Tuesday, 22 November 2016

Head-to-Head: Superhero Films, 2016

Points system: 6 points for #1, 4 points for #2, 2 points for #3, 0 point for #4, -2 points for #5, - 4 points for #6

Direction
1. The Russo Brothers, Captain America: Civil War (+6)

2. Scott Derrickson, Doctor Strange (+4)

3. Tim Miller, Deadpool (+2)

4. Bryan Singer, X-Men: Apocalypse (0)

5. Zack Snyder, Batman v.s. Superman: Dawn of Justice (-2)

6. David Ayer, Suicide Squad (-4)

The Russo brothers have now proved themselves to be, essentially, masters of the superhero genre in almost every regard. Civil War seemed like an impossible feat to pull off, with so many different elements to balance while never losing sight of it being a Captain America film, it's a wonder it didn't all become a huge mess. That they managed to craft what is the greatest superhero film of this decade so far, is incredible. Doctor Strange was finely directed by Scott Derrickson with a very assured and consistent hand that establishes another successful, and in this case very stylish element to the Marvel Cinematic Universe very well. Tim Miller's direction is fun and knows how to make use of its somewhat scattershot components very well, even though it never stands out beyond being serviceable. X-Men: Apocalypse is interesting in that several elements of the X-Men films Bryan Singer had previously been less adept at - the 'lighter' moments, the 'fun' segments - are directed very well, but when the material calls for the more dramatic and 'serious' side of his talents, he falters big-time. Although his direction never is bad like Zack Snyder is for about 95% of BVS, failing to engage the audience whatsoever in Superman's plight and thoroughly messing up large portions of the Batman side of things, though within that are some cracking sequences which show promises of a great film. Ayer's direction is easily the worst on this list as he never finds a proper tone to the film; it would've benefited if he'd stuck to the gritty, hard-hitting machismo he'd established well in the likes of End of Watch and Fury, since his work here is ultimately a mess, with neither the humorous or darker side of things cohering properly, resulting in every scene spiraling out of control in a bad sort of way.

Screenplay

1. Captain America: Civil War (+6)

2. Deadpool (+4)

3. Doctor Strange (+2)

4. X-Men: Apocalypse (0)

5. Suicide Squad (-2)

6. Batman v.s. Superman: Dawn of Justice (-4)
Deadpool has a very, very, very funny script; it's enjoyably self-referential and meta in its deconstruction of the superhero genre, perfectly evoking the same sort of atmosphere as the comics. Doctor Strange has a screenplay with a few thinly sketched bits involving Stephen Strange's life back in the Big Apple, and a few rushed character developments brushed over with vague speeches (hello, Baron Mordo), but it's very brisk, describes its concepts thoroughly and in an accessible way, and the highlight is like Deadpool the humour, especially in scenes involving the two Benedicts. There's nothing overtly BAD about the scripts to Apocalypse or Suicide Squad, their plots are just extremely unoriginal and many characters become mere visual ciphers due to how thinly sketched they are in the script. There's some funny one-liners and character moments in both those films though.
The top and bottom of my list though are worthy of particular mention. The script to Civil War is everything the script to Dawn of Justice should've been. It establishes the conflict between the two parties with clarity and depth, and fleshes out exactly why each individual takes on their respective stances, without ever making anyone out to be a strawman. The central relationship between Steve Rogers and Bucky Barnes is beautifully crafted by the script, as is the growing animosity between Steve and Tony; the villain's plotting though rather complex, all makes complete sense and is never compromised by the writing. And there's beautiful little scenes of individual writing like Wanda Maximoff and Vision discussing their place in the world, the final conversation between Tony and his best friend Rhodey, and the incredibly moving funeral of Peggy Carter. BvS has a script that is littered with plotholes in terms of the villain plot, and that's only the tip of the iceberg. The villain is as sloppy in terms of characterization as his grand schemes, and you never quite understand what he's getting at, and not in a 'mysterious' sort of way, more a 'stupid' sort of way. The central conflict between the Man of Steel and the Caped Crusader is incredibly dumbed down from what could've been, springing from some incredibly convenient contrivances and resolved with the stupidest scene of the year. Very little, if any, of the screenplay works, and I struggled throughout in trying to pinpoint where the stories and characters the film tosses around were building up to.

