and sticks to a much tighter narrative structure, which works very well. Even when the plot twists do make themselves known – and I can assure you that you won’t expect them – the story remains coherent and ordered. Much like the first hour or so of Avengers, this film takes it’s time to give proper, fleshed-out character development, in such a way that even the audience who just turned up to see things explode won’t find it dull. It’s all offset with the reliable Marvel humour and a visual style that is cleaned to a mirror-shine, the fantastic digital cinematography really bringing out the colour in the costumes and the polished surfaces of the S.H.I.E.L.D headquarters.

The leads all give very fine performances; Evans retains his role of trying to keep things morally straight, Johansson continues her alluringly deadly facade but conflicted under the surface. Samuel L. Jackson is always reliably grumpy as Fury and new-comer to the franchise Robert Redford is very good as a morally suspect S.H.I.E.L.D executive. When the action sequences do turn up, they’re a well-balanced mix of in-camera effects and CGI, the hand-to-hand fights packing a real punch in terms of visuals and thumping sound effects, and the great big computer-generated effects still carry enough weight to be believable. 

The only issues with the film are that it stretches the mark in terms of running time, and doesn’t have the fun-factor that felt much more prevalent in the former Marvel films, plus it has little to contribute to the Marvel cinematic universe as a whole (save for a very brief post-credits scene). Captain America: The Winter Soldier is still a worthy addition to the canon, making its mark with an intriguing story, well-developed characters and some extremely well put together action sequences. Roll on, Avengers 2.

4 Stars