Monday 25 May 2015

Netflix's Daredevil




From the very first scene the ‘Devil of Hell’s Kitchen’ appears, I was on board. As someone who wasted two hours of his life on the initial Agents of SHIELD episodes, I was hesitant to get invested in another Marvel show. But my God, watching a blind ninja endlessly pummel a human-trafficker and moving like a character from the Matrix – it got me hooked immediately. 

Let’s talk Marvel’s Netflix-exclusive show, Daredevil:

1.                   Protagonist

Matt Murdock (played by Charlie Cox, of Stardust fame), is eminently likeable. He’s not a brooding Bruce Wayne, nor is he a total dickhead like Tony Stark – he’s a relatable, but driven, guy.
Throughout the series, you get flashbacks to his childhood; we see the origin of his powers and his relationships with the two men who shaped his destiny. Matt’s dad, Battlin’ Jack Murdock, was an amateur boxer who struggled to support his blind son in the slums of Hell’s Kitchen, leading to him getting in trouble with the wrong type of people. An older blind man called ‘Stick’ helps Matt hone his skills to the point where his remaining senses are at a near superhuman level. 

The character’s Catholicism is a feature which almost bookends the series; the first time we meet adult Matt Murdock he goes to Confession to beg forgiveness for all-dat-Daredeviling he’s about to do. And later in the story, he returns when he is contemplating resorting to murder.

1 Mark

2.                   Antagonist


Vincent D’Onofrio (Full Metal Jacket, Men in Black, Jurassic World) plays Wilson Fisk, AKA The Kingpin, in a fascinating way. You would assume a man who is building the vastest criminal empire known to man – and has the comfort of having the media, police, judicial system and politicians on his payroll – would exude arrogance and talk as though he were untouchable. D’Onofrio, however, opts to portray the character as unsure, hesitant, and even socially awkward.

It’s often said the best villains are the ones who are convinced they’re doing good, and you really get the sense this man is desperate to help his city. When Fisk says he takes no pleasure in the cruel things he has to do, you believe him – just as you believe the events of the series lead to him truly accepting the fact he is the bad guy. But for every moment of bumbling shyness, there’s an explosion of pent-up rage. Stay away from car doors around Wilson Fisk. Nuff said. 

1 mark

3.                   Secondary Characters


Foggy Nelson – Matt’s legal partner and friend. He’s very much the comic-relief of the show, but not all of his jokes hit, and sometimes the actor looks out of his depth when alongside the movie-star cast. That being said, he too is a very likeable character, and as the relationship between the two lawyers is explored, we see how their bond is and the effects of the dynamic between the two being seriously challenged, as certain information comes to light.

Karen Page – framed for murder after moving to New York, Karen becomes Nelson & Murdock’s first client and then their secretary once released from custody. Karen is desperate to bring to light those who framed her, and works with the attorney duo to try and do just that. This however, grates after a while, as it seems the character’s whole deal is trying to convince people to do something they don’t want to. Although, we do get several allusions to her dark past, which is enough to keep us interested. 

Ben Ulrich – a respected but tired journalist, Ben Ulrich agrees to help Karen Page in her efforts to expose those who framed her before their grip on Hell’s Kitchen becomes unbreakable. Ulrich knows exactly how he and Karen should approach this new story – even if his editor is not interested in supporting them. His wife, however, is in the hospital with a debilitating illness and he is struggling to fund her care, so he is hesitant to invest too much into this dangerous and possibly pointless endeavour.  

Claire Temple – a nurse who patched up Matt after finding him in a dumpster following a night of Daredevil-ing. Played by Rosario Dawson, she has a smaller role as the series progresses, but is another anchor in Matt Murdock’s life, keeping him from losing himself to the Devil inside. Comic fans will know she also had a romantic relationship with Luke Cage – one of the other three Marvel characters getting the Netflix treatment before a team-up series – and so it may be that this is the character who links the different shows to each other (which would make sense, considering the calibre of actor they hired for a seemingly small role).

James Wesley – clean-cut, impeccably dressed and an expert at manipulation, Wesley is Wilson Fisk’s right-hand man. Just as Fisk will go to any lengths to ‘protect’ his city, Wesley will do whatever is necessary to ensure his employer’s whims are satisfied, and wear a polite yet threatening smile while doing it.