Hero (es) (Main)
1. Chris Evans and Robert Downey Jr., Captain America: Civil War (+6)

2. Ryan Reynolds, Deadpool (+4)

3. Benedict Cumberbatch, Doctor Strange (+2)

4. Will Smith and Margot Robbie, Suicide Squad (0)

5. James McAvoy and Jennifer Lawrence, X-Men: Apocalypse (-2)

6. Ben Affleck and Henry Cavill, Batman v.s. Superman Dawn of Justice (-4)

No matter what way you look at it, DC really flunked it with Superman, among other things. I'm a Man of Steel apologist, but even that film had problems with how it depicted Superman, although it worked there because he was still a superhero in development, there were definitely lots of flaws with how one-note and moody he was at points, although Cavill had more to work with as well in terms of charm and emotional power. Here, Superman is little more than a walking, barely talking prop, a piece of meat. In contrast, Bruce Wayne/Batman gets a lot of focus, but the film really drops the ball in trying to make Batman a straight up psychopath, a somewhat dumb detective who makes judgements that are WAY too swift. Ben Affleck manages to make a lot out of a rather poorly written role and excels best as the man in the Batsuit, and is a suitably brooding Bruce Wayne. As for suicide squad, the two selling points and leads of the film, Deadshot and Harley Quinn, are introduced, fit the tone of the film, and both Will Smith and Margot Robbie are charismatic enough performers to make their characters work memorably, even if there was perhaps even more depth to be found in the roles.

Cumberbatch's Dr Strange is rather memorable bit of Sherlockian arrogant genius routine at the start, and is very convincing in gradually transitioning the character into a better man and earning the 'wow, he's a badass now' moments. His accent's a bit iffy, I'd rather he used his normal accent, but I didn't mind as it added to the...strangeness, of Steven. Ryan Reynolds, of course, got to play the role he was born to play of Deadpool. It's not his best work, that'd be Mississipi Grind, but he certainly fits the role to the tee and nails every second of the irreverent superhero routine. The current controversy behind the scenes of Deadpool 2 I'd actually say is earnt because frankly, I feel Reynolds knows the vigilante better than anyone else.

As for the established heroes, what I loved about the dynamic between Chris Evans' Captain America/Steve Rogers, and Robert Downey Jr.'s Iron Man/Tony Stark, is that they built it up through every previous film, even the lacklustre ones. Yet even within just the context of Civil War it works. When Cap says 'the safest hands are still our own', or talks about how though you can't always save anybody, you can't give up, even the brainwashed Bucky Barnes, you believe his conviction entirely; and Downey Jr. fascinatingly turns the characterization of Tony Stark in a full circle by utilizing the elements of his previous performances in a different fashion, to create a truly distraught, disillusioned man crumbling from within. Together, the two heroes work in tandem to create something quite special. With X-Men: Apocalypse, we once again get the McAvoy/Fassbender/Lawrence trio established by this new X-Men 'prequel' universe. I'll get onto Fassbender in a bit, but what worked wonderfully in Days of Future Past sort of falters here. Professor X sort of retreads along the similar lines of the previous film again, and it's not as effective this time round, though you have to give McAvoy credit for giving it his all once again. Mystique as a hero I've always been a bit 'meh' about, it worked (sort of) in Days of Future Past, it doesn't here. Firstly because it just doesn't cohere with the plot in a seamless fashion, secondly because Jennifer Lawrence just cba. Neither actor is terrible, in fact McAvoy is quite good still, but the way the characters are utilized in the film just feels uninspired and ineffective on the whole.

