EDEN – Review

Jude Law as Dr. Friedrich Ritter and Vanessa Kirby as Dora Strauch, in Ron Howard’s EDEN. Courtesy of Vertical Entertainment

Little is heavenly in EDEN, a drama based on a true story of jealousy, deceit, revenge, sex and murder, on a tiny island in the Galapagos, in which a group of people destroy each other instead of finding the paradise they sought. Jude Law, Vanessa Kirby, Daniel Bruhl, and Sydney Sweeney star in a crime drama that director Ron Howard and writer Noah Pink set in 1929, at the very end of the Roaring Twenties, the post-WWI decade of prosperity and exuberance everywhere. Everywhere except in Germany, which was saddled with both paying war reparations and soaring inflation, which drives some of the people in this chilling tale to flee all that. One is a German doctor-turned-writer, Dr. Friedrich Ritter (Jude Law), who has sought to escape civilizations strictures and Germany’s problems by moving to a barely-habitable island with his lover, Dora Strauch (Vanessa Kirby), a free-spirited idealist who also rejects convention. While Dora struggles to raise produce in their garden for their vegetarian diet, Dr. Ritter writes newspaper columns, to pay for supplies to supplement their meager but free life. Dr. Ritter’s columns praise their Eden, their free life off the gird, in glowing terms, which ironically becomes the problem.

Those columns provide them funds for occasional deliveries of supplies but they prove surprisingly popular, which also yields something unexpected: visitors who wan to join them in the “Eden” the columns describe. First to show up is another German, Heinz Wittmer (Daniel Bruhl) along with his wife Margret (Sydney Sweeney) and ailing young son, who plan to establish a back-to-land farm on this marginal island. Next comes the Baroness (Ana de Armas), a self-styled aristocrat, international celebrity and wild hedonist, with two lovers in tow (Felix Kammerer and Toby Wallace) and plans to build a grand hotel for all the tourists who will soon arrive. Friedrich’s and Dora’s dream of solitude and freedom are now shattered, as the world they sought to escape follows them to their island Eden.

It never occurred to Dr. Ritter that essays he was writing would draw people who want to emulate his back-to-the-land life but he seemed to omit that this Eden was an unforgiving place. An unforgiving it is: water is scant, soil is thin, and everything, from the wildlife to the plants to the weather, is trying to kill you.

There is, of course, a note of dark, ironic humor in this situation, but director Ron Howard’s crime drama has little humor in it, and the real story the film is based is pretty grim. At first, the doctor-turned-reclusive author tries to re-direct his earnest admirers, who have arrived to emulate his life, to another part of the island, one with the only other source of water but with less land suitable to farm. He hopes they will become discouraged by the harsh life but instead, Daniel Bruhl’s back-to-the-land idealist and Sydney Sweeney as his stoic, hard-working wife proves industrious. They do not leave.

Friedrich and Dora maybe could have lived with that, but when Ana de Armas’ the Baroness and her entourage show up it introduces a lot more chaos. At first tensions between the three groups are dealt with largely by ignoring each other, but soon things escalate, alliances are formed and broken, and all descends into total madness. Late in the unfolding events, another visitor arrives, Allan Hancock (Richard Roxburgh), one of Dr. Ritter’s financial supporters. Allan brings some welcome supplies, as he periodically does, and a bit of break in the building toxic events. But ultimately don’t stop things from going down on their deadly path.

It should be noted that the film opens with some misleading text, suggesting that 1929 was a time of hardship. Actually, that was only true in Germany, whose broken post-WWI economy was saddled with paying war reparations and out-of-control inflation, while the rest of the world enjoyed the Roaring 1920s, a time of prosperity, technological and artistic innovation and wild exuberance. All that came to an end with the October 1929 stock market crash that launched the Great Depression of the 1930s, after the events the movie sets in spring, summer and fall of 1929.

