Ten years of mighty Marvel

All I really wanted as a kid was to see a movie based on characters from Marvel Comics on the big screen. Growing up there were movies based on DC characters like the Superman and Batman but none from Marvel.

And it wasn’t like Marvel wasn’t trying. Their first movie in theaters Howard the Duck (1986) seems like an odd choice now but for a time the character was extremely popular and seemed like it could be a crossover hit but instead was a colossal flop. And there were a few more attempts shortly after with films like Captain America and The Punisher that went direct to video and Fantastic Four that went direct to nowhere and has never officially been released.

Still, reading the back pages of the magazine Comics Scene which each month teased that a James Cameron directed Spider-Man movie was in the works and Tom Cruise was set to star as Tony Stark in Iron Man –– movies based on Marvel characters seemed to be closer than ever and further away too.

In 1998 my prayers were answered with Blade and then in quick succession X-Men and Spider-Man. Over the following years some of these movies would be good, mostly sequels to X-Men and Spider-Man, and some not so good, Ghost Rider, Daredevil, Elektra, another Fantastic Four… Which is kind’a how I thought comics based on comics would be, a few gems mixed in with the dung.

But all that changed ten years ago with the release of Iron Man on May 2, 2008. This movie wasn’t just based on a character from Marvel, it was also produced by Marvel too which meant the people working on Iron Man actually understood how to translate the character to the big screen. Iron Man was great, quickly becoming a fan-favorite film and was one of the biggest movies of 2008. The Incredible Hulk would follow that same summer and while not attaining anything near the box office of Iron Man was still a good movie none-the-less.

In quick succession Iron Man 2, Thor and Captain America: The First Avenger would follow over the next few years. And while I don’t think any of these three movies are great, I still think they’re good. And, more importantly, they all made loads of money at the box office.

In fact, Marvel went from a company in the 1990s that was on the verge of bankruptcy to one that was bought by Disney for a reported $9 billion dollars based on the strength of the characters and movies alone.

What would change everything was the release of The Avengers in 2012. That movie was well-written, acted, had amazing action sequences… that I think from The Avengers on audiences would no longer accept mediocre comic book movies, or just about every comic book movie released prior to this point, and would only accept great ones.

Great movies like Iron Man 3 and Thor: Ragnarok would follow and would be embraced by audiences. Not-so-great movies like The Amazing Spider-Man and yet another Fantastic Four would also follow and would be condemned by those same audiences.

Which is a double edged sword. When a movie can’t be just “good” anymore and has to be groundbreaking and “great” it sets an artificially high standard. I thought films like Suicide Squad and the condemned Fantastic Four were good, but since they’re not great it means that fans of the genera feel safe openly deriding them.

Still, this artificially high standard has produced a lot of classic movies over the last decade that I think people will still be talking about generations to come.

And now we enter another decade of movies based on Marvel Comics with more than ten films featuring their characters due out over the next few years. I don’t see any sign of movies based on Marvel comics slowing down anytime soon — they make way to much money at the box office to do that. Still, I can’t imagine if there was some way I could magically send a message to myself as a kid wishing for these movies that I’d actually believe my older self that there would one day be so many good Marvel movies out there.

After having spent so much time wishing for a good Marvel movie such an embarrassment of riches these days wouldn’t seem to have been possible.

Direct Beam Comms #23

TV

The Grinder

The-Grinder-Season-1-Poster-FOXThe first season, and ultimately what’ll turn out to be its last season, of the FOX TV series The Grinder ended last week. This series started off as a kind’a wacky show about two brothers, one a successful small town lawyer (Fred Savage) who up until that point’s greatest accomplishment was having a “protected left turn” installed in their town and the other brother (Rob Lowe) who’s returned home after playing the character of “Mitch Grinder” on a fictional long-running show-with-the-show that’s like a legal version of CSI that’s also called The Grinder, who now wants to work at the family law firm since he considers his run on his The Grinder as being just as good as law school.

At first The Grinder was enjoyable but it started being a bit too formulaic. That formula was the firm would take on a case, brother Stewart (Savage) wouldn’t want Mitch to be a part of the case because of his lack of real world experience, but in the end Mitch by using his experiences on his The Grinder would be able to figure out a way to win the case.

Which was fine except that it started getting a bit old.

As the series progressed, though, the real The Grinder started to evolve away from that simple premise and started making fun of procedural cop and lawyer shows that are everywhere these days. When The Grinder moved to this it became much more enjoyable and many times more entertaining.