Antagonist (Main)
1. Daniel Brühl, Captain America: Civil War (+6)

2. Mads Mikkelsen, Doctor Strange (+4)

3. Ed Skrein, Deadpool (+2)

4. Oscar Isaac, X-Men: Apocalypse (0)

5. Cara Delevinge, Suicide Squad (-2)

6. Jesse Eisenberg, Batman v.s. Superman: Dawn of Justice (-4)

It was a bad year for superhero villains, largely. Less said about Jesse Eisenberg the better; the thing is, with the right sort of approach, say his Mark Zuckerberg mixed with the more direct, biting ill-intentions of his James Simon in The Double, he could've been a great Lex Luthor, but I don't know, maybe he didn't film deserved a great villain and just decided to have a bit of fun. Fair enough, right? I'm kind of tempted to rank Delevinge and the horrifyingly poor portrayal of the Enchantress lower than Eisenberg because it's just an embarrassing performance for a good actress. I've had enough of mystical sorcerers/sorceresses as villains in these sorts of films, especially when they result in every film finale having that 'vague beams shooting out of building' denoument that feels painfully rehashed every time it's used. Following on the trend of good actors placed in bad roles, the great Oscar Isaac is placed under unrecognizable makeup, and utterly wasted as the titular Apocalypse. I did not feel compelled at all by the aesthetic or the performance, which is odd because pretty much everything else I've seen Isaac in, no matter how big or small the role, he's impressed.

Skrein's Francis (as Wade Wilson would like to have you know) is technically a fairly standard 'bad Brit' villain, nothing great but perfectly serviceable. I'd say the same for Mads Mikkelsen's Kaecilius, except he's played by Mads Mikkelsen, who always adds a little something even to the most thankless roles. The villain here is an even thinner one than his Casino Royale antagonist, but Mikkelsen adds enough menace, poignancy and even some wry humour to his portrayal to make an impression. The best villain this year, however, was funnily enough also from the Marvel Cinematic Universe, which usually has the tendency to have thankless villains even in their best films. Daniel Brühl's Zemo is a much more modest figure than some of the previous gods, men in iron suits and electric whiplashes, robots, etc. but he's also the greatest because the scope of his plans are so brilliantly realized by the script and his performance. Zemo is more an Iago figure than some overt, cackling villain, and I loved the originality behind such a portrayal. Once again, Civil War wins these stakes.

Ensemble (Part I, the 'good' side)
1. Captain America: Civil War (+6)

2. Doctor Strange (+4)

3. Deadpool (+2)

4. X-Men: Apocalypse (+2)

5. Suicide Squad (-2)

6. Batman v.s. Superman: Dawn of Justice (-4)

Superman's side of things couldn't possibly be blander in Dawn of Justice, where Lois Lane (Amy Adams), already not the best fit for the role, becomes a bit of a stick in the mud, the Daily Planet team are decently acted enough but don't have much to do. I'm tempted to rank the 'good' ensemble of Suicide Squad at the bottom purely because many of the well-acted and well casted characters they have, like Jai Courtney's Captain Boomerang, and Jay Hernandez's Diablo, are very underused. Then you have characters like Katana who's utterly sidelined and useless for much of the film, and Rick Flag who was originally going to be played by Tom Hardy and ended up being played by Joel Kinnaman, who gives the worst supporting performance of the year so far. The character is intended to be a bit of a blank slate, I'll grant him that, but he somehow manages to make every line reading and gesture seem so completely out of place, and really drags an already not very good film down with every line reading. Thankfully, Viola Davis' Amanda Waller helps to somewhat redeem the film on that 'authoritative' front since she gives a rather entertaining, cold and professional performance as the true boss of the Squad.

I'd say the 'good' ensembles to Apocalypse and Deadpool are about on equal par; the usual regulars of Nicholas Hoult, Lucas Till, and especially Evan Peters as Quicksilver, are all fine, as are the new entrants of Cyclops, Jean Grey and Nightcrawler. Rose Byrne gives a kind of awful reprisal of Moira McTaggert but that's alright since she doesn't do all that much. In Deadpool we get some very entertaining comedic relief in the form of T.J. Miller's Weasel, fine romantic support in Morena Baccarin's Vanessa, and some rather entertaining sidekicks in the form of X-Men Negasonic Teenage Warhead and Colossus. They all add to the film very nicely and provide more than worthy sparring partners for Deadpool.