Curiously, the true story the film is based on actually didn’t take place until the 1930s, but setting it at the end of the 1920s makes sense, as it lets the film tap into the decadence and irrational exuberance of the 1920s in setting the tone of the film. Ron Howard cleverly sets this story in 1929 specifically, the waning days to the optimistic 1920s and just before it all came crashing to a halt with the stock market crash of October 1929. Howard then breaks the narrative into sections labeled Spring, Summer and finally, Fall, so we are aware of the ticking time clock counting down to the crash and depression, a disaster the plotting characters are unaware is looming.

The conflict between the Ritters, the island’s original couple, and Whittmers, the new intruders, starts out with just resentment and snubs but that quickly escalates, going from just rude to nasty to sabotage and murder, once the chaotic Baroness arrives. With little in the way of comic relief, the sleight ride of settling scores and toxic competition is a fast, chilling ride. A recap at the film’s end, of what became of the actual people, is chilling as well.

The strength of EDEN is it’s fine cast, all of whom do well. Standouts are Jude Law, very good as the writer who abandoned his medical practice to live a life of freedom to write and little else, and Vanessa Kirby, who perhaps outshines him as the doctor/writer’s fiery, unconventional and idealist lover Dora, who pointedly asserts she is not his wife when anyone dares to assume that, and insists on their vegetarian diet, with produce from the garden she tills tirelessly, with the help of her beloved donkey and despite her periodic bouts of weakness from multiple sclerosis.

Unfortunately, the film is plot heavy, with one bad turn relentlessly sparking another. We don’t really get a deep sense of any of the individual characters. There isn’t really anyone we feel like we can cheer for, as bad behavior abounds, although much worse from some than others. Perhaps Daniel Bruhl’s idealist farmer and his dutiful wife come closest to sympathetic characters, although Sydney Sweeney’s nearly-stoic performance does not help much.

This is one of those true-story tales that you would not believe if it had not actually happened. Director Ron Howard makes the most of this fine cast and this wild, dark story, to create a historical thriller that really grabs you by the throat, but this is a pretty grim story. The Baroness is the major agent of chaos but soon she is matched by the good doctor. Howard gives the actors plenty of space to work as they lie and betray their way into craziness, but the emphasis on plot hardly gives us a moment. Periodically, scenes of the harsh natural world remind us that this unforgiving land has its own threats to survival, with rocky soil, poisonous plants, venomous wildlife and a hot, dry climate.

EDEN opens in theaters on Friday, Aug. 22, 2025.

RATING: 2.5 out of 4 stars

Win Free Passes To The St. Louis Advanced Screening Of THE KING’S MAN

As a collection of history’s worst tyrants and criminal masterminds gather to plot a war to wipe out millions, one man must race against time to stop them. Discover the origins of the very first independent intelligence agency in “The King’s Man.” “The King’s Man” is directed by Matthew Vaughn and stars Ralph Fiennes, Gemma Arterton, Rhys Ifans, Matthew Goode, Tom Hollander, Harris Dickinson, Daniel Brühl, with Djimon Hounsou, and Charles Dance. Matthew Vaughn, David Reid and Adam Bohling are the producers, and Mark Millar, Dave Gibbons, Stephen Marks, Claudia Vaughn and Ralph Fiennes serve as executive producers. “The King’s Man” is based on the comic book “The Secret Service” by Mark Millar and Dave Gibbons, and the story is by Matthew Vaughn and the screenplay is by Matthew Vaughn & Karl Gajdusek.

Directed by Matthew Vaughn, “The King’s Man” opens in theaters on December 22.

Rated R

For a chance to win 2 free passes to the advance screening on Thursday, December 16th, 7pm at the AMC Creve Coeur 12, enter at the link below.

Pass Link: http://gofobo.com/Zglid93950

Social Media Facebook: @kingsmanmovie … Hashtag: #TheKingsMan

https://www.20thcenturystudios.com/movies/the-kings-man

THE KING’S MAN Starring Ralph Fienne In Theaters February 2020 – Check Out the New Trailer & Poster

20th Century Fox has released a new trailer and poster for the upcoming film THE KING’S MAN. 

