Another Year in Review post, this one covering the cinematic releases I managed to catch in 2018.
I'll start with the Marvel trio of Black Panther, Avengers: Infinity War and Ant-man and the Wasp. Another three slickly produced and well made blockbusters, demonstrating how good the Disney-owned Marvel movie factory actually is. Black Panther nails the origins story, Infinity War brings the Thanos story line along nicely and Ant-man 2 gives us more character background and a chance to see CGI Michael Douglas as a young man again. And yes, it's still a little freaky! Each ties in with the on-going narrative that Marvel started all those many films ago (the original Iron Man - it feels like an age since that first came out) and whilst each was successful at the Box Office (especially Black Panther - $1.34 billion for effectively an origin story is tremendous), I think the steam is running out of the series.
Let me explain. Black Panther gave us the origin story of the character and one of the best secondary villains in a Marvel film (Andy Serkis showing that he's more than just a bloke in a mo-cap suit), so far, so good. The thing is it's only the second of the origin films (from Iron Man, Thor, Captain America, Ant-Man, Dr Strange and even Guardians of the Galaxy), that's been great in every respect. Spiderman - Homecoming is about equal here. We have another origins movie next year, Captain Marvel that, when I saw the first trailer, I thought it looked decent. Then the second trailer dropped and I found I couldn't care less. Maybe it's just me, but once we get the Infinity Wars story line finished in Avengers: Endgame, I'm not sure how much more effort I want to put into these films. Another by the book origins story with an overly CGI'd final battle and character redemption is not something I really want to see again. That's been done already. I could be wrong, but at it's current standing, Captain Marvel might be the Marvel film that hits "Peak Superhero" for me.
Of course, whilst fans will say it's great bringing new characters and new story lines in, it's all just about the Benjamins and I am increasingly cynical about Disney. They bought Marvel and have so far managed a frankly embarrassing high level of quality releases. That surely can't continue forever? They bought Star Wars and have pretty much ridden that one into the ground - I would like to see Episode 9 to see how the story ends but that's about it. Now they have the 20th Century Fox-held Marvel licence, so that's the X-Men, Fantastic Four and Deadpool. Lord knows what the conservatively minded studio execs will do with the Merc with a mouth.
Speaking of him, Deadpool 2 saw a sequel that, while it didn't hit the heights of the first film, provided a worthy and fun follow up. Yup, they pushed the boundaries with the humour again, but that's what makes Deadpool quite refreshing. Of course, the success of this one means calls for a third but I'm in two minds about this and even Ryan Reynolds has been honest about saying unless there is a good story, they're willing to leave well alone. As I said above, who knows what Disney will do with the franchise.
The final superhero (or anti-hero) movie is Venom. Nominally part of the Spider-verse that Sony holds the rights to, Venom had some challenges to overcome, with both production fights and questions as to whether Sony could produce a decent superhero movie since the last decent one they made, Spiderman 2 in 2004. Well, they produced a corker, most of which I am crediting to Tom Hardy who once again demonstrates his ability to put 100% into any project he's involved with. A serviceable story, coupled with all-round good performances and a decent line in humour, the only thing that detracts from Venom is the CGI-fest finale, but that's a staple now of the genre. Feeling more fresh that Deadpool 2 and less "manufactured" than the Marvel series, Venom was the superhero film of the year for me.
On to what can only be described as the most unnecessary sequel ever produced (unless you are the studio execs who saw the first film take $1.67 billion worldwide), Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom was advertised as a new adventure and ended up being a bit of a re-tread with an oddly small-scale third act. That didn't harm its box office success too much, raking in $1.3 billion and more than justifying a third film in the Jurassic World series. And that's the disappointing thing here - Fallen Kingdom exists merely to bridge the gap. The story is lazy, the actors look bored and it's likely the film will be remembered only as something you have to watch to keep up with the story. The worry here is that the third film will suffer from the same malaise that has gripped the second. Time will tell.
Before I get to my final film, a quick note about The Greatest Showman. The Hugh Jackman-starring musical loosely based on PT Barnum (loosely based is about the right level to describe this movie - there is a guy called Barnum and he had a circus - the rest is purely for entertainment), is a rip-roaring crowd-pleaser with enough ear-worm songs that you'll be humming them for hours after the end of the movie. My opinion is based purely on the entertainment value of the film, not its historical accuracy and you could do far worse than give up a couple of hours for this.
Right, the final film of the post and it's undoubtedly the best of the films I have seen this year, so much so that we went to see it twice (once at the chain cinema in the MetroCentre and once at the local independent cinema in Consett - you use it or lose it). That film, Mission Impossible: Fallout. Entry number six in a series that started in 1996, MI: Fallout continues the quality trend since MI: Ghost Protocol. With regular cast members back in place (Ving Rhames, Simon Pegg and the seemingly immortal Tom Cruise) plus returning cast from the previous entry MI: Rogue Nation (Alex Baldwin, Rebecca Ferguson and Sean Harris), MI: Fallout also brings in a few nods to the older entries and celebrates the fact that they've been doing this kind of thing for so long. Some might say this entry is a little too long but it never really sags and the action sequences are the best the series has had yet. The HALO jump and the toilet fight scene are two stand outs among the many set pieces. Part of the success is the acknowledgment of Cruise's advancing age and yet he still puts in maximum effort on screen - even to the point they kept the shot from a roof top jump where he breaks his ankle on contact with the side of a building and then hobbles off. That is a tad mental! Mention must also be given to the soundtrack which is simply sublime. People generally take little interest in the music used in action films - this soundtrack will make you sit up and take notice. That this series still feels fresh and exciting after 22 years is very much down to the right production teams, writers, directors and actors and I for one look forward to the inevitable follow up. How Cruise beats the spectacle he's already provided will be the big question. Space, anyone?
That's films out of the way. Let me know what you think of my choices and if there are films you have seen in 2018 that caught your interest. Next up, it'll be videogames.
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