Friday, February 27, 2015

Extra, Extra!: Leonard Nimoy Lived Long and Prospered

In which I report on the latest in entertainment news.

That last year or so seems to have been especially rough on the celebrities who tirelessly work to bring joy into our lives.  Robin Williams was one of those who left us in 2014, whose work touched the lives of millions of people around the world.  Today saw the death of Leonard Nimoy, who died at the age of 83 after being hospitalized for severe chest pains, who will be missed just as much.
I can't say that his death came as a particular shock, especially with the news of his recent hospitalization, but that comes as little consolation when you consider what we as a society have lost.  Leonard Nimoy was one of the foremost advocates for logic and scientific reason - not just in Star Trek, but in life.  He was a tireless humanitarian and conservationist who dedicated Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home - which he wrote, directed and co-starred in - to raising awareness of the endangerment of the Humpback Whales and devoted his efforts in recent years to the plight of Elephants.

I plan on dedicating my Unreality article this week to reviewing The Voyage Home, which has always been my favorite of the original Star Trek films.  Reviews for The Wrath of Khan - whose plot was reversed in 2013's Star Trek: Into Darkness - and The Search for Spock - which he also directed and costarred in - are also in the works as a way of cherishing his extensive body of work as well as his long and prosperous life.
Either way, he will be missed.

Join the Filmquisition on Twitter (@Filmquisition) or by subscribing to this blog.

Ask questions or share your thoughts in the comments section below.

2014 Revisited: The 30 Best Movies of the Year - Part 3

In which I revisit a previously explored topic with fresh eyes and an open mind.

So after a full week and two preceding lists, we finally arrive at the money shot: my top ten favorite films of the year.  This is it, folks - the best of the best.  These are the movies that were so good that they warranted special accommodation against an uncannily crowded field of great films.  And if you haven't checked them out already, please check out the first and second parts of this list as well.
10) The Lego Movie - Everything about this movie is, in fact, awesome.  Never mind what the Academy says - never mind that they evidently think that The Box Trolls is a more artistically rendered film - The Lego Movie is hands down the best animated film of the year.  The fact that it was so nearly knocked out of my top ten list is simply testament to how strong the year as a whole was.

What by all rights should have been a 90 minute toy commercial for children turned into the surprise hit of the year: a heart-felt story about discovering your purpose in life and coming to terms with who you are as a person.  It featured some of the best action sequences and biggest laughs of the year, not to mention the heart-rending destruction of Cloud Cuckoo Land, which caused a bigger emotional uproar than even "Tadashi is here."  The Lego Movie is easily one of the best written, best directed and most confidently executed films of the year and will only improve with age.
9) Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) - Michael Keaton's epic return to form was the big winner on Oscar night: justly winning four out of its nine nominations (including Best Picture and Director).  To say that this wasn't the weirdest movie of the year is a stern reminder of just how trippy movies like Predestination, Enemy and Under the Skin actually actually were.  And although it seems tailor-made to appeal to industry insiders, it's a film that struck a chord with a lot of theater-goers last year, myself included.

Birdman was one of the most aggressively original films of 2014: blurring reality and delusion so often that it was hard to tell what was actually happening at any given point of the film.  The ending in particular is sure to inspire more debate than any finale since Inception, and that's a good thing.  Movies don't have to be open-and-shut stories; they can inspire passion and debate among their audiences and make the story carry on well past its pre-described shelf life in theaters.
8) Boyhood - Although it was closely contested by Birdman, Boyhood is my favorite film of the eight Academy nominees for Best Picture.  That's right: this list is only populist trash from here on out.  And although it was my favorite in its category and although it is prominently ranked among the year's overall favorites, I can't really bring myself to buy it on BluRay.  It's a once - maybe twice - in a lifetime experience that doesn't lend itself to additional viewings in the same way that Into the Woods or The Book of Life do, and that's okay.  Some movies only need to be seen once to burrow their way into your heart.

