“When Captain America throws his mighty shield…”
art, business and economy, computers, environment, event, everyday glory, exhibits, geekery, health, history, LEGO and Rokenbok, movies and TV, music, space July 21st, 2011Thursday – 21 July 2011
This NBN Technical Friday is a bright, sunny day with blue skies and no clouds.
Last night, SaraRules! and I went to a screening of Captain America: The First Avenger, thanks to Jeff and Jimmy at Big Movie Mouth-Off and about 20 of my friends, who helped me win tickets.
Where some directors might have a problem making a solid comic book adaptation or a period piece, Joe Johnston has successfully crafted a movie that works not only as a big-screen comic book movie AND a period piece, but also as a lighter World War II fare. The only thing that our screening didn’t have was the post-movie teaser clip for The Avengers. (Thank God for YouTube…)
Sidenote: I just noted that Mr. Johnston also directed a few other movies of which I am fond:
- October Sky,
- Hidalgo, and
- The Rocketeer (which I’ve only seen in bits and pieces, but is also a comic book adaptation and period piece)
I also find it somewhat amusing that it’s been 20 years between his forays into comics-related fare.
Chris Evans did a fine job as Steve Rogers, a young man looking for a chance to serve his country, but unable to do so because of his frail constitution. When given a chance to join the military, he finds that it’s not the role he wanted or expected… but that doesn’t stop him. Nor does it keep him from becoming the soldier — not just “super-soldier” — that he hoped to be. Stanley Tucci‘s turn as Dr. Erskine – who developed the super-soldier formula – was also quite good. He came across as a man who, like Steve Rogers, understood the difference between doing something because you can and doing something because it’s right. Hayley Atwell was a good choice for Agent Peggy Carter, the romantic interest. Most importantly, she wasn’t relegated to a “damsel in distress” role; Agent Carter was as much in the thick of things as any of her male counterparts. In a bit of a surprise to me, Tommy Lee Jones‘ Colonel Phillips was in more of the film than I expected. And I enjoyed every bit of screen time that he had. And Hugo Weaving was an excellent choice as Johann Schmidt/The Red Skull. He made a believable adversary, mixing the right amounts of ego and megalomania.
This is a fun bit of summer cinema, with a little something for everyone. The movie apparently earned its PG-13 rating for one scene — an action/violence issue, rather than a language or nudity issue. With this movie, Marvel Entertainment – and Disney, by extension – has hit the proverbial trifecta, with respect to comic book movies this summer, in the releases of Thor, X-Men: First Class and Captain America.
(Yeah, I could have used LEGO bricks for this, but… I liked this better.)
See Also: Captain America’s cinematic comeback, from USA Today and Comics, Everybody: The History of Captain America Explained, from Comics Alliance.
Groove. Boogie. Sway.
Today’s musical oleo has included:
- US3 – Cantaloop (Flip Fantasia)
- Annie Lennox- Walking on Broken Glass
- Santana (ft. Rob Thomas) – Smooth
- Led Zeppelin – Heartbreaker
- LL Cool J – Mama Said Knock You Out
Stray Toasters
- Marvel Entertainment and the LEGO Group announce strategic relationship in construction toy category
- Tax Bill Imperils Slavery Museum
- Apple does away with the MacBook
- Space shuttle Atlantis lands, ending NASA’s shuttle program
- Last Space Shuttle Lands, Ending 30 Year Era
- Spaceflight Is Getting Cheaper. But It’s Still Not Cheap Enough.
- To Nullify Lead, Add a Bunch of Fish Bones
- MarknTyme sent me a link to a trailer for the upcoming Conan the Barbarian. I’ve been somewhat ambivalent about the movie, but the trailer has piqued my curiosity…
- Computer theft impacts 400K South Carolina patients
- Social Media History Becomes a New Job Hurdle
Namaste.
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