Doctor Strange's entrance into the mystical dimensions is greeted with some welcome faces: Tilda Swinton as the Anicient One providing gravitas, humour and an added dose of poignancy, Chiwetel Ejiofor as the straight-laced and moralistic Mordo, and Benedict Wong as an enjoyably serious, deadpan Wong. They all have great chemistry with Cumberbatch and add to the film in their own ways, and I also have to praise Rachel McAdams for making the most out of her incredibly limited love interest role. Then Civil War. For the 'good' side of the conflict, I'll go with Cap's anti-Records side. Elizabeth Olesen's Scarlett Witch gets a massive upgrade this time round in terms of characterization and stuff to do and acts as one of the hearts of the film, and while the likes of Hawkeye (Jeremy Renner) and Ant-Man (Paul Rudd) get less to do, they stand out incredibly well despite their limited screentime, bringing a welcome dose of humour (especially Rudd) to the film - and Ant-Man also gets perhaps the single most AWESOME moment in it.

Emily VanCamp's Sharon Carter doesn't get a lot to do, but nails her big scene of her speech at Peggy Carter's funeral, a speech which encompasses the core themes of the movie. Black Widow/Natasha Romanoff is used to sort of balance the two conflicting sides together and Scarlett Johansson gives a really impressive performance in playing the conflicted nature of her character finally guided towards helping Steve. Anthony Mackie's Falcon is an even more energized, even more charismatic and funny presence this time round; and strikes up a really funny camaraderie with Steve Rogers' other best friend, Bucky Barnes. Sebastian Stan and Chris Evan strike up a believable and very moving friendship that is the true heart of the film, and helps make Civil War not just a story of conflict but also of friendship.

Ensemble (Part II, the 'bad' side)

1. Captain America: Civil War (+6)

2. Batman v.s. Superman (+4)

3. Deadpool (+2)

4. Doctor Strange (0)

5. X-Men: Apocalypse (-2)

6. Suicide Squad (-4)
For the 'bad' side of the BvS: Dawn of Justice ensemble, rather than focusing on the very forgettable side characters to Lex Luthor's plot (only Holly Hunter and Scoot McNairy make impressions purely because they're good actors in strangely small roles), I'll focus on Batman's side of things. Now despite seemingly forgetting that she's with him in the third act (a set up for a really awkward joke), Gal Gadot's Wonder Woman is absolutely splendid, and I can't wait to see more of her portrayal in the near future. Jeremy Irons isn't exactly having the time of his life as Alfred but I found he gave more than enough humour and wit to the role to make it work very well, and I'd love to see his dynamic with Bruce expanded in the upcoming films. Deadpool and Doctor Strange have serviceable side villains, I enjoyed the whole Dormamu section in Doctor Strange more than most, definitely. I'd say Deadpool is better in that regard because its villains are so squeamishly sleazy that you want them to get their comeuppance so, so bad.
Apocalypse and Suicide Squad are both largely disastrous in terms of establishing the side villains. The Enchantress' brother shape shifting morphing thingy is so poorly established by the film that there was absolutely no, menace, whatsoever, Even worse is the overhyped incarnation of the Joker by Jared Leto, a performance that gets worse and worse the more I think about it. The villains in SS are essentially failures through and through; the Apocalypse villains aren't that much better though. Most of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse are entirely useless beyond their participation in a few action scenes; Psylocke, Angel, Storm, all get very little to do than stand around and strut their extravagant costumes. But Michael Fassbender as Magneto actually gives a very good performance this time round as a particularly heartwarming, loving Erik Lensherr in the first act, resulting in a tragic scene which involves some of the best acting of Fassbender's career. Unfortunately after that he also becomes more just a stand around, look cool with your powers sort of villain.