Richard Linklater has fast proven himself to be one of my all time favorite directors.  Despite a few speed bumps along the way, His Before Trilogy and Boyhood are absolute masterpieces of film.  They are confidently helmed, organically written and exceptionally well acted movies that speak to the heart of reality: what people really sound like and how they actually interact with one another.  Boyhood is particularly interesting in that the film acts as a visual shorthand of what a person would actually remember of their childhood: a few snippets from early on, then increasingly more as he gets older, with many of the narratively critical moments happening off screen.  In this way, Boyhood doubles as a time capsule: perfectly capturing what it was like to grow up in the post-9/11 landscape of the 21st Century.
7) Oculus - Unquestionably the best-directed horror movie since Halloween, Oculus was last year's installment into Blumhouse Productions' immaculately execute filmography.  Equal parts enthralling and terrifying, it injected some much-needed life into an increasingly flaccid genre and provided a more than serviceable launching pad for British actress Karen Gillan's Hollywood career.

What makes Oculus so unique is that it's story isn't a linear progression from cause to effect (ironically, something that fans of Gillan will be well aware of coming into the film).  Like The Imitation Game, it succeeds in balancing multiple narratives with equal heft and even lacing them together in order to produce a whole that is far greater than the sum of its parts.  The scares are real and the dizzying editing style - match-cutting from one timeline to another with such increasing rapidity that the lines dividing the two become impossibly blurred - is absolutely perfect.  Even those who are a bit gun shy with horror movies (due to an admittedly dubious track record of quality) should check this absolute gem out anyway.
6) Nightcrawler - Nightcrawler ranks up there with Selma as one of the most important films of the year.  Whereas Selma took on racial injustice and illustrated the best way to practically take on such matters, Nightcrawler peers into the seedy underbelly of journalistic ethics.  While the subject has always been a hot-button issue of grave importance, it's rarely been so popular a conversation piece than it is in our post-Gamer Gate  world.

Jake Gyllenhaal's Lou Bloom is an infectiously charming sociopath looking to make it big as a nightcrawler: a late-night cameraman who scours L.A. for crime and accident footage for the morning news.  But when he faces competition from veteran news teams, he begins blurring the lines between reporting on news and creating it.  Nightcrawler is nothing less than a dark perversion of the American dream, whose predatory protagonist finds success through a combination of opportunity and hard work.
5) Guardians of the Galaxy - The biggest and most talked about hit of the summer was perplexingly based on Marvel's most obscure property.  Heading into its August release date, Guardians of the Galaxy had everything going against it: notably source material with zero name recognition and the writer-director responsible for the live action Scooby Doo movies and 1/16 of Movie 43.  Its two biggest stars were going to voice a raccoon and an Ent, its next biggest star would appear in greenface for the entire movie and everything was headed up by the fat guy from Parks and Recreation.  Oh, yeah, and it it also starred a professional wrestler, because that's always a good idea.

And yet, much like its underdog protagonists, the film somehow worked despite itself.  It was fiercely original, and yet instantly familiar.  It was at once the funniest comedy, one of the most action-packed romps and one of the most movingly dramatic films of the year - proving once again just how unerringly good Marvel is at producing high-quality movies of such wildly different genres.  And while speculation abounds about what's going to happen in Guardians of the Galaxy 2, we can rest assured that the franchise is in more than capable hands.
4) The Raid 2 - I wouldn't have believed it myself going into it, but The Raid 2 was the definitive action movie of 2014.  That's not to say that it was the best movie to feature car chases and fight scenes in it from last year (but more on that later), just that it was the best at what it was: a visceral, adrenaline-pumping punch-fest meant to excite and titillate.  It's pretty much would have happened if Jackie Chan had starred in Infernal Affairs instead of Tony Chiu Wai Leung, and every last second of it is awesome.

