What Is Techno Again?

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Posts Tagged ‘Robert Downey Jr’

Published: Thursday, May 13th, 2010

Iron Man 2: He’s Good for Peace Consulting

Yesterday I watched Iron Man 2 with a good friend of mine, and only a day later, after chewing over the film a bit more, we both (separately, mind you) arrived at the same conclusion: The more we thought about it, the less we liked the sequel. For me, if a movie doesn’t sit quite well, and I can’t figure out straight away my impression, then I maybe need to sleep on it or drink some coffee or take a shower and think about it. Other times, the very act of writing helps me figure out what I like and don’t like about a movie or comic or video game, et cetera.

My point is, if you weren’t gushing over Iron Man 2 and you can’t figure out exactly why, maybe a line or two of my review with strike a chord:

Two years ago, Robert Downey Jr. charmed audiences with Tony Stark’s smarmy playboy attitude. Jeez, we’re chumps for assholes, as long as those assholes look good wearing Jaeger-LeCoultre and several flirtatious women. If he hadn’t endured months of terrorist torture, developed a knack for responsibility and peace and other heartwarming attributes, and came within minutes of dying horribly, Stark would have gleefully trampled egos like bubble wrap for the entire movie. Thank God those terrorists nurtured some character in him, right? Screenwriter Justin Theroux mulled over these various elements and decided that the “dying horribly” part was most endearing of all because that’s what he ran with for the popular movie’s sequel. And ran … and ran.

Read the full review now at RadNerd.

Another thing: I was just having a conversation about Mickey Rourke the other day. Supposedly he was damn good looking in his younger days, but drugs, wrestling, plastic surgery, and other fun activities zapped all the physical magnetism right out of him. But hey, everything has a silver lining, right? Now he gets to portray fucked-up Russian villains. And man, does he know his fucked-up Russians.

Rourke and Kim Basinger, who both starred in Nine 1/2 Weeks (1986)

Published: Sunday, January 3rd, 2010

Sherlock Holmes Hot on the Trail of Action

I had been looking forward to the Christmas release of Sherlock Holmes for awhile, and I finally saw it yesterday. So what was my overall impression, and is the movie worth watching? Visit OneMetal to find out for yourself, and let me know what you think of the review or movie if you went to the theaters!

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle didn’t achieve immediate success with his 1887 craftsmanship of the ingenious British detective Sherlock Holmes, but when the master of disguise’s popularity became as rampant as the plague, there was no limit to his incarnations. Robert Downey Jr. is merely the latest in a long string of actors who have donned a tweet coat and deerstalker hat along with Holmes’ trademark pipe, but the actor eases into the role with unforgiving determination. Directed by Guy Ritchie, the newest adventure takes to the streets of 19th-century London for an action-coated mystery shrouded in black arts and parlor tricks—and of course, a healthy dose of logic provided by the eccentric Holmes and his often wiser friend and doctor, John Watson.

Lord Blackwood (Mark Strong), a devious and ardently feared murderer with occult interests, meets a death sentence by hanging thanks to Sherlock and his trusty companion, Watson (Jude Law). While it appears Blackwood’s schemes have literally been laid to rest, the dark predictions he spoke to Holmes in the criminal’s final hours begin to surface when the dead man is spotted wandering about his burial grounds. As Watson endeavors to keep his marriage proposal intact despite Holmes’ brash interference, the duo investigate the strange new occurrences jeopardizing London’s elite. The puzzle becomes more convoluted once Irene Adler (Rachel McAdams), world-class thief and Holmes’ old flame, steps foot in London under the sinister employment of a shadowed man later revealed to be a professor by day. Conspiracy and deduction ensues along with a modern touch of action.