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Film & TV on DVD - John Doe News & Reviews

 
Greetings Film Fiends and welcome to John Doe's Film Blog. 30 years of dedicated celluloid obsession has meant that I have seen a few films. Drawing attention to some of the lesser discussed gems that I love. Cult classics, obscure curios and quality genre pictures. This blogs purpose is to translate some of my passion for these films and with luck, inspire you the reader to go check em out.

Iron Man (2008) - Trailer Included

April 30th 2008 00:00
Ore Mined and Polished


The nice people at Paramount sent John Doe a press invite for Iron Man on Monday night and he just has to thank them for their kindness. It is admittedly fun seeing a super-hyped movie before the global release and geek boys spoil the surprises.

iron man poster
Iron Man arrives this week
Director: Jon Favreau
Starring: Robert Downey Jnr, Jeff Bridges, Terence Howard, Jon Favreau, Gwyneth Paltrow


Stan Lee must be loving the financial rewards of movie adaptations. Kudos due to him since his reign as the comic book king in an era where the medium was considered intellectually defunct. Expanding his dominance over the genre, Iron Man is the first production Marvel has fully funded.

The character of Iron Man is not as widely worshipped as his other creations like Spiderman, X-Men and The Hulk, but is certainly as richly drawn. The film version definitely falls into the kiddie friendly category, opting for a “rock’n’roll” approach to the violence (established as AC/DC’s Back in Black blares over the opening) and side stepping many opportunities for a satire on pro-war propaganda, instead this is a non offensive action comedy.

Taking the anti hero Tony Stark out of Vietnam and transporting him to modern day Iraq for a more contemporary feel the film does attempt to remain true to the source in many other respects.

The story begins as the nihilistic, self serving and egotistical weapons inventor/manufacturer Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jnr) peddles his wares in the desert.

After a successful demonstration of his latest WMD his convoy is promptly ambushed and an injured Stark is left near dead. Evil terrorists abduct him and demand he build the weapon of choice for them to use in there perceived fight for freedom.

Degraded, fearful and humiliated Tony is awakened to his destructive life’s folly and plans a metal skinned escape. Using only the raw materials available he constructs a bullet proof prototype Iron suit that also has the benefits of increasing his strength and even achieves flight over short distances.

It’s enough for him to evade the clutches of bad men and soon he is back on US soil with a change of heart and a new found determination for true heroics, as Iron Man

Iron man film
The Dude is a villian, Air America is a hero - welcome to the dawn of steel



John Doe says:
It’s unfair to compare Iron Man with adult minded fare like Batman Begins or Sin City because of its distinctly family minded execution. When sizing it up against its obvious competition like Daredevil, Electra and Fantastic Four the film is above average. It’s light, fun entertainment, sometimes witty, occasionally exciting and boosted by two stellar performances. The staggering FX bear a Hollow Man style on the simulated design and development scenes. The inspired set pieces and costumes are excellent.

According to imdb.com the Director Jon Favreau (Made Zathura), describes the film as "a kind of independent film-espionage thriller crossbreed; a Robert Altman-directed "Superman", with shades of Tom Clancy novels, James Bond films, "RoboCop" and "Batman Begins".

Well he did get part of it right, the Robocop stamp is on just about every sound byte and frame that captures the mechanical giant in the lens. In fact at about the half way point JD yearned for someone like Paul Verhoeven at the helm to play with the ripened social commentary that is never plucked. It would have been nice to see a little blood in a story with so much carnage, what we get is the A-Team slug shot philosophy.

As for the espionage it really isn’t present aside from a token sub plot that is never fully realised and of course the element of Q gadgets galore. An unresolved love interest thread is unfortunately given more time than the spy angle.

It’s certainly not all bad, credit has to go to Favreau for at least holding back and never unleashing a full bodied CGI assault of quick edit action that drags on to be remembered as a blur, there is strength in economic combat.

If anything the film is too controlled in its delivery. The build up to the conflicts is more enjoyable than the events. The film wants to achieve terminal velocity and lift off but the clanging and crashing only ever feels like a leisurely jog instead of a supersonic sprint of pounded steel. The real joys arrive whenever Stark is tweaking the suit, honing features, witnessing each new evolution and the preparation for battles.

The screenplay is full of humour, some works, others are experiments in cliché, this is a obviously a set up for sequels. JD loves films that take their time to develop characters or anticipation, but the pacing of this seems off because there really is no pay off or plot, the journey is the essence for audience satisfaction or disappointment.

The highlight of the film is the lead characters. Robert Downey Jnr (Less Than Zero, Zodiac, Chaplin) is charismatic and charming as the playboy/bubble boy who like the Scarecrow in the Wizard of Oz finds out he has a heart. Even great in lame films, here you can tell he had a fair bit of free reign and according to gossip much was improvised in rehearsal.

