.jpg)
With his return to the title role of The Wolverine for the sixth time (with a seventh film now shooting), Hugh Jackman has proven that there's plenty of life left in the most famous X-Man. Unburdened by the type of reservations or fears that some other filmmakers and actors seem to have about the comic-book characters they're adapting, Jackman once again goes full in, embracing the Logan that fans first fell in love with in the pages of the X-Men. The result is, finally, the Wolverine movie we've always wanted.
Director James Mangold and
his screenwriters smartly avoid the clutter of mutants and other pitfalls of
the character's first solo film, creating a tale that is equal parts inspired
by a classic storyline from the comics, a continuation of the X-Men film
series, and a separate adventure all its own. Much like the character himself,
The Wolverine is lean, mean, and fun.
Interestingly enough, the
film serves as a quasi-sequel to the last of the "original" X-Men
films, The Last Stand, which came out all the way back in 2006. When we first
meet him here, Logan is living like a hermit in the Canadian wild, with the
closest thing he has to a friend apparently being the grizzly with whom he
uneasily shares the area. Wolverine is mourning the loss of Jean Grey, the
X-Men teammate who he loved -- and was forced to kill in that earlier film --
and he has cut himself off from the world rather than have to face more loss.
But the film is a journey of
healing for the character, as well as a meditation on the nature of life,
death, and the notion of immortality. Soon, the ageless Logan encounters Yukio,
the emissary of a dying old man whose life he saved decades earlier during
World War II. The old man, Yashida , brings Logan
back to Japan, where he offers to take the mutant's immortality away from him
as a final gesture of thanks. It's a compelling situation to put Wolverine in,
cursed as the character is to forever see those around him grow old and die.
In this age when superhero movies are increasingly concerned with universe-building, it's refreshing to get a film like The Wolverine that mostly stands alone. It's nice not having to worry about the bigger X-Men story or some kind of origin tale during the film (which isn't to say there's nothing here that points to the future of the Wolverine and X-Men franchises). For the most part, this is just a single adventure in Wolverine's long, long life. And really, it makes you feel that the Wolverine movie series could go on forever.
While the picture pulls
liberally from the classic Chris Claremont/Frank Miller Japan storyline from
the comics, it really plays more like a Bond movie than anything else, putting
Logan in an exotic locale with entirely new characters to deal with, friend,
foe, and love interest.
There's also a small but
great beat in this script that I think is instructive for those who are looking
to work in this genre. It involves the undying Wolverine starting to become a
thing of legend -- via bedtime story! This is not only a cool concept but it
also ties in perfectly to the film's bigger themes and the very notion of what
makes Wolverine what he is. Note to all studios: This is the type of flourish
that makes a good superhero movie -- not Gambit cameos that go nowhere.
As far as the action goes, a
high-speed fight aboard a bullet train is a showstopper, but there are lots of
ninjas and sword fights to also keep Wolvie in motion. And fanboys will find
the deeper mythology of the character is intact as well. Still, The Wolverine
does run into some problems as it nears its climax. The Viper is sexy and
kick-ass, but kind of one-note. And a perhaps too cartoonish villain emerges
during the finale, as does some CGI action that is more over the top than the
rest of the film that precedes it.
But this story paints a deep
and compelling portrait of Logan, a haunted character that Jackman still finds
new ways to play all these years later. It turns out The Wolverine is the
superhero movie surprise of the summer. He's still the best there is at what he
does
No comments:
Post a Comment