Green Lantern
Space oddity
Opening Green Lantern in the same month—or the same galaxy—as X-Men: First Class was probably a scheduling necessity, but it forces a ruinous comparison. Capably adapted from one of the bazillion storylines in DC's 70-year-old Green Lantern comics series, the new movie has some promising sci-fi elements and a pair of normally appealing stars. But the picture is slathered with so much CGI goop that at several points it's indistinguishable from a Saturday morning cartoon show. Very soon you start wondering why you had to leave your living room to see it.
The movie begins in deep space with a riot of digital hubbub (pricelessly silly in big-deal 3D). We meet the Guardians of the Universe, a council of wizened Yodas ensconced on very high stools (which amusingly recall the much more amusing Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension). The Guardians have divided the galactic vastness into thousands of separate sectors, all patrolled by an interstellar police force called the Green Lantern Corps, each member of which is armed with a super-powerful green ring and a glowing green lantern with which to recharge it when the super-power runs low. We also make the acquaintance of a rather amorphous evil entity called Parallax—a destroyer of worlds and so forth. When Parallax attacks a Green Lantern patrol ship, the captain is forced to ditch his craft on the nearest reachable planet, which turns out to be Earth. Wounded and dying, he recruits a local human, Hal Jordan (Ryan Reynolds), to take up his ring and lantern and join the Corps. As a bonus, Hal also gets to wear a bright green super-suit with built-in muscles and a tiny green mask.
Hal is a brave, handsome, and of course headstrong test pilot in the employ of Ferris Aviation, where he's maintained a years-long touch-and-go relationship with the boss's daughter, Carol Ferris (Blake Lively)—a test pilot herself, naturally. Since considerable time is devoted to this underpowered romance, it's unfortunate that Reynolds and Lively—such engaging actors in other films—never really warm to each other here. But then they're given little assistance by the dialogue. Carol laments that proud loner Hal has always been "scared I was getting too close." Changing into his flight suit, Hal says to her, "Let's get these pants off and fly some planes." Smooth.
The story ping-pongs back and forth between the Earth-bound love dawdling and the Guardians' heavily computerized home planet, where Hal undergoes Green Lantern training under the gimlet eye of a harsh taskmaster named Sinestro (an unrecognizable Mark Strong). As with every other off-planet actor in the movie, Strong's bulb-headed alien makeup forcefully recalls the cornball days of early Star Trek cranial prosthetics. No matter how dire the doings in this film, inducements to giggling are usually close at hand.
Reynolds is too mild a presence to make Hal very compelling. A couple of personality doodles have been sketched in—Hal is haunted by the death of his test-pilot dad, and hobbled by a vague feeling of unworthiness—but when a guy looks like Ryan Reynolds, and has Blake Lively making love eyes at him, it's hard to accept that his life could be all that tormented. This leaves the field clear for Peter Saarsgard to move in and make up the live-wire deficit. Saarsgard appears to be having a ton of fun as Hector Hammond, a brainiac science professor who becomes infected by the universal Force of Evil (which turns out to be yellow). Before long, the mutating Hector and the increasingly fearless Hal are engaged in super-being smackdowns of an elaborate but not especially thrilling sort—even when Parallax weighs in (as a sort of humongous smoke bomb) to make it a threesome. Despite the movie's super-budget (officially $150 million, rumored to be twice that), it's undone by digital cheesiness at every turn. There's a possibly delusional promise of a sequel at the end—a notion dependent on whether this rather limp opening installment covers its outsized expenses. Big bets are not recommended.
The oddest aspect of Green Lantern—and I wonder if the filmmakers were even aware of it—is its frankly fascist sci-fi philosophy. The green rings and lanterns are charged with the Power of Will, the various counterpoised yellow thingies with the Power of Fear. At one point, Sinestro (who would trust a guy with a name like that?) says, "Fear is the enemy of Will. Fear is what stops you and makes you weak." At which point I wondered what kind of movie Leni Riefenstahl might have made from this material. Possibly a more interesting one.
Kurt Loder is a writer living in New York. His third book, a collection of film reviews called The Good, the Bad and the Godawful, will be published in November by St. Martin's Press.
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So what you're saying is, the previews for this movie are entirely accurate, and my pre-formed opinion based on them was right? Damn.
Based on just the material alone, regardless of director, a Green Lantern movie walks the razor fine line between absurdity and coolness.
I will find out this afternoon which way the movie falls.
In brightest day, in blackest night, no 3-D shall infect my sight.
I don't know man, I highly recommend the Hubble 3-D Blu-Ray. And 3-D gaming can be pretty epic.
I like those magic eye thingies
Parallax?a destroyer of worlds and so forth
Har. That one quip may be better than the whole flick. Not that I have seen it. But why should that stop me?
Maybe Leni would have made The Green Klantern.
The Green Lantern comics weren't interesting enough for me back in the day and this movie certainly looks like it lives down to my very low expectations.