For this round again, I'll have to award Civil War the win. Frank Grillo as Brock Rumlow/Crossbones, despite his short screentime, is quite memorable within it. The more minor characters of Rhodey, Vision, etc. on Stark's side have a lot to do in very little time, and Don Cheadle and Paul Bettany are more than up to task.  Thaddeus 'Thunderbolt' Ross is something of an underutilization of William Hurt, but he is perfectly fine in the role, and the character serves the purposes of the plot well enough. The highlights though of the new 'anti-Cap' ensemble, would be the fantastic introductions of T'Challa/Black Panther (Chadwick Boseman), and Peter Parker/Spider-Man (Tom Holland). Boseman could not be more perfectly cast as the epitome of grace and class as the Prince of Wakanda, delivering his lines with such elegance and poise; he shows the path of grief and vengeance he goes down remarkably well, carries himself with such assurance in the action scenes, and his final scene with Brühl is one of the best-acted scenes of the year. And ol' Spidey, after that dreadful The Amazing Spider-Man series,

Special Effects
1. Doctor Strange (+6)

2. Captain America: Civil War (+4)

3. X-Men: Apocalypse (+2)

4. Batman v.s. Superman: Dawn of Justice (0)

5. Suicide Squad (-4)

6. Deadpool (-2)

Doctor Strange has some of the best, biggest special effects of the year; every trippy, dimension-bending scene is so flawlessly handled. Civil War also has incredible effects, we've seen a lot of them before but a lot of exquisite, subtle work is done on stuff like Black Panther's eyes, and the bigger stuff like that Giant Man scene. Apocalypse and Dawn of Justice have perfectly decent SFX in all regards, again nothing we haven't seen before, but largely without flaws; and Deadpool and Suicide Squad, while having a few iffy and in the former's case, slightly more budgetary-constrained effects, are largely fine too. Really, from a technical standpoint, none of these films have massive special effects problems, though Deadpool has with good reason, the smallest scope of it.

Set Design
1. Doctor Strange (+6)

2. Batman v.s. Superman: Dawn of Justice (+4)

3. Captain America: Civil War (+2)

4. X-Men: Apocalypse (0)

5. Deadpool (-2)

6. Suicide Squad (-4)

Again, the whole world crafted in Doctor Strange is something to behold; the Kamar-Taj, the Sanctums, even just Strange's hospital, all have such character of their own. Dawn of Justice has a particularly spiffing looking Batcave, Civil War has a few memorable sets (though what takes place in them is more memorable), and the X-Mansion, etc. in Apocalpyse look good as always. Again there's a certain less appealing and forgettable quality to a lot of Deadpool's sets but they're not bad, it's just not the film's focus; and Suicide Squad has the prison which is well designed, but everything else feels a bit off. The Joker's apartment and the finale, in particular, just feel a bit out of place.

Costumes/Makeup
1. Captain America: Civil War (+6)

2. Batman v.s. Superman: Dawn of Justice (+4)

3. Doctor Strange (+2)

4. Suicide Squad (0)

5. Deadpool (-2)

6. X-Men: Apocalypse (-4)

I have many reservations about the new Batman, but the Batsuit is not one of them; and Wonder Woman's costume is great too. These two elements alone put it near the very top. Civil War and Doctor Strange, as per usual for Marvel, establish the old heroes with their usual great set of costumes and the new ones have some spiffing gear, especially Strange's Cape, Black Panther's whole suit, I wouldn't say the new Spidey suit is an absolute favourite of mine but I like it well enough. Also, some extra credit to Civil War for it's wonderful matching of Vision with some fine smart casual clothing. The other films are all just fine on the costuming front besides Apocalypse which makes some seriously bizzare choices with the Four Horsemen.