Matching, if not exceeding his co star, Jeff Bridges (Big Lebowski, Thunderbolt and Lightfoot) goes all Lex Luthor, shaving his head cue ball bald. Taking aplomb in every dialogue delivery his daunting performance is far from the sleep walking through a role that many other big name stars deliver when answering the siren call of a massive pay-check for a potential franchise.

The rest of the players are rather forgettable. Standing beside a pair of titan thespians only highlights how lacking Gwyneth Paltrow (Royal Tenenbaums) is in onscreen energy, passion and presence. As the 007 Money Penny clone, Pepper Potts she stops the movie in its tracks whenever she appears and sadly can’t even muster up chemistry with her fictional love Tony Stark.

Terrence Howard seems to channel Cuba Gooding Jnr as the military sidekick, boring as you would expect.

John Doe is a little over critical in his review, Iron Man is truthfully good popcorn fodder. The reason for the less than stellar critique is due to the obvious sanitising or aversion to potentially dark moments. Several times, in the action and character scenes there is room for substance that is neutered. Wisely Favareau is career minded and caters to the studios “please everyone” creed any time things begin to get a bit edgy, something the idealistic JD hates.


Read Cib's review for Iron Man HERE

Iron Man - The Trailer
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Juno (2008) - Trailer Included

February 13th 2008 00:01
Juno's Arc

Juno Poster
Juno Poster

Director;Jason Reitman
Writer; Diablo Cody
Starring;Ellen Page, Michael Cera, Jason Bateman, J K Simmons, Emily Perkins, Jennifer Garner


“Yeah, I'm a legend. You know, they call me the cautionary whale.” - Juno

Receiving an avalanche of awards show media praise, Juno is a multi nominated cool jewel Dramedy with an uncharacteristically optimistic heart. Teen Pregnancy, human frailty and making the best of life’s imperfection, the film is like a gentler Todd Solondz mutated into a Wes Anderson philosophy.
“You should've gone to China, you know, 'cause I hear they give away babies like free iPods. You know, they pretty much just put them in those t-shirt guns and shoot them out at sporting events.” - Juno

Named after the title character, Juno MacGuff (Ellen Page) is an intelligent, experimental 16 year old girl who gets herself pregnant as a result of bored curiosity. The owner of the sperm is the lovable dweeb Paulie Bleeker (Michael Cera), neither are ready for a decision of this magnitude.
“That ain't no etch-a-sketch. This is one doodle that can't be un-did, homeskillet.” - Rollo

The logical solution seems to be adoption, with that the mischievous smiles and coming of age dramatics enters their first trimester.
“I'm going to give it up for adoption and I already found the perfect couple, they're going to pay for the medical expenses and everything. And what in 30 odd weeks we can just pretend that this never happened.” - Juno


Juno ellen page
Now you saw what I can do with candy, so let me make the decisions.


John Doe says:
Funny but with that necessary dramatic weight to compel thought and invoke interest, Juno is another unjudging social observation tempered with humour from Jason Reitman, the director of Thank You For Smoking.

Juno scribe Writer Diablo Cody learned her craft as a sex industry blogger with “The Pussy Ranch”, a tell-all-day-in-the-life diary of a stripper. From a singular perspective her screenplay is paced with a melodic rhythm that keenly serves up quirky character moments. Dialogue that instantly rewards is the glue that forms the stories omnipresent inner substance.

Juno Diablo Cody
Writer Diablo Cody


The off beat voices of the soundtrack add an indie sunflower atmosphere that works well with the intentional colours in the frame.

Whenever sweet charm threatens to weep into saccharine revulsion the wit and a cynical awareness of reality rescues the films fate. All the parts are appropriately developed to serve there purpose on paper and then are lifted with some superb performances from the cast.

Ellen Page backs up the promise of Hard Candy with another knowing selection of mannerisms that make Juno flawed but understood. Believably mature beyond her years yet still retaining a childish glow.

Michael Cera (Arrested Development, Superbad) as the boyfiend proves again his talent as a loser straight man comic garnering empathetic laughs without audience superiority.

Having recently revisited the vile pleasures of Oz to see J K Simmons (Spiderman) as dear old dad McGuff maybe added extra bite to the roll with the punches father figure.

Jason Bateman’s commercially trapped muso adds up to a double dose of Arrested Development quality.

Managing to avoid provocation, still John Doe found the film a pleasurable and balanced fable of modern life. Juno’s sincere intentions win over, maybe it’s because what many call strange and peculiar translates to interesting cinema a weirdo like JD can relate too. Usually more inclined towards darker mysteries when fractured and crippled personalities come to screen in believable fiction it’s reassuring to not be alone in the way we view the irony in small tragedies of the world.


Watch the Juno Trailer
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