The Summer of movies….begins.
The summer of 2012 looks like it will be a bang-up collection of good-to-great movies, even if several are getting the jump on summer by starting a couple months early – to wit:
April: We started with Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy – starring Gary Oldman, who like his fellow Brit Alan Rickman, is one of those ‘chameleonic’ actors that seems to morph into something completely different in nearly every film (although Mr. Rickman keeps that unique, uber-distinctive voice no matter what he does – and we love him for it!). This film, based on a John LeCarre novel of the same name (I have never read any of his books) is very interesting, although it took me a while to understand what was going on. Unlike say, James Bond or Jason Bourne movies, even though a spy movie, this isn’t an action thriller really at all – no, this movie is far more subtle (but no less devious!). Always good to see John Hurt (he was the spymaster ‘Control’) and Tom Hardy was also good. And as Kerewin pointed out afterward, this isn’t a story of black & white/good & bad – everyone has flaws, everyone does things that aren’t necessarily on the up and up. Definitely worth watching!
Next on the list was The Descendants, starring George Clooney and set in Hawaii. Ah, I want to go back to Hawaii so bad!!! This is a story of serious family dysfunction but with hope and some eventual redemption (it is a Hollywood movie, after all 🙂 – the acting is good and believable, and it’s easy to see why this movie was in the running for Best Picture among other awards this year. It’s not a ‘happy’ movie by any means – but it’s definitely worth seeing – and thanking that your own family (immediate or otherwise) isn’t in the same boat. I still wanna go back to Hawaii.
Next, we saw The Hunger Games. Astute readers will remember the Battle Royale review here from last August – this movie is very similar, but based on a trilogy (sequels on the way I’m sure) and set in a future rich-guy-rules-poor-guy-gets-f’d America, rather than Japan. Both movies have more than a few similarities to Lord of the Flies, the book that arguably inspired most such stories way back in the ’50s. I’m not going to rehash the plot – but rather, muse a bit on what this movie made me think about.
1) if the book’s author and movie-makers are trying to send a message of the kind of country we could become if we don’t deal with income inequality in the USA (now!) – well done. Certainly this dystopia is an extreme endgame with many sci-fi overtones to boot, but without reading too much into a pop culture movie – the risk is real, guys.
2) Another movie/story this reminded me of was The Handmaid’s Tale. That movie, while nowhere near the budget and production values of this one (I couldn’t make it through the entire book, either) has equally scary scenes and VERY evil central characters too – Victoria Tennant most prominently, but Robert Duvall also takes a turn as a cynical military commando at the highest ranks of the religious government – unlike Hunger Games, Handmaid’s Tale is much more about a religious takeover, not far from the Heinlein classic “If This Goes On…”
3) What’s also interesting about these dystopian stories generally is the attention (or lack thereof) paid to the ‘downtime’ – that is, what is everyone doing when they aren’t doing ‘the main event’ the story is about? Are the poor just making gruel and crappy bread all day in their districts while the rich live completely off the fat of the land and run around to endless parties and socializing? I honestly can’t think of any human society, totalitarian or not, that has managed to survive for many decades without at least minimal change – even the last remaining “Communist” countries have embraced tentative steps into free enterprise in the past several years, for various reasons. It’s one potential flaw to these dystopian scenarios – save for possibly those that include the world being ruined in some way (Terminator movies, Matrix, etc.) – but The Hunger Games doesn’t appear to be about the environment, it’s about power and exploitation, plain and simple.
The next major movie was The Avengers, seen last week. This isn’t any ‘message’ movie by any stretch of the imagination (e.g. there are Norse gods in it, hello?) but just the first of the pure mindless entertainment summer movies to debut (that I care to see, anyway). And despite some minor flaws (would SHIELD really fly a ‘stealth’ aircraft carrier, really?) it mostly delivers. I was also surprised how much I liked the Thor and Hulk characters – I still haven’t seen either Hulk movie (nor do I plan to) and the Thor movie wasn’t really in the cards either, and then Conan O’Brien made SURE I didn’t want to see it :). But here Mark Ruffalo is a great Bruce Banner/Hulk, and I liked Chris Evans as the ‘serious but somewhat ignorant’ Captain America – very different than his portrayal of The Human Torch in the FF4 movies of a few years ago. Robert Downey is the same smarta** he was in the two previous Iron Man movies, and is still very good. The Black Widow and Hawkeye characters are obviously ‘lesser’ as they have no super powers, but whatevs, they are still good too. All in all, a very good movie – I still think the first Iron Man was easily the best of these so far, but time will tell….
Onward, movie summer!
Tags: '10s, comics, fantasy, freaks, fun!, malevolence, monsters, movies, sci-fi, TV
Posted on May 16th, 2012 at 5:54 pm
To your point 2, A Handmaid’s Tale is a fantastic book, I’ve read it many times and would do so again. To Point 3, READ THE BOOK, they detail their lives outside of the Game very clearly.