Critics of 2012's The Raid: Redemption often cited its overly simplistic plot as the film's greatest shortcoming.  The Raid 2 seemingly exists for the sole purpose of answering that criticism: exploding outward with what could arguably be considered far too much plot for its 150 minute run time.  Its absurdly good action sequences are strung together with a conspiratorial gangster story of undercover cops and double-crossing criminals.  With so many twists wrung out out such a complicated story, many audience members were understandably confused, but when you're watching fights this well choreographed and this visually distinctive, it's easy to forgive it of its over-reaching ambitions.
3) Interstellar - I will never understand what the Academy fails to see in Christopher Nolan.  Looked over for 2008's Dark Knight, that snub prompted the expansion of the Best Picture race to as many as ten nominees.  Since then, only one of his films have been nominated for Best Picture (2010's Inception) and none - either before or after - have been recognized by the director's branch.  2014's Interstellar - Nolan's min-blowing, Kubrick-esque space epic - only earned a few technical nominations at this year's Academy Awards, and I cannot for the life of me figure out why.

Interstellar is both Nolan's most epically scoped and restrictively shot film to date: preferring to sit back behind the camera and let the quietly monolithic visuals of interstellar space dominate the screen while its immensely talented cast play out a human drama that spans light years and decades, but never loses sight of the emotional core at the center of everything.  And while, as I mentioned in m review of the film, I loved Gravity's "exceptional direction, phenomenal lead performance, adherence to scientific realism and scene-stealing special effects,"  Interstellar makes Gravity "look like its retarded little brother drawing stick figures in the dirt" and I will go on record calling Interstellar the best space-set film ever made.
2) X-Men: Days of Future Past - The X-Men franchise has had a wildly uneven journey since its first outing in 2000.  The initial trilogy went straight from good to bad to ugly, then produced a pair of nebulously decent Wolverine solo movies before finding its footing again with X-Men: First Class.  The franchise's most recent installment - the iconic Days of Future Past - faced an uphill battle from the outset by tackling a fan-favorite storyline helmed by the once-great director that abandoned the series to direct Superman Returns.

Fans needn't have feared, however, as Bryan Singer showed the world why he was entrusted with the franchise in the first place.  His crisply focused direction succeeded at keeping two vastly different storylines in two vastly different time periods that occurred simultaneously from becoming confusing.  In fact, he used the juxtaposition of the two against one another to build tension and heighten the visceral excitement of the film's titanic climax.  It even managed to fix the film series' tangled continuity: undoing the wrongs of the past while opening itself up to the possibilities of the future (such as the much speculated upon Deadpool movie).
1) Captain America: The Winter Soldier - The second Captain America film answered the very real question of what you do with a problem like Steve Rogers: a white-bread goody-goody whose old-fashioned morality can be most readily defined as obsolete in an increasingly global, increasingly complex world where previously black-and-white concepts of right and wrong are more often grayed by compromised ethics and Machiavellianistic altruism.  The answer?  Make that the entire central premise of the movie.  To put it simply:


The Winter Soldier is a gritty, Nolan-esque spy thriller where everyone is suspect and nobody is innocent.  It is a masterpiece of post-9/11 paranoia and 21st Century realism [that] delivers on the promise of The Avengers: that Phase 2 can continue to produce interesting, nuanced films beyond Phase 1’s origin stories.
Like what you've seen so far?  Please check out Part 1 (30-21) and Part 2 (20-11) of this list.

Join the Filmquisition on Twitter (@Filmquisition) or by subscribing to this blog.

Ask questions or share your thoughts in the comments section below.

Thursday, February 26, 2015

2014 Revisited: The 30 Best Movies of the Year - Part 2

In which I revisit a previously explored topic with fresh eyes and an open mind.

Earlier this week saw the first third of my favorite movies list from 2014 explored in depth. It included everything from B-grade schlock to multiple Best Picture nominees.  Today's third of the list ups the ante a bit.  Here the movies start getting considerably better and a Hell of a lot weirder, starting with: 
20) Enemy - When Anthony discovers an actor who impossibly looks exactly like him, his entire world begins to unravel into a web of obsession and single-minded fixation.  What began as simple curiosity turns into an increasingly dangerous game about identity and the lengths that people will go to to choose one for themselves.

