Sunday, August 28, 2016

Check it Out! - Captain America: Civil War

Every time you see a new Marvel movie, you wonder, "Wow, how can they top that one?"  And amazingly, they always come up with a way to not disappoint with their next venture.  That doesn't mean that the next one always tops the previous one, but at least they are all always really good.  And that's the way I felt when I finally got to see "Captain America: Civil War".


While I wouldn't rank it as high as "Avengers: Age of Ultron", and it definitely didn't have the same magnitude, it was still a very well-done, satisfying movie.  I will admit that it took me a bit longer to get sucked in to this one than most of the previous movies, but that's probably because they had to set a lot of emotionally frustrating, not-as-entertaining groundwork before all the exciting, fun stuff could happen.  It definitely had a more somber beginning than most of the movies in the Marvel saga (that I've seen, anyway.  I still haven't watched any of the Iron Man movies).  But once you get into it, it still has that classic, enjoyable Marvel charm and adrenaline.  And it has one interesting, unique characteristic in that it is the first movie where the bad guy is in reality a minor character.  He's a well done character, and definitely has his impact on the movie, but he's more of a behind-the-scenes bad guy than any other Marvel bad guy (that I've seen) to date.

I'm not going to bother going into any of the debate about which side was right; if you want to read or hear a good discussion on that, I would recommend Plugged In's movie review and vodcast.  They both do a very good job looking at both sides of the Civil War from a Biblical standpoint, showing how both sides have good, moral truths behind them as well as fallacies.

I'm going to do this post like I've done all my other posts about these movies, in a character-analysis format.  I figured I might as well do this by team, starting with Cap's team.  I mean, after all, it is HIS movie.  So, here we go!  :)



Team Cap


Steve Rogers, aka Captain America: What can I say about him that I haven't already said?  He's still...wonderful.  And you can understand why he takes the stance he does.  Not only is his oldest, closest buddy being targeted, but he has also seen how governmental power can be abused and misused, not just in WWII but also more recently with the Hydra-infested Shield.  And he never, ever falters in his convictions, which is the main reason why you have such high respect for him.  And he still has his down to earth, slightly dorky side that makes you just want to hug him like a teddy bear because it's so cute/sweet.  :)

Bucky Barnes, aka Winter Soldier:  WE FINALLY GET OLD BUCKY BACK!!!!!!!!!!!!  It takes a while, but we do finally get the dedicated, trustworthy, loyal-to-the-end best friend from "The First Avenger" back again.  The first moment where you get a glimpse of that is when he fights so hard against being re-brainwashed (yay!!!!!  And then of course it doesn't take Cap and Falcon long to get him back out of it again).  And I have to admit that if I had to pick between Bucky and Cap, I couldn't decide.  It's just impossible, he is that great.  Of course, you see him struggle with his past, which really hurts to watch and makes you want to hug him and tell him that everything will be ok, it wasn't his fault.

Sam Wilson, aka Falcon:  Falcon is still the steady, reliable guy we came to love in "Winter Soldier".  He's the soldier's soldier, sticking by his commander through every situation and doing what is asked of him, even when he isn't too thrilled about it.  It's also pretty cool that he now has a "sidekick" in Red Wing.  I can kind of understand why Falcon isn't too happy at first about having Bucky on their team.  I mean, after all, Falcon's been Cap's wing-man for more than five years (according to "Age of Ultron"), so naturally having Cap's original wing-man come back on the scene would be a little unsettling.  But no matter how the two of them feel about each other, the combo of Falcon and Bucky is priceless.  :)

Wanda Maximoff, aka Scarlet Witch:  You really get to know her better in this movie, and I've realized that if I wound up having super powers I'd probably handle it the same way she does.  I'd zealously use them to defend my friends, then be devastated at what the side effects were.  She is learning how to better use them, but you also see more of her sensitive, kind personality, that she really doesn't want to hurt anyone and really takes it to heart and blames herself whenever she does, either intentionally or unintentionally.  She really brings out the "mom" (or, in Cap's case in one scene, "dad") instinct in you.  And it's really weird that she is actually a teenager.  I'd gotten the impression from "Age of Ultron" that she and Pietro were both in their twenties.  Oh, well, whatever.

Clint Barton, aka Hawkeye:  My one complaint about the movie has to do with Hawkeye; there isn't enough of him in it.  Like, not even close to enough.  Basically all he does is babysit Wanda and give Tony a bit of a chewing out, both of which are important, but neither one gives him enough screen time.  You still do get to see some of his dry, sarcastic humor, but there isn't nearly enough of him.  :(

Scott Lang, aka Ant Man:  While I haven't actually seen the entire "Ant Man" movie, I have gotten to see about an hour's worth out of the middle of it, so I feel that I seen the main points and filled in the rest with what I read on Wikipedia.  And I like Scott.  He's just an average, everyday guy who doesn't have a fake bone in his body.  He blurts out exactly what he (and everyone else) is thinking, whether it's positive, negative, or downright embarrassing on himself.  He's so easy to identify with, especially when he's freaking out over meeting Cap.  We all know that we'd be reacting the same way.  ;)

Sharon Carter:  She isn't "technically" a member of the team, but since she risks her job to help Cap find Bucky and then helps him even more after they're on the lam, she's basically a member even if she doesn't take part in the big fight between teams.  And I really like her.  The scene where she and Cap bond while talking about Peggy is really sweet.  I'd be ok if something really does wind up develop between the two of them.  Cap needs some kind of bright spot in his life, and she could be it.  And I'm not alone in that thinking, either...




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Team Iron Man

Tony Stark, aka Iron Man:  You can see where Tony comes from with his side of the issue, too.  He has seen what can happen when power is used without any kind of check, and as we saw in "Age of Ultron", the realization of what kind of destruction his power can do has him a little scared.  And it really is a great responsibility.  He wants to do the right thing just as strongly as Cap does, he just has a different view of what that is because of his different background (although he does come to understand a bit more of where Cap is coming from near the end of the movie).  He is much more vulnerable in this movie, as well as you see more about his background (and a flashback of sorts to a teenage Tony!!!!!!  That scene was crazy/cool).

