Saturday 15 June 2013

Does Man of Steel measure up?

The pressure was on the shoulders of a Director known mostly for his visual style to breath life back into a character that was seen to be out of date and unrelatable. To do this he would need more than visual flare. He would need heart, soul and a wonderful actor strong enough to re-vitalise the role and make us believe in the character again. Did he accomplish this task of herculean proportions? Let's have a look...



The short, non-spoilery answer is a resounding YES!!! Absolutely. This is a definitively modern Superman. This isn't the Donnerverse overgrown boy scout comfortable in his own skin (not that I am decrying the Donner Superman in any way), this is a conflicted man, his origins and task thrust upon him but one that he rises to and becomes the hero we all want him to be.

So there, if you haven't seen the film then leave now, go see the movie and come back afterwards because leading on, this review delves heavily into spoiler territory. This isn't the ravings of a Superman fanboy (well...It is but...). It is a very good Summer blockbuster of a movie but beneath the surface there are all kinds of goodies waiting for you. So go. Enjoy. Then come back to see if you agree with me.

As a kind of spoiler break why don't we enjoy this picture of Mr. C. in the suit...



So...if you're still here I'm going to assume that you've already seen the movie or aren't particularly bothered about spoilers.

Let's start with THAT moment, the one everyone is talking about, the one most 'fans' of the character (creators included) are crying about...Supes snaps Zod's neck. 'That isn't right, Superman doesn't kill, etc, etc, etc,' Well, sorry to break it to you chaps but he does. He never likes it, he always trys to find a way round it but he WILL kill, when absolutely necessary.

For me this moment (and the line that actually sets it up) are the actual heart of the story and for me why it's possibly not called Superman Begins or something like that, it show's that he is, that he can be a 'Man of Steel', a hard man. Not just in terms of physical strength but in emotional strength too.

But what line, I hear you ask, I didn't hear it. You did. You may not have noticed it but it was delivered with vigour by Zod here it is..."Where did you train?...On a FARM!!!".  Yes. On a Farm. You see, a farmer would know how he had to deal with a feral creature who was hurting his animals, he would do everything he could to stop it but in the end he knows that if all else fails that he would have to kill the creature to stop it, which he does.

Does Kal/Clark like it? Not in the slightest. His howl of anguished pain immediately afterwards wrenched him into contortions but he knew he HAD to do it and that is where his 'Steel' comes into play.



All the way through the movie we're shown Jonathon Kent as a practical man, he's clearly a hardworking, grafter and a man who is willing to let a bus full of kids drown to protect his son's secret even giving up his own life. Kal/Clark would have been imbued with this same practical, hard, ethic. A man's got to do what a man's got to do. Or to steal a Donnerverse line 'So the Son becomes the Father and the Father becomes the Son'.



Kevin Costner along with Diane Lane play the Kents to perfection. Costner especially excelling in the role bringing a definite weary, gruff but loving, midwestern feel that suits the tone of this film perfectly. A grittier version of Schneider's Pa Kent and a performance that, at least for me, brought a tear to the eye as the tornado approached and 18 year old Clark watched his father make the ultimate sacrifice to keep the secret.

Lane is the sunshine to Costner's thunder bringing a real heart to a role which I would have liked to have seen more of if I'm honest but as the character is still around a kicking I hope we will. Every single scene she featured in was an emotional anchor for Clark. His Island in the see of endless and unceasing bombardment from the world, the home he returns to after the truth is revealed to him and his initial flashpoint to take action directly against Zod once her welfare is threatened. After it all, after the fights and the rubble he again returns for a mother's blessing.

The two younger Clark actors, Cooper Timberline and Dylan Sprayberry also give great peformances that are truly believeable, these are not 'stagechildren' deliveries, glorified extras there to fill the gap, real, honest performances. When Clark saves the school bus, the look of guilt and fear on Sprayberry's face is a superb beat and pause immediately before we take breath with Clark and head out with him to the barn where the first part of his story is revealed to him.


Moving up through the Clark's we get the only one that really matters, Henry 'Fat' Cavill. Could the man who could have been Superman twice before make it third time lucky? Could a British Actor really embody one of the US's most memorable icons? Could he make the role his own?

Yes, yes and a thousand times yes. Henry Cavill IS Superman.

