BlackChampagne Home

In association with Amazon.comBuy Crap! I get 5%.
Direct donations to cover hosting expenses are also accepted.

Site Information
--What is Black Champagne?
--Cast of Characters & Things
--Your First Time.
--Design Notes
--Quote of the Day Archive
--Phrase of the Moment Archive
--Site Feedback
--Contact/Copyright Info

Blog Archives
--Blogger Archives: June 2005-
--Old Monthly Archives: Jan 2002-May 2005

Reviews Section
Movie Reviews (153)

Ten Most Recent Film Reviews:
--Infernal Affairs -- 5.5
--The Protector/Tom Yum Goong -- 6
--The Limey -- 8
--The Descent -- 6
--Oldboy -- 9.5
--Shaolin Deadly Kicks -- 7
--Mission Impossible III -- 7.5
--V for Vendetta -- 8.5
--Ghost in the Shell 2 -- 8
--Night Watch -- 7.5

Book Reviews (76)
Five Most Recent Book Reviews:
--Cat People -- 4
--Attack Poodles -- 5
--Caught Stealing -- 6
--The Dirt, by Motley Crue -- 7.5
--Harry Potter #6 -- 7

Photos Section
--Flux Photos
--Pet Photos (7 pages)
--Home Decor Photos
--Plant Photos
--Vacation Photos (12 pages)

Articles
See all 234 articles here.

Fiction
Original horror and fantasy short stories.

Mail Bags
Index Page

Features
--Links
--Slang: Internet
--Slang: Dirty
--Slang: Wankisms
--Slang: Sex Acts
--Slang: Fulldeckisms
--Hot or Not?
--Truths in Advertising

Band Name Ratings
(350 Rock Bands Listed)
FAQ -- Feedback
A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- X -- Y -- Z

Hellgate: London
--The Unofficial HGL Site
--The Hellgate Wiki

Diablo II
--The Unofficial Site
--Flux's Decahedron
--Middle Earth Mod

Locations of visitors to this page

Powered by Blogger.

BlackChampagne -- no longer new; improvement also in question.: Movie Review: X-men 3



Thursday, June 01, 2006  

Movie Review: X-men 3


I'm going to review Xmen 3 here in a minute, but first I wanted to talk about an almost unknown summer action movie that's opening this weekend in the US, and is surely more deserving of your entertainment dollar than the big budget summer snooze fests. It's a French film that they're calling District B13 in the US, but don't let the name throw you. It's basically one of the next generation of Jackie Chan-inspired action films, with agility, speed, inventiveness, and stylized martial arts taking the place of the old style guns and muscles action movies.

B13 stars David Belle and Cyril Raffaelli, neither of whom you're likely to have heard of. Cyril is best known as one of the identical twin blonde badguys in the Jet Li film Kiss of the Dragon. He was the smaller one, the one who could actually fight, and he's apparently something of an action film star in France. David Belle is not an actor, but he's pretty well known on the Internet for sort of inventing the new, death-defying urban sport of Parkour. It's basically a sort of improvisational gymnastics, performed on the balconies, ladders, walkways, stair cases, and ledges of high rise buildings, and while I've been seeing amazing movies of guys doing this stuff on the Internet for a few years, I've never yet seen it in a motion picture. (Unless you count some of the agility stuff Jackie Chan does.)

Don't take my word for it though; here's a (subtitled) French TV segment on David Belle with tons of footage of him doing his thing, and here's a fantastic 3 minute scene from District B13 with more cool stunts than most action movies pack into their full 120 running time. Really, calling them stunts isn't fair, since they're more like feats or performance art; they aren't digitally erasing the wires on those guys leaping between 6 story buildings; they're really doing those stunts live and a slip away from death.

Are you intrigued, but thinking the movie must be crap with some good stunts? You might be right, but they're really, really good stunts, since as of right now, this is the best reviewed film of the year. It's got 15 reviews on Rotten Tomatoes, and all 15 are positive.

If you go to the movies this weekend and subject yourself to the anti-romcom misery of The Break-Up (21% RT, 0% from major critics) instead of seeking out the wild action fun of District B13, you are making a really big mistake, and you must have a really lame girlfriend. (I'm lucky here, since Malaya's more excited to see District B13 than I am.)



As for Xmen3... it wasn't bad. We went in expecting a fun action movie, and while the script wasn't a 10% as smart as the twisty Mission Impossible 3, it wasn't awful. The movie moved along nicely, none of the characters were unwatchable, the teenage angst crap was kept to a minimum, the 2x4 "mutant = gay" societal metaphors were subtler, and the action scenes were done nicely. I didn't think it was a masterpiece, but it was a fun summer movie, and I definitely liked it more than Xmen 1 or 2, both of which pretty much bored me.