Natasha Rominoff, aka Black Widow:  Like with Tony, you can understand why she chooses the side she does because of her background as an international spy/hit woman.  But at the same time, she really struggles with her loyalty to Cap.  After all, the two of them have been through more together than any of the other Avengers have (other than her and Hawkeye, anyway, but we don't know as much about what those two have been through together, regretfully).  She tries to protect Cap by giving him plenty of warnings against what he's planning on doing, but at the same time you get the idea that she knows that he isn't going to heed them, because she knows the kind of guy he is.  And of course she also struggles with the fact that she's actually AGREEING with Tony on something...(say what???)

Prince T'Challa, aka Black Panther:  This guy is pretty cool, at least from the superhero power standpoint.  And as a character he's pretty interesting, too.  He kind of agrees with the idea of the Accords, but at the same time he goes out and tries to hunt down Bucky on his own without the approval of the Council.  And when it gets near the end of the movie, while Cap, Bucky and Iron Man are having their three-way fight, HE is the one who really shines in how he handles the bad guy as he realizes how he has been looking at the situation with the wrong perspective/attitude.  I'm a fan.  :)

James Rhodes, aka War Machine:  This is the first movie that I've seen where there's really been any decent amount of Rhodey in it, and I like him.  He's just the kind of wing-man Tony needs.  He'll back him up 100%, but also does a great job at keeping him humble in a friendly way.  I'm glad he didn't die in the movie like there had seemed to be a bunch of hints at.

Peter Parker, aka Spiderman:  I'm not exactly sure what I think of the new kid.  He's funny, sure, but at the same time I can understand why some of the other Avengers, even on his own team, were finding him annoying during the fight with his constant chatter.  I do like the dynamic between him and Tony, though, with the way Tony kind of takes him under his wing and helps him with learning about this whole "being a legit superhero" thing.  And some of his gangly newbie-ness is kinda cute, a bit reminiscent of Cap's fish-out-of-water moments sometimes.

Vision:  It's rather interesting seeing Vision try to understand what it's like for his human companions.  He truly is a compassionate character, especially to Wanda, but at the same time since he isn't a human he doesn't really have the ability to make decisions for himself and, as a result, does what he is programmed/ordered to do.  That causes probably the biggest conflict between members of the opposing teams (outside the actual battle, of course).


While this might not be the #1 best Marvel movie ever made, it DEFINITELY is the one that ends with the biggest cliffhanger!!!  While the end of "Thor: the Dark World" did leave us with some questions (which aren't going to be answered until later next year!  :(  ), it doesn't leave us with half as many as "Civil War" does by a long shot.  What the heck is going to happen to the team now???  *sigh*  Oh, well, I was able to hang in there between when "Age of Ultron" and this movie came out, so I guess I'll be ok until "Thor: Ragnarok" comes out.  And what will help a little is...


BONUS!!!

You know I couldn't do a post like this without including a funny moments clip.  ;)  For some reason the bloopers from this movie (and the past couple, actually) haven't been all that great, in my opinion, with the only real good one from "Civil War" being Jeremy Renner cracking up over the way Scarlett Johansson was looking at him (there we go with Hawkeye being wonderful again).  BUT...the interview combo of Sebastian Stan and Anthony Mackie is pure gold.  They both are really funny, and they play off of each other so well.  It's just a joy to watch.  Have fun!


Wednesday, July 6, 2016

Character Comparision - "Alias Smith & Jones" v. "The Wild Wild West"

Sorry it's been forever since I've posted on here.  I guess I just need to accept the fact that I am going to be a very, very sporadic blogger.  Other things keep interfering (like having a busy life away from the computer, and the fact that I'll start on an article and then realize that it's not really that interesting).  Anyway, I think I've finally come up with another good post.  Since my character comparison between "Hogan's Heroes" and "F Troop" was pretty popular by random blog follower standings, I thought I'd give another one a shot, this time by comparing the main characters of two buddy-style Western TV shows.

As I've blogged about previously, I am a pretty big fan of the show Alias Smith & Jones from the early '70s.  It is a show about Hannibal Heyes and "Kid" Curry, two Western train robbers who decide to go straight and are told they have to earn their amnesty by staying out of trouble AND not getting arrested until they have "earned" it.

Until recently, Smith and Jones was my only go-to for a fun, action-packed Western with some good humor mixed in.  But that changed a few months ago on my last birthday, when my mom gave me the first season of The Wild Wild West, which is a show set in the 1870s about James West and Artemis Gordon, two US secret service men who go all around the States (primarily west of the Mississippi) breaking up gangs, overthrowing evil plots, and generally saving the good ol' United States of America from all kinds of destruction.  It's a James Bond-meets-John Wayne kind of show.  And I have to admit, I was hooked within two episodes.


There are several similarities between the two shows, which is probably why I like them both.  They both have action, suspense, a hint of mystery, good humor, and really good chemistry between the two main stars.  And of course they both have horses, historical tidbits, and guys in stetsons.  But there are two main areas where the shows differ, with each show having one negative over the other, as well as one positive, which kinda winds up evening things out.

Apparently Wild Wild West was removed from the air after the fourth season because its fight sequences had become "too violent" by '60s standards.  As far as the first season goes, there's only been a couple episodes that had fight scenes or other material that made me wince, so either it got a lot more violent as the show progressed or society's (and mine along with it) definition of what is violent has changed a lot.  But there are definitely a lot of fight scenes and some villains with twisted, almost insane, minds, much more so than in Smith and Jones, where pretty much all you encounter are some bloodless shootouts and greedy landowners/bankers who aren't above working behind the law to get what they want.   Because of this, the story lines of the Smith and Jones episodes are generally more "feasible" and easier on the emotions.

