Not a totally un-fantastic movie
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JIM ERWIN
These days it seems like everyone is being exposed to radioactivity
and gaining special powers. “Fantastic Four,” the latest action movie
about Marvel Comics superheroes, is the story of yet another group of
people whose genetically altered DNA make them unstoppable. Despite
its shortcomings, “Fantastic Four” is fast paced, funny and
entertaining. This movie may not be fantastic, but it’s a still a
hoot.
The biggest problem with “Fantastic Four” is that neither the
story or the characters are very original. When Marvel Comics writer
Stan Lee created these characters 40 years ago, he was basically just
putting together a super hero team to answer a commercial success by
a competitor. The how or why any of these characters inherited their
special powers wasn’t really as important as just giving them powers
he felt were interesting. This was 20 years before near meltdowns at
Three Mile Island plant in Pennsylvania and the Fermi plant in
Michigan. Unprotected exposure to intense radiation was still a cool
way to become stronger, faster and more sexy.
As the name would indicate, the Fantastic Four are made up of four
characters: Reed Richards/Mr. Fantastic (Ioan Gruffudd); Sue
Storm/The Invisible Girl (Jessica Alba); Johnny Storm/The Human Torch
(Chis Evans); and Ben Grimm/The Thing (Michael Chiklis from FX’s “The
Shield). Of the four Chicklis is the most entertaining. His
character, The Thing, is done using a costume rather than computer
animation. Chiklis’s eyes bring humanity to a person who’s
transformation has turned him into a monster. Although the costume
looks uncomfortable, Chiklis seems to be having a ball.
The story uses the characters’ abilities for comic relief in
addition to driving the big action sequences. Mr. Fantastic’s elastic
body is able to do things like reach outside the bathroom for more
toilet paper without getting up -- a joke the movie’s writers
borrowed from an old issue of Mad Magazine. The fact that Jessica
Alba has to take off her clothes to become completely invisible is
another one of the movie’s running gags.
You can’t have super heroes without a super villain and the fifth
person exposed to radiation is their nemesis, a narcissistic
megalomaniac named Victor Von Doom (Julian McMahon). Von Doom’s
incredible thirst for power makes Karl Rove look like a manic Boy
Scout leader. Unlike the others, Von Doom sees his freakish change as
terrific asset. He decides to use his super powers to dominate the
world and it’s up to the Fantastic Four to stop him.
At its core, “Fantastic Four” is basically just mental junk food.
On the other hand, who can really survive without chili-cheese
Fritos? It’s fun to watch these characters in action and there’s
never a dull moment in this movie. At a time when we’re fighting
terrorism at home and abroad, and senior White House staffers aren’t
above committing treason to retaliate against their political
opponents, it’s nice to spend two hours watching a story where
nothing really matters.
The reason “Fantastic Four” works so well is that it doesn’t take
itself too seriously. No one involved in this movie thinks they are
making Ingmar Bergman’s “Saraband.” The cast are clearly having a lot
of fun, and so is the audience. This is a movie that’s great to see
on a big screen, especially in an air conditioned theater on a hot
day.
* JIM ERWIN, 40, is a technical writer and computer trainer.
A march that is worth going to the birds
They have wings but do not fly. They live eight months of the year
in temperatures averaging 40 below zero. And, if humans had to endure
their mating ritual man would, no doubt, still be back living in
caves.
Penguins, part bird, part fish, are the subject of the documentary
from France titled “March of the Penguins.”
Set against the icy back drop of the South Pole where penguins
trek miles across the frozen ice in order to meet, mate and hatch
their babies. The documentary provides an intimate look at the docile
animal.
Narrated by Morgan Freeman (“Driving Miss Daisy,” “The Shawshank
Redemption”) March of the Penguins follows one hoard of birds as they
embark on their yearly ritual that involves walking seven days
straight without stopping then going three months or longer without
food.
The experience of watching the penguin’s winter march up close on
film closely mimics the act of bird watching for the movie audience.
The similarities humans and penguins share look to outweigh the
differences.
The birds body surf just like beachgoers do, except penguins use
their belly instead of a board to glide across the frozen water. Like
teenagers in love, once penguins find their mate they become
inseparable. As the penguin couples produce their egg, they become
doting self-sacrificing parents providing shelter, warmth and food
for their soon-to-hatch baby.
There are three storytellers in March of the Penguins. First the
penguins themselves by their actions and activities like huddling
together for warmth during one of several fierce winter storms.
Second is Morgan Freeman’s narration that supplies the unseen
background information such as why the penguins travel to what
appears to be the middle of nowhere to make babies. And third, the
viewers can see other aspects to the penguins, not explained in the
documentary, by watching and observing what the penguins do. For
example, the penguins live in one gigantic socially active group
huddle for warmth, safety and protection yet they walk in single file
formation to and from their destinations. And, viewers will see that
penguins are docile creatures.
The few altercations that arise are quickly settled and ended by
the group.
The hardships some penguins endure are treated delicately. Hunger,
predators and weather are three dangers the majority of penguins
encounter but do survive. As a Disney documentary, the treatment of
the birds that succumb to the dangers generally lead up to the moment
then quickly move away without too much graphic detail.
Like expectant parents, however, the viewer’s focus is on the baby
penguins’ anticipated arrival. Half of the film belongs to the babies
from the moment they hatch until they become independent.
Watching and observing the penguins is a rare and new event for
humans. It has been less then a century since penguins were
discovered by explorers to the Antarctic. March of the Penguins
offers a window into their world that is suitable for everyone from
pre-teens to grandparents.
* PEGGY J. ROGERS, 40, produces videos and documentaries.
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