Under this premise I could’ve seen this show going for a few years, but alas FOX announced this week that the first season of The Grinder would also be its last when they announced the cancellation of this series.

Overall: C+, first half: C-, last half: B.

Movies

Captain America: Civil War

565cb34596f3bThe first Captain America movie was released five years ago and was good. It starts off as an origin story of the character where puny Steve Rogers (Chris Evans) goes from literal 90 pound weakling to strapping super-soldier Captain America via an experiment, then tells of Cap and his team’s adventures during WW2 against Hydra and the Red Skull. That movie did a good job of introducing the character and ultimately taking him from the 1940s to present day by the end of the film. What I didn’t expect was that a side character in that movie, Bucky Barnes (Sebastian Stan), would go onto play such a pivotal role in future Captain America movies.

Frozen and brought back to life much like Captain America, instead of waking to our modern world like Cap did, Bucky woke in a Soviet facility where he was turned into the “Winter Soldier.” A state sponsored assassin who was put on ice in between missions and would become the main baddie of the second Captain America: The Winter Solider movie.

And while I thought both the original Captain America: The First Avenger and Winter Soldier were good, I must say I really liked the third Captain America: Civil War movie a lot, and much of that is because of things like Bucky’s story.

This latest Captain America film bumps Bucky from nemesis to ally of Cap as Bucky struggles to regain his lost memories stolen from him in the process of becoming the Winter Soldier. Bucky’s main problem is that everyone’s looking for him because of a bombing that injured many and killed the King of Wakana. Cap, looking to help his friend, goes on the run with Bucky to try and track down the real bomber and clear Bucky’s name.

Except that with Cap, Bucky and the Falcon (Anthony Mackie) on the run means that Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr.) and the rest of the Avengers must go after them since the Avengers are now under the control of the United Nations as a sort of state-sponsored super-hero team.

What I liked most about all this was that none of the characters in Civil War were in the wrong with their beliefs. There’s a legitimate argument to be made that superheroes like Iron Man and Captain America need to be controlled by someone, lest they grow too powerful and decide to control us. And there’s also a good argument to be made that no one should be in control of an organization like the Avengers since they’d be in charge of the most powerful weapons on the planet.

568afc3d90c1cI think Tony Stark makes his point here with Avenger the Scarlett Witch (Elizabeth Olsen) who can do all sorts of weird things like control minds and use force-fields who’s staying in the US at an Avengers compound, “They generally don’t let foreign WMDs into the country.”

So it’s hard to root for any character here; is Tony too proud to admit that Cap might be right, that they’re doing a good enough job on their own and don’t need overseers or is Cap too proud to see that sometimes a lot of innocent people are hurt and die when the Avengers go into battle.

Or maybe bother Tony and Cap are both right and wrong at the same time?

All of which makes for a very compelling story. And this mixed with amazing action scenes where we see super-powered characters fighting each other in spectacular ways makes for a great film.

more-captain-america-civil-war-trailer-breakdown-740992Speaking of action, Civil War and previous Winter Soldier do an interesting thing with their big action set pieces — they start small and slowly build big. Be it Cap’s elevator fight in Winter Soldier that starts with Cap vs a few and turns into an all-out brawl that evolves to Cap vs a jet on his motorcycle or in Civil War that starts with Cap and Bucky confronting each other, turns to Cap and Bucky fighting a German SWAT team and ends up on the roads with Cap and Bucky racing cars and being chased by the likes of the Black Panther.

This slow build is something I don’t see a lot of other comic book movies using, but it seems like they should be when they all seem to be trying to copy the Marvel style of films.

I really have to nit-pick to find anything in Civil War that I didn’t care for. And I’m one who’s the first to pounce on story elements that don’t make sense or characters who change at the whim of story beats. That stuff simply isn’t present in Civil War. It’s a solid movie from beginning to end, does a great job of introducing new characters like Black Panther (Chadwick Boseman) to a new Spider-Man (Tom Holland), has an interesting story interspersed with action scenes that actually drive the story rather than just featuring characters punching one and other in the fact — and does it all without missing a beat.

Grade: A

The Reading List

Trapped on Tape: 10 Great Horror Movies that are Only on VHS

This week in pop-culture history

  • 1971: Escape from the Planet of the Apes opens.
  • 1982: Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior opens in the US.