On the other hand, Wild Wild West has a more positive message behind it.  Its stars are two guys who are determined to do what is right and protect their country no matter what the cost, while in Smith and Jones, the primary objective for the two main characters is much more self-centered.  It is admirable that they are trying to go straight, but in all honesty, the main reason they even considered the possibility is because being an outlaw was becoming too difficult.  Their main motivation is to protect their own hides until they can earn their amnesty so that they don't have to spend more than half their lives in prison.  They do wind up risking their amnesty, and occasionally even their lives, for the good of others at times, even saving the life of a bounty hunter who was after them in one episode, which does show that the boys do have a compassionate, selfless side that can come out when they'll let it, but it is not the first thought on their minds like it is with the Wild Wild West fellas, who risk their lives for the good of people they don't even know in every episode.

As I started thinking about doing a comparison post with these two shows, it hit me that, unlike my last one, there are no really obvious counterparts between the two shows other than their basic role as "head guy" or "sidekick", and even those lines get blurred at times in Smith and Jones.  It's implied in some episodes that the Kid is Heyes' second in command, but in other episodes they treat each other as equal partners.  So this has been a very interesting character study.  And here's what I've come up with...

 Hannibal Heyes (aka Joshua Smith) v. Capt. James West

     

Similarities:  - They are both very sharp, intelligent fellows, and they typically have great composure/poker faces when things get tight.
- They trust almost no one, especially women.  The people they DO truly trust can be counted on one hand.
- They both have something of a silver tongue, which they use to their advantage when they need something, especially if it's from a woman or from their at-the-time reluctant best bud.
- They're tall, dark, handsome, and they have pretty good taste in fashion.
- They both like black horses.

Differences: - The way they handle tight situations is very different.  While Heyes is the ultimate strategist, almost over-analyzing situations at times, Jim jumps right into the middle of a situation and uses his brilliant cunning to get himself out of it unscathed.
- While both of them are smooth talkers, Jim is way more of the "ladies man", using his charisma more often than his smooth tongue, while Heyes has the stronger talking-himself-out-of-things skills.  Heyes also hardly ever gets romantically involved with any of the ladies he encounters.  He enjoys their company, sure, but he only sets out to woo only a handful. And on a couple of the occasions where he does, he winds up getting emotionally attached, which Jim never, ever does.  Ever.
- To be perfectly honest, Heyes has more personality than Jim.  While Jim is always the true, noble, dedicated guy who always knows the right thing to do and always does it with courage and the occasional glimpse of humor, Heyes is more complex.  He shows when he's annoyed, you see him backpedal and regroup when he's thrown a curve ball, he alternately jokes around good-naturedly and uses sarcasm, he sometimes shows biases and you see him struggle to make a decision between following what he knows is right and his own selfish desires.  He's more...human, I guess.
- Jim is always getting into fights, while Heyes typically does what he can to avoid violence.  He will draw his gun when he needs some extra motivational help, but he only punches a couple of people through the show's run, while it's a rare episode where Jim doesn't have at least one fistfight.


Jed "Kid" Curry (aka Thaddeus Jones) v. Artemis Gordon
                                                                  
   Image result for image artemus gordon wild wild west

Similarities: - They are both very loyal, even to the point of being willing to get beaten up for their buddy.  Artie does this more often than the Kid, but in at least one episode Kid purposely starts a fight to buy Heyes time to complete a job.
- Both of them can be worriers and get fussy with their partner fairly regularly.  The reasons they get fussy might on the surface seem different, but at the base of it, it's because they are concerned about something or someone.
- Both are more susceptible to women's charms than their partners and are more inclined to give a woman the benefit of the doubt in a situation unless she has done something to prove her true bad colors.  After that happens they immediately put her on their permanent black list.
-They are both more likely to provide the comic relief in a situation, both intentionally and unintentionally.  In either one of those situations, they can easily produce a pretty on-point wisecrack.
- They both can pull off a very smooth Southern gentleman impersonation.  ;)

Differences:  - Their fighting styles are very different.  While Artie swings quite a few punches (although not half as many as Jim, and he hardly ever comes out on top in any of his fights), Kid almost always uses his fast-draw to get his point across.  Of course, he usually doesn't have to fire in those cases, and he only kills one person during the show's three seasons (and that was in self defense).
- While Artie is a very inventive, intelligent fellow who can match Jim in brains (and is actually the better strategist when you get down to it), Kid's mind works in a very practical, everyday man, down-to-earth way that sometimes runs in the opposite way from Heyes'.  Fairly often when he hears one of Heyes' schemes, he responds with a "Say what?" and is usually very pessimistic about their feasibility.
- In a related vein, while Artie as a former actor has a somewhat classy, educated demeanor, Kid is obviously of the working class.  The level of his literacy and manners fluctuates between episodes, but at his best he usually reaches Artie's average casual demeanor and never his level of education.
- About the only kind of impression you see Kid perform is his Southern gentleman impression, while Artie has all kinds of impressions he pulls off, at least one different one in each episode (he did over a hundred during the run of the show).


It would be impossible to pick a top favorite among these four guys.  They each have their own endearing qualities, as well as their own personal foibles.  That's why the two teams offset each other so well, I suppose.  The strong points of one character balance out the weaknesses of his partner.  And in both shows it's obvious that both sets of characters really care for each other like brothers and don't see each other as "just a coworker".

I know it could have never happened since the shows were aired about five years apart, but I think it could have been fun if they'd had a crossover episode between these two shows.  They could have brought the actors who played Jim (Robert Conrad) and Artie (Ross Martin) to be guest stars in Smith and Jones, even if they weren't playing the same characters.  But, they didn't, so we'll never know what that would have been like.  It's neat to think about, though.   :)

Thursday, October 22, 2015

My Top 10 Music Videos

Ok, I have to admit it, I'm a music video junkie of sorts.  I guess it's because I love both music and movies, so a combination of the two naturally appeals to me.  But I do have to say that most of the music videos that I like are ones that hint at a story; you know, the ones that take the message of the song and put some feet to it, hinting at a deeper story line.  Those are the music videos that grab me, the ones that have been masterfully made into a three and a half minute story that sucks you in and gets your imagination going.  So, here is an arbitrary list of my top 10 favorite music videos.  Enjoy!

Michael Buble - Feelin' Good


I don't know what happened to the original version, but for some reason the only decent one I could find of this song has Spanish subtitles.  Oh, well, it's still the same song and video.  And can somebody PLEASE make this the theme song for a spy movie????? 

