I’m not a fan of most of these, but super hero films generally aren’t my thing. I’d seen Avengers Age of Ultron, Dr. Strange, Guardians of the Galaxy, Black Panther (part of it), and Thor (part of it). I can’t say I enjoyed any of these films, none of them did anything I hadn’t seen before about 37 dozen times before. I don’t think any of these films are anywhere near as good as the Nolan and Burton Batman films, Blade (all three), Deadpool (both), X-Men First Class, Logan, and I’m apparently one of the 14 people who liked X-Men Origins: Wolverine, Spider-Man 1 (Tibet Maguire) and 3 (again, another film very few seemed to enjoy), Watchmen (film) is fantastic, and the TV series The Boys is brilliant.
Iron Man and Captain America: The first Avenger are where I started. Captain America I enjoyed (which actually surprised me a great deal, I was expecting to dislike this one), Iron Man I did not.
I understand I’m in the minority on this.
I give lists of reasons, but in the end the reality is I just enjoyed one and not the other so much.
Iron Man, my issues:
• I don’t buy unmotivated Bruce Wayne as a character.
• Probably hearing so much about Robert Downey Junior’s great come back, but finding him kind of boring compared to his coked out years (Natural Born Killers, Less than Zero, Chaplin… yeah, I’m probably one of the 5 people left remaining on Earth who was, until recently, only familiar with pre-1995 Robert Downey Jr.)
• The film was choppy, and the pacing was rushed until the third act—before that point, the whole flow of the film was kind of random—I felt like I needed Ritalin just from watching it.
• I don’t mind cartoony (I love Deadpool), but this one didn’t land for me. I think Deadpool had the charm of never taking itself seriously. Iron Man featured unserious characters, but the film was constantly taking itself seriously, never self-jabbing.
• WAY too contrived. The plotting was very forced. And any time he or the plot needed something it was already there. I can take a bit of contrivance, but I much prefer organic, character driven plotting to the characters just doing things because the plot asks for it… like, there was a scene in Iron Man where his second in command is randomly dealing under the table, terrorists who seem to be randomly attacking people, and Iron Man makes his result and gets there just in time to save them. seemed to have a point except “the plot needs it”
• Because he could just create anything he needs, the stakes never felt important… maybe if I was really high and ignored the fact that Tony Stark can make everything from anything, there would be tension of some sort.
• On the positive: a dirty martini is a great drink. In fact, I didn’t even know I liked olives before I started drinking these in University.
Captain America: Why I liked it
• Better directed. Better written. Action was much better.
• It was a more serious film than Iron Man, but knew exactly when to not take itself seriously. (As opposed to Iron Man, which I mentioned above isn’t serious, but seems to always take itself seriously as a film: it’s like a cheesy metal band).
• Felt like a simultaneous parody and improvement over the 1990s film, The Rocketeer.
• The Nazi parody (Hydra) is funny.
• Hugo Weaving plays a great villain.
• It reminded me of a deliberate Spider-Man 1. Which I kind of like better than the whole accidental mutation.
• Tony Stark’s father/grandfather? He’s clearly based on the historical figure Vannevar Bush, the founder of Raytheon and father of the US military industrial complex - the guy that brought radar to the west, combined it with sonar and depth charge launchers, and figured out a way to take out all those Nazi U-boats sinking the allied convoys. So, I really dig the historical parallels.
I didn’t like how Iron Man kind of ignored those historical parallels for the most part (mentioned the Atomic bomb, but that’s all I picked up on). Not sure what the source material says, I’m a film/video game/novel guy, not a comic guy.
Iron Man and Captain America: The first Avenger are where I started. Captain America I enjoyed (which actually surprised me a great deal, I was expecting to dislike this one), Iron Man I did not.
I understand I’m in the minority on this.
I give lists of reasons, but in the end the reality is I just enjoyed one and not the other so much.
Iron Man, my issues:
• I don’t buy unmotivated Bruce Wayne as a character.
• Probably hearing so much about Robert Downey Junior’s great come back, but finding him kind of boring compared to his coked out years (Natural Born Killers, Less than Zero, Chaplin… yeah, I’m probably one of the 5 people left remaining on Earth who was, until recently, only familiar with pre-1995 Robert Downey Jr.)
• The film was choppy, and the pacing was rushed until the third act—before that point, the whole flow of the film was kind of random—I felt like I needed Ritalin just from watching it.
• I don’t mind cartoony (I love Deadpool), but this one didn’t land for me. I think Deadpool had the charm of never taking itself seriously. Iron Man featured unserious characters, but the film was constantly taking itself seriously, never self-jabbing.
• WAY too contrived. The plotting was very forced. And any time he or the plot needed something it was already there. I can take a bit of contrivance, but I much prefer organic, character driven plotting to the characters just doing things because the plot asks for it… like, there was a scene in Iron Man where his second in command is randomly dealing under the table, terrorists who seem to be randomly attacking people, and Iron Man makes his result and gets there just in time to save them. seemed to have a point except “the plot needs it”
• Because he could just create anything he needs, the stakes never felt important… maybe if I was really high and ignored the fact that Tony Stark can make everything from anything, there would be tension of some sort.
• On the positive: a dirty martini is a great drink. In fact, I didn’t even know I liked olives before I started drinking these in University.
Captain America: Why I liked it
• Better directed. Better written. Action was much better.
• It was a more serious film than Iron Man, but knew exactly when to not take itself seriously. (As opposed to Iron Man, which I mentioned above isn’t serious, but seems to always take itself seriously as a film: it’s like a cheesy metal band).
• Felt like a simultaneous parody and improvement over the 1990s film, The Rocketeer.
• The Nazi parody (Hydra) is funny.
• Hugo Weaving plays a great villain.
• It reminded me of a deliberate Spider-Man 1. Which I kind of like better than the whole accidental mutation.
• Tony Stark’s father/grandfather? He’s clearly based on the historical figure Vannevar Bush, the founder of Raytheon and father of the US military industrial complex - the guy that brought radar to the west, combined it with sonar and depth charge launchers, and figured out a way to take out all those Nazi U-boats sinking the allied convoys. So, I really dig the historical parallels.
I didn’t like how Iron Man kind of ignored those historical parallels for the most part (mentioned the Atomic bomb, but that’s all I picked up on). Not sure what the source material says, I’m a film/video game/novel guy, not a comic guy.