This is hands down the weirdest movie that I saw from last year.  Filled with abstract symbolism and a twisting plot whose explanation is only ever hinted at, it honestly took an exceptionally well thought out video by Chris Stuckmann to help me piece together what it actually was that I saw: the arthouse love-child of Fight Club and Vertigo.  Enemy is a methodically crafted, intellectually rewarding art film designed from the ground up to challenge the way that people think about the medium of filmmaking and what it's capable of.
19) How to Train Your Dragon 2 - Those of you who followed my coverage through Oscar season should know by now that I consider 2014 to be the definitively best year for animation.  What it lacked in groundbreaking, historically and technically important films, it more than made up for with a string of unerring high-quality and instantly memorable films, both shorts and feature length.  That is why How to Train Your Dragon 2 - easily one of the emotionally riveting and breathtakingly animated films ever produced - ranks so comparatively low on a list generously portioned with animation.

How to Train Your Dragon 2 encapsulates the best qualities of a sequel.  After the first film sets the groundwork by establishing the characters and the world that they live in, this film uses its setting as the occasion to plumb the depths of what's possible within that system.  Where does Hiccup, the son of a village chief, have to go after uniting his viking tribe so closely with their ancestral enemies?  How has the rest of the human world coped with the existence of dragons?  What happens when the real enemy proves to be infinitely deadlier than the Red Death? 
18) Foxcatcher - I will say right away that Foxcatcher is not at all what it was advertised as.  I went in with a mismatched set of expectations and, while thoroughly pleased with the film I did receive, I could not help but feel more than a little disappointed about it (admittedly through no fault of the film's).  This is not some Steve Carell vehicle that happens to intersect with real-life events, but a subtle character study featuring three exceptionally talented and immensely versatile actors (the least of which is Carell) in a fatalistic, almost Grecian, tragedy.

Bennett Miller is fast proving himself to be a must-see director.  And while Foxcatcher doesn't quite elevate him to that stature, when paired with similar successes with The Social Network and Moneyball, it feels like he's just one good movie away from getting there.  Foxcatcher pervades with an ominous, almost smotheringly bleak atmosphere that drowns its every scene with the realization that something is profoundly wrong at Foxcatcher Farms, something truly terrible is about to happen and that nobody is going to step in to prevent it.  Even without the foreknowledge of the history that it explores, you know, in the pit of your stomach, that something's the matter with John du Pont and that it can only end in tragedy.
17) The Book of Life - Although it's been demoted from my initial top ten, The Book of Life remains one of the most stunningly animated films I have ever seen.  Although there are cutesier elements thrown in to keep the children entertained, this is a film that adults can enjoy in equal measure with their kids.  And what's more, it comes wrapped in perhaps the most important message for young boys growing up in a "post-masculine" society: you don't need to be violent to be a man, you only need to be yourself.

As I mentioned in my review of the film, this is Guillermo del Toro's A Nightmare Before Christmas: a movie that he did not direct, but which will be forever most strongly associated with him.  " Who's Henry Selick?  Exactly.  The same goes for Jorge Gutierrez."  Incorporating popular music into styles ranging from acoustic solos to drunken mariachi, The Book of Life weaves a timeless tale of self-acceptance, becoming an adult and true (if antagonistic) love.
16) Justice League: War - When Darkseid's forces invade Earth in order to slaughter its people and repurpose their genetic material into soldiers, Earth's mightiest heroes have to team up in order to save the world.  The problem is, however, that they couldn't be any less of a team.  The Batman seemingly exists only as an urban legend, Shazam is a show-offish brat only wanting attention and Cyborg wants nothing to do with any of them.  They must work through their differences, however, and unite to defeat the Earth's greatest enemy to date.

My experience for Justice League: War has been virtually identical to my experience with American Sniper: despite being an undeniably great film, the initial high from watching it failed to hold up on retrospection.  The difference is that American Sniper was only a middlingly good film to begin with - made with some artistry and considerable skill, but never quite rising to the occasion.  Justice League: War, even with its deteriorated quality,is never the less a fantastic film that I can still confidently call one of my favorites of the year.
15) The Hunger Games: Mockingjay - Part 1 - Mockingjay seems to be an easy target for film critics today.  Epitomizing the "broken franchise" movement - in which the last book of a series is split into two (and sometimes three) films in order to engineer a bigger profit - it was almost instantly dismissed as an artless cash grab, without any consideration for its actual merit.