Toto - Africa


This video is chock full of moments that make you wonder "What's the back story?" and that open doors for all kinds of speculation and imagining as to what happened.  *happy shivers going down the spine*

Shania Twain - Don't


This one doesn't really have much of a "story" element to it, but it's so gorgeous I had to include it.  That horse...oh, such a beauty!  And the setting has such a flavor of romance to it  (several of the dresses would be absolutely stunning, too, if they weren't quite so low cut).

Jonny Diaz - Irony


Jonny Diaz is my #1 favorite singer.  And this music video does actually have a backstory.  Jonny went to college on a baseball scholarship and planned on following his older brothers (one of whom is my first favorite MLB player, Matt Diaz!) into baseball as a career, but he felt God calling him into music.  Knowing that, this video takes on a whole new depth.  (Most of his music is really good!  I highly recommend checking out more of his songs). 

Alison Krauss - End of a Summer Storm


This video almost had me in tears!  As a former kid who's best friends were mostly her stuffed animals (who became even more alive thanks to her and her dad giving them voices while playing pretend) this tugged at my heartstrings so much!  <3

Taylor Swift - Love Story


I'm not as big a fan of Taylor Swift as I used to be (and even then I only liked a handful of songs), but this video is one that you dream about being in.  The whole Jane Austen-esque setting, the dancing in the candlelight, the old fashioned lantern, *sigh*.  It brings out the history buff in me.

Rebecca St. James - Wait for Me


This has been one of my theme songs for this point in my life.  In the video I love how it shows the guy both going looking for her, but also being willing to wait for her.  He isn't impatient, but at the same time he isn't just twiddling his thumbs wanting her to take all the initiative.    

Michael Buble - Haven't Met You Yet


This is such a fantastic twist on an oft-used story line!  Who would think about meeting your future spouse in the frozen section of the grocery store?  I love it.  (Fun Fact: the lady who plays the girlfriend in the video is now Michael Buble's wife.  I think I read they had actually started dating before they shot the video, but he wrote it with her in mind).

Shania Twain -  Forever and For Always


Such a sweet story!  And such a beautiful filming location!  This showcases the kind of love that everyone, if they were honest, deep, deep down dreams of having.

Alison Krauss and Union Station - The Lucky One


This is hands-down my favorite music video.  I can remember as a young teenager talking with my dad about "Is this really an ok song?  I mean, she talks about one-night stands", and my dad saying he thought that the song was stating a fact about the "Lucky One", and that it didn't mean that the singer was a part of those one-night stands.  And then later I find this video and it proves my dad right!  The way she looks at him like, "I know exactly what you are, and you are not getting me, no matter how persuading you may be.  I know you."  They do such an excellent job of showing his past without actually having to SHOW it like a bunch of videos nowadays do.


BONUS: There are a couple of fan-made music videos that rank up with the official ones in my favorites list.  They are so well done that they almost look professional.  Here are my top three favorites of those.

"I'll Make a Man Out of You" from Mulan


There have been several videos made for this song using clips from the The Avengers, and all of them are pretty fun to watch, but in my opinion this is the best one.  The scenes seem to fit the lyrics the best to me.

Sugarland - It Happens


Since the boys in Stalag 13 seem to get into all kinds of trouble, both planned and unplanned, this song is most appropriate for them.  :)

Michael Martin Murphy - Wildfire


Is it possible to actually be in love with a music video?  If it is, then this is the one for me.  It is so GORGEOUS!!!!!  (and it has a bunch of clips from my favorite movie, "The Man from Snowy River").  Put horses, breathtaking scenery and a hauntingly beautiful song together and you have me hooked!  :)

Monday, August 24, 2015

Thoughts on "Star Wars: the Original Trilogy"

Since I forgot to do a post when I first saw "Star Wars: Episode IV" earlier this year, I decided that I might as well do a post covering the whole trilogy after I saw all three movies.  So, thanks to a couple movie, popcorn and homemade brownie nights with a couple of friends, one who loves Star Wars and the other who had never even seen the first one before, here are brief synopses of them, along with some random thoughts that popped into my head as I was watching them (which sometimes made the movies even more entertaining).  :)




Episode IV: A New Hope

Synopsis:  Young Luke Skywalker finds himself caught up in the middle of the Rebellion against the Empire (which, like the American Revolution, is a good, needed rebellion) when he becomes the owner of two droids that have vital information that the Empire and it's primary general, Darth Vader, will do anything to get back.  So Luke, along with the droids, R2D2 and C3PO, a forced-into-retirement Jedi knight named Obi-Wan Kenobi, and a smuggler named Han Solo and his partner, a Wookie named Chewbacca, head out to deliver the information to the Rebels.  What they don't plan on is Han's spaceship, the Millennium Falcon, getting sucked in by the Empire's great Death Star's gravity field, and then learning that the Empire is holding Rebel leader Princess Leia captive on the Death Star, and then...well, let's just say it's more than Luke ever imagined.

Thoughts: #1 - I want an R2D2!!!!!!!
#2 -  Han Solo is an "almost-bad boy", meaning that he has that devil-may-care attitude but when the chips are down he'll come through and do the right thing.  That makes him even more irresistible.  (I actually cheered out loud when Darth Vader's ship got blasted from behind Luke and you find out it was Han).
#3 - Why did we have to loose Obi-Wan Kenobi as a physical character right as we were getting to know him??????  :(
#4 - Han and Leia have very similar temperaments.  That could either be a bad thing or a good thing.
#5 - I still don't understand why in a sword fight you would spin around before reengaging your opponent.  But you see it all the time!


That really seems like opening up your defenses to me, especially when you don't move as fast as you used to...
#6 - For all the complaining he does, C3PO really is attached to R2, which is really, really sweet (but you do sometimes wish that C3PO would shut up).


Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back

Synopsis:  Luke, Han, Leia and all the other Rebels are hiding out on a frozen planet, hoping that Darth Vader won't find them (as if!)  One night when Luke gets caught out in the snow he has a vision of Obi-Wan telling him to go to another planet and find Jedi master Yoda to help him finish his training.  After an attack on their base by Vader, Luke heads out to find Yoda while Han and Leia go to hopefully find safety with Han's old buddy Lando.  Unfortunately, somebody has reached Lando first and has forced him into a compromising situation...