Editing

1. Captain America: Civil War (+6)

2. Doctor Strange (+4)

3. Deadpool (+2)

4. X-Men: Apocalypse (0)

5. Batman v.s. Superman: Dawn of Justice (-2)

6. Suicide Squad (-4)

For such a long and epic film, Civil War actually breezes along quite nicely, with a good amount of pacing and yet never feeling rushed; each scene builds to the next one very well. Almost as impressive is Doctor Strange which also establishes its new universe with a remarkable pace that arguably might be too fast at certain points, but nevertheless is extremely solid work. Deadpool flaws along very well too, I'd say the opening and the ending is a bit choppy in parts but that might've been intentional, and really the midsection where Wade Wilson establishes himself as Deadpool is pretty well-paced stuff. Apocalypse is perfectly fine in this regard, I have issues with the film's but not really how they're edited together. Dawn of Justice is a film you can just tell by watching it that there's a more coherent extended edition lurking somewhere, oh wait...anyway, the film itself is poorly edited in many regards, just in terms of not bridging scenes from the Batman and Superman side of things all that well, certain scenes dragging on for too long, too short, or just not making sense at all.
It'd be at the bottom of the list if not for the atrocity of editing that was Suicide Squad. I'd say part of my enjoyment of the film came from how atrociously the first few minutes or so were edited; absolutely no coherence at all, and the more I think about it my enjoyment might've been in a very Wiseau-esque fashion. Past that point, the pacing is really off at various points, Joker's scenes in particular fittting extremely poorly into the film; and one notable instance of terrible editing is the scene where the Enchantress turns 'bad'. It comes out of nowhere, establishes nothing, and once it flashes across the screen you derive nothing from it.

Sound

1. Doctor Strange (+6)

2. Captain America: Civil War (+4)

3. Batman v.s. Superman (+2)

4. Deadpool (+0)

5. X-Men: Apocalypse (-2)

6. Suicide Squad (-4)

All films sound okay, to very good. I'll give the edge to Strange because in the scenes where we're immersed in the 'otherworld' are all rather evocative. Civil War, BvS, Deadpool all have good sound effects, and even if Apocalypse and Suicide Squad have iffy moments in terms of the action scenes, they're still both largely solid.

Cinematography
1. Doctor Strange (+6)

2. Captain America: Civil War (+4)

3. X-Men: Apocalypse (+2)

4. Deadpool (0)

5. Suicide Squad (-2)

6. Batman v.s. Superman: Dawn of Justice (-4)

Again, Strange has cinematography that is really out of this world, and I'd say it's one of the highlights of the film, though Civil War is close on its tail with its less extravagant but equally effective camerawork that's particularly dynamite in individual sequences like the opening action sequence to take down Brock Rumlow, the Spiderman v.s. Bucky and Falcon fight etc. Apocalypse has some solid camerawork, particularly in the Wolverine sequence and of couse any scene involving Quicksilver; and Deadpool is also very finely filmed albeit with a slight tinge of budgetary constraints to its aesthetic. Suicide Squad and BvS both have extremely problematic camerawork, and I'll put the latter at the bottom for now because outside of the Batman warehouse scenes, the excessive use of slo-mo by Zack Snyder and odd angles he uses to film various sequences, from action to simply conversation/exposition scenes, are really distracting.

Soundtrack

1.  X-Men: Apocalypse (+6)

2. Batman v.s. Superman: Dawn of Justice (+4)

3. Deadpool (+2)

4. Captain America: Civil War (0)

5. Suicide Squad (-2)

6. Doctor Strange (-4)

BvS has a marvellous Junkie XL/Hans Zimmer score, the stuff of dreams really, and Deadpool has some perfectly matching tunes, especially 'X Gon' Give It to Ya'. I love Civil War to bits but I'll admit the soundtrack doesn't really stand out in the way that the other great Marvel films like Iron Man, The Winter Soldier and especially Guardians of the Galaxy do; Suicide Squad has some great songs it actually uses quite well in parts, but cuts them off to early and the actual score is fairly generic. Doctor Strange, though a film I really, really liked, has a largely forgettable soundtrack. In the end though, I'll give the win to X-Men: Apocalypse since it blends a solid action score and 80's tunes seamlessly, and feautures 'Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)' by the Eurythmics in what is still one of my favourite scenes of the year.

Fun Factor
1. Deadpool (+6)

2. Captain America: Civil War (+4)

3. Doctor Strange (+2)

4. X-Men: Apocalypse (0)

5. Suicide Squad (-2)

6. Batman v.s. Superman: Dawn of Justice (-4)

Not gonna lie, though it had lots of issues, I largely enjoyed Deadpool through and through because it was such a fun, easy watch. Not a single dull moment even in the sketchier and less well-made bits, though I would say that Civil War is far more satisfying to watch overall. Doctor Strange was quite a blast, far more than I expected it to be, Apocalypse has a lot of extremely fun moments to make up for the questionable choices in the screenplay, performances etc. Suicide Squad was fun, though at points in a 'so bad it's fun' sort of way, and I mostly hated BvS through and through for its mostly dreary, dark and dull tone. Seriously; the Nolan films were dark and gritty, but also made it compelling to watch and in parts, so very exciting to watch. Snyder's take on the Bat seems to be directed to making him as gruesome and unpleasant to watch as possible, and his take on Superman seems to be at best, indifference, and at worst a certain dispassionate quality to his direction.

