Yesterday
I discussed the near flawlessness that is Iron Man, and whilst all these
praises remain for the sequel, it suffered from having far greater levels of
hype, anticipation and expectation. It seemed that all who had loved the first
couldn’t wait for the second, everyone wanted more, and more was most certainly
what they got, especially when it comes to an overabundance of supporting
characters, superfluous plot strands and men in metal suits hitting each other.
Where the original finale, with Stark and his business partner, Jeff Bridges
Obediah Stane, knocking seven bells out of each other in their rocket-propelled
armour, seemed fresh, new and exciting, in the sequel we get something similar
not once, but three times, as well as two metal men fighting an army of
remote-controlled drones and an early confrontation between Stark and new
villain Ivan Vanko (Mickey Rourke) at the Monaco Grand Prix. Some of the action
set pieces, like the aforementioned meeting, seem a little shoehorned in to put
an action beat in place, but are still impressive, and the suiting-up sequences
have also been greatly improved upon, especially the Suit-case.
All the
supporting characters are back, but Don Cheadle has replaced Terrence Howard
(Howard apparently wanted more money than Marvel thought he deserved, and
seeing how little he brought to the table in the first film I’m inclined to
agree with them) as Rhodes, and all the characters get an expanded upon arc,
even director Jon Favreau’s background cameo as driver Hogan gets himself
something to do. Gwyneth Paltrow’s Pepper Potts is the new Stark Industries
CEO, Rhodes wants a suit to take back to the military, Scarlett Johansson is
Tony’s new assistant/undercover S.H.I.E.L.D. agent (a welcome addition to the cast,
if only for aesthetic reasons), Tony is in talks with Samuel L. Jackson’s
one-eyed Nick Fury about his role in the Avengers, weapons rival Justin Hammer
(Sam Rockwell) is desperate to better Stark and bird-obsessed Vanko aims to settle the score
regarding his father working with Stark’s dear old Dad (Mad Men’s John
Slattery). See, that’s a really long sentence. Far too much to take in. The first
film was streamlined, with not much chaff around the wheat, but here there’s
just too many strands. I didn’t even mention that the arc reactor keeping Stark
alive is also killing him, a completely unnecessary plot point that adds
nothing and is resolved by the end, so doesn’t affect the series, but takes up
about 20 minutes of screen time. Even with so much going on, the film is 5
minutes shorter than the first, but feels half an hour longer, as boredom sets
in from watching metal men punch each other repeatedly.
Even more
so than in Iron Man, this feels like a prequel to the Avengers, especially with
Johansson’s Black Widow, bigger roles for Nick Fury and Agent Coulson and
references to Captain America and Thor. That, and the film’s finale feeling
disappointing after a protracted build up leaves this film with all the
entertaining pats of the first, but an unfulfilling sequel that doesn’t take
them anywhere. Favreau has since dropped out of part three, but Kiss Kiss Bang
Bang director Shane Black has stepped up instead. He’s worked with Downey Jr.
on one of his best roles to date, so here’s hoping.
Choose
life 6/10
I agree that this felt like a setup for The Avengers. So did Thor, to me.
ReplyDeleteI don't mind the odd reference and in-joke, and the post-credits scenes are nice because they don't get in the way, but when they devote entire scenes to telling Stark he won't be in the Avengers? I don't understand what that scene is even for. A) it has nothing to do with the plot of this film, and B) it makes me less excited about the Avengers if they tell me that the most interesting and entertaining character in it will have a reduced role (the Hulk is arguably a better character, but they've yet to make a decent film incarnation, so he gets knocked down a couple of rungs)
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