As a collection of history’s worst tyrants and criminal masterminds gather to plot a war to wipe out millions, one man must race against time to stop them. Discover the origins of the very first independent intelligence agency in THE KING’S MAN.

Check Out this trailer:

As a collection of history’s worst tyrants and criminal masterminds gather to plot a war to wipe out millions, one man must race against time to stop them. Discover the origins of the very first independent intelligence agency in The King’s Man, directed by Matthew Vaughn, coming to theaters February 2020.

THE KING’S MAN stars Ralph Fiennes, Gemma Arterton, Rhys Ifans, Matthew Goode, Tom Hollander, Harris Dickinson, Daniel Brühl, with Djimon Hounsou, and Charles Dance and is directed by Mathew Vaughn

7 DAYS IN ENTEBBE – Review

 

Though the Oscar ceremony is less than two weeks old, the studios are returning to real-life subject matter with a non-fiction flick usually released toward year’s end for awards consideration. Oh, and this true tale from nearly 42 years ago has been dramatized multiple times. It all really depends on this film maker’s take, their perspective. Big battles of WWII have been the source of several films. Just last year the story of Dunkirk was the backdrop for three films: the propaganda romance THEIR FINEST, the acclaimed Churchill profile THE DARKEST HOUR and Christopher Nolan’s same titled multi-story thriller. Now, returning to theatres is the tale of a hijacked airliner and the secret rescue of its passengers back in 1976. Shortly after the incident, the broadcast networks rushed out two dramatizations (later released theatrically overseas), “Raid on Entebbe” and “Victory at Entebbe” were multi-starred TV events that echoed the “disaster movie” formulas (with casts that included Elizabeth Taylor, Burt Lancaster, and Charles Bronson). And a year after the events, the story was made into a true feature film by the “Go-Go” boys over at Cannon Films as OPERATION: THUNDERBOLT with Klaus Kinski and Sybil Danning as two of the main hijackers (not one to leave a good plot unexploited, the same studio produced a slightly fictionalized version nine years later as THE DELTA FORCE with Lee Marvin and Cannon superstar Chuck Norris). So with over four decades passed, and more information released, will time be an ally in this very latest docudrama/ thriller, 7 DAYS IN ENTEBEE?

 

The film begins minutes prior to the fateful Air France Flight 139’s boarding in the Athens airport (after originating in Tel Aviv). Near the gate, two members of the German Revolutionary Cells, Bridgett Kuhlmann (Rosamund Pike) and Wilifred Bose (Daniel Bruhl), try to make discreet eye contact with two members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-External Operations. Once the jet is in the air on the way to Paris (after that stopover in Athens), the four take out their weapons (pistols, grenades) and announce that the plane is being hijacked. Bose heads to the cockpit, sending out one crew member, as he gives the pilots part of the new flight plan. When they touch down in Libya for refueling one of the passengers who pretends to be pregnant, is released for medical attention. She contacts authorities who pass on the information. Word eventually gets to Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin (Lior Ashkenazi) during a cabinet meeting. After the seven hour refueling, the plane lands at its ultimate destination, Uganda at Entebbe airport near an old unused terminal. There everyone is greeted by the country’s president Idi Amin (Nonzo Anozie), who supports the hijackers while assuring the passengers that he is their “hero”. The next day the hijackers issued their demands: $5 million USD for the release of the plane and the release of 53 Palestinian and pro Palestine prisoners. If the demands are not met, they threaten to begin killing the passengers in two days. Shortly after, passports are inspected and the Israelis are separated from the other hostages (who are soon taken away by buses on to other flights). Rabin meets with his security teams. When diplomatic talks with Amin break down, defense minister Shimon Peres (Eddie Marsan) insists that they send in a rescue team. Despite mounting pressure to negotiate, Rabin agrees to the  mission, named “Operation: Thunderbolt”, and an elite military team begins the planning and preparation. One of the soldiers, young Benji (Ben Schnetzer) tries to calm his dancer bride (Andrea Deck), who wants him to attend an important recital, but most importantly, prays the he returns to her from the deadly assignment. And all the while temperatures climb as tensions between the hijackers mount back at the Entebbe airport terminal.

