Showing posts with label falcon and the winter soldier. Show all posts
Showing posts with label falcon and the winter soldier. Show all posts

Saturday, March 27, 2021

Trucks and Flags

The second episode of Falcon and the Winter Soldier premiered yesterday, bringing some tonal shifts from, and an overall improvement on, the story presented in the first episode.

Oddly, Sam (Anthony Mackie) and Bucky (Sebastian Stan) weren't even in the top three most interesting things in the episode, which I would rank as 1. John Walker (Wyatt Russell) 2. The Flag Smashers and 3. Isaiah (Carl Lumbly).

The main thing I like about Isaiah is Carl Lumbly's performance. I've seen Lumbly in a few things--he's actually been in a few DC productions, including the excellent Justice League animated series from the early '00s, when he played Martian Manhunter--but I never took notice of him before. His energy when he confronts Bucky is captivating. You can see the restraint he's exercising and sense decades of anger simmering under the surface. The delivery on his lines is so tightly controlled, he reminded me a bit of Christopher Lee.

Following up on the mention of the global financial impact of the Blip is the organisation called The Flag Smashers, a ragtag group apparently based on an intriguingly complicated character from the comics who was only a villain most of the time. Flag Smasher in the comics represented a philosophy of ant-patriotism (to be an antagonist for the patriotic Captain America); here the group represents a not dissimilar globalist philosophy that keys in nicely with current politics. And it is a much more thoughtful use of the Blip as a continuing story element--I bet, in many ways, things must have been better during those five years. That was Thanos' idea, after all, that having none of the resource scarcity caused by overpopulation would lead to a reduction in conflict and civil strife. John Walker talks a little bit about the difficulties involved in post-Blip "repatriation" and it seems likely that all kinds of bureaucratic, as well as financial, chaos must have been caused by so many people returning from the dead. The banks are liable for all those bank accounts and property must have been redistributed or appropriated in who knows how many ways. It makes sense there'd be a group of people who look back fondly on those simpler times.

I was happy to see they didn't take the obvious route and just make John Walker a douchebag. He's captivating for the whole episode in kind of the way Anakin Skywalker is in Phantom Menace--no matter what he does, you're constantly looking for this or that little sign that indicates he's a villain, or the early stages of his path to villainhood. So the longer he's just a sweet, normal guy, the longer the tension holds. But he's more complicated than that because he does come off as smug a bit, and he can't resist giving a too presumptuous plea for Rogers' friends to be "at his side". As Sam says, it's always that last line.

Sam himself still feels like a blank, especially since there's no followup on his character building from the first episode. He has a couple of good one-liners, though. I also like how he ended the therapy session by saying, "Thanks for making it weird." Bucky, meanwhile, has two problems now--dealing with his past as a killer and dealing with his resentment of Sam and John over the shield. The action sequence was much, much better in this episode, partly for how well it incorporated the character drama, and I loved the split second where Bucky had to decide to hand John the shield.

The scene also featured a much more exciting use of Sam's wings.

I'm looking forward to seeing Daniel Bruhl next week, hoping the show makes better use of him than Civil War did.

Falcon and the Winter Soldier is available on Disney+.

Saturday, March 20, 2021

Metal Wings and Battleship

My expectations for Falcon and the Winter Soldier were pretty low. I'd never been particularly interested in either character despite the fact that Captain America: The Winter Soldier is one of my favourite MCU films. But I liked the first episode of the new series which aired a couple days ago. It's not as intriguing as WandaVision, it's even kind of boring, but I appreciate it for not being obnoxious or egregiously stupid.

The episode, like, apparently, several upcoming episodes, was directed by veteran television director Kari Skogland who also directed an episode of the Netflix Punisher series so this is her second outing in the MCU. She does a decent enough job--the action scenes are fast moving, if a little predictable--the moment I saw the helicopter with the open sides, I knew Falcon was going to fly through. I saw someone on Twitter describe the opening as a military recruitment ad. I guess if the military had guys with wings, sure.

He doesn't really have a superpower, does he? Just mechanical wings? I never read any of the comics with Falcon. According to Wikipedia, he was briefly a mutant. Maybe the MCU will reintroduce that idea as part of their interminable X-Men teases. At the moment, he's just a guy with mechanical wings, which makes him a less powerful version of X-Men's Archangel, I guess.

As a character in the MCU, Sam Wilson (Anthony Mackie) is kind of a blank slate. He's always just been around either to react as the normal modern human guy to Steve Rogers or to be part of the CG super-mob in a busy Avengers fight scene. This episode opens him up a little, giving him a sister and nephews (who amusingly call him "Uncle Sam") and a family legacy involving a mouldering old boat. There's a kind of interesting scene where they try to get a loan from the bank for the boat. I like how the bank employee is insensitive but not cartoonishly horrible when he's oddly focused on taking selfies instead of talking about loans. Still, the scene feels truncated, as though there was a longer version where he actually explained why Sam's government contracts were insufficient. The episode handles The Blip a little better than other things in the MCU--certainly better than Far From Home--and there was just the barest hint of how billions of people suddenly turning up might have affected financial institutions.

Sam still feels insubstantial but I can see him possibly becoming interesting. Bucky (Sebastian Stan) has a lot more baggage to work with and I liked his awkward date. Though actress Miki Ishikawa reminded me of the typical MCU child actors--as seen in the Ant-Man movies and WandaVision--whose flatly chipper line deliveries make them seem manic and partially deaf. Sebastian Stan isn't bad though I don't understand why so many Star Wars fans want him to play Luke Skywalker so badly.

I think there's reason to hope the series will improve in quality once we get to scripts by John Wick's Derek Kolstad. I'll tune in in any case.