To the scores:
X-men 3, 2006
Script/Story: 6
Acting/Casting: 6
Action: 8
Combat Realism: 7
Humor: 5
Eye Candy: 6
Fun Factor: 6
Replayability: 7
Overall: 6.5
You can see my reviews of X-men 1 and X-men 2 by clicking their golden names, and I'll just add that I gave them a 5 and a 5.5, respectively. This one I gave a 6.5, which isn't a huge improvement, but I did think it was better. This puts me in the minority, since the critical consensus of the 3 films, going by the RottenTomatoes scores, were 80%, 87%, and 54%.

I think a lot of the low scores for this one were pre-judged, by critics hearing about Brian Singer leaving and Brett Ratner coming in, the production being rushed to beat Singer's Superman movie that's due later this summer, etc. Most of the critical comments I've read said things about how this film felt rushed, that the characters needed more time to be delved into, that there were too many mutants with too many powers, etc.

They have a point, but I thought some of those things were improvements. My main dislikes about the first two films were the excessive scenes of whiny, mopey teenagers, the stupid use (or non-use) of mutant powers, and Storm and Cyclops being actively painful when on screen. Xmen 3 improves in all those areas by largely removing the Dawson's Creek style "my life as an outcast teenager is so hard" bullshit, making the mutant powers on display more logical and timely and practical, giving Cyclops almost no screen time at all, and turning Halle Barry's formerly unwatchable Storm into a pretty good character. Xavier continued to be kind of a whiny bitch, but Magneto was still cool, Wolverine was good, and all of the newly-introduced mutants were well-used and not overly annoying.

The plot wasn't great; it was very point A to point B, and didn't have anything even approaching a twist. No one ever did anything you didn't pretty much expect them to do and most of their actions were necessitated by the plot, but I will give the movie credit for killing off or greatly-changing quite a few major characters. I thought most of the events could have been handled better, and we passionlessly saw a lot of things we should have felt a much stronger emotional attachment to, but I thought it was a better film than the first two, and I certainly enjoyed it more.

The real mystery for me was Storm. I would have paid money to have her killed off in movies 1 or 2, or at least for her to have been written out of movie 3. I didn't know if it was her character, her awful Rapunzel wig, or Halle Barry's performance, but whatever the reason, she was actually interesting in this film. She finally got to use some of her powers, she had a lot of dialogue, and while I didn't think her performance was ever more than adequate, it was a much better part.

My knee jerk theory, which could probably be easily-disproved, is that the change in directors made all the difference. It was really the script, but assuming the directors had some hand in that, I'll continue. Brian Singer directed X1 and X2, and while I can't remember if he's openly gay or not, ever gossip blog entry I see about him treats his all-male pool parties and strong attachment to various male stars as a matter of fact aspect of his life. (Google says... he's out.)As for Brett Ratner, he's notoriously heterosexual, and has been linked to numerous hot starlets, female athletes, models, etc.

Singer seems to be a good director, and yes, most people liked X1 and X2 more than X3, but I didn't like the character interaction stuff that much in the first two, with so much of it feeling full of ham-handed efforts to score societal points about mutants and people not accepting them, with very obvious equivalencies to current issues with homosexuality. I'm not saying there aren't parallels, and I'm certainly sympathetic to his efforts, but I had, "Enough, already!" reactions to a lot of scenes in the first two films. The Ice Kid's awkward family meeting with his mom's well-meaning, "Can't you just try not to be a mutant?" dialogue was groan-inducing, in X2.

At the same time, the female characters were either annoying, or perfect and loved, in X1 and X2. Well, except for Mystique, but she's never really female in anything but having boobs, as she secret agents her way through the films, killing, disguising, spying, and so forth.

In X3, as I've already said, the teen-centric, "Is this a mutant academy or a day care center?" aspects were way toned down in X3, and the female characters were much more interesting. Mystique was the same as ever, and Rogue and the other kids didn't do much, but Storm was 1000% better, Jean Grey as Dark Phoenix was far more interesting than her cutesy love-triangle stuff in the first 2 films, and new addition Kitty Pryde felt like a real person, rather than being all cloying and needy, like most of the kids were in X1 and X2.

If the far more interesting female leads in X3, and their increased humanity, vulnerability, and ferocity were due to the director or script, it's hard to say. And I can't say if Ratner's heterosexuality gave him more insight and interest in the women characters than the apparently-homosexual Singer possessed. But it's a possibility that occurred to me, as I pondered one of the major differences between the Xmen films.