#1 - I still want an R2D2!  (Sidenote: I've learned that I can imitate a couple of the squeals and squeaks he makes)
#2 - Never say "I'd rather kiss a Wookie!" to a guy who's best buddy is a Wookie.  He has an immediate killer comeback.
#3 - Never call the aforementioned friend of a Wookie a "scoundrel", not if you're wanting to annoy him, anyway.  If you're wanting to do that, call him "scruffy".  (Of course, if you're wanting to see him smirk in a swoon-worthy way and repeat what you said with relish.......)



Sorry, where was I?  Oh, yeah...other things I noticed -

#4 - Yoda might be a very good teacher, but he'd sure be an annoying neighbor.
#5 - You do not want Darth Vader to promote you to Admiral.  That is almost like promoting you to Death Row.  I do have to say though that the second one he killed did have guts.  Too bad he was on the Dark Side.
#6 - Why was Lando surprised that Darth Vader kept changing the terms of their agreement? I mean, c'mon, he's the BAD GUY.  Bad guys do that.  (I am glad that Lando wound up being a good guy.  As he said, he didn't really have any choice but to go along with Vader).
#7 - The only time that hyper-speed worked on the Millennium Falcon during the whole movie was when Lando was driving it.  How could Han have let it get into such bad condition?  It was his baby!

Episode VI: Return of the Jedi

Synopsis:  The movie starts up with the gang trying to rescue Han from Jaba the Hut, the guy that Han owed money to and who wasn't too keen on forgiving the debt.  After finally being successful, Luke heads back to join Yoda while Han and the others join the rest of the Rebels for what will hopefully be their final offensive.  The Empire has been building another Death Star that needs to be blown up...and Vader and the Emperor have to be dealt  with once and for all.

#1 - I STILL want an R2D2!!!!!!!  Please, can somebody make that happen?????
#2 - I also want an Ewok.  Or, better yet, a whole family of Ewoks.  Those babies are PRECIOUS!!!!!!!  <3

See what I mean?!?!?!  I NEED one!!!!!!

#3 - If the previous movie had the most dark moments of the trilogy, then this one had the most cute moments...
            #3A - When Chewie is so happy to be reunited with Han (awwwww!!!!!!)
            #3B - When Leia coaxes the first Ewok into being her friend (and then when he keeps hugging both Han and R2 throughout the rest of the movie)
            #3C - And then THIS, which has to be one of the sweetest, cutest love scenes ever caught on film.


             Here Han was willing to put his feelings for Leia aside so she could be happy.  And then you can read on his face the exact thoughts that are running through his head: "Her...brother?  He's her brother???  He's - oh!  He's her BROTHER!!!!!!"  :)
#4 - Will somebody please shoot that little rat thing that's always hanging out with Jabba the Hut?  PLEASE?????   (Thank you, R2!)
#5 - How in the world did Luke go from running out on Yoda before he could pull his own plane out of the swamp with the Force to being a full-fledged Jedi knight??????  We know he didn't go back to Yoda during that time, so what the heck happened?
#6 - The only reason bounty-hunter Boba Fett dies during the fight with Jabba the Hut is because Han accidentally whacks him as he's trying to see what's going on (and did we ever even hear his name mentioned in the movie???)
#7 - Somebody in with George Lucas & Co. must have loved the phrase "false delusions of grandeur".  I think I've heard it at least once in each movie... 
#8 - Luke was right!!!!!!!  There was some good left in his father!  Yay!  :)


Overall, I enjoyed the trilogy.  I kind of wish I could have seen the original versions instead of the remastered ones so that I could have appreciated the advances in special effects since the '80s, but in the long run it doesn't matter.  I guess I would have to say that the final movie was probably my favorite out of the three, despite the grossness of Jabba the Hut and the few unexplained things that happened between it and the previous movie.  One thing that struck me about all of them, though: here they have all this amazing technology with droids and all kinds of aircraft and weaponry, yet they don't have one single piece of hand-held...anything, really, except for whatever it is they use to contact 3PO and R2.  No terrain readers, no room scanners, no device that when you speak into it it translates what you said into a different language and then does the same for the person you're speaking with...I know the movies were written in the '80s, but surely even back then such things could have been imagined up for sci-fi.  I mean, it's so inefficient, having to constantly wait for a slow, jerky-moving droid to come over to do anything that requires technology.  Makes me wonder what Tony Stark would think if he ever wound up in that world...

He'd probably call them archaic.  Just sayin'.  Goes to show how much things can change in three decades.

*Update: I've now seen a few episodes of the original Star Trek series, which was made before the Star Wars movies.  Since Star Trek has a bunch of hand-held devices, why the heck didn't the Star Wars movies???

Either way, the movies were fun to watch, even if they did cause me to loose my heart to an unattainable loved one.  

;)

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Check it Out! - Avengers: Age of Ultron

Oh - my - goodness, "Age of Ultron" was soooooo good!  In fact, it was so good I went to see it twice.  ;)   I am glad that I watched "Winter Soldier" before I saw this, it did help a lot of things make more sense.  The very beginning of the movie shows the wrapping up of what Cap was starting at the end of the last movie, with the Avengers helping clear out the last Hydra stronghold (in an epic fight scene in the snow, of course).  And naturally, when you finish off one bad guy, you know that another one has to come along to keep the story going, right? 




Tony Stark, aka Iron Man:  He's definitely more enjoyable in this movie than he was in the first "Avengers" movie, mostly because he has learned to "play well with others".  More of his spunky side comes out, but we also see his biggest fear.  And like usually happens, by trying to insure that that fear doesn't come about, he almost brings that fear into reality.

Steve Rogers, aka Captain America:  Cap is still wonderful, but he is also a man who is still trying to find his place in the world.  He says that he's no longer interested in settling down and having a family like he was back in the 1940s, but there are so many moments where he seems to be feeling a deep hole in his life that you can't really believe him (and he is also still trying to find Bucky.  At one point it is hinted at that it's been five years since Shield first fell, so it makes you wonder where Bucky's been all this time.  Hopefully getting his memory back!)