He is however the most kick ass character to use in DC vs. Mortal Kombat.
Really? My favorite was actually Captain Marvel.
There are some good GL stories out there, they just don't lend themselves to movie treatment.
Justice League: New Frontier is a solid read.
New Frontier actually made a pretty kickass animated movie (it was direct-to-video, but they didn't skimp on the budget). Darwyn Cooke's art looks great in motion.
A lot of talented writers have written GL tales in recent times, you may want to give them a try.
Avoid anything written by Geoff Johns.
Leni at least had talent. If you watch her films made before Triumph des Willens (both acting and directing), it's pretty clear. Das Blaue Licht is still a moving masterpiece, and she shines in her roles in Die wei?e H?lle von Piz Pal? and St?rme ?ber dem Mont Blanc. The gal had talent.
The last time a film critic compared a benign movie to the Nazi propaganda of Leni Riefenstahl was with the movie "Secretariat" ... and that didn't go over so well. Anyway I've seen the trailer and it looks horrible, totally does look like a cartoon.
Anyone who hadn't already said "uh, the guy from Two Guys, a Girl, and a Pizza Place as a superhero? Yawn." is a lost cause anyway.
Of course, saying "uh, the recurring guy from Two Guys, a Girl, and a Pizza Place as Mal Reynolds? Awesome." would be genius.
Yes, but Traylor Howard is hot.
No, Traylor Howard was hot.
When Parallax attacks a Green Lantern patrol ship, the captain is forced to ditch his craft on the nearest reachable planet, which turns out to be Earth.
It's always Earth. The only habitable planet within miles. What a coincidence! And not only that, it's always the United States! Couldn't the Israelites in 586 BC get the alien superhero just once? Or maybe the Aztecs in 1519?
12th century Burmese tribesmen never get any love.
Earth is the center of the Multiverse.
You need to read Red Son. More interesting than the main Superman line.
It is the anthropic principle. They always end up here because we are here to see them. We cannot see all of the alien superheroes bombarding the planets on the other side of the galaxy.
"It's always Earth"
And for similar reasons, all the killer asteriods in those documentary shows on the History channel or the Science channel or whatever have to hit smack dab in the middle of New York or Los Angeles.
Never over the Mariana trench in the Pacific Ocean or some place like that.
I liked the Green Lantern as a kid. Always wanted one of those power rings.
I always wanted a Beta capsule.
where IS Ultra Man when you need him...
the EPA probably fined him and the giant monsters for all the toxic messes they left behind...
We always liked him because we felt he was the one other Super-Friend who could possibly wipe Super-man's smug, perfect smile off his face.
Fear is the enemy of Will. Fear is what stops you and makes you weak.
According to Theon Greyjoy in Game of Thrones fear proves you are not stupid.
Theon is mostly irrelevant until the 4th book. I wouldn't focus on him too much.
Doesn't he die in the 4th book?
Maybe, maybe not. It's always tricky with Martin, if you don't actually see the guy getting killed, to know if someone is dead or not. I personally think Theon Greyjoy is in "soap opera" territory and will re-emerge at the right time. Too much hogwash left to tidy up with the governance of the Iron Islands.
And even then, sometimes they aren't dead (e.g. Catelyn).
Nope.
Theon isn't dead. He's just the new monster of Roose Bolton
stop talking about the frigging books!!!
I only know he told Robb Stark that it was good that he was scared because it showed he was not stupid on the TV show....for all I know that part wasn't even in the book.
Wow, Godwined in the review. Kinda takes some of the fun out of the thread.
You know who else had reviews of his art Godwinned?
Are all the nerds on dinner break?
That may be the funniest comment I've seen in months.
You know who else thought that was a funny comment...
lol
Winnah.
Nice!
Crapola. I enjoyed Men, thought Thor was sufficiently entertaining, and the Lantern sucks. Outside of Batman, DC characters were always boring anyways.
What Batman isn't boring too?
Didn't he spend 7/8 of the last two films complaining about how hard it is to be Batman and fight crime? How many more films will center around Batman whining he's Batman? Boring and shallow.
Its really hard to care when every time there's a chance to be heroic, Batman has to stop and change his diaper.
Perhaps he should leave the hero work to those more suited for it... the Wonder Twins.
But Batman does it all as a human (albeit a billionaire... probably related to the Kochs in some way). That is why he is entertaining. Every other hero in the DC or Marvel universes have SUPER powers that make them more than human (don't even think about mentioning Green Arrow/Hawkeye, etc.)
No. We are more related to mastermind Golgoth
Punisher, Nightwing, Robin all beg to disagree.
Punisher is hot, ergo no relation to koch brothers
Superman/Jimmy Olsen bad boy alter egos don't make the cut either
ummm.....Tony Stark?
closer but not
Ever since the introduction of the Extremis armor, Tony Stark isn't a human anymore. He's a cyborg.