Mockingjay - Part 1 not only features the best-executed half of its source material, but far surpasses it in quality.  For all the bemoaning about unnecessarily stretching out the narrative, Mockingjay was a surprisingly meaty novel with a perfect mid-story climax to end a film on.  The film solved my every issue with its source material, including an unrecognizably feeble Katniss, an underdeveloped plot and the fact that it told an incredibly interesting story - a two-sided propaganda war waged over the loyalties of the Districts' citizens - from the least interesting perspective possible - Katniss, safely infirmed in District 13, completely removed from any of the action.  What's more, the film shows the direct effect of Katniss' symbolic involvement in the war, cutting from propos to the inspired masses taking action against the capitol, culminating in the most singularly memorable sequence from the entire series: the destruction of a hydroelectric dam to the tune of "The Hanging Tree."
14) Snowpiercer - Not enough people have seen this movie.  Due to a petty marketing move on distributor Harvey Weinstein's part, what should have been a major force in blockbuster landscape of 2014 became an obscure action film for those lucky enough to come across it in their local video store.  This makes it a prime candidate for my next Diamond in the Rough segment, so please keep an eye out for that in the near future.

Snowpiercer is a truly international film: based on a French graphic novel, helmed by a South Korean director and starring Captain America and The Doctor.
13) Under the Skin - Arthouse movies are a funny thing.  Often created with roughly equal parts pretentious directing and obtuse writing, they rarely appeal to anybody outside of a very narrowly defined demographic of self-described intellectuals.  From almost any given year, I couldn't name a single arthouse film released during it, let alone a good one.  Between Enemy and Under the Skin, however, 2014 gave us two.

Under the Skin is an arthouse sci-fi / horror film featuring a near-solo performance by the immaculate Scarlett Johansson.  Utilizing a controlled form of photo-realism - including partially improved scenes and physically deformed actors - it is easily the most haunting and visually arresting film of the entire year.  Like Enemy, however, this is unlike anything most mainstream audiences have ever seen: something that most wouldn't like, let alone tolerate.  If you can sit through a slow, near dialogless film that trusts its audience to figure out what's going on through visuals alone, you'll hardly find a more memorable or rewarding film from this or any other year.
12) Into the Woods - It seems strange to me to be going over a film that I already shared my thoughts on - twice - but it made it onto this list fair and square.  Into the Woods is one of the most toe-tappingly moving musicals to come out this century.  It prominently features with incredible vocal performances by Meryl Streep and Johnny Depp (and the rest of the cast too), phenomenal production design that simultaneously manages to emulate the play upon which its based and an actual forest and what is easily the funniest scene of the entire year (the performance of "Agony," which makes the film by itself).

Despite featuring two child performances in centrally important roles, the two young actors pull it off with an unparalleled degree of skill and only a few shrill notes.  With rare exception - such as the reprisal of "Agony" in the final act - director Rob Marshall knows exactly which parts of the original cumbersome script can afford to be cut loose.  Even if you don't particularly care for musicals, this is one that would be a shame to miss.
11) Whiplash - Whiplash was easily the most intense experience that I've had in a theater in years.  It depicts the increasingly dysfunctional creative relationship between a drum protegee and his abusive director: coming to an explosive head at a jazz competition where they create far more powerful music together than either could do by themselves.

Now, this movie isn't for everybody.  I saw one woman storm out of a performance with a massive scowl on her face repeating "He's too mean" over and over again only a half hour into the movie, while a second woman came out beaming at the end of the film to thank me for the recommendation.  It's an explosive, bloody, invigorating and instantly memorable film that's bound to draw equal love and ire for decades to come.
Like what you've seen so far?  Please check out Part 1 (30-21) and Part 3 (10-1) of this list.

Join the Filmquisition on Twitter (@Filmquisition) or by subscribing to this blog.