Thor (no "aka" for him):  He has pretty much acclimated to living on Earth after giving up Asgard at the end of "Thor: the Dark World" (including picking up some of Cap's martial arts stuff, apparently).  He probably hasn't even thought about his old home much since he's been busy helping to stamp out Hydra.  But once Loki's scepter and the Infinity Stones are brought back to his notice, he realizes that he is needed for more than just Earth's protection.  He is also a bit more relaxed in his manner now that he is no longer the "heir apparent", which also means that he has more foot-in-mouth syndrome than he had in the previous movies (cue the cute-awkwardness).  :)

Bruce Banner, aka The Hulk: He is more in control of his Hulkness and has put more safeguards in place against it, but he is still afraid that he won't be able to control it enough to keep the members of the team safe.  We also get to see that he really does have some backbone and isn't just a teddy bear that's afraid that someone is going to say "boo" and cause him to turn into the Hulk.  And he winds up finding a "very compelling reason not to turn green" (see the next profile).

Natasha Romanoff, aka Black Widow:  We finally learn more of her backstory!  She is a poor girl who got pressed into a mold and brainwashed about what was expected of her (thankfully not in the same way Bucky was brainwashed) who finally broke away from it and is still trying to make up for her past.  We still don't know HOW she broke away, but I wouldn't be surprised if Hawkeye had a hand in it.  She is also letting herself be more vulnerable by owning up to the feelings she has been developing towards Bruce, and encouraging the ones he has been developing towards her (as hinted at above).

Clint Barton, aka Hawkeye:  I knew I liked Hawkeye from the moment he says "I'm starting to root for this guy" in the  first "Thor" movie, and then from the parts where we got to see him sane in the first "Avengers". We get to see a lot more of his personality in this one, which can pretty much be described in a little bit of dialog between Tony and Bruce after Hawkeye has been injured.  "How's he doing?"  "Well, unfortunately, he's still Barton."  "That's terrible."  Of course, we don't think that's terrible at all.  He's such a wise-cracking, down to earth guy.  And *spoiler!* he's got a family!  He definitely has the right woman behind him.  I hope Laura gets to be in more stuff.

Ultron:  THIS is the new bad guy, the robot that Tony created with the idea of using it to protect the world and create world peace.  Unfortunately, it is such a highly "intelligent" robot that it gets the idea that the way to get world peace is to eliminate all of the human race.  It is also very conceited and manipulating.

Wanda Maximoff, aka the Scarlett Witch:  One half of a pair of twins that volunteered to help Hydra after a bomb created by Tony killed their parents, she has mind reading abilities, can create force fields, and has the ability to manipulate objects without touching them.  She can also show others their deepest fears through visions.  After Hydra is wiped out, she and her brother join with Ultron.

Pietro Maximoff, aka Quicksilver:  Wanda's twin brother, this guy is super fast.  Like, super-super fast.  Blink and you miss him fast (which drives Hawkeye crazy).  He's a bit cocky because of his ability, but you almost can't blame him.  Once he and his sister realize that Ultron is planning on wiping out the whole human race and not just the Avengers, they change sides and join the Avengers.  (Sidenote: He wears Adidas!!!)

The Vision:  He is the result of Ultron trying to make a body for himself out of vibranium (the stuff Cap's shield is made of), the body getting captured by the Avengers, and Tony uploading JARVIS with a few alterations into it instead.  He is more of what Tony had originally intended Ultron to be, just without the being able to protect the whole world by himself stuff.  He is also the exact opposite of Ultron personality-wise, being a humble, polite, and insightful character.  And he is the reason for the #1 jaw-dropping moment of the whole movie.  As much as I would love to spoil it, I just can't.  I'll leave it at that pretty much everyone in the theater went "Oh!" at the same time and then burst out laughing when it happened.  It's great.

Nick Fury:  He isn't in the movie all that much, but whenever he is, he is a pivotal force.  First he gives the team the shot in the arm they need while they're in hiding licking their wounds, and then during the last battle he shows up at just the right moment with the backup they need.  


Overall, it was a very well-done movie.  It definitely needs parental guidance before even some teenagers see it (some of the visions the Scarlett Witch creates for the others get kinda creepy, and the battle scenes are a bit more dramatic than those in the first "Avengers"), but overall I thought it was good.  My only complaint: they didn't bring Coulson back!  While I've never watched any "Agents of Shield" episodes, I've read about the series and seen a few clips.  And one part that I came across was an episode where Sif is on Earth helping them and she tells Coulson that Thor will be glad to know he's alive, and Coulson says that's why he'd like to tell him himself.  And I'm sitting there going, "Well, WHEN ARE YOU GOING TO TELL HIM??????"  They have to do it on film.  They just HAVE to!!!!! 

Now, how long until "Captain America: Civil War" comes out?????  It is going to feel like forrrrrreeeevvvveeeerrrr.  At least I have "Thor" on DVD now, so I guess that will help tide me over...that and catching up on "Star Wars" (I've only seen "A New Hope".  Yes, shame on me). Anyway, go check out "Age of Ultron"! :)


BONUS:

As always happens when a new movie comes out, there have been a bunch of interviews with the actors floating around.  I found a few that were so funny/cute that I just had to share them.  :)

#1:  Robert Downing Jr. meets Mini Thor


I totally like RDJ so much more after seeing the way he interacts with this little guy.  While the other interviews with Mini Thor all showed the actors falling in love with him, RDJ definitely did the best job interacting with him and trying to make him feel special.  <3  (And why didn't they do an interview with Mini Thor and Chris Hemsworth???  I would have probably paid to have seen that happen!)

