Wednesday, 23 March 2016

BATMAN Vs. SUPERMAN

 YOU ME & CINEMA - BATMAN VS. SUPERMAN REVIEW

 The greatest gladiator match on earth - Son of Krypton against Bat of Gotham, this is not one to be missed, this one has to be witnessed on the big screen. If Marvel redefined the scale of Superhero movies by bringing their biggest characters together, DC has now begun rolling out its own version of heavy duty multi-superhero flicks, and it is reason enough to get excited. But the hype ends the moment you enter theatres. From that point it is only the quality of the movie that can decide whether it wins over the viewer. Does this scripting coup win the viewer?

It starts when Superman is first introduced to humanity, from Man of Steel. We have Bruce Wayne
watching from the sideline as the new hero gets the adulation. What does he feel? The Bruce Wayne from Nolan's universe would have been relieved that he can finally retire, rest his cape and mope around in peace. But this is Zack Snyder's universe and we are not sure about what Bruce feels. Is he insecure, is he confused, or is he jealous? We are not sure at first. Turns out that is how the entire world feels about Superman. It is this insecurity that Lex Luthor wants to prey upon.

Batman vs. Superman starts slow and is in no hurry to pick up the pace. Both Batman and Superman view each other with suspicion, and someone's stoking the fire quite strategically. This though takes quite a long while. The proceedings are dull and we are left searching for moments of adrenaline. The story does keep moving ahead, you can see the isolated dots coming together slowly, but very few moments get the excitement going. That Batman is someone with deep seated psychological insecurities due to a childhood tragedy is well known. Zack Snyder probes that hard, giving us a couple of sequences that are obviously dreams, which seem to slow things down further. You begin to feel that things are taking too long, when finally the Bat and the Superman come face to face. That is really when the film clicks into gear after a fair amount of drifting.

The plot thickens and comes together soon after that. If  Bruce Wayne’s haunting childhood memories are inseparable from Batman movies, so is Krypton inseparable from a Superman movie. The Kryptonite angle is built up slowly and surely around Lex and then there is the final showdown. The usual graph of a superhero movie! What should appeal here is the Batman vs.  Superman angle, which one feels is explored more at a psychological level rather than a more entertaining popcorn level. That could have been very interesting in the hands of a skilled director, more Nolan territory. Subtlety is not Zack Snyder’s forte and so much of it looks more forced than fluid.

And once we are at the business end of the movie, that is when the protagonists have all come to the
right side and are now up against the anatagonist, Zack Snyder jumps onto his style of film making – large scale destruction. If you think he had peaked with Man of Steel, think again before you see this one. We don’t know how many cities he has blown up in the final showdown, frankly we lose count because it movies all the way from some port to Gotham city, burning almost everything in its path. For audiences who are accustomed to the usual Hollywood superhero movie, this is more yawn-inducing stuff as there is little or no originality in the way these confrontations are conceived. Die hard Batman and Superman fans can whistle for a while, but even they go quiet after a while. DC needs someone more inventive, not a technical behemoth like Zack, at the helm of things.

It is obvious that the plan is to dazzle us with a lot of action - big, bombastic action. But with so many superhero movies these days, it is a hard thing to impress audiences that way. What we do enjoy are the little moments, like the ones we saw in the trailer, the ones where the Batman smartly takes down a dozen or so guys, like the one where Batman and Superman fistfight each other, or the small game of wits between Bruce Wayne and the Wonder Woman. The Script, however, does not allow enough room for more such moments because the big action cannot wait. Also disappointing is the complete lack of cheer or brightness in the movie. The Nolan shadow of grim and dark superhero movies hangs on over DC – get rid of it already, please. That’s something only Nolan can do well. Here, we get a movie which looks and feels like it is always waiting for doomsday to happen, as if it is inevitable, as if there is a sword hanging over the world, when the audience can’t frankly see it. We are here to have a good time, but the movie just won’t have any of it, it is too busy being serious. Hardly anyone smiles on screen, except of course for the megalomaniac villain.

That brings us to Jesse Eisenberg who gets to play perhaps the first big ticket character of his career
after Zuckerberg, that is. He is required to play someone one dimensional, and even though he tries to do that with subtlety it doesn’t look that great, the shadow of the Joker lingers on, one guesses. The thoughts that he echoes are also quite similar to what the Joker said, like how someone all powerful cannot be all good and vice versa. Someone who does abominations for the sake of it, someone who couldn’t escape the abominations of his father! The set up of Wonder Woman too has fleeting similarities to that of Selena Kyle from the Dark Knight Rises. These observations just show how big a shadow Nolan cast with his trilogy and how hard they are to forget. This script does not challenge its lead players much. Henry Cavill has to look morose or angry, while Ben Afleck has to look pensive or angry, and there is nothing much in between. The epilogue, even though stretched a bit, gives us glimpses of how the Justice League is going to come together in the coming years and who their adversaries are going to be. The way it panned out gives us hope that this franchise will get better, that this was just the first act of a grand play, the one that sparked off bigger things. But DC will have to rethink its strategy of making superhero movies. If they are going to go all out on heavy duty VFX action with cities crumbling like packs of cards, they must remember that they are very close to saturation. Watch Batman vs. Superman because it is a dream union of superheroes, there are moments (even though only a few) where you can scream your lungs out, there are genuine goose bump moments, but it all does not add up into a great movie. Worth a watch nonetheless.

2.5/5
Dream duo, grim setting, heavy VFX, middling movie!

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