 

 

For most of the film’s first act the story centers on the two Germany-based hijackers, a duo united by a mission but with very different personalities. Pike as Kuhlmann is the more focused, perhaps the toughest of the two. Her motivations are more clear as she seems to be seeking revenge for a fallen friend. With her eyes blazing with fury, Pike is a formidable force who still lets her guard down occasionally to clumsily try to comfort a distressed child. Other times she plays the “bad cop” to Bruhl as the often wavering Bose. His reasons for joining are never really concrete. He proclaims himself an idealist, but we’re not shown via flashback how this publisher of radical tomes made this huge leap to action. In between his furious chain-smoking, Bose rankles at his PFLP superiors, and we seem him strain to convince Kuhlmann that they may have been duped, or at least kept in the dark. Bruhl conveys Bose’s disenchantment and unease at his role, especially when the Israelis are singled out. Both Pike and Bruhl relate the still fairly fresh disgust and shame over their homeland’s WWII atrocities. The story shifts in the second act to the Israeli power base, headed by the calm, contemplative Rabin, portrayed with subtlety by Ashkenazi (who were saw as an ambitious politico last year opposite Richard Gere in NORMAN). We can see him slightly struggle to keep his cool (more furious chain-smoking) as he’s bombarded by his country’s press and citizens (they even storm his offices) along with those in his cabinet. The loudest voice may be the tough-talking Peres played with pit bull tenacity by the glowering Marsan . Almost chanting “Israel does not negotiate with terrorists” as a mantra, he hovers over Rabin’s shoulder as the voice demanding action, not talk. Anozie brings an unpredictable affability to the role of Amin. At times an engaging buffoon whose fragile ego can cause him to turn, on a dime, into a vicious raging beast. Also of note is Denis Menochet as the member of the flight crew who is filled with a quiet dignity as he tempers his disgust at his captors’ cruelty. In one scene he delivers a much-needed “wake up” call to Bose, saying that sometimes the world may need plumbers and mechanics more than idealistic radicals.

 

The depiction of the first minutes of the hijacking is taut with tension with the terrorists in as much of a sweaty panic as many of the passengers. Unfortunately director Jose Padilha (the recent failed ROBOCOP re-boot) then begins to loosen the reins. The internal machinations of the Israeli cabinet is still compelling as are the plotting and rehearsals of the planned rescue. By that time the short flashbacks to the hijackers’ secret meetings in Germany have concluded without really giving us a clear look at their motivations and ultimate goals. And then Padilha and screenwriter Gregory Burke commit a narrative blunder usually foisted upon audiences of the 40’s and 50’s. The film screeches to a halt as we are introduced to the young couple, the soldier and his dancer paramour, perhaps to give the story a more personal, relatable angle. I always think back to the stateside romance that undercut the courtroom tension in THE CAINE MUTINY (Bogie going bananas is much more interesting than the two colorless lovebirds). As if that weren’t bad enough, the actual raid sequence is intercut with the dancer’s big recital, the one her elite forces beau is skipping (the rehearsal scenes weren’t distracting enough). Perhaps the film makers were making an artistic commentary, saying the Middle Eastern conflicts were a never-ending dance of destruction and death. What should be a nail-biting, edge-of-your-seat finale is completely derailed, making the final act more frustrating than engaging. And these poor choices make 7 DAYS IN ENTEBBE feel like a full month.

 

2.5 Out of 5

 

THE CLOVERFIELD PARADOX Airing On NETFLIX After Big Game!

File under SHOCK! No press release, no advance warning, no screenings!

Netflix surprised fans of producer J.J. Abrams’ CLOVERFIELD (2008, directed by Matt Reeves) and 10 CLOVERFIELD LANE (2016, directed by Dan Trachtenberg) with a third chapter in the successful franchise for THE CLOVERFIELD PARADOX. A new trailer dropped during the Super Bowl and the film can be seen after the Big Game on Netflix.