Emotional Factor
1. Captain America: Civil War (+6)

2. Doctor Strange (+4)

3. Suicide Squad (+2)

4. Deadpool (0)

5. X-Men: Apocalypse (-2)

6. Batman v.s. Superman: Dawn of Justice (-4)

Though I can see why some may not have felt so strongly about it as I did, Captain America: Civil War is probably still the most emotionally powerful film of the year so far - I say so far because it looks like Hacksaw Ridge, Silence, Fences and Rogue One are all going to be pretty emotionally charged. Anyway, Civil War acts as a sort of emotional statement on the journey of my favourite Avenger. It explores every facet of what makes him a true hero even with the odds stacked against him; and I've mentioned how all the most poignant sequences, from the funeral scene to his reminisces with Bucky about the past, and to add to that you have Tony Stark's equally heartbreaking storyline of self-reflection and being haunted by his past. In comparison, the other superhero films this year can't quite match the depth of emotional intensity in Civil War, but Doctor Strange does have a strong emotional undercurrent in both Strange's journey into a better man and the Ancient One's final scene, even if Baron Mordo's character transition is a bit shortchanged. Suicide Squad, for all its flaws, does manage to have a few genuinely heartrending subplots; Deadshot's relationship with his daughter is rather movingly handled, Diablo's backstory is rather powerful and makes you care about the character in a very short span of time, and despite the insurmountable flaws of the film on a technical level, there's glimpses of a darker and more emotionally impactful film in these moments. Deadpool and Apocalypse work less well in the 'emotional' moments than the 'fun' moments, but aren't overtly bad in them, and Deadpool sort of works around that by always having a tongue in cheek during these scenes. Apocalypse would be more powrful if it made better use in developing McAvoy's Professor X arc though; in comparison to Days of Future Past, it seems relatively tame and derivative. Batman vs Superman though, completely mucks up its emotional core. Batman's rage at Gotham's destruction is well handled in the opening sequence, but Superman's own emotional journey is seriously stunted and underdeveloped (especially if you compare it to Captain America's arc over his first two films), and the 'MARTHA' scene is one of the worst failures at emotional manipulation in recent memory. I'll end with this.

Results:

  1. Captain America: Civil War - 72
  2. Doctor Strange - 48
  3. Deadpool - 24
  4. X-Men: Apocalypse - 0
  5. Batman v.s. Superman: Dawn of Justice - -14
  6. Suicide Squad - -34
It's strange because on my rankings of 2016 films, Suicide Squad actually ranks slightly higher than BvS because I enjoyed it more - maybe I need to re-evaluate that. But besides that, these rankings make sense; Civil War is still my favourite film of the year so far, I really liked both Doctor Strange and Deadpool, Apocalypse was average, and the other two are bad, not wholly bad, but poorly made films. 

2 comments:

  1. Crazy long, crazy well thought out. Agreed with just about all of it - although I thought that the costuming in Deadpool deserved more praise than Suicide Squad, mainly because it was completely faithful and they nailed Deadpool's eyes. Marvel has always had a great history of excellent costume design and some of that has bled through to the movies (see Vision's iconic turtleneck in the comics). Re. Deadpool's sets, I believe that they had by far the lowest budget of the lot? I think I'm turning into a Deadpool apologist, although I'm not certain why I'm doing that...

    I hope you've seen Tony Zhou's essay on Marvel soundtracks on Every Frame A Painting.

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  2. Brilliant post, Calvin! I agree with almost everything you wrote, and I too agree with your final ranking and assessment of the films. Here's to hoping Civil War gets a few Oscar nods!

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