1 Mark

4.                   Plot

The main theme of the show is that sometimes good people have to do bad things. From Battlin’ Jack taking a bribe to throw a fight so he can support his son, to Daredevil jabbing a knife in someone’s eye to get information, to Wilson Fisk taking control of the city via criminal means in an effort to rebuild it following the ‘Battle of New York’ in the first Avengers film; no-one walks away from this series with their hands clean.

The show isn’t bloated in a way that other shows tend to be; there are only thirteen episodes, as opposed to shows like Arrow and the Flash that have 23 per season. No sub-plots feel forced or unnecessary and each episode advances the story in a meaningful way. It’s consistent, concise and keeps you guessing all the way.

1 Mark

5.            Action


The combat scenes in this show are incredible, as the video at the top of the review will show. The punches feel heavy, the kicks feel swift and we see how Daredevil’s enhanced senses give him the advantage, without the need for any heavy-handed cuts to his point of view – just watching him be still and wait for his opponent to make a move before he reacts instinctively is a subtle way to keep the choreography flowing while also being true to the character.

It isn’t just the fighting where the action shines: the way he moves through environments and uses his surroundings convey just how agile and graceful he is as a result of his powers is so well done and supported by clever camerawork. There’s no shaky-cam obstructing our view unless the circumstances call for it – we get to see the expertly choreographed combat and set pieces unimpeded. 

1 Mark

5.                   Drama

As light and danger-free as most of the Marvel movies have been, this is the dark corner of that universe. Characters die throughout the series and there is quite a bit of blood – there’s no magical hammers or unbreakable shields on show; people get shot, stabbed, burned alive, hanged, thrown off buildings and beaten to death. 

We get glimpses of both Matt Murdock and Wilson Fisk’s upbringings and how it set them on their respective paths, and both backstories are equally brutal. The show’s best dramatic moments, however, come in the heart-to-heart scenes. In particular, a scene towards the end of the series where Matt asks Father Lantom whether he believes the Devil exists in human form, which results in the Priest recalling a terrifying memory from his time giving aid in Africa.

1 Mark

7.            Comedy

As mentioned previously, Foggy is overused as a comic relief. However, there are enough well-crafted moments of levity where he does shine, and as the series goes on and things look bleaker and bleaker, it is Foggy who breaks the tension and offers something other than despair and rage.

Half a Mark

8.            Romance

The show is interesting in that it is the villain who has the love story. Wilson Fisk begins a relationship with an art dealer, who at first is scared of his work but grows to love the power being at his side brings. It’s a very believable dynamic between the two and it isn’t focussed on too much as to weight the story down, which is a problem some comic-book related properties tend to have.
A connection between Matt and Claire is hinted at, but she realises it would be too painful to become attached to someone who might step out at night and never come back. Likewise, Foggy is shown to have feelings for Karen, but they are clearly not mutual. 

Half a Mark

9.            Pacing

The series is paced brilliantly in terms of the overall story-arc. For example, we don’t meet Wilson Fisk until very end of episode three, and not properly until episode four, and so we have three episodes of build up to this mysterious unseen force before we see first-hand why his name is feared.
In terms of screen-time for Daredevil, the occasional episode will have him in costume for the majority of it – and these are the best episodes – but most episodes divide up the time between Matt’s solo story, the Karen/Ben Ulrich plot thread and Wilson Fisk’s dealings very well, with a sprinkling of Daredevil in each act.

Although, perhaps too much time is dedicated to the Karen Page and Ben Ulrich story at times. While it certainly pays off in the end, I sometimes felt their slice of the cake tended to slow down individual episodes as more interesting things were happening elsewhere; there was a little bit of repetitiveness in how their arc developed.

Half a Mark

10.          Re-watch-ability

Well, I’ve watched it twice already, and plan on buying the Blu-Ray when it comes out. So take that how you will.

1 Mark

Ranking Daredevil alongside the Marvel movies, I’d put it comfortably in third place, behind Avengers Assemble and Captain America: The Winter Soldier, but ahead of Avengers: Age of Ultron and Guardians of the Galaxy in the top five.

