spider-neil
spins a web any size!
- Joined
- Sep 30, 2004
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- 18,205
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IM3 just jumped a point from 77% to 78% on the RT meter.
One more time... The deconstruction is exploiting the conventions of a genre (in this case, how Superhero universes work) instead of playing them straight. Yeah, Killian was a straight Supervillain in the final act. He wasn't in the first two.
It's maybe a political commentary too, but the reason I'm saying it's a deconstruction it's because it specifically plays with the genre's tropes, it takes them apart instead of presenting them as they always were.
...tried to vote in the poll above but it wouldn't let me.
I absolutely loved this movie. It definitely broke the "trilogy" movie curse.
10/10![]()
Same here, bro. I got "this poll is closed" and I'm like, "Bullhuckey!"![]()
I'll add that Killian mentioned that the terrorists like Bin Ladin, Gaddafi and The Mandarin are all just pawns, actors in a play. This seems to suggest that the movie was making a much bigger political point than it was trying to deconstruct the superhero genre. Heck, it is damn near a 9/11 Truth type statement. The assumption is that government and corporate interests backed Bin Ladin and The Mandarin to achieve certain selfish goals. Heck, you could even take the leap that his taking over of satellite feeds was showing that the media is in bed with the government/corporate interests.
This is a worthy point for the movie to make, but it is not superhero deconstruction.
What humor after Happy got injured? He was pretty angry after leaving the hospital. He then makes an angry threat to kill the Mandarin and goes full on detective to track him down before having his house blown up. What humor after he doesn't save Pepper? I don't recall Tony being in a jovial mood when he is throwing down with Killian.
What you consider lazy writing is actually bold writing. You would prefer Tony to be a stereotypical superhero that screams, "NOOOOOO!", broods, and beserks like Wolverine. I have seen this melodrama in every superhero movie and am glad that Tony is set apart from it.
One more time... The deconstruction is exploiting the conventions of a genre (in this case, how Superhero universes work) instead of playing them straight. Yeah, Killian was a straight Supervillain in the final act. He wasn't in the first two.
It's maybe a political commentary too, but the reason I'm saying it's a deconstruction it's because it specifically plays with the genre's tropes, it takes them apart instead of presenting them as they always were.
It seems like people are just saying this as if that makes it a genius film when it really doesn't.
[blackout]Stark didn't have those defenses for his house because (1)he never gave out his home address to anyone.[/blackout]
Heretics sarcasm went way over your head. This is why I claim the Avengers was the high point of Tony's arc. He started out as a guy who used to cope with difficult situations by cracking wise in IM1. In the Avengers you can see how the loss of Coulson shocks him. No wisecracks, no nothing.
And now they downgraded him to a character that jokes around when the love of his life dies a horrible death. The main reason why he's building all those armors in the first place. To have the feeling that he is able to protect her.
Call it what you want but thats just character backwardness.
It's not just Tony that's joking though. The whole situation with the MK42 after Peppers "death" is just jokey and carries zero weight. You wanna call it deconstructing the genre, fine. But if that's what it is I rather filmmakers refrain from deconstructing genres ever again.
By the way, when did he joke about Pepper dying?
Exactly.As Killian declared in the end: "I'm AM Mandarin!" He is the real villain in IM3, not the fake actor who wore robes and acted like Bin Laden for the world to hate and focus on. And while the U.S. was focusing their resources on capturing this make-believe villain, Killian was doing all the work in the background, and that was why he was able to kidnap the President and nearly succeed in executing him on the big screen. People are just too fixtated on Kingsley's Mandarin and fail to see what this movie is trying to deconstruct.
A few moments after [BLACKOUT]"Pepper dies"[/BLACKOUT], he calls the Mark 42 and it breaks apart, and he says [BLACKOUT]"Whatever"[/BLACKOUT] like nothing happened.
And this is not like Coulson, this is the woman of his life, his everything (according to this very film), it's hard for me to believe that this would be his reaction against his biggest enemy (again, according to this film) who's partially responsible for the [BLACKOUT]death of his love[/BLACKOUT].
Alright so help me on this guys, I also dont understand why we need to blackout anything on a rate and review thread , but I'll follow suit.
[BLACKOUT]Since IM 1 Killian helped Obadiah/Killian was leading the 10 rings Terrorist group? I understand he was the true Mandarin in the movie but I can't help but feel a little lied to/cheated. Cap has The Red Skull/Thor has Loki.....IM should of had The Mandarin, at least if it was Killian not die at the end of IM3 but be an ongoing villain
Also with the death of Killain and AIM pretty much done for, we can no longer have MODOK or any other villain AIM created?[/BLACKOUT]
Absofrickinlutely right.
That's probably why there's a lot of ******** fans in here ---- they've just been targeted and insulted. IM3 is a deconstruction of the genre, and it skewers not only Nolan but Whedon as well, but more importantly, it skewers fandom. The point of the movie is that we create our own ideas of what a hero is and what a villain is, and when that conception fails to reflect reality, things fall apart.
This movie is way, way, *way* over a lot of CBM fans' heads. The ones who only wanted to see "Iron Man vs. Mandarin!!! zomg pew-pew socko-blammo" got a cold hard dose of reality poured over their heads. Even Tony Stark did. The difference is, Tony recognized it in the end, and became a more mature and better person because of it. The fanboys are still stuck seething in their impotent rage, blind as ever.
IM3 is the most realistic depiction of a superhero world yet.
Alright so help me on this guys, I also dont understand why we need to blackout anything on a rate and review thread , but I'll follow suit.
[BLACKOUT]Since IM 1 Killian helped Obadiah/Killian was leading the 10 rings Terrorist group? I understand he was the true Mandarin in the movie but I can't help but feel a little lied to/cheated. Cap has The Red Skull/Thor has Loki.....IM should of had The Mandarin, at least if it was Killian not die at the end of IM3 but be an ongoing villain
Also with the death of Killain and AIM pretty much done for, we can no longer have MODOK or any other villain AIM created?[/BLACKOUT]
A few moments after [BLACKOUT]"Pepper dies"[/BLACKOUT], he calls the Mark 42 and it breaks apart, and he says [BLACKOUT]"Whatever"[/BLACKOUT] like nothing happened.
And this is not like Coulson, this is the woman of his life, his everything (according to this very film), it's hard for me to believe that this would be his reaction against his biggest enemy (again, according to this film) who's partially responsible for the [BLACKOUT]death of his love[/BLACKOUT].
Trust me on that, people would have complained about how ridiculous the magical rings would have looked.
How is this a joke? He was in the heat of battle. Was he supposed to just give up and start crying? Screaming, "NOOOOOOOO!". This is nothing more than a minor nitpick of the movie. I didn't find that scene to be played for laughs. Not saying it couldn't have been handled a bit better but it really wasn't an issue for me.
keep in mind the entire film established that Tony doesn't process events real well in his life.. he has PTSD... he did't freak out about the events right after avengers until he was able to think about it... and i'm sure the same goes for pepper...
He got pretty emotional / angry about Coulson's death.
Yeah, I'm sure they would have looked as ridiculous and magical as do armour parts flying on their own many, many hundreds miles in a minute without any visible power source or means of propulsion.
I hope I never see such a thing in a movie.
It obviously was, it got one of the biggest laughs in my viewing, and in yours I'm sure. A scene like that could've easily worked better before the [BLACKOUT]Pepper dying[/BLACKOUT] scene. I could never believe that Tony's reaction was that of a guy who [BLACKOUT]just lost his one and only purpose[/BLACKOUT]. It was kinda obnoxious.