#2: Jeremy Renner plays "Heads Up"


It is soooo nice to know that some celebrities have good taste regarding twerking (aka "I ain't going anywhere near that stuff"). And it's a good thing that (as far as I know) none of the characters he's played have had to have a dramatic death, because that one stunk.  Sorry, Jeremy, but it's just the truth.  ;)

#3: Chris Evans Doesn't Like It


This is so precious!!!!!!  We "wuv" it!  And somehow it seems super appropriate for Chris E to be the one saying that.  For some reason trying to picture Chris H or RDJ saying it doesn't seem half as cute.  Maybe Jeremy or Mark Ruffalo could have pulled it off, but Chris E was just the perfect one for it to happen to.

#4: "Who Would You Call?"


This is just a bunch of fun with most of the main cast (except for Chris H!!!  Where the dickens was he?)  I have to admit, Jeremy and Chris E were the funniest duo, though.  "Thanks for ruining my career."  :)

Wednesday, July 8, 2015

Check it Out! - Captain America: The Winter Soldier

Well, I’m all ready to see “Age of Ultron” now!  I have watched “Captain America: The Winter Soldier”.  While I like the first Cap movie better overall, I have to say that this one was definitely more of a cliffhanger.  I can’t remember the last time I’ve yelled at and pleaded with the TV so much during a movie.  That is one main advantage to watching a new movie on DVD versus watching it in theaters, you don’t have to worry about disturbing anyone with all your uninhibited comments and emotional outbursts (that and being able to pause it if you absolutely have to leave the room for a minute so you don’t miss anything).

Anyway, here we go, in the format that I started using with “Thor” and have used ever since.


Steve Rogers, aka Captain America:  During the unmentioned amount of time since “Avengers” occurred, Cap has done quite a bit of acclimating to the 21st century.  There are still some things he hasn’t gotten used to, and some things he refuses to get used to, namely the idea that in order for peace to reign everyone that might stand as a threat to it must be eliminated (as he told Director Fury, "This isn’t freedom, this is fear.”)  Cap still has his moral compass intact and pointed in the right direction, and he still has that heart of gold.  This is what causes Shield (which has had Hydra working within it undetected for years) to target him for elimination.  I am also glad they showed that he had been able to find Peggy again.  Even though she is now a bedridden old woman who has lapses of memory, you can tell that he still cares for her.  That was the sweetest, most heart touching and close-to-tears-inducing part of the whole movie.


Natasha Romanoff, aka Black Widow:  It is much more obvious in this movie than in "Avengers" that Natasha and Cap have entirely different outlooks on life.  They both end up needing each other to survive, but that doesn't mean that they approve of the way the other person handles different situations.  Then after they find out that Hydra has been using Shield as a cover all these years, Natasha begins to doubt what she has believed about her past motives and methods.  She is definitely a developing, evolving character, which makes her interesting to watch.

Director Nick Fury:  This is the movie where some of Fury's previous work comes back to haunt him.  While he does end up realizing that he has inadvertently been helping Hydra all these years and is able to let Cap know in time to stop him from getting caught up in it, he also has to suffer the consequences of being too deeply involved and then trying to get out.  (Sidenote:  I want a car like his where you can control it using vocal aids.  That would have saved me from a couple startling situations where I've forgotten that my car can't read my mind to know that I now want to drive forward instead of backwards...)

Sam Wilson, aka The Falcon:  This is the guy Cap needed in his life.  A veteran of the Armed Forces who served two tours of duty and now works with other vets struggling with the after-effects of being in combat, Sam understands what Cap has been through more than anyone else Cap has encountered.  AND he has a special skill set that comes in real handy as he steps in to the role as Cap’s right hand man.  He's the kind of guy that when he hears about something that needs to be done, he says, "Ok, let's go!"

Secretary Alexander Pierce:  It was so strange seeing Robert Redford playing an antagonist.  I can’t really say “bad guy”, since the other two movies of his that I’ve seen had him playing rolls where both characters were technically “bad”, i.e. "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" and "The Sting", which were both well done but both also deserve PG ratings.  ("The Sting" has the most jaw-dropping ending of all time. Trust me).  But, as always, he did an amazing job.  He is such a scheming, hardhearted so-and-so!

The Winter Soldier (aka Bucky Barnes!!!!):  This guy is the main reason I was screaming at the TV.  During his first real fight with Cap, the mask he's been wearing comes off, and Cap recognizes him and calls him by name.  Bucky denies knowing him since he’d been brainwashed by Hydra after they discovered him after his fall in “First Avenger”, but the encounter starts things niggling in the back of his brain where he knows he’s seen that guy before.  Then they brainwash him again!!!!!  That’s when the yelling started on my end.  After that whenever Bucky was in a scene I was begging, “Remember, Bucky!!!!!  Knock some sense into him, Cap!  Let him remember!!!”  It sure took forever, but apparently something did start to work, since we see him pulling Cap out of the Potomac after Cap fell in to it.  And then in one of the end credit scenes, he is in the Captain America exhibit in the Smithsonian reading about himself.  Just like everyone watching the movie, Cap knew that there is still something good left in Bucky.  I hope he gets his memory back in “Captain America: Civil War”!!!!!  He’s too good to loose.  (One other thing that dawned on me while watching their final fight was that this was the first time Cap has ever refused to fight back.  Even back before he had the serum injection he would never back down from a fight, but now he let Bucky beat him to a pulp and never resisted.  That's what you call loyalty right there).

Well, this beats my previous record of number of Marvel movies watched during a certain time span.  While it was one week between watching the first "Thor" and the first "Avengers" movies and two weeks between seeing both Cap movies, it is going to be just three days between "Winter Soldier" and "Age of Ultron"!  I'm going with a couple of friends to see it at our $3 theater (I hadn't been expecting it to get there for another month, but last weekend one of the friends I'm going with texted me saying it was there already!  This is the same friend who agrees with me that it's almost impossible to pick who you like better between Cap or Bucky, and by that I mean the original, sane Bucky.  We'd both take either one.  ;) )  So be looking for a new post in a few days! 

Saturday, June 27, 2015

Check it Out! - Captain America: The First Avenger

Since I have definite plans to watch "Avengers: Age of Ultron" whenever it gets to our local $3 theater, I realized that it would probably be a good idea for me to watch both Captain America movies before I saw Ultron, since from what I've heard that "Winter Soldier" gives a lot of background for Ultron, and of course you never watch a sequel before watching the first movie (not if you're me, anyway).  So I've finally watched "Captain America: the First Avenger".