Ask questions or share your thoughts in the comments section below.

Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Counterpoint: Becky's Monthly Countdown - January 2015

In which Becky shares her wrong different opinion on a Filmquisition post.

It should come as no surprise to anybody that Becky is my constant movie watching partner.  With very little exception, what she watches, I watch and what I watch, she watches.  So it's only natural that she'd want to get in on The Monthly Countdown.  And, for the most part, we seem to agree with what was best from January.
American Sniper
Dragon Ball Z: Battle of Gods
Gojira
The Grand Budapest Hotel
The Imitation Game
Into the Woods
The Raid: Redemption
Selma
Seven Samurai
The Theory of Everything

As could be expected, there's a lot of crossover between our two lists.  The Raid: Redemption, The Grand Budapest Hotel, Dragon Ball Z: Battle of Gods and Seven Samurai were present on both of our lists.  Let's take a look at where our opinions differed.
American Sniper - I initially loved American Sniper about as much as Becky did.  It was an exciting film and grippingly portrayed a man struggling (and generally failing) to reenter into domesticity following multiple tours in the Middle East.  Bradley Cooper is an exceptional actor who was innately excellent as Chris "The Legend" Kyle.

The problem is, though, that the film simply doesn't hold up.  Never mind repeated viewings, it fails to hold up upon retrospection.  Although I initially gave it an 8.5 (a high 8.5 at that) it slipped lower and lower in my esteem until it wound up at a middling 7.5.  Clint Eastwood spend so much time trying to channel Katheryn Bigelow instead of making his own movie that the end result comes off as a poor man's Hurt Locker, without enough meat on its bones to keep me coming back to it after first watching it.
Gojira - Both Becky and I love horror movies.  There's a reason why so many of my initial blog posts were reviews of them.  And, more and more, we're starting to catch up with old Kaiju movies.  Last month we finally saw patient zero: the original king of the monsters (not to be confused with Godzilla: King of the Monsters).  And the thing is, it wasn't anything like the campier, more light-hearted Godzilla movies that we were more used to seeing.  It was dark and foreboding and weighed down by atomic despair.  And every last bit of it was awesome.

Despite being made in 1954, the film holds up remarkably well today.  Despite obviously being a man in a dinosaur costume knocking over miniature buildings in a model city, the special effects were never the less shockingly effective.  Godzilla's assault on Tokyo is burned into my mind as one of the most well-shot and memorable scenes in all of cinema.
The Imitation Game - This is Becky's favorite of the Academy Award's Best Picture nominees, and it's not really all that surprising why.  It's a well directed, well acted, well written historical drama that strikes the proper balance between wartime drama, post-war persecution and the personal enigma that is Alan Turing.

I actually had the opposite reaction when it came to this movie as I did American Sniper.  I initially gave it a solidly well-earned 7.5, but the more that I thought it over - the more that I revisited the film in the days and weeks which followed - the more that I realized that it was a genuinely great film.  And while it did pale against most of its fellow Best Picture nominees, that doesn't diminish the quality of the film that hit theaters late last year.
Into the Woods - Although we saw this film together, I didn't include it on my own list for January because I had actually seen it already over Christmas.  It was a stunningly rendered vision of the incredible stage musical with an outstanding cast and singular direction.  Johnny Depp was an inspired choice for the Wolf, as was Meryl Streep as the Witch, and Chris Pine channeled is ordinarily glib charisma to good use as Cinderella's prince.  Anna Kendrick, James Gordon, Tracey Ullman, Lila Crawford and that kid from Les Miserables were all outstanding in their respective roles.

If Into the Woods can be faulted for anything, it's for not including the reprise of "Agony" in its final act - in which the two princes, after winning over their princesses, are now pining after new damsels (this time, Snow White and Sleeping Beauty) - and for not properly explaining why the witch lost her powers.  Otherwise, it was a powerful, moving and toe-tappingly great film that makes you wonder how it ever managed to get away with a PG rating in the first place.
Selma - Although I'm not quite as enamored with Selma as most critics are, I obviously liked the film.  After all, it made my top 30 movies list for 2014.  I just think that in a year crowded with an unprecedented number of great films, maybe it was the strong competition - rather than racially-motivated discrimination - that kept Selma out of certain Oscar contests (although slighting David Oyelowo for a Best Actor nomination is still a head-scratcher for me).