Cavill absolutely owns the role. Redefining the character and giving us much, much more than even I could have hoped (and I've been a flag waving, drum beating member of the Cavill Appreciation Society since the day he was annouced way back in January 2011). Superman is alive and well in 2013.

The depth of acting chops that Cavill displays on the screen is very impressive from disarming charm to brooding mystery, barely contained anger, laughter and outright fury. We live these emotions with Kal/Clark all the way through the film. This may be spur of the moment hyperbole (and honestly is the reason I waited 24 hous to write this just in case I felt differently) but I truly believe that he is the finest actor and gives the finest dramatic performance in any Superman project to date (even beating Affleck in Hollywoodland!).



But the best thing about Henry is that he delivers in the action stakes too...and with this film, that's perhaps a good job as Action, with a capital A, is what this film delivers in spades.

From the invasion of the Council Citadel on Krypton to the dying moments of the Battle of Metropolis the action is there. Whether it's laser gun battles, Space chases or the seemingly large amounts of buildings toppling during Kryptonian fisticuffs this is a Summer Blockbuster through and through. Some of the complaints that I have seen feel that the movie was too weighted in favour of the action and battles, I see their point (there are a LOT of buildings that fall over) but this is also where we have the emotional content of the movie for the rest of the cast. Jor-El's Death, Martha's fear, the Soldier's hope, Perry's bravery and all the way throughout the movie Pete Ross' journey.

It's Snyder doing what Snyder does best. A cognitive banquet and with the assistance of WETA digital handling the CGI all the Superfeats are brought to life in way we haven't been able to show before. The initial flight sequence is a true hold your breath moment, I really feel that I need to experience it in IMAX 3D (I plumped for the 2D showing).

This movie can be a popcorn munching, turn your brain off 'Hey, it's Superman beating up baddies' visual feast if that's all you want but for the people wanting a little more it's all there.

The remaining members of the ensemble cast, Russell Crowe, Amy Adams, Antje Traue and Christopher Meloni all bring their own flavours to their characters and the film is richer for it, Crowe especially putting in a much larger amount of screentime than I was expecting and providing a rather Shakespearean take on Jor-El, the rebel of Krypton.


Ahhh Krypton...it looked gorgeous. It felt like a Gallifreyan Dystopian nightmare and really laid the scene for the McGuffin of the Kryptonian Codex containing the DNA matrix of every Kryptonian yet to be all now residing in The Last Son of Krypton. From the landscape itself, to the dragons, to the sterility of the inhabitants, to the costumes and the living metal servant's the production gave me all incarnations of Krypton that I had long ached to see on the screen (the only thing really missing was the citizen's leaping about).

Krypton also gave us our chief antagonist in General Zod. A man whose was born in the matrix to fulfill a single role. The protection of the planet Krypton. A man who would stop at nothing to ensure that his role was carried out. More living machine than a free man. This again is a theme that reoccurs throughout the film. Predestination vs. Free Will.



Michael Shannon, despite playing a one-note character does a lot with that note and doesn't resort to the campy theatrics that we loved in Stamp's Zod. This is a Zod who you would be terrified of. A warrior. A Zealot and a real threat.

This is also where this new Superman differs from what we've seen on the big screen in the past. This isn't a real estate/resources scam. This is an alien invasion story, a danger to the entire earth and our only hope being one of those Aliens who has been living amongst us for 33 years. It's tangible and real.

This has been a postively glowing 'review' up to now and, I'll be honest, I really, truly love the movie and this new take on my favourite character. It gave me everything I wanted to see for the continuation of the franchise and for the DC Universe but there are some points I take issue with.

Firstly, amount of collateral damage and loss of life that occurred during the battles in Smallville and Metropolis. Now to some degree Smallville was a heat of the moment battle with no real time to think only to act and the majority of Metropolis had already been levelled by the World Engine but it seemed that even if, just once, we had seen Kal-El's concern for the bystanders being injured or hurt it would have made the Train Station sequence that much more powerful. I've personally chosen to infer that he had already scanned the buildings with his X-Ray vision to see which one's were empty before the fight given that everyone was evacuating the city ;-)

However, this may be something that is revisited in the (already green-lit) sequel as the world comes to terms with the presence of a god-like being among them and the paranoia of one Corporation owner who's reach over the day to day products used in the universe was visible throughout.