It was kind of interesting, seeing as how I've already been acquainted with Cap thanks to "Avengers", to go back and learn his beginnings and to get to know him better.  I knew that he was a really good guy with strong morals, but I had no idea that he had that much strength of character!  (As I told a friend after I watched the movie, "I have found my soulmate!"  She thought it was funny for some reason...)  What was a little surprising about the movie was that, even though I KNOW what happens later on, I STILL cried twice during the movie.  I mean, obviously Cap doesn't die when the plane crashes (and from what I've read of "Winter Soldier" I know that (spoiler!) Bucky doesn't die, either), but there I was with tears rolling down my face like I'd lost a close friend.  All I can say is that the writers and directors of these movies do a GREAT job, making them both emotional and enjoyable.  The humor in this one wasn't quite as prevalent as it is in Avengers or even in the Thor movies, but it was always very well placed.  And I love that, while all of the movies have incredible action sequences, none of them are bloody, which is what I can't stand.  I can take computer-animated aliens all day, but one gory, bleeding limb and I've got my eyes shut for the rest of the scene.

Since I have done my posts on Avengers, Thor I, and Thor II in a character-analysis format, I figure I might as well stick with that theme.  So, here we go...

Steve Rogers aka Captain America:  Oh, where to start on describing him?  How about we just say "perfect" and go with that?  ;)  Ok, ok, he isn't perfect, but boy, his positive characteristics sure outweigh his negatives by a long shot.  He could be called stubborn, but a lot of that came from his background of being bullied and of not allowing that to define who he was.  It was from that background that he developed his strength of character.  If you are never tested, you never grow.  Then after he is changed from the sickly little guy into the super soldier, he doesn't let his new power go to his head.  Instead he uses it to defend those who were in the same position he had been in.  As he explains when he is asked why he wants to kill Nazis, "I don't like bullies."  The one thing about him that helps remind us that he is still human, though, is that he is awkward around most girls and doesn't understand much about them, which could be infuriating if you were actually with him but for us outside observers it can be kinda cute.  :)

Johann Schmidt aka The Red Skull:  The head of Hitler's scientific research unit (HYDRA), he believes that what was viewed as magic in the old days and what is now considered science are connected.  He finds the Tesseract and uses it to create a line of vaporizing weapons, and then ditches Hitler and decides to take over the world for himself. (In a video clip shared below under a different profile it explains how he became the Red Skull, which fortunately just looks like a glowing red face without a nose and isn't all that creepy).

James "Bucky" Barnes:  You first meet Bucky as he is pulling a bully off of Steve.  While it is never said how long the two friends have known each other, you get the impression that they have been close since childhood, and that Bucky as always stood up for Steve.  He doesn't quite understand why Steve is so "stubborn" and why he always insists on not "staying safe", but his loyalty is unwavering, even unto the point of death.  (One of my favorite parts of the movie is when Steve has asked him if he's ready to "follow Captain America into the jaws of death", and Bucky says, "[Heck] no.  That little guy from Brooklyn who was too dumb to run away from a fight?  I'm following him." <3 )

Dr. Abraham Erskine:  The scientist who created the serum that changes Steve into a super soldier, he is the one who saw beyond Steve's physical appearance and saw his character and his potential.  The scene below I think is one of the most powerful in the whole movie.


What a wise man!  And then as he is dying on the floor after being shot, he just taps Steve in the chest like he's trying to say, "Remember who you are in here.  Never change that."

Agent Peggy Carter:  A special British agent who has been "allowed" to be an assistant in the American army, she has encountered a lot of rebuff and stigma while trying to prove that she really is capable of doing a man's job, and because of that she has become hardened and cynical about all the men she meets.  Then she encounters Steve.  You can almost see the moment when she falls in love with him.


And who wouldn't?  When you've been surrounded by arrogant, big-talking men for a long time, and then someone (even, or maybe I should say especially, if he is a shrimp) shows that he has more guts and concern for others than anyone else, you're naturally going to be drawn to it.  She doesn't let on about it until close to the end because of the wall of protection she has had to build around herself to succeed in her business, but as her feelings grow they get harder and harder to hide.

Col. Chester Phillips:  The commander of Steve's unit, he is not only the one who has to help Dr. Erskine find a guinea pig for his experiment, he is also the one who gave Peggy her chance to do what she felt called to do.  And at times he regrets doing both.  It takes him a while to see that Steve really was the best choice for the experiment, and once he finally does, he's as much behind him as anyone else.

Howard Stark:  This is the guy who started the whole Stark empire (which is later under the care of his son, who might just be a familiar character in an iron suit...I must say they did a great job finding an actor that looked like he could be related to Robert Downing, Jr.).  He helps with the experiment on Steve, helps Steve pull off his first mission, and then creates for Steve a new, more functional uniform and, most importantly, his iconic shield.  While he does have a few similarities personality-wise with his son, he isn't as snide or egotistical and is a bit more open and friendly.

Cap's Commando Squad:  When Steve rescues Bucky from the Red Skull, he first found a whole bunch of other guys who were being held captive.  The ones who lead the way for getting out of the compound while Steve was still searching for Bucky ended up being asked to become his special group to help him break up all the other HYDRA bases.  And what a group they were!  A crack unit full of unique guys  (or, as Steve refers to them lovingly at one point, "a bunch of idiots").  They were: "Dum Dum" Dugan, a bowler-wearing muscle-man, Gabe Jones, an African-American who can speak both German and French, Jim Morita, a Japanese-American who proves invaluable, Jacque Dernier, a former French Resistance fighter, and James Montgomery Falsworth, a trusty British soldier.


Overall, while this movie was very well done, I think I like the Thor movies a little bit better.  I couldn't really say why, but that's just my personal preference.  I will say that if I had to choose between the character of Thor and the character of Steve Rogers, I would pick Steve, but out of the movies about them Thor's were just a bit more enjoyable.  I am still planning on watching "Winter Soldier", though!  So be on the lookout for that blog post.  :)