Singer's other films include Apt Pupil and The Usual Suspects; I've never seen the first but the novel has zero female characters, and there's hardly a woman onscreen in the Usual Suspects. Of Ratner's other films I won't even mention Rush Hour 1 and 2, since there aren't any women of importance in them, but there's not any acting either. Red Dragon is the only other film of his I've seen, and it's not much to compare either, with 90% of the film being a police procedural, the only woman being the detective's terrified wife (who does come through strong in the end), and most of the scenes taking place between Ed Norton and Anthony Hopkins' Hannibal Lecter.

Anyway, I'm not saying gay male directors can't direct women, or craft realistic female characters... just that Bryan Singer appears unable to do so. Even in comparison to a special effects director like Brett Ratner.

Labels:

Comments:

I liked 2 the best by far, with 1 next and then 3. The thing is, when asked about this, I can't come up with very many specific reasons I had that reaction to 3. I definitely did not like Jean Grey's character in the third one. Essentially she stands around and looks constipated through most of the movie. Totally different character from the comic books.

But...I'm basically OK with deviating from the comic books...poetic license and all that. It works OK for some characters but not as well for others...that's fine. But with Jean Grey/Phoenix in particular it struck the wrong chord with me. I'm also fine with killing off major characters...they're in a war, there's going to be casualties.

Good parallels to the comic include: Storm being a leader. (Although she's much more serious in the comic books.) Juggernaut's character was portrayed well. Wolverine has been spot on throughout all 3 movies. And Magneto has probably been my favorite. Oh, and Beast was done well, too (but I'm sort of disappointed they had a different actor in 2 and 3).

Deviations include: Rogue is older in the comics and a much more powerful mutant. Iceman is way off; he's more of a loner/wild-card (irresponsible) in the comics than Wolverine is.

Overall the movie series stands up well, with 2 being my favorite.


 

A big part for Storm's place in this movie is that Halle Barry threatened not to be in the it unless they gave a lot more screen time to her character and delved into her a lot more.

Judging by your comments (I'm going next week), she got her way and they managed to pull it off decently.


Apt Pupil has got massive homoeroticism in it, so much so that [i]all[/i] of my straight friends noticed it and commented on it.


 

re: comment #2

I read something about Halle Berry demanding a bigger role in the movie last week before I saw the movie, maybe this:

http://movies.yahoo.com/movie/preview/1808490829

...and every time she was in a scene with a central role that's what my mind went to.

The role was closer to the comics than previously, though.


 

Lanth's got a point, but homoerotic and "can't direct females" are different things. Not that he said they were the same.

I didn't think there was any homoerotic stuff in the first 2 xmen movies, unless your gadar is so fine-tuned that any shirtless or leather clad guy is an example of it. I'm almost surprised there wasn't; Ian McKellan's Magneto seems sort of gay (though that's obviously tinged by knowing the actor is gay himself) but it's far from overt, and it certainly could be, with him taking troubled young male mutants under his wing.


 

What those guys are doing in the videos really is amazing. I thought the instances where they were jumping from a ledge to a pole and back was pretty remearkable, as that would take a tremendous amount of balance and muscle control. But was it really necessary to walk up all the railings next to the walkways? It's a bit like impressing someone with your ability to juggle chainsaws and following it up with a demonstration of your ability to throw a ball straight up in the air and catch it.


 

I still wasn't particularly impressed with Halle Barry's acting in X-men 3. It wasn't as bad as the first two, and the change in hair made her look less goofy at least.

As for Singer being unable to direct female actors, I think there is a flaw in the theory. Yeah, Storm sucked in X-men 1 and 2, but Jean Gray didn't. For that matter, even Rebecca Stamos' Mystique was pretty good in the first two movies, and she can't act!

I think any problems with Storm were entirely on the shoulders of Halle Barry's acting, and the resentment she had about the only strong black female roles in movies being a comic book character (I remember seeing her complain about that somewhere when the first movie came out)


 

Post a Comment << Home

Archives

May 2005   June 2005   July 2005   August 2005   September 2005   October 2005   November 2005   December 2005   January 2006   February 2006   March 2006   April 2006   May 2006   June 2006   July 2006   August 2006   September 2006   October 2006   November 2006   December 2006   January 2007   February 2007   March 2007   April 2007   May 2007   June 2007   July 2007   August 2007   September 2007   October 2007   November 2007   December 2007   January 2008   February 2008   March 2008   April 2008   May 2008   June 2008   July 2008   August 2008   September 2008   October 2008   November 2008   December 2008   January 2009   February 2009   March 2009   April 2009   May 2009   June 2009   July 2009   August 2009   September 2009   October 2009   November 2012  

All site content copyright "Flux" (Eric Bruce), 2002-2007.