My only other area of issue was Lois herself and how she was handled especially the first meeting. I thought Amy Adams did a great job but their first meeting should have been a wonderous love at first sight rescue (which, I suppose it was after a fashion...I just wanted something...more) and I don't particularly like the way that she sold her story to another organisation. Lois should be Daily Planet through and through not a contracted superstar writer. Other than that I adore the fact that she is aware of the dual identity from the get go and can't wait to see how this pans out.


If I had to pick a downer for the film it would have to be the score. It was nothing special. Some of it is lovely I'll give Zimmer that and it ties in themeatically with his Batman work giving the universe a cohesive feel  but there was just some immediacy lacking, no fanfare moment. Then again, this isn't a project for a nostalgic dose of  'BIG FILM THEME' this is a project about looking forward to a new future and I'm certainly looking for my shades, I think I'm gonna need them.

"Mr. Kent. Welcome to the Planet."

Indeed.

9/10


Saturday 18 May 2013

A Man of Steel...in plastic - Mattel's Man of Steel Movie Masters




This years Summer Tentpole release from Warner Bros. is Zack Snyder's big budget reboot of the Superman franchise. Originally scheduled to be released in the overly subscribed release period of December 2012, the studio wisely decided to allow a 'make or break' movie for the entire DC Comics stable to breathe and to devote some serious marketing power to the worldwide release now scheduled for 14th June 2013.

With any good superhero movie you need to not only satisfy the needs of the audience in the theatre but also the needs of the playground and the increasingly larger adult collector market for toys and action figures. The studiod turned to longterm master licensee partner Mattel to accomplish the mass market releases for action figures.

Mattel, following on from the very disappointing show for the Dark Knight Rises line went back to the drawing board for this one and covered the three main areas that make up any toy geeks collection. 3.75 inches, 6 inches and the more cartoony stocky 2 inch figures.

BUT...the real question has to be does the line fare any better than the ill-fated Dark Knight Rises?

I'm pleased to say that the answer to this is a resounding YES but by just how much. Let's look...

This review will focus on, what for me, is my own personal favourite scale, the 6 inch scale. The 'Movie Masters' series.

For the uninitiated, the Movie Masters series are meant to be more 'realistic' sculpts with a touch more articulation than 'Kids' toys. The series began with the rather lukewarm 'Superman Returns' but really hit it's stride with the phenomenally successful 'The Dark Knight'.

So enough of the waffle, let's get down to it.



The series, features, as can be seen above, the titular Man of Steel, Superman himself, Jor-El and General Zod.

Let's look at those individually.

First up, as it should be, is Superman himself.




All three of the characters come packed in a blister card with a brief synopsis of the character and their role in the movie on the back.








Each character in this wave also comes with their family's own sigil that they wear upon their chests...and you thought it was just a convenient 'S' for Superman...

I was, it has to be said extremely disappointed when I unpacked this figure. I just couldn't see Henry Cavill in the sculpt. Henry Cavill is a ridiculously attractive fellow with definite chiseled features and on first impression the jaw line was far too wide.

As an action figure of Superman though everything was there, multiple points of articulation (I counted 22 points but I could be mistaken). The real problem with this figure is that the cape is simply too thick and certainly hinders any dynamic posing and also prvents any real decent look at what is no doubt top quality scuplting on the rear of the figure because that it where this figure excels, the sculpting.

The costume in the movie is highly textured (a source of some costernation of fans) and I'm glad to report that this has been translated very nicely onto the figure itself an area that could easily have been foregone as a cost saving measure has, instead, been faithfully rendered.


As has the other decorative features of the new Supersuit. Again, what would normally have been done with a paint job has been sculpted onto the figure. 



Even the boots have the texturing followed through. a very impressive feat (or feet even...)



But as I said above, I was having real difficulty seeing Henry in the figure when it was in flat light. That is until I hit it with other lighting which altered the scenario substantially. a light in right place brought the sculpt to life  in a huge way.


It ain't perfect by any chalk but it's definitely Superman as we'll see him in the movie.



Certainly, it's markedly better than the effort to capure Brandon Routh back in 2006. Here's a side by side shot.


So, some really good plus points and to be honest, every fan of Superman SHOULD have this figure in their collection because it's the best 6 inch scale representation of Superman from the movie that you're going to get and it is really is a decent figure.

Then again, that's maybe the problem. It's just a decent figure. Nothing more. There's certainly an argument that this is the figure that should blow you away. It doesn't. But it is a good figure.

There are however the drawbacks that I've mentioned above. The sculpting only really comes alive when it's lit, the hands ar sculpted closed and that bloody cape hampers any decent poses.



The stand that comes with the figure is a nicely opaque representation of the 'S' that we know and love with a single peg that slots into the left foot to allow the figure to be displayed on the stand.


At the end of the day, if you own any of the other Movie Masters figures of the the characters from any of the other DC movies you really need to get this figure if only to be able to take this photo and get excited at the possibilities...






moving now onto what was, hands down the most impressive of this trio of releases in wave one, the daddy himself, Jor-El...


As you can see from the above photo, the sculptors at mattel have been working overtime on this one and it really, really shows.

An incredibly detailed figure, from the textured bodysuit to the subtle striations on the armour.


Certainly with this figure it's initially better to let the pictures do the talking...







Unfortunately, with all of the time taken over the body Mattel really let themselves down by not sculpting the beard onto the facial sculpt relying solely on paint to accomplish the look. This renders the figure as looking less like Russell Crowe than it would have done if the beard had been sculpted and again, until you hit it with some decent light whilst the man who is Javert is there it's a case of 'B+ could do better...'.

But when you do hit it...blimey!


There, you have Russell Crowe as Jor-El.

Really, a very cool figure and like Pokemon, you gotta catch 'em all so this is certainly one to pick up if you see him on your toy shelves.

Jor-El, like Superman, comes with a stand featuring the 'El' family crest.



Again the figure has the same 22 POA as the Superman figure but the armour may well restrict some upper arm movement.  

A nice Father and Son shot



Definitely two very nice figures and for the $15 pricepoint certainly favourably comparable with everything else on the market at that price.

I just wish the same could be said of General Zod...



Michael Shannon has the 'benefit' of being a man with very *ahem* striking features. Imagine therefore my puzzlement when I unpacked Zod.

Frankly, the figure looked nothing like him.

Even worse, in every single shot we've seen of Zod he has a beard. Missing. Not even painted on.

NB. - Update. It's been pointed out to me that this is in fact the Zod when he's being sentenced on Krypton and that he doesn't have a beard in this scene.


Sure, the texturing of the costume is as nice as the other two figures, same POA and same great sculpting on the other features of the suit.


Presumably, this is sort of what is hidden by the cape on the Superman figure.

A lesson learned however with the other two figures made me hit it with a different light thinking it would make a difference. Thankfully it did but not as drastic as the other two.


It certainly became more Shannon like but still missing Zod. Until I changed my angle of shooting.



There was Zod. A clean-shaven Zod to be sure but Zod to be sure.

Call me silly, but I don't think you should have to go to all the trouble of lighting and choosing which angle you look at your figures from to get a decent representation of characters. I use this as an example a lot but Designworks Windsor's work on the 5 inch Scale Doctor Who line was, to me, the benchmark of what should be acheived with a mass market figure line.

This has certainly affected my scoring of the line as a whole and I hope it's something that's taken into account on Wave Two of the line.

Zod again comes with his crest as a stand.



Which, again only in my opinion, looks a bit Soviet Russia 'Hammer and Sickle' - perhaps shades of the influence of Mark Millar's seminal 'Red Son' Graphic Novel.

Also, because I couldn't resist the temptation to do it I pulled out the other franchises villans for a quick photo...


On the whole therefore, Wave One is definitely worth picking up. As a die-hard Superman fan I absolutely had to have these figures which, unfortunately, due to the usual crazy marketing decisions taken by Mattel UK I have had to secure from the USA as they won't be stocked over here at any mainstream toy outlets and will only be available in small quantities at inflated prices from specialist stores.

A shout out then to my man, Brandon, for stepping into the breach and getting these babies in my hand for review before many US stores have them in stock for sale.

For all fans of the character I think you should pick these up as soon as you or indeed any US friend can pick them up. Certainly judging by the groundswell of support that I'm hearing for this film these will certainly be getting harder to find as the film is released.

So, from me a thumbs up but with my Superman Bias turned off I certainly think twice about getting the General Zod figure.

Separate scores :-

Superman - 7/10

Jor-El - 8.5/10

General Zod - 6/10



See you in the aisles...