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"Movie Review: Green Lantern (2011)"

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Blogger Cadet said...

This is a pretty spot on review. Yesterday I posted my own clipped thoughts elsewhere but have reiterated them to share here.

The biggest problem with Green Lantern ...is that it’s a superhero movie.

As you’ve stated, the overly familiar superhero movie tropes are what really dragged it down for me. However, when it not being a generic superhero movie, Green Lantern goes gonzo as a full blown sci-fi fantasy space opera, and that’s the part of the movie I really enjoyed and would have preferred to see all the way through. I strongly disagree with those who ridicule the film for its alleged poor quality in look and design. It’s easy to slap this movie for its unrealistic, un-naturalistic, even downright silly CGI, but this is a fundamentally inane criticism when one considers the outlandish subject matter. How else could it possibly look?

I personally loved the super bright alien world of Oa (I saw the movie in 2D proper) in the way it aspired to the 1930s, ‘40s and even ‘60s pulp cosmic aesthetic. I don’t want reality grounded naturalism. I want far-out retro wonders, and that’s what this movie gave me. The only problem is that it didn’t give it in spades. When Hal Jordan awakes on a strange planet light years away from home, stands up and sees his slightly warped reflection in full Lantern mode, such was the beginning of a truly fantastic, extended set-piece that makes for top-notch escapism. Moments later he finds himself surrounded by a mass army of bizarre alien creatures--that is where the movie should have stayed. I wanted those bizarre aliens to become main characters whose trust and friendship Hal would earn over the course of a space adventure narrative.

But, alas, that particular movie was not to be, for Hal and the audience both are literally zapped back down to boring Earth where the set-pieces feel tired and the story drags from multiple apartment scenes to a lame romance to a tedious sub-plot involving a Hector Hammond, his employers and a resentful father-son relationship; Tim Robbins and Angela Basset seemed totally awkward in this movie, though I will admit that Sarsgaard made the most of his transformation into an evil Mr. Potato head. I also think Mark Strong gave the most dramatic performance as Sinestro and both Jeffery Rush and Michael Clark Duncan did great voice work for some delightfully animated aliens. Even Temuera Morrison’s brief role as the purple skinned Abin Sur had some resonance to it.

I also agree that Reynolds, though physically appropriate and likable enough on his own, was simply not the right personification of the title character; the reasons for which you explain very well. Green Lantern was ripe for a refreshingly pro-action, Superman-like hero of conviction instead of the jokey man-child version depicted here, whose character arc feels derivative to mind numbing degrees. There were brief moments where Reynolds ditches the stupid smile and nonchalant manner and grits his jaw squarely during the character’s most tableau stand-offs against overwhelming evil – singular images, really. Too bad the bulk of his portrayal was something else.

June 18, 2011 at 1:02 PM

Anonymous Dan O. said...

The mythology is nonsensical and the plot takes forever to get going. But once it does, the movie takes advantage of a strong cast and a director who knows what he’s doing. Good Review! Check out mine when you can!

June 19, 2011 at 1:54 AM

Anonymous DTG Reviews said...

I really enjoyed this movie. The story dragged in some areas but it stayed as true to the comics as it possibly could. Ryan Reynolds has the charm necessary to pull of the character! He looks to have the same personality in most movies he is in, but it works well here. I like his power and the special effects were great.

December 14, 2011 at 9:56 PM

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