There
were some that I agreed with the general consensus of commercial and critical
success.
Aquaman
was the first DC film that gave me the same feeling many Marvel films do, where
I could have turned around, gone right back into the theater and watched it
again.
The
story maintains the mythological roots (in this case, Arthurian Legends,
several versions of Atlantis and a few pantheons of sea dieties for good measure)
for a DC hero’s iconic status, but it does it in a fun, engaging and visually
amazing way.
The
land locations were gorgeous, but it’s the undersea realms that were stunning
and made this a rare case where the IMAX screen is worth it.
Iconically,
Arthur is King of the Sea, but it has varied over the years whether he was a
reluctant king, an accomplished king, an exiled king or other variations. Add in that there really isn’t one definitive
personality of Aquaman, and the film had the opportunity to pick and choose
what worked for Jason Momoa’s interpretation.
This
Aquaman had the toughness of Peter David’s version (also used in the DCAU),
developed the regality of Dan Jurgens's version, showed the enthusiasm of the Batman Brave and Bold version, and
retained the whimsy and powers of the Silver Age/ Super Friends version.
In
other words, there were massive cinematically impressive battles including giant
seahorses, monstrous creatures, and fistfights with a bulletproof super
strong hero that enjoys the property smashing carnage while protecting
innocents making the choices based on what is right.
The
rest of the characters were equally engaging.
Mera
was always a powerful, royal woman in the comics who discovers the joys in the
mundane things of the surface world through her connection to Arthur. Amber Heard looked and acted like she stepped
straight off of a comic’s page. This
was whether she was negotiating in commanding tones, or taking out a squad of Special
Forces aquanauts on her own.
While
he didn’t look like the classic version of the character, Willem Dafoe played the
role of Arthur's mentor Vulko with the acerbic wit and wisdom comic fans could easily
recognize.
Every
hero needs villains, and Aquaman did
what many super hero sequels fail at in its first outing. It balanced several
bad guys in a single story.
Ocean
Master and Black Manta are Aquaman’s two most key villains in the comics, both
with strong connections to both Arthur individually, and Atlantis itself.
Patrick Wilson had about as many variations and versions as Arthur has in the comics to pick from. The movie Orm, while definitely in the wrong, has elements that make him understandable, and relatable yet fear inspiring.
Patrick Wilson had about as many variations and versions as Arthur has in the comics to pick from. The movie Orm, while definitely in the wrong, has elements that make him understandable, and relatable yet fear inspiring.
Like
Mera, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II’s version of Black Manta comes straight out of the
comics. As usual for the character,
there are elements that could, in other circumstances, generate sympathy, but his choices render him
unworthy of those feelings. It was very
cool following the story they created that led him to look like the in print
version.
Temura
Morrison, Nichole Kidman and Dolph Lundgren as Tom Curry, Queen Atlanna and King
Nereus were all noble in different ways. They also joined with Willem Defoe as
sort of “Ghosts of Super Hero Films Past” to bring genre knowledge to a new
generation.
Echo
of final thoughts:
I
was hoping the new Aquaman series would lead to a big budget blockbuster back
when Green Lantern came out, and
joked about them changing Topo. Since
that series was part of the Nu52 fiasco, I received two pleasant surprises.
1)
Outside of Superman, Wonder Woman and a few other guests acting way out of
character, the Nu52 Aquaman series,
which I read in its entirety after seeing this movie, (initially written by
movie Aquaman co-writer Geoff Johns)
was nicely awesome.
2)
Part of that “whimsical” bit I referenced was a magnificent appearance by Topo
in a scene that was both an epic introduction to a fantastic action packed battle, and
goofy as all heck.
Not
that goofy, but it was a reference to a Disney Atlantis not in their Atlantis film that also looked to have some influence on this movie.
Real
Final Thought-
Julie
Andrews is ALWAYS awesome, and her characters ALWAYS know how to make an impressive entrance.
3 comments:
IMPRESSIVE MOVIE! PERFECT WRITE-UP!
Is there an Adrian Grenier camero?
What about minnow? is minnow/Aqualad in it?
MANY THANX!
No cameos referencing the past making fun of Aquaman. This one just highlights the awesomeness of what everyone made fun of. Even the talking to fish circle-y things. The first film would have been too busy with a sidekick, I'm sure Garth, Kaldur/ Jackson, or Tula will show up in the next one. Thanx for playing!
Post a Comment