Final Score: 8.5/10

Thursday 21 May 2015

Mad Max: Fury Road Review





Mad Max: Fury Road is an art-house film with a blockbuster-sized budget. There’s minimal dialogue, no real plot and it’s 100% about the visuals – essentially the movie is a two-hour car-chase. Don’t walk in expecting a typical Hollywood film that holds your hand with lots of exposition; it’s an insane world where nothing makes sense and nothing is meant to. 

But let’s try anyway:

1.                   Protagonist


 Max; he’s pretty miffed. Haunted by flashbacks of people he couldn’t save, the character is mysterious but immediately relatable – unlike Tom Hardy’s obligatory weird accent for the day, which mostly consists of grunts and mumbles. Although, to be fair, Tom Hardy could play the shark in a Jaws remake and be amazing.

Here, he plays a man whose sole objective is survival; he’s a man living second-to-second, minute-to-minute. After being captured at the beginning of the movie, Max is reduced to a ‘blood-bag’ for ailing War-Boys and is thus strapped to the front of a truck when they are ordered to chase a rogue vehicle. 

Over the course of the movie, he comes to care about the characters he winds up with and their hopes for a future, and in a purely selfless way. A lot of critics have said Max isn’t really the protagonist in his own movie - but he’s the one who is changed by the time the credits roll, thanks to the characters around him. He comes to realise that even in this nightmare world, there’s more to life than just survival. This is the story of how Max regains his humanity.

1 Mark

2.                   Antagonist

 
 The bad guy is called Immortan Joe, and is played by an actor from the original Mad Max film (Hugh Keays-Byrne), but as a different villain this time. He’s convinced his community that he’s a god since he has control of the water supply. Each day, he goes through a very Darth Vader-like ritual where he is placed in a menacing looking life-support suit, before addressing his people and sending his army out on supply runs. When he learns that one of his vehicles has gone rogue, Immortan Joe leads a brigade out into the desert to hunt them down – complete with a vehicle solely used for war-drums and another powered by an electric guitar which blasts fire. BAD GUY! GOT IT?

As far as villain motivations go, there’s nothing complex about this character; he had something stolen and he wants it back. He’s interesting to look at, but he’s only really there to be the thing the good guys are running away from. The society he's crafted is fascinating (there’s an entire level of his lair used solely for obese women to make a constant stream of breast-milk), but the character itself is nothing exceptional.

Half a Mark

3.                   Secondary Characters


Furiosa (Charlize Theron) is one of Immortan Joe’s trusted rig drivers, who goes rogue on a supply run. She steals precious cargo, the details of which I won’t spoil here, resulting in a desperate and fiery chase through the wasteland. 

For many, Furiosa is the best character in the movie: she’s smart (she has a killswitch on the rig, so if anyone tries to steal it without knowing the correct sequence of switches, the vehicle stops), she’s resourceful (she repair’s the rig from underneath as its being driven by Max), she’s tough (she doesn’t hesitate to attack Max when he seems like he’s going to hijack the rig, and even pulls the trigger on a shotgun inches from Max’s face, without knowing it was broken) and she’s brave (despite missing an arm, she’ll put herself in harm’s way to protect the cargo). In short, Furiosa is a great character.

Nicholas Hoult plays Nux. He's one of Immortan Joe’s War-Boys who has a disease and so uses Max as his ‘blood-bag’ in order to carry out everyday activities - like driving a spikey car with a man chained to the front of it through explosions and sandstorms and such. 

Like the rest of the War-Boys, Nux is a lunatic – spraying silver chrome onto his face moments before an attempted suicide attack during the early stages of the chase, and shouting “What a day! What a lovely day!” during the aforementioned explosions and sandstorms. His arc is a familiar one: he just wants to make his leader proud, but then he discovers maybe he doesn’t need his leader’s approval, and all that matters is the power of love or something. Regardless, like the movie as a whole, it’s watching Nux that is thrilling, rather than the bullet points of his storyline.
                                                                          
1 Mark

4.                   Plot

As the movie opens, Max asks the audience an interesting question. He wonders who is crazier: the hairless, topless, chalk-white, murderous lunatics chasing him through this insane world of fire and sand, or him for appearing to make peace with what his existence has become.

It’s them. It’s obviously them. They’re much crazier.

The basic plot is simple: Furiosa steals cargo from the villain, so he gathers an armada and chases her through the desert. Max is taken along for the ride as a ‘bloodbag’, but eventually gets free and links up with Furiosa and they try and evade capture. It’s nothing complex and I can’t award a full mark when the plot is seemingly inconsequential; the action is what the film lives and dies on. That said, the movie poses interesting questions about morality, and the characters keep you hooked enough so that everything they do feels vital.

