I was not a fan of Marvel’s Civil War, it 
took characters I had read and loved for decades and twisted them in 
directions I did not like, but hey that’s their sandbox and one can’t be
 too pissy about such things, but it was that comic run that made me at 
first a little leery about Captain America: Civil War 
as I was afraid Marvel Studios was going to do the same thing with their
 movie franchise as they did with the comic. Thankfully that is not the 
case.  There are some similarities between the comic series and this 
movie, Cap and Iron Man do fight in both, but much of the story is 
vastly different.
Where
 the comic failed to create any nuanced character moments, Mark Millar’s
 Tony Stark is a complete dick verging on Hitleresque, but in this movie
 the Russo Brothers deftly handle the interactions of good friends 
finding themselves on different sides of an ideological question very 
well. The movie dives right into the action with the Avengers battling 
it out with a group of terrorists trying to steal a biological weapon, 
but when Scarlett Witch (Elizabeth Olsen) uses her powers to save Captain America (Chris Evans)
 the ensuing blast she shifted takes out several floors of a nearby 
building and killing many civilians. This is when the government steps 
in, led by U.S. Secretary of State Thunderbolt Ross (William Hurt),
 as 117 countries of the world have united to create the Sokovia Accords
 which will put the United Nations in charge of where and when the 
Avengers will act. Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr.) is reeling from his failing relationship with Pepper Potts (Gwyneth Paltrow not seen in this movie) and from the fallout from their battle in Sokovia, as seen in Avengers: Age of Ultron, and so he sides on the side of government supervision.
Note: 
 I had a small problem with Tony Stark using the disaster that was the 
Battle of Sokovia for justification in signing the accords when all that
 death and destruction could be laid solely at his feet.
Steve 
Rogers, a person out of time, is not keen on losing the freedom to act 
when deemed necessary, and doesn’t trust a bureaucratic committee to 
make that call. The rift between team-mates is messy; Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson), Falcon (Anthony Mackie), Vision (Paul Bettany), James Rhodes/War Machine (Don Cheadle),
 and Scarlet Witch all voice valid reasons for the side they choose. At 
first it’s just a case of Steve Rogers walking away, refusing to sign 
the accords, but when the world sees Bucky Barnes/Winter Soldier (Sebastian Stan) blow up the signing ceremony, and they put a “shoot to kill” order out on Captain America’s oldest friend, well it’s time to get off the bench.
This is not only an amazing action film but a movie with some serious messages, and not just “Big government is bad,”
 we have characters making choices based on emotion and not necessarily 
on facts or reason. This creates great conflict and makes one see where 
each side is coming from.  The Russo Brothers proved they could tell an 
intelligent story amongst spectacular stunts and visuals with Captain America: Winter Soldier
 but in this outing they go even farther into the exploration of the 
human side of being a superhero. When Tony Stark and Steve Rogers throw 
down it’s more than just a punch fest, these are two friends being torn 
apart in every way imaginable. Not to say that this a grim and 
depressing film full of angst and despair, that is not the case at all, 
Marvel is the studio that hasn’t forgotten that superhero movies are 
supposed to be fun, and I laughed out loud several times during the 
film’s 146 minute running time. This brings us to one of the film’s 
highlights, Spider-Man (Tom Holland).
I
 thought Tobey Maguire did a fine job as Spider-Man in the Sam Raimi 
movies (well maybe not so much the third one), but Tom Holland 
completely nails it here. This is a geeky high school kid that is just 
super excited that he has powers, and when in combat not only is he an 
acrobatic badass but he is also damn funny. The taint of the Andrew 
Garfield’s Amazing Spider-Man
 will soon be nothing but a distant memory. Spider-Man isn’t the only 
superhero making his debut here as one of the victims of the bomb, 
supposedly set by the Winter Soldier, is the father of T’Chall/Black 
Panther (Chadwick Boseman),
 and the Black Panther now wants Bucky’s head. Boseman gives a 
remarkable performance full of gravitas and fury, and he backs it all up
 with some of the coolest fighting moves put to film. All helped by his 
snazzy vibranium Panther suit.
My
 only real complaint I have is that some of the action sequences relied 
too heavily on the shaky-cam. Why have astonishing choreographed action 
sequences, performed by some of the world’s best stuntmen and women, and
 then hide it with unnecessary shaky-cam? Worse is that much of the 
shaky-cam is on close-up and medium shots making it even harder to tell 
what’s going on, and certainly not helped by the fact that fast motion 
and 3D do not work well together. It’s possible that it will look better
 in 2D but I still wish directors would learn to just “lock the fucking camera down”
 once and awhile. Sorry, that came out a bit harsh, but that is one 
filming technique that I think has had its day in the sun and needs to 
be retired.
 That
 caveat aside this is possibly the best Marvel movie yet, I’ll have to 
see it a couple more times and give it a little distance to clarify 
that, but it’s certainly kicks the crap out of DC’s recent cinematic universe entries, and at no point during Captain America and Iron Man’s fight do either of them yell out their mother’s name.  Captain America: Civil War is the new benchmark for superhero movies.
Thursday, May 5, 2016
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