Only the Koches' hearts are made of tin
So I wonder how much this terror drill cost?
http://www.10tv.com/live/conte.....ml?sid=102
Another Super Hero thread on Reason.
Let the Sausage Fest? begin!
Ah - I see my Reason colleagues are all over it already. Carry on, men.
You want the Weiner thread @12:12.
The frankly fascist philosophy comes straight out of E.E. Smith's Lensman novels, whence Gardner Fox lifted it when he resurrected the character for DC.
Overall, Donald Duck was much more accessible.
Holy shit! You mean that Thaal Sinestro, the SPACE HITLER OF DC COMICS! comes off as fascist? WHAT A TWEEST!
You DO realize that now I must form a punk band called Space Hitler...
I wonder how David Niven felt about having his mustache appropriated for Space Hitler.
It sounds like Thor, which was entertaining enough. I'll go in with low expectations and see what happens.
Just like at election time.
Yeah, I thought that too. One difference, you can always walk out of a movie if it goes to terrible.
I cant wait to watch this movie, I hope next time they will make Justice League the Movie, it would be awesome to watch them..
I just wished they did not made it like sooo 2020 something so that the oldies can feel back their childhood
Green lantern is a great character with simple effects. in sci-fi simple is boring
Really, people think Ryan Reynolds is attractive? I always figures in 20 years that Sexiest Man Alive declaration would go over as well as the Nick Nolte one.
The only superhero worth a damn.
Super
I believe he grew up to be a movie reviewer.
Eh, you hoity-toity reviewers can put your CGI-snobbery where the pixels don't shine. This is the Golden Age of movies.
Do you have any idea what we would have given for CGI comic book movies when I was a kid? We had to make do with E.-fucking-T. for godsakes.
This is the Golden Age of movies.
Crack etc.
Back to the Future > Anything that came out this year.
Even as a kid in the 80's, I didn't like ET. After watching the likes of Star Wars, I wanted my sci-fi with friggin' laser beams.
I know it is easy to pick on this for its fascist ideas but I notice that most fiction created in the 1940s or 30s has some kind of fascistic qualities. Superman is a good example of that. He is a guy from space who has all the qualities of being an American yet he is not one of them. He is strangley disconnected from America yet embodies all its qualities. THe spiritual connection is being made between the Americans and superman. The fascistic way of thinking is up and down these stories when you begin to think about it.
The oddest aspect of Green Lantern...is its frankly fascist sci-fi philosophy. The green rings and lanterns are charged with the Power of Will, the various counterpoised yellow thingies with the Power of Fear.
Sounds more Wagnerian than fascist, but then, some people don't know the difference.
Actually, Supes is a pretty bad example of that. Siegel and Shuster (after their disastrous first Superman run) re-imagined Supes as modern day cross between Samson and Hercules. Superman probably owes more of his creation to Flash Gordon and Doc Savage than to Wagner.
o k.cool!
Green lantern is a cool movie but seeing the trailer with soo much effects its soo 2025.
Anyway, being the next day, the twilight hours before the all-important "official" morning links pop up, here's a heartwarming tale of a social-media narcissist who claims culpability in the Vancouver riots and brags about it on Facebook. D'Oh!
Facebook user becomes infamous after claiming role in Vancouver riot
http://ca.news.yahoo.com/turn-.....34706.html
The trick is remembering that Sinestro is a good guy who makes bad decisions and pays for them. His comment about fear is his perspective...in the comics Hal learns that the only way to defeat fear is to feel it and use it...not shun it entirely and try to be emotionless as the Guardians have been.
Right. The point is not "will is power" and "fear is weakness." It's how you deal with them and use them. Sinestro actually was a bit of a fascist as I recall. Got him into trouble. Hal learns a different way.
+1 internet. What made Hal Jordan the greatest Green Lantern (until recent events involving Kyle Rayner and Sodam Yat) was not that he didn't feel fear, but that he could overcome fear. Unlike the Guardians, he could feel emotion without being ruled by emotion.
Which is why he has, at some point, been a member of every Lantern Corps in the universe.
here is special news for you guys.... http://tinyurl.com/hotnewz2011
After reading the reviews on this movie, I'm feeling as if it's more likely that someone will eventually make a movie out of Plastic Man.
That might be an entertaining movie. There was an endearing weirdness to Plastic Man that you don't see in many of the Golden Age comics.
I always thought Green Lantern was the least interesting of the DC characters, at least based on the stories he was given when I was growing up in the '70s. Green Arrow would probably make a better movie subject.
did nobody notice sinestro's speech also sounds like the whole "fear is the mindkiller" thing in dune?
I think the fear vs will version of the light vs dark side of the force is less about fascism, unless pace Ayn Rand you think Immanuel Kant is the father of fascism, than it is about will-as-self-control over impulses, in this case
fear.
http://bighomocon.blogspot.com.....l?spref=fb
thank you
is good
thank u
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