Both powerful and timely, Selma is arguably the most important film to come out last year.  Acting essentially as a "Civil Rights For Dummies" how-to guide to social revolution, it shows how civil disobedience, rather than violence, is the surest path to positive change - how being oppositional can mean never striking out against your oppressors.
The Theory of Everything - Despite being my patently least favorite of this year's crop of Best Picture nominees, The Theory of Everything is still an entertaining, informative and worthwhile film.  It's as well acted as it ever needed to be (thanks to the exceptional Eddie Redmayne) and better written than it deserved to be (I was expecting Lifetime Channel level schmaltz, personally).

Although not my favorite performance of the year (that would be Jake Gyllenhaal in Nightcrawler), Eddie Redmayne really knocked it out of the park on this one, so much so that I don't mind him winning the award in the least.  He gave an astoundingly good performance that's immediately reminiscent to Daniel-Day Lewis in My Left Foot without ever being derivative of it.
Join the Filmquisition on Twitter (@Filmquisition) or by subscribing to this blog.

Ask questions or share your thoughts in the comments section below.

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Extra, Extra!: What the Avengers: Age of Ultron Poster Tells Us About the Movie

In which I report on the latest in entertainment news.

So Marvel just released the first official poster for Avengers: Age of Ultron and, I have to admit, it looks amazing.  But even more than giving us something awesome to look at for the little more than two months before the movie's released in theaters, it gives us a little bit more insight about what we can expect from it.
Right away, it appears that the gang's all here: Iron Man, Captain America, Hulk, Thor, Black Widow, Hawkeye, Quicksilver, Scarlet Witch, The Vision, Nick Fury and about 10,000 Ultron drones.  But if you look a bit closer at the bottom of the poster, there are a few tidbits that I found especially interesting.

Hayley Atwell and Anthonie Mackey will appear in the movie.  That's right, Agent Carter and The Falcon will appear in at least some capacity in Age of Ultron.  There's no word if we'll see a younger, post World War II Carter in flashbacks or the enfeebled, dementia-ridden Carter from The Winter Soldier, but I'd put money on it being the former.  Latter-day Carter doesn't add much to the film outside of emphasizing Cap's status as the man of yesteryear, while a younger Peggy Carter could potentially tie into the origins S.H.I.E.L.D. and, by extension, Ultron.
Falcon's presence is something that I find particularly odd.  To date, he hasn't been highlighted in any of the trailers, posters or other promotional materials.  We don't see him fighting off Ultron drones, mixing with the Avengers team proper nor pictured anywhere on the poster.  This might mean that he's included only to bridge Cap's presence in Age of Ultron with what he was taking on at the end of The Winter Soldier:  pretty much a nod to continuity before sweeping him under the rug for the main attraction.  We already know that Heimdall, Loki and War Machine will all appear at some point in the movie, so is this just Marvel making sure that their main six's supporting casts get continued screen time, or what?

Danny Elfman is at least somewhat responsible for the Age of Ultron score.  That's right, the frequent Burton collaborator is attached to the film as providing "additional music."  This credit is typically used for industry shorthand for recycling music from previous films.  Do you know what other movie Elfman has worked on that's a prime candidate for inclusion here?  Spider-Man.
Remember, according to the deal brokered between Sony and Disney, Spider-Man will be introduced to the MCU before a 2017 solo movie.  This lends credence to my theory that he will be introduced in a post-credit scene in Age of Ultron, with Elfman's Spider-Man score providing an auditory cue to the audience about what's happening on screen.  If this is the case, then it's the most exciting development yet for the character.

Join the Filmquisition on Twitter (@Filmquisition) or by subscribing to this blog.

Ask questions or share your thoughts in the comments section below.