Half a Mark

5.                   Action


It’s amazing. Even though the film is set in nothing but desert, the range of colours used combined with almost entirely practical stunts and well framed combat, not to mention brilliantly inventive props (they manage to reinvent the spear - a weapon as old as mankind itself), ensure that the film remains visually stunning throughout. This film has everything modern action movies take for granted (fights on top of cars, explosions galore, people plummeting to their deaths etc) but implements them in a way that actually connects with the audience – you feel like anyone could die at any time.

In the same way Netflix’s Daredevil series (review to come) gave us hand-to-hand combat that outshines pretty much every fight scene in any Hollywood movie, every frame of Mad Max has something visually astounding happening, even in the background. Especially in the background.

1 Mark

6.                   Drama 


There are some excellent character moments throughout the film, primarily with Max, Furiosa and Nux.

Towards the end of the film, we're given more information on Furiosa’s back-story, including where she came from and how she came to be in Immortan Joe’s service. These scenes also convey why she is as determined as she is to get the stolen cargo to its destination.

The lack of dialogue enhances the dramatic aspects of the movie; we don’t need to be told why Max identifies with Furiosa as the film goes on, we can see it through the experiences they’re forced to share and the physicality of the actors. Where most movies would have Max explain that he’s starting to trust Furiosa, this one shows us by having Max hand over a rifle with the last bullet in the barrel as an enemy bears down on them.

In the final third of the film, Nux has several great character moments, but going into detail would be spoiling his arc.

1 Mark

7.                   Comedy

Nothing laugh-out-loud, but the world is so insane that it’s just funny to witness. Tom Hardy’s facial expression of ‘well, I guess this is life now’ when he’s stood on a swinging giant pole while surrounded by carnage, and his disbelief at being chained to the front of a vehicle heading into battle emphasise just how bizarre this reality is. 

The film subtly reminds you to process the ludicrous mayhem on screen as more than just the CGI ‘splosions of a lot of films these days, by showing that Max himself is even caught off guard on occasion and yes, this is really weird. Plus, every time Nux is on screen in the first half of the film, something hilarious happens.

1 Mark

8.                   Romance

There was no real romantic sub-plot in this film, which is refreshing (think how much better the Thor films would be without the forced love story). There are hints at something between Max and Furiosa, and even Nux has few moments with another character – but I took that more as him appreciating being treated as a human for possibly the first time in years. The film gets half a mark for setting up Max and Furiosa in future installments, without Hollywood-ing them down our throats in this one.

Half a Mark

9.                   Pacing

The quiet moments are, to use a cliché, few and far between. If you want more from a film than just the greatest action ever to slapped to celluloid, this film will leave you wanting; you get to know the characters through their actions rather than their words. And while Mad Max is a fantastic example of ‘show, don’t tell’, an audience whose cinematic bread and butter has been dialogue based films, with action sequences every ten-to-fifteen minutes and a love-story sprinkled throughout, may misconstrue this movie as just mindless action.

That said, it is difficult to keep an audience’s attention during the chase scenes when the action escalates, and escalates, and escalates, and escalates, and escalates, and escalates some more, before the payoff and fade-to-black. The film also suffers from ‘Return of the King syndrome’: you think the film is going to end about three or four times before it actually does. There’s only so many times we can watch you say goodbye to your god-damn Hobbit friends, Frodo!

Half a Mark

10.               Re-watch-ability

The film has really grown on me since seeing it, but I wonder how hooked I’d be watching the same car chase again when there’s no riveting dialogue or complex storytelling techniques on display between crashes to make me desperate for a repeat viewing. However, bearing in mind the next opportunity after the cinema run ends will be the DVD, I am tempted to see the film in all its explosive glory one last time.

Half a Mark

Final Score: 7.5/10

Mad Max: Fury Road is definitely worth seeing on big screen. It is visually amazing, has a great cast and even with minimal dialogue, the characters are vibrant. Don’t wait for an inevitably less impressive smaller screen viewing – like with last year’s Godzilla, if you’re interested in watching the film, pay for the cinema ticket and appreciate the spectacle.