In the near future, a group of international astronauts on a space station are working to solve a massive energy crisis on Earth. The experimental technology aboard the station has an unexpected result, leaving the team isolated and fighting for their survival.

The film is directed by Julius Onah and stars Gugu Mbatha-Raw, David Oyelowo, Daniel Brühl and Chris O’Dowd.

Watch THE CLOVERFIELD PARADOX https://www.netflix.com/title/80134431

Photos courtesy of Netflix

7 DAYS IN ENTEBBE Gets A New Poster

A gripping thriller inspired by the true events of the 1976 hijacking of an Air France flight en route from Tel Aviv to Paris, 7 DAYS IN ENTEBBE depicts the most daring rescue mission ever attempted.

From José Padilha, the director of  “Narcos” and “Elite Squad,” Focus Features has released a very red poster for 7 DAYS IN ENTEBBE. The upcoming film stars Rosamund Pike, Daniel Brühl and Eddie Marsan.

Focus Features will release 7 Days In Entebbe in select theaters on March 16, 2018

Visit the official site: focusfeatures.com/7-days-in-entebbe

Focus Features Releases First Trailer For 7 DAYS IN ENTEBBE


Credit : Liam Daniel / Focus Features

Daniel Brühl stars as “Wilfred Brose” and Rosamond Pike stars as “Brigitte Kuhlman” in this first trailer for José Padilha’s 7 DAYS IN ENTEBBE.

Focus Features will release the film in select theaters on March 16, 2018.

A gripping thriller inspired by the true events of the 1976 hijacking of an Air France flight en route from Tel Aviv to Paris, the film depicts the most daring rescue mission ever attempted.

There have been two TV movies about the rescue.

RAID ON ENTEBBE (1976) starred Peter Finch, Charles Bronson, Yaphet Kotto and was directed by Irvin Kershner (THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK). It won the Golden Globe for “Best Motion Picture Made for Television.” VICTORY AT ENTEBBE was helmed by Marvin J. Chomsky (TANK) and starred Elizabeth Taylor, Linda Blair, Helen Hayes, Richard Dreyfuss and Burt Lancaster.

The 2017 film is from director José Padilha (“Narcos,” “Elite Squad”) and written by Gregory Burke (“’71”) .

Visit the official site: focusfeatures.com/7-days-in-entebbe

THE ZOOKEEPER’S WIFE – Review

Zookeepers-Wife-620x413

Based on fact, made with noble intent, and grounded by a sincere performance by Jessica Chastain, the Holocaust drama THE ZOOKEEPER’S WIFE is clumsily executed and so manipulative it practically hands you the tissue and begs you to cry.

THE ZOOKEEPER’S WIFE delves into a little-known aspect of World War II: the part played by the Warsaw Zoo in Poland. It’s based on a novel by Diane Ackerman inspired by the writings of Antonina Zabinski, the zookeeper’s wife of the title. She (played in the film by Chastain) and her husband Jan (Flemish actor Johan Heldenbergh) managed to save over 300 Jews. Spanning roughly seven years beginning in 1939, THE ZOOKEEPER’S WIFE is set in Warsaw, where the Zabinskis own and operate a popular little zoo. The Nazis invade and plunder the attraction, killing half of the animals and shipping the most valuable to Hitler’s zoo in Berlin. This pillaging is overseen by Lutz Heck (Daniel Brühl ), a real-life animal researcher introduced pointing out which animals to dispatch. “Shoot that bird and have it stuffed for my office” he commands, pointing at a magnificent bald eagle, and sure enough, the next scene opens with the poor fowl mounted in the foreground (subtlety is not one of this film’s strong points). Heck is known as “Hitler’s Zoologist”, but instead of converting their attraction to an Evil Petting Zoo, he has it converted into a hog farm so the German soldiers will have bacon to eat while they occupy Poland. While driving into the Warsaw Ghetto to collect refuse to feed the swine, Jan gets the idea to hide its inhabitants, about to be sent to death camps, beneath the trash and transport them back to the zoo where they are hidden and cared for by Antonina.

THE ZOOKEEPER’S WIFE is not a bad film, just a mediocre and overly sentimental Holocaust movie. I feel like I’ve seen this story – the noble do-gooder hiding the Jews from the Nazis – before and done better. There’s some interesting information here about the Resistance and the Underground and the Warsaw uprising so it’s a decent history lesson but the more cinematic elements such as pacing, intrigue, and tension are lacking. The film’s poster, with Chastain nurturing a cute tiger cub, is misleading. After the first 15 minutes, it’s mostly pigs. THE ZOOKEEPER’S WIFE is rated PG13, neutering the sadism moviegoers have come to expect from the Third Reich who slaughter more animals this time than humans. The Nazis here are notable for their lack of intelligence. Heck is too dim to figure out, despite a couple of “say, what’s that noise behind that wall?” moments, that Jews are hiding right under his nose. When Jan is confronted by a Nazi guard while trying to sneak a Jew past him, he simply barks “This man is a doctor, not a Jew! Do you want me to report you?!” and goes on his way. Nazis were evil but they weren’t this stupid.

Chastain is good but this is not one of the actresses’ more memorable characters. Antonina is introduced leaving an upscale dinner party to tend to the difficult birth of a baby elephant. But as the story progresses, Chastain becomes more passive, eventually relying on her sexuality to distract Lutz Heck. It’s a 180-degree turn from the smartest-ice-queen-in-the-room character Chastain played in last year’s MISS SLOANE, similarly one-note, but at least a different note. Better is Johan Heldenbergh, stoic as Jan, whose role is just as central to the story as Antonina’s. THE ZOOKEEPER AND HIS WIFE may have been a more appropriate title as it’s Jan who has the ideas and takes the risks to pull off their caper. A late development with Jan getting shot after joining the armed resistance, his fate unclear, doesn’t make sense. It seems like he was doing plenty for the resistance with the hog farm ruse, so it’s unclear why he felt the need to risk all of that.

THE ZOOKEEPER’S WIFE looks good with careful attention to period detail, yet still can’t escape the trappings of a conventional TV drama. The Zabinski’s story deserves better.

2 1/2 of 5 Stars

THE ZOOKEEPER’S WIFE opens in St. Louis March 31st exclusively at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Theater

Zookeepers-Wife-poster

 

 

 

 

Jessica Chastain Stars In First Trailer For THE ZOOKEEPER’S WIFE

zoo_onesheet

Coming to theaters is one of 2017’s highly anticipated films, THE ZOOKEEPER’S WIFE.

The real-life story of one working wife and mother who became a hero to hundreds during World War II. In 1939 Poland, Antonina Żabińska (portrayed by two-time Academy Award nominee Jessica Chastain) and her husband, Dr. Jan Żabiński (Johan Heldenbergh of “The Broken Circle Breakdown”), have the Warsaw Zoo flourishing under his stewardship and her care. When their country is invaded by the Nazis, Jan and Antonina are stunned – and forced to report to the Reich’s newly appointed chief zoologist, Lutz Heck (Daniel Brühl of “Captain America: Civil War”). To fight back on their own terms, Antonina and Jan covertly begin working with the Resistance – and put into action plans to save lives out of what has become the Warsaw Ghetto, with Antonina putting herself and even her children at great risk.

The film is directed by Niki Caro (“North Country,” “Whale Rider,” “McFarland, USA”) and written by Angela Workman (“War Bride”), based on the nonfiction book by Diane Ackerman.

Focus Features will release THE ZOOKEEPER’S WIFE on March 31, 2017.

