Movie Review – Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles

Directed by Jonathan Liebesman

Starring Megan Fox, Will Arnett, William Fichtner, Alan Ritchson, Noel Fisher, Pete Ploszek, Jeremy Howard, Danny Woodburn, Tohoru Masamune, Minae Noji, and the voices of Johnny Knoxville and Tony Shalhoub.

Backstory

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. It looms large in my childhood, having come along just my childhood was starting to end. So, in my awkward junior high years, I was still devote. When this new movie incarnation was announced, like a lot of fans, I was worried. Michael Bay producing? After what he did to Transformers? And then there was that leaked early script that changed the Turtles to aliens…. Unlike others, though, I was cautiously optimistic about Megan Fox as April O’Neil. However, as the release date drew near, I found myself not getting that excited about it. But still, being a fan, I knew I was going to see it. Was it worth my $10 at the theatre?

Plot

April O’Neil, ace reporter for Channel 6 news. She’s stuck on the human interest beat, but she yearns to do the harder, “real” news, and is conducting her own investigation into a recent crimewave orchestrated by an organized crime ring from Japan known as the Foot Clan. When stumbling upon a Foot robbery one night, she sees that the crime is broken up by a mysterious vigilante. She also happens to be friends with Eric Sachs, the billionaire industrialist who was close colleagues with her father, a research scientist, who died when the Foot attacked Sachs’ lab. Switching her investigation to the vigilante, April discovers that the vigilante is actually four walking, talking mutant turtles, trained in the arts of ninjitsu. What is the mysterious connection between the Turtles and Apirl’s father’s research? What is the link between the Foot Clan and Eric Sachs? Will the Turtles be able to stop the Foot Clan and their leader, the fierce Shredder, before they destroy the city?

What I Liked

Well, at least they got the Turtles right. Leonardo is still the leader, Raphael is still the angry loner, Donatello is still the quiet brainy one, and Michaelangelo is the goofball. And there’s a great action scene with a semi sliding down a snowy mountain.

What I Didn’t Like

The plot is fairly standard superhero stuff. Megan Fox is Megan Fox. The hilarious Will Arnett is actually pretty bland as April’s sidekick and cameraman Vern. Eric Sachs wasn’t really developed that much as a villain. Shredder gets short shrift as a villain. Bryan Tyler, doing the music, as he has done for a lot of the Marvel movies, has reached that point where all his scores are starting to sound the same. It all wound up being a pretty routine, almost phoned-in superhero movie.

Final Assessment

Not terrible…just bland.

2 Nibs

Movie Review – Guardians of the Galaxy

Guardians of the Galaxy

Directed by James Gunn

Starring Chris Pratt, Zoe Saldana, Dave Bautista, Lee Pace, Michael Rooker, Karen Gillan, Djimon Hounsou, John C. Reilly, Glenn Close, Benicio Del Toro, and the voices of Vin Diesel, Bradley Cooper, and Josh Brolin.

Backstory

Well, when Marvel announced their Phase II of films, the curve ball that surprised everyone was Guardians of the Galaxy. A much more recent comic (the incarnation seen in the film debuted in 2008), full of relatively obscure characters. But still, there was hope. Marvel had already established a good track record, and the space opera was one sub-genre of superhero film that really hadn’t been done yet. It was time to venture into the outer regions of space for a comic book film. So, then, is Guardians of the Galaxy a good introduction to the more cosmic aspects of the Marvel Universe?

Plot

Peter Quill is abducted from Earth when he is just a child, and grows up to be part of a group of space pirates called the Ravagers. Calling himself Star Lord, he eventually strikes out on his own to steal a priceless orb. However, there are other forces at play who want that orb. The warlord Thanos and his disciple Ronan the Accuser send Thanos’s adopted daughter and assassin Gamora to retrieve it. With a bounty now on Quill’s head, two bounty hunters named Rocket — a walking, talking racoon — and Groot — a tree that can only say “I Am Groot,” are hunting down Quill. When all four get in a scuffle, they’re thrown into a prison called the Kyln, where they encounter Drax the Destroyer, who has sworn vengeance on Ronan for killing his wife and daughter. Now, these five are forced to work together, unlock the secrets of the orb, and save the galaxy from the wrath of Ronan. Will these five become the guardians of the galaxy that the galaxy needs?

What I Liked

The music. Oh dear God, the music. The collection of rock and pop hits from the 1960s through the 1980s meshes with the outer space action in a beautiful, brilliant way. Every character in the film is on fire. The quips and the wisecracks are funny. More hits than misses. Rocket and Groot steal the show. And I was shocked to see Lee Pace as Ronan. He’s come a long way from being the Piemaker on Pushing Daisies.

What I Didn’t Like

So many characters, it only makes sense that some are going to get short shrift. I felt like we could have spent more time Gamora and learning about her and what makes her tick. Oh, and the plot is a tad formulaic. Marvel’s got their formula figured out by this point.

Final Assessment

Just a fun movie. Lots of action, lots of humour. Just fun.

3.5 Nibs