Visit the official site: www.focusfeatures.com/thezookeeperswife

4101_D009_03963_R Jessica Chastain stars as Antonina Zabinski in director Niki Caro's THE ZOOKEEPER'S WIFE, a Focus Features release. Credit: Anne Marie Fox / Focus Features
Credit: Anne Marie Fox / Focus Features

4101_D005_02391_R (l-r) Johan Heldenbergh and Jessica Chastain star as Jan and Antonina Zabinski in director Niki Caro's THE ZOOKEEPER'S WIFE, a Focus Features release. Credit: Anne Marie Fox / Focus Features
Credit: Anne Marie Fox / Focus Features

4101_D004_01936_R Jessica Chastain stars as Antonina Zabinski in director Niki Caro's THE ZOOKEEPER'S WIFE, a Focus Features release. Credit: Anne Marie Fox / Focus Features
Credit: Anne Marie Fox / Focus Features

CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR – Review

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It’s finally time to pack away the bulky Winter coats and jackets, or at least regulate them to the far corners of the closet, because Summer has truly arrived. A new tradition heralding the seasonal start began eight years ago with the first major Marvel Studios release IRON MAN, and almost every first weekend of May since has seen another “box office buster” storm the nation’s, now the world’s, theatre screens. Like the “star-spangled man”, these exec do have a plan, mapping out groups of films as a “phase”. That 2008 classic marked the beginning of “phase one” that concluded with the first titanic team-up of heroes, MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS. “Phase two” finished up last Summer with ANT-MAN and the second Avengers epic. Who better to usher in the beginning of “phase three” than the first Avenger himself, Steve Rogers? But the good Captain now faces a challenge perhaps greater than the Hydra hordes that infested SHIELD in his second solo film. The sentinel of liberty is pitted against his friends and fellow Avengers in the globe spanning adventure CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR.

The story actually begins 25 years ago in Siberia, as James “Bucky” Barnes (Sebastian Stan) is awakened from his cryogenic slumber to complete another murder mission as the Winter Soldier. Jump forward to modern-day Lagos in Africa, as Captain America (Chris Evans) and Natasha Romanoff AKA the Black Widow (Scarlet Johansson) team with Avengers “newbies” Wanda Maximoff AKA the Scarlet Witch (Elizabeth Olsen) and Sam Wilson AKA the Falcon (Anthony Mackie) to stop a gang led by an old enemy. Suddenly the battle takes an unplanned turn, leading to a unforeseeable tragedy. Meanwhile Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr) has finished the presentation of a new simulator at MIT, when he is confronted by the relative of an innocent lost during an Avengers operation. Later the Avengers are summoned to a meeting with new Secretary of State, Thaddeus “Thunderbolt” Ross (William Hurt), the former General who tried to take down the Hulk. He reminds them of the destruction left in the wake of the Avengers, then presents a thick book, the “Sokovian Accords”. He wants each Avenger to review the tome then sign an agreement to only assemble after approval by members of the United Nations. Steve has reservations about such restrictions, while Tony believes that they should be “put in check”. But as the debate rages, Steve and Sam continue their search for Bucky. Days later an attack occurs in Vienna during a special address to the UN by the king of the secretive African nation of Wakanda. The country’s Prince T’Challa (Chadwick Boseman) swears revenge. Police security footage reveals the Winter Soldier at the scene. Can Steve find his old friend before the authorities and T’Challa, who is also the fierce warrior the Black Panther, do? And what will happen if Steve and his supporters refuse to sign those Accords? Will the Avengers “dis-assemble”?

With such a large cast it comes as a great surprise, joyous really, that each actor really gets a chance to shine (this is something that the Star Trek and X-Men films struggle with). The story anchor is, of course, the title hero. Evans slips into Steve Rogers just as you may slip into a warm, comfy sweater. After five features, Evans has made Cap a truly human hero, a man who always rises to the occasion, despite the odds or his own doubts. Yes, he’s an iconic symbol, but he’s still a guy from Brooklyn. You might say that the film has an equal co-anchor in the always entertaining Mr. Downey. He’s still a master of the devastating quip or insult (and there’s plenty here), but we see Tony’s darker self, a man dealing with past regrets while having great trepidation about the road he’s taken. Mackie’s a superb soldier who still has time for a wisecrack or three. Of all the heroes, Johansson as the Widow is perhaps the most conflicted. She has great loyalty to both Tony and Steve, but she wants no more innocent blood on her hands. Stan as Bucky still seems to be a fog, struggling to find his own humanity, but unable to quell the beast that has been placed inside him. Olsen’s Wanda also struggles as she tries to control her powers and not be consumed by guilt when those powers are not enough to avert catastrophe. She shares great screen chemistry with Paul Bettany as the aloof, otherworldly android, the Vision. He begins a hesitant friendship with Wanda, one that seems in conflict with his programming (wow, he’s got a cooking app). Emily VanCamp finally opens up to Cap, sharing the truth about her connection to him. Jeremy Renner as Hawkeye and Don Cheadle as James “War Machine” Rhodes are solid as the world-weary soldiers on opposite sides (the archer is most worried about leaving his family). Hurt, reprising his role from 2008’s THE INCREDIBLE HULK, adds an air of stern gravitas as he tries to reign in the group. And Paul Rudd’s starstruck Scott Lang brings some much-needed levity to the high stakes showdown while his Ant-Man more than proves his value.

Marvel's Captain America: Civil War Spider-Man/Peter Parker (Tom Holland) Photo Credit: Film Frame © Marvel 2016
Marvel’s Captain America: Civil War Spider-Man/Peter Parker (Tom Holland) © Marvel 2016

Hey, they even added a few new folks into the mix. Martin Freeman is quite engaging in his brief role as VanCamp’s arrogant new boss, Everett Ross. Daniel Bruhl adds an air of menace as the mysterious Zemo, a shadowy figure with an unexplained (until the final act) agenda. Boseman has a dignified regal bearing as T’Challa until loss  unlocks the Black Panther’s rage, making us look forward to his upcoming solo feature film. But the breakout new addition to the Marvel movie universe may be Tom Holland as Peter Parker, the amazing Spider-Man. “But, we’ve seen the wall-crawler on screen before!”, you say. Well, not in the hands of Marvel Studios. After five features, Sony Pictures has finally joined forces with them to relaunch the franchise. Spidey will be able to guest in the other films and vice versa. Holland (so great in the 2012 disaster drama THE IMPOSSIBLE), brings a vulnerable charm to Pete while exuding boyish enthusiasm (and lots of “smack talk” chatter) to ole'”webhead”, stealing every scene, and leaving us anxiously awaiting his screen return in SPIDER-MAN: HOMECOMING. Now this is our Spidey!

The brothers Russo (Anthony and Joe) prove that their tag-team triumph on CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE WINTER SOLDIER was truly no fluke. They masterfully juggle the myriad of “super folk”, while never making the film feel bloated. There’s a lean vitality to their action set pieces, from the flawed opener, to the traffic chase, and the apartment assault. But the most remarkable action sequence, setting a high water mark for future super hero flicks, is the big airport showdown, the “tumult on the tarmac” you might say (hey, I just did). It’s a visual stunner with over a dozen heroes giving a new meaning to the old Astaire standard as they suddenly “change partners and dance”, making for many astounding match-ups. There’s an infectious sense of fun (so lacking in another recent comics-inspired face off). While this would be the big finale for most flicks, the Russos opt for a more intimate last confrontation that packs an emotional wallop thanks to the great script by Marvel movie vets Christopher Markus and Stephan McFeely. Besides the physical battles, this is a story that deals with important issues, very relevant to our times with the enhanced heroes echoing real-life concerns over security and international boundaries. elaborating on the excellent recent comics mini-series written by Mark Millar.  Neither Tony or Steve is 100% right or wrong. Plus the city-wide mass destruction is kept to a minimum, never becoming  another tiresome bit of “disaster porn”. Many fans felt that the Marvel films may have lost their way with the last Avengers film. Now the Russos has gotten the train back on the track, making the Marvel Universe a welcome vacation spot at the multiplex (in the words of Liz Lemmon on TV’s “30 Rock”, “I want to go to there”). When we look back on these “phase” sets of films, CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR will shine as one of the best